Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Sept. 13, 1910, edition 1 / Page 4
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r Aca foot. THE OASTUMA GAjdETTE. TUESDAY, SErTE-MBER IS, 1010. The Gastonia Gazette Iad vry Tuesday and Friday Wr Ta Oasatt Publishing Company. C D. ATKINS 9. W. ATX1XS Editors and Mgrs. SUBSCRIPTION PRICK: Bumr II" g!X month . Wt moaths Om BMBU . TS .60 .IS GASTONIA Coaaty Sea of Gaaton County Al ter January t " No. S3S Main Areas. PHOXE Ntt 60. succeed Hal, th victory I on which will mak vry Democrat la the country rejoice, Th 0. 0. PM fast losing ground. ' Tb peopl ax tired of their broke promise and class legislation. The part of Tart and Roosevelt see defeat ahead of It. ' And nothtnr could contribute so largely to the country's good as the ascendency to power of the Demo cratic party a party which stands for revision of the tariff downward. for suppression of th grasping trusts and monopolies, for equal jus tice to all men. DECAY OF TIN. take TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1910. For For DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Chief Justice Supreme Court WALTER CLARK of Wake County Associate Justices (supreme Court. PLATT Q. WALKER of Mecklenburg County WILLIAM R. ALLEN of Wayne County Representative in Congress, Ninth District E. Y. WEBB of Cleveland County For Solicitor. Twelfth Judicial Dis trict GEORGE W. WILSON For State Senator JOHN G. CARPENTER For House of Representatives A. C. STROUP k N. B. KENDRICK For Clerk Superior Court mrm C. C. CORN WELL For Register of Deeds A. J. SMITH For Sheriff J. D. B. McLEAN For Treasurer J. Q. HOLLAND For Coroner C. L. CHANDLER For Surveyor C. A. BLACK ' For County Commissioners JOHN P. LEEPER J. FRANK M CARVER R. 8. LEWIS J. W. KENDRICK " 0. O. FALLS R. K. DAVENPORT Ofty Schools Open. The city schools began the session of 1910-11 yesterday morning with a total enrollment of about 825. All of the teachers were present, classe were organised and the work of the year started off quickly and smooth ly. Fuller particulars of the open ing will appear Friday. The Ga- iette expects during this session to carry a regular department giving all the new of the city schools, fur nished by someone In close contact with the schools. This will be an interesting feature to many of our readers. Remarkable Alteration WhleH Plaoe In the Metal. Any t Msg mad of tin. ti seems. Is doomed to brief existence. Tula metal la subject to a remariabl kind t alteration, a species of disease to which It Is llabl. When exposed to th air, tin undergoes no chemical change, as do Iron and copper, which. of course, chemically combine with th oxygen or .with water. . Th tin, bow ever, still remains metallic tin. , but gradually becotnea gray and dull and falls to In powder. Th disease la "catching." , It Infect or Induces th same chsng Id other masses of tin in the Immediate neigh borhood. We are told that in a Rus sian Imperial magazine, la place of tin uniform buttons, little heaps of powder were found. A consignment of Banks tin sent from Rotterdam to Moscow In 1877 Hired at the latter place In the form of powder. This alteration is flue to a change In the internal crys talline structure ef the metal and Is analogous to the slow transformation of monocllnlc sulphur to rhombic sul- 'J, FUNERAL COSTUMES. Their Extravagance Curbed by Lav at V On Time In England. ,.' Sumptuary mourning laws were for merly found necetuiary 1 In England to restrict the extravagance of the no bility and their Imitators in tb mat ter of funeral coat urn. At tbtfend of to Ofteenth century It was laM down that dukes, ofarqulse and archbishop should be allowed sixteen yards of cloth for their gowns. skppW (mourn Lfrg caaaocksi and mantles: earl fourteen, viscount twelve, baron eight, knight six sod all person of In ferior degree only two. Hoods were forbidden to all except those above the rank of esquire of the king' house- bold. , , ' la the following century Margaret, countess of Richmond, mother of Elen- ry VII., Issued an ordinance for th "reformation of apparel for great es tates of women In tyme of mourn ings." So It eem that men and wom en nave met la tb extravagance of sorrow. ' Even 200 years ago London trades men found that court mourning serl- PROTECTION mains neAf Aedn wa v vtuMU i iy uituua JlVtVllAvll IUI HJJ , ; ; . ;, , , .' y. ( In addition to having an jrisurance policy protecting us against lots by. burglary, . and being protected by the American Bankers Association, of which we are a member, we have a contract with the ( v r ; : D 1. jl F 1 ' AT 1 a?" " 3 1 r!al':sfl-.S-A lA''- - rV' :: riuiierion s national ueiecuve Agency .1 1 m '. 