Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Sept. 16, 1910, edition 1 / Page 6
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TAGE BEL U TIIK GASTONIA GAZETTE. SPECIAL NOTICES NOTICE: TIIK FARMERS' IXIOX tax. COME to the new Ginnery in Dal w. R.t Anuimted Ginnery In the County everything new and up-to date and the best work guaranteed Will treat you right Brother Farmer Will have meal and hulls for sale or o,rhin for seed. S30clmo W S. ROBINSON. XOTICE. Notice Is hereby given that Mc. Q Anders. M. D., has been appointed iiri Director of the Catawba Mutual Life & Health Insurance Co. THOS. H. WHITE. rresident SI 6c 1 mo. CATAWBA (X)l'XTY STREET FAIR Hickory, X. C Nov. -i. and 4, 10 On account of the above occasion the Carolina & Northwestern Hail way will sell special round-trip tick ets" at a rate of one fare, minimum 50 cents, to Hickory, N. ' . and re turn. Tickets on sale Nov. 1st to 4th in clusive, tinal lin.it returning Nov. :th. iaio. E. f. Ri:n. i. Chester, S. C. C. X N.-W. RAILWAY. Schedule in Effort Sunday, June 12, HMO. NORTHBOl'XD. Train No. 10 (Passenger) Leaves Gastonia daily 9:30 a. m. Train No. S ( Passenger ) i.eaes Gastonia daily, (except Sunday) 5:40 p. m. Train No. 00 (Mixed) Arrives Gastonia daily, (except Sunday), 4:00 p. m. SOUTHBOUND. Train No. 9 (Passenger) Arrives Gastonia daily 4:40 p. m. Train No. 7 (Passenger) Arrives Gastonia daily (except Sunday) 10:25 a. m. Train No. 61 (Mixed) Leaves Gastonia daily (except Sunday) 12:25 p. m. TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS. The Gazette's subscription list is growing very satisfactorily. We gladly welcome the new subscribers whose names we are putting on ou. list every day and shall strive to I make The Gazette so interesting and valuable a twice-a-week visitor to their homes that they will not con sent hereafter to be without It. Our method of setting the date of expir ation of your subscription after your name enables you to tell definitely from any copy of the paper which comes to you how far in advance your subscription ha3 been paid either by yourself or some friend who is sending you the paper. AH subscriptions are discontinued promptly when out. SEABOARD AIR LINE SCHEDULE. These arrivals, departures sad aonnectlons with other companies are given only as Information. Schedule taking effect May 15 1910. subject to Changs without notice. Trains leave Charlotte as follows: No. 40, dally, at 4:50 a. m.. for Monroe, Hanrfet and Wilmington connecting at Monro with S3 for Atlanta. Birmingham; with 38 for Raleigh. Weldon and Portsmouth With 66 at Hamlet for Raleigh. Richmond, Washington, New York No. 133. daily, at 9:50 a. m.. for Lincolnton. 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. dally, 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. 123, 9:50 a. m., from all points North, brings Portsmouth sleeper. No. 4 5. daily, at 12:01 p. M.. from Wilmington and all local points North. No. 132, 7 p. m.. from Ruther fordton, Shelby, Lincolnton and C. A N. W. Railway points, Johnson City No. 46 arrives 10:30 a. m, from Rutherfordton and all local stations No. 39. daily, at 10:50 p. m., from Wilmington. Hamlet and Monroe; also from points Kast, North and Southwest, connecting at Hamlet and Monroe Cafe cars on all through trains. Ticket office Pelwyn hotel. All trains run daily. For further Information call on or address James KER, JR., T. P. A.. Charlotte, N. C. H. S. LEARD, D. P. A.. Raleigh, N. C. C. B. RYAN. G. P. A.. Portsmouth. Va. t unity. Parties between Rutherford ton and Hamlet will use trains 46 and 44 Into Hamlet connecting thers with special train leaving about 8 p. m. September 27th. The rats Rutherfordton to Shelby Ine to Jack sonville $10 toTampa $12. "Waco and Cherryvllle to Jacksonville, $9.00 to Tampa $11, Lincolnton to Monroe inc to Jacksonville $8, to Tampa $10. These tickets will be good on any regular train returning up to October 4th, Inclusive. For runner information call on your agent or write to the under signed. H. S. LEARD, D. P. A.. Raleigh. N. C. JAMES KER, JR., T P. A.. Charlotte, N. C. Leg al Blanks Of All Kinds Warranty Deeds, Mortgage Deeds, Quitclaim Deeds, Executor's Deeds, Chattel Mortgages (North and South Carolina), Bonds to Make Title, Agricultural Liens, Attachment Blanks, and others. Mall orders receive prompt atten tion. Gazette Pub. Co. 234 Main Ave., Gastonia, S. C REAL ESTATE All parties having houses, lots or country property for sale will please write me at Lancaster, S. C. or see Mr. W. B. Knight, of Gastonia. I'll list your property, advertise it and sell same on a small commission no sale, no pay. I list and sell Real Estate no matter where locat ed. FOR SALE. Nice six-room house and lot on north side of Fourth avenue in south Gastonia. A nice location and a good big lot, 72 feet front by 200 deep. House nicely fitted up with sewerage, bath room and electric lights. House rents for $15 a month. Price $3,000. 