1 14 m , .V '', 1 1. ' giving us tne services ot this worldwide famous detective agency in cases of burglary or forgery. J ' MSBjsaBsaii . . . . , , , . . ' ' First National "Bank phur. As a result, objecta of tin of OU8jy affected their business. Addison A 8TRAXGE MAN. archaeological Interest are rare. Those that have been found hsve been In the form of earthen were vessels, knobs, etc, which have been found In the Swiss lake dwellings coated with tin foil. Casslterite or tinstone Is the sin gle ore from which the tin has been obtained In any quantity. Knowledge and Scientific News, London. t. ' Yesterday's victory in Maine was a glorious one for Democracy and there is no wonder that the Repub licans were overwhelmed with sur prise. They wern't looking for such a defeat For the first time In thir ty years that State will have a Dem ocratic Governor and It is rather singular that Maine's last Democrat Governor, thirty years ago, was the father of the man who was yesterday chosen by the people to be their next executive. With three or four Dem ocratic Congressman chosen in what were formerly strong Republican districts and with a possibility of a Democratic Legislature, which would end a Democrat to the Senate to He Appears in the Panhandle Dis tributing Free Cigars aiVl Suppo sition is That He is a S. McXinch Some Comments on Deserters. To the Editor of The Gazette. There is considerable excitement elicited in the Panhandle section over the appearance of a strange man handing. out cigars right and left, acts kindly- and sociably, puts on no extra airs but talks politics like blue blazes. In conversation never speaks of deserters, which has raised sue- pition that be has deserted his party and is trying to be conducted into some other party. We shall lnvea tigate the matter soon and should it appear that the stranger is S. S. McNinch, of Charlotte, N. C, and that he has played tory and desert ed his colors, we will at once order a courtmartial and give him a fair trial and if found guilty sentence will be passed by the Judge advocate and on election day it will executed We exercise no patience for a de serter, for from sad experience we know they are not trustworthy as an official, private or even as scavinger. They deserve ail the punishment due the crime and should have it. A man that will desert his party is no better than the soldier who deserts his country. Why should he be? A deserter is a deserter all the same and should not be looked upon as a worthy citizen. Thia Is the signal gun of what is to follow. We ask the reason If there la any, why, any voter of the ninth Congressional dis trict of North Carolina should vote for Mr. McNinch or any other Mack. instead of Hon. E. Y. Webb, who has the character among the Republicans of Washington of being the cleanest Representative In the House. BOB PEAK. Cherryville, N. C, Sept. 12, 1910 A PLACID MERCHANT. He Had 8ome Regard For the Social Side of Trade. The summer visitor In a small sea port town was amazed and amused at the assortment of merchandise display ed In the little store at the head of the wharf. The showcase was devoted to an assortment of candy at oue end and a lot of cigars and tobacco at the oth er end and no barrier between. Next to the showcase stood a motor engine valued at several hundred dollars. Thinking to please the proprietor. the visitor remarked that even the large department stores In Boston could not boast of such a collection. 'Well," be said. "I ain't aping them stores, I can tell you. I aim to keep what my folks wane When a man wants an engine for his bo't be wants it, and if the fish are running be can' wait to send way to Portland or Bos ton for It. He want It when he does. then and there," After a little pause be continued "I don't like the way they do business In them big stores, anyway. Why, when you go into a store up to Bos ton the first thing you know some body asks you what you want. "Now, I never do anything like that If a man comes Into my place I pass the time o day and ask him to set and after he's set and talked a while If be wants anything be'U tell me. I never pester a man to buy. May be he ain't come to buy: maybe he's come to talk." Tooth's Companion. relates that at a tavern be often met man whom he took for an ardent and eccentric royalist Every time this man looked through the Gazette be ex claimed. "Thank God. all the reigning families of Europe are well." Occa sionally be would vary this formula by making reassuring remarka respect ing the health of British royalists. Aft er some time Addison discovered that this ualversal royalist was a colored Ilk merchant who never made a bar gain without Inserting in the agree ment "All this will' take place as long aa no royal personage dies In the In terval" London Chronicle. nj ; FJPJ! Gastonia,5N. C. ; , Gaston County's . Oldest and Largest Bank L L Jenkinj, Prett, J. Lee Robinson, V-Pt, S. N. Bojce, Cainier. Solo non-- Civil, Structural and ATLANTA, GA. IX THE CANDLER BUILDING Norcross Co Hydraulic Engineers GASTONIV N. c IN THE REALTY BUILDING Rubscrthe for The Gaxetta. s WE SSURED THE HAN WHO HftS MONEY" IN THE IMS I1MARSHALL FIELD clerked in a atore.when he was a boy.'He put in the bank enough out of his salary to start a small business of his own. Today his establishment is the finest in the world. His two grandsons will get 400 millions each when they are given their share of his estate. Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank . vI Begin an account to-day with the bank that will rre you the glad hand. We welcome new accounts. , . Gtizeiis National Bank of Gastonia X L Uocreres, C N. Emu, Vice-Pres, A. C. Mjers, Oilier. The First Universities. To fix precisely th date of the rise of the Orst universities Is Impossible for the reason that they were not founded, but grew. They were started by a few able men who had something they wished to teach and youths wished to learn. Gradually the free. voluntary center of learning became the organized affair we know as the university. Among the earliest of these centers of learning were Saler no. Naples and Bologna. Italy being the first land to experience the literary revival. We may aay that Balerno university was fairly established by the year 1000. the University of Bo logna by 1160 and the University of Naples by the year 1200. The Unl verslty of Paris, which owes Its ex Istenc to th genius of Abelard. was founded about th cam time. New York American. Handed It Back. A clergyman In the neighborhood of Nottingham was complimenting a tai lor la bis parish on repairs which he had done for him. In the course of conversation he, however. Incautiously observed: "When I want a good coat I go to London. They make them there." Before leaving the shop be Inquired. "By the bye, do you attend my church?" "No," was the reply. "When I want to bear a good sermon I go to Lon don. They make them there." Lon don Tit-Bits. Tea In the Time of Buddha. At the time of Buddha China was en Joying a large foreign commerce in tea. It was carried by her junks to Japan, Korea. Tonquln. Anam, Cochin. Bur ma, Slam. India. Ceylon, Persia and Arabia. According to on record, it was sent to a great black river country west of Arabia, from which It waa sep arated by a long and very torrid sea, which most have been Egypt It was carried by caravans to Uancburla, Mongolia, Euldja. Tartary, Tibet, Per sia and northern India. Couldnf TsH. "Has your pocket ever been picked?" ' "Really, I don't know. It never was before I got married. If It ha been lnc L ef course, would have no way of finding out about it" Chicago Bec-ord-Brald .: The laealratlen. "This 1 a pretty good poem. Too must have had toot strong lasptra- m 1 bad. The editor promised $ia Lonlsvflle CourietsJousaaL Tb heart nt a loving woman 1 a golden sanctuary wber often there reign an Idol of clay. lima rae. MENTAL INFLUENCES. The State ef tha Mind Has a Direct Effect Upon the Body. A good deal la said In these days about the effect of mind on matter In the way of the cure of disease, but less is beard about mental Influences as a cause of bodily Ills, yet it Is an old truth that the state of mind has a direct effect on the body. The gloom and depression caused by worry and anxiety create a morbid condition of the physical system. It Is impossible to feel well physically when the mind and spirits are downcast The blood doe not circulate properly, appetite falls, the hea.4 aches, and If these mor bid conditions continue more deep seated ailments are likely to arise, and cancer