6-Horse-power gasoline engine and 60-lIght dynamo and voltmeter for sale very cheap. T. M. BELK REAL ESTATE AGENT Lancaster, 8. C. W. B. Knight Gastonia Agent Low Round Trip Rates Via Southern Ry. On account of the following oc casions: Ohio Valley Exposition, Cincin nati, Ohio, August 29th-September 24th, 1910. Tickets on sale August 28th to September 24th with final limit to reach original starting point within five days from (fate of sale. Appalachian Exposition, Knox ville, Tenn., September 12th to Oc tober 12th. Tickets on sale Septem ber 10th to October 12th. Limits according to rate. Several low fares with short limit and higher rates with long limit. Sovereign Grand Lodge of I. O. O. F., Atlanta, Ga., September 19th 24th. Tickets on sale September 16, 17, 18, with final limit Septem ber 28th, with privilege extension by depositing ticket with Joint Agent and upon payment of fee of $1.00. National Encampment G. A. R., Atlantic City, September 19th-24th, 1910. Tickets on sale September 15th to 19th Inclusive with final limit September 29th, with privilege of extension to October 28th, by de positing ticket with Joint Agent and upon payment of fee of $1.00. Brotherhood of St. Andrew, Nashville, Tenn., September 26th October 2nd, 1910. Tickets on sale September 24th to 27th with return limit October 5th and privilege of extension by depositing ticket and payment of fee of $1.00. General Assembly of the Episcopal Church. Cincinnati, Ohio, October 5th-26th. Tickets on sale October 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and 10th, limit October 30th. National League of Postmasters, Chattanooga, Tenn., October 12th 14 th, 1910. Tickets on sale October 10th and 11th, with final limit Octo ber 17th, and privilege of extension to October 31st by depositing ticket and upon payment of fee of $1.00. For further Information and rates apply to your ticket agent or write to R. H. DeBUTTS. T. P. A., Charlotte, N. C. Proud day when that first pair of "long pants" is worn! Bring the youngster here and preserve that "expanded chest" and self-conscious air for him to see a year or two from now. J. I. GREEN Photographer Phone 147 A NOTABLE POEM. Langdon Smith's Evolution" has been very wldel copied. Langdon Smith, the war corres pondent and writer, died several years' ago at Brooklyn. No New York newspaper man was better known than Smith, who (could de scribe, equally well, a battle or a baseball game. But the thing that he wrote that will live the longest because It Is worth while is his poem "Evolution." which has been reprinted all over the country. The poem follows: When you were a Tadpole and I was a Fish. In the Paleozoic time, I And side by side on the ebbing tide We sprawled through the ooze and slime., Or skittered with a caudal flip Through the depths of the Cam brian fen, My heart was rife with the Joy of life, For I loved you, even then. Mindless we lived and mindless we loved, And mindless ut last we died; And deep in the rift of the Caradoc drift We slumbered side by side. The world turned on in the lathe of time. The hot lands heaved amain. Till we caught our breath from the womb of death. And crept into light again. We were Amphibians, scaled and tailed. And drab as a dead man's hand; We coiled at ease 'neath the drip ping trees, Or trailed through the mud and sand, Croaking and blind, with our three- clawed feet Writing a language dumb. With never a spark in the empty dark To hint at a life to come. That men might understand. , For we lived by blood and ths right of might i. Ere human laws were drawn. And ths Acs of Sin did not begin Till our brutal tusks wers cons. And that was a million years ago. In a time that no man knows; ' Yet hers tonight In the mellow light We sit st Delmonlco's. Your eyes are deep as the Devon springs. Your hair Is as dark as Jet; Your years are few, your life Is new Your soul untried, and yet Our trail is on the Kimmerldge clay, And the scrap of the Purbeck flags. We have left our bones in the Bag shot stones; And deep In the Carallne crags; Our love Is old, our lives are old. And death shall come amain. Should It come today, what man may say We shall not live again? God the wrought our souls from Tremadoc beds And furnished them wings to fly; He sowed our spawn in the world's dim dawn. And I know that it will not die, Though cities have sprung above the graves. v nere the crooked-boned men made war, And the ox-wain creaks o'er the bur ied caves Where the mumied mammoths are. Then, as we linger at luncheon here, O'er many a dainty dish. Let us drink anew to the time when you Were a Tadpole and I was a Fish. 1K)ES YOUR BABY SUFFER FROM SKIX DISEASE? He would be a heartless father indeed, who did not allay baby's suffering as did Mr. E. M. Bogan of Enterprise, Miss. He says: "My baby was troubled with breaking out, something like seven year itch. We used all ordinary remedies, but nothing seemed to do any good until I tried HUNT'S CURE and in a few days all symp toms disappeared and now baby is enjoying the best of health." Price 50c per box. Manufactured and Guaranteed by A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO. Sherman, Texas. ABERXETHY SHIELDS DRUG CO. Needn't Go West Go Under the Surface for the Rich Soil. Monroe Enquirer. In years gone by they left this section for the West, seeking a rich er soil and more fertile fields. Lift up your eyes and see the cropa now ripening in the fields! Our people no longer go for hundreds of miles and cut off old associates and the ties of home, seeking richer soil, for the great lesson has been learned that not hundreds of mile away to the Westward, but from 12 to 16 inches under the surface of these once considered poor hills is a soil capable of yielding harvests rich as any that grows out of the ground. Yet happy we lived, and happy we loved, And happy we died once more; Our forms were rolled in the cling ing mold Of a Neocomian shore. The eons came, and the eons fled. And the sleep that wrapped us fast Was riven away in a newer day, And the night of death wa3 past. Then light and swift through the jungle trees, We swung in our airy flights; Or breathed in the balms of the fronded palms; In the hush of the moonless nights. And oh! what beautiful yearB were these, When our hearts clung each to each; When life was filled and our senses thrilled In the first faint dawn of speech. WOMAN'S HAIR. Grand Fall Excursion to Jackson ville and Tampa, Florida), via Sea board Air Line Railway, Tuesday September 27th, 1910. The Seaboard Air Line Hallway will operate a low rate excursion to Jacksonville and Tampa. Fla., on Tuesday, September 27th. This il the first excursion of this character ever operated from this section to Florida points,- the rate Is very low and all who wish to spend a grand time in the tropical country should take advantage of this. great oppor- H. Kennedy & Co. Knows of a Preparation That Makes Hair Fas cinating. Pari3lan Sage is the ideal hair tonic and beautifler of the present time. It is compounded on the most ad vanced scientific principles, and noth lng on the market today can compare with it. It accomplishes so mucn more than the ordinary tonics, and does it so quickly that users are astonished. Parisian Sage kills the dandruff germs and eradicates dandruff In two weeks, or money back. Parisian Sage stops falling hair; Itching of the scalp and splitting hairs, or money back. Since its Introduction into Amer ica It has become a prime favorite with women of refinement. Parisian Sage gives a fascinating lustre to -women's hatr and makes It Thus life by life, and love by love, We passed through the cycles strange, And breath by breath, and death by death, We followed the chain of change, Till there came a time in the law of life ' When over the nursing sod The shadows broke, and the soul awoke In a strange, dim dream of God. T was thewed like an Auroch bull, And tusked like the great Cave Bear; And you, my sweet, from head to feet, Were gowned in your glorious hair. Deep In the gloom of a firelees cave, When the night fell o'er the plain And the moon hung red o'er the river bed, We mumbled the bones of the slain. I flaked a flint to a cutting edge, And shaped it with brutish craft: I broke a shaft from the woodland dank, And fitted it, head and haft. Then I hid me close to the reedy tarn, Where the Mammoth came to drink; Through brawn and bone I drave the stone, And slew him upon the brink. Loud I howled through the moonlit wastes; Loud answered our kith and kin: From west and east to the crimson feast The clan came trooping in. Getting More Live Stwk on Your Farm. Progressive Farmer. The plant ' feeds on the soil, the animal feeds on the plant, and the fertility goes back to the soil. This is the Almighty's trinity the plant, the animal, the soil over and over again in unending cycles, if the earth Is to be kept fruitful. Any sort of farming that tries to exist with only two of the three the soil and the plant flies in the face of Nature and of Providence and can only end in failure and poverty. And true as this Is for other sec tions, it Is even truer for the South. The Western farmer, whose land is rich, may grow live stock if he chooses. It s a matter of choice with him. But the Southern farmer whose land is poor, must grow live stock if he is to prosper. It's a mat ter of necessity with h?m. Doubtless you do not wish to go Into general stock raising now, Mr. Average Farmer, but you ought to have more hogs than you are raising. There's a market for pork and bacon and ham prices are out of sight and more money in hogs than in cot ton. You ought to have more cattle, too. Our average farmers In the South don't keep even half as many milch cows aa they should, to say nothing of market cattle. Milk and butter makes up about the cheapest as well as the most healthful of food products, and a farmer should be ashamed to be without an abundance of either. Then, we ought to have more horses more horses to work lmprov ed farm machinery, and more brood mares to raise high-priced