may be one of them. With mauy persons a Ot of anger la followed by an attack of Indigestion. Excitement destroys the appetite, bad news creates nausea, fright causes fnlntness. and so on. Violent or de pressing emotions always disturb the equilibrium of body and mind alike. This being the case. It la Inevitable that when these emotions often recur or become continuous serious physloal results will follow. The obvious les son is. then, that mental serenity tends to health Is, in fact, an essential element of health and that Instead of resorting to mind "cures" after the health is broken it I wise to preserve the serenity as a preventive and safe guard against disease. Indianapolis Star.' Lordly Disraeli. Disraeli once told a lady that two possessions which were Indispensable to otber people be had alwaya don without. "1 made," she said, "every kind of conjecture, but without suc cess, and on my asking him to en lighten me be solemnly answered that they were a watch and an umbrella. 'But bow do you manage,' I asked, if there happen to be no clock in the room and you want to know the time? 'I ting for a servant.' was the magnilo quent reply. 'Well,' 1 continued, 'and what about the umbrella? What do you do. for Instance, If you are in the park and are caught in a sudden show er?' I take refuge,' be replied, with a smile of excessive gallantry, "under the umbrella of the first pretty woman I meet.' " Easier to Write It In 1871 Edward Lear was staying with the governor of Bombay at Ma babaleshwar. the bill station of the Bombay presidency. I was there and took a walk with him on day. He asked me the name of some trees. I told him thy were called "Jambul" tree in India. He Immediately pro duced bis sketch book and In bis in imitable style drew a bull looking into a Jam pot. Be said it would help him to remember the name. London Spec tator. Pleasant P reaped. To Isn't stopped at de Palace hotel befo', 1 yo. boss r Inquired the col- ored man who was piloting a Just arrived traveler from tb railway sta tion to th hostelry. "No. But what make you cur of TJhkas yo' gwin dar now, sah," -Pock, .'. Solomon-Norcross Company, Cbn- siilting Engineers, announce the opening of a branch office at Gastonia, N, C., 202 Realty Building, in charge of Mr. S. C. Cornwell, C. E. We are prepared to render expert engineering service on Sewers, Sewage Disposal Plants, Water Works, Pave ments, Stnichiral Steel Buildings.. Reinforced Concrete Buildings, Water Power Development, Expert Surveys, Betterment Reports. "JELUCO" C A':-!-:' Best hunp coal on the market Buy now and save on your winter's supply. No other coal on the Gastonia market compares with "Jellico". It's the hest See me before yon boy; save money and set latufacton. P. R. Huffstetler - Trunks delivered or taken to depot Call Phone 121 or 169. FALL M ILL1NERY - Amiability Rule. Don't flatter yourself that friendship authorizes you ' to say disagreeable thing to your intimates. On tb con trary, th nearer yon com Into rela tion with a person th bum necessary do fact and courtesy become, Hoi Admitted. '. She Oh, I bar no doubt yon love be, but your lor lacks' th supreme touch-unaelfiahneee. , "What make yon say that?" "Ton admit It Ton want to for yourself alone, you say." j Th Utopia of today 1 th reality of tomorrow. Passy. Our new stock of Fall and Winter millinery is coming in every day and is being prepared for in spection by the ladies. All the newest creations in headgear will be found here. . A full line of new Coat Suits, Muslin Underwear, Silk Petticoats and Dress Goods coming in daily. All the newest weaves and patterns- in the fall fabrics. If it is the latest and the best you are looking for we have it :-: :-: :: :-s See us before you buy your fall goods Thomson Merc. Company Gastonia, N. C. HafveVYbuax BOY OR GIRL.: Going away to school or.college? ; If so you couldn't please them better than to send them THE GAZETTE whpe they are away.' une douar wui carry it to inem iwrec , for eight months and will send along a nice 25 cent vest pocket dictionary also. You couldn't spend a dollar in any other way that would furnish them as much pleasure. It will keep. them posted on whats going on back home. Do this to-day. .V "
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
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Sept. 13, 1910, edition 1
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