colts. Our average farm worker In the South is using only one-fourth or one-fifth as much horse power as the average farm worker in the West. So let's not try to deceive our selves Into thinking it is not practi cable to get more stock on our farms. We shall fail about as badly as we do trying to deceive Nature with a soil-plant team instead of a soil- plant-animal team. few Southern farmers after full investigation will deny the advisa bility of getting more hogs, more cattle, and In most cases more hors es, for their farms. Make up your mind then to begin adding these un til you have a properly stocked plan tation and the best stock, too. Work away from scrubs Just as rap idly but steadily as possible. SYSTEMIC CATARRH. One of many cases where Peruna has done what other failed to do. MR. C A. LANDCRABG. Mr. O. A. Landgrabe, Bom 25, Coal burg, Ohio, writes : "1 bad been a slight sufferer for a number of years, but paid little or no attention to it, until tle spring of ibis year, when aay suffer ing became very aorere. "I bad pain in tho bead, hack, spine, liver, chest, and various part of iry body, besides indication that caused me much trouble and anxiety. I often thought when I retired at night I would not live through it. I tried madlcal aid, but tc no purpose. "Not knowing what was my main trouble I wrote to Dr. n.irtnian, aftci reading of his treatment, for advice, telling him of my varioas ailment, and be notified me at once that I bad sys temic catarrh. 'After using the first bottle of Peruna I felt relief, so 1 continuod to use it until I had taken four bottles, when I felt entirely cured. I recommend it to all others, believing that tliev will ex perience the relief that I did." Pe-ru-na as a .Tonic. Mr. William F. Hawkins, 18 West 8L. Westerly, R. I., writes: 'I wish to give my testimony In favor of Peruna as a tonic. I have used the same for catarrh, and can recommend It to ail who are troubled in that way. Hooper Nominated in Tennessee. At the State convention of the in dependent Democrats at Nashville Wednesday the expected happened when this wing of the Democratic party nominated for Governor, Capt. beu Hooper, the nominee of the Republicans. As noted in Friday's paper Gov. M. R. Patterson, the nominee of the regular Democrats, withdrew last faaturday. This leaves only one candidate for Governor In the field. This action was the result of a coalition between the independ ent Democrats, Statewide prohibi tionists and "Republicans, the other two factions having previously as sisted the independents in putting through the anti-Patterson Judicial ticket. This agreement had refer ence only to the Governorship. The last Republican Governor in Tennes see was Alvln L. Hawkins, in 1881-82. Mr. D. J. Carpenter was Wednes day acquitted of a charge of com plicity in the burning of the ware houses of the Newton Hosiery Mills, of which he was proprietor. The trial was held before a magistrate in Newton and was hotly contested. Carpenter was arrested on the evi dence of a man named Rador who claimed that Carpenter had induced him to set fire to the buildings. Ra dor's assertions were not substantia ted and his character was proven bad. beautiful. It makes the hair grow 'er lolnt and gristle and padded luxuriantly; it is the daintiest and most refreshing hair dressing that science has produced, and has not a particle of grease or stickiness in it. A Jarge bottle of Parisian Sae costs but 50 cents at J. H. Kennedy st Co a. and druggists everywhere. The girl with the Auburn hair Is on every package. "16-30. hoof We fought and clawed and tore. And cheek by Jowl, with many a growl, We talked the marvel o'er. I carved that nlgHC on a reindeer bone With rude and hairy hand. I pictured his fall on the cavern wall Clonlnger Pardoned. Governor KRchln on Tuesday is sued a conditional pardon to John Cloninger, who was convicted at the February term, 1908, of man slaughter and had served about three fourths of his two-year sentence on the roads. Among his reasons for granting the pardon the Governor tatea that all the Jurors living la Gaston county who tried the case, with the exception of one, recom mended the pardon, as well as the attorney who aided the solicitor In the prosecution. ' At the same time Governor Kltchin pardoned Fred Brown, of Iredell CL-ui.tr. serving a five-year term on the rcaJs for larceny. GOOD WAY TO USE HYOMEI FOR CATARRH. Besides breathing through the In haler a few times a day, many ca tarrh sufferers write that they find inhaling HYOMEI (pronounce It HIgh-o-me) from a bowl of steaming water each night before retiring a great aid in curing stubborn cases. Try It; It's very simple; gives quick relief and makes you breathe easier. Fill a bowl half full of boiling wa ter pour Into the water a teaspoon ful of HYOMEI. cover head and bowl with a towel, and breathe through nose and mouth the pleas ant, medicated, antiseptic and heal ing vapor that arises. This method relieves that stuffi ness at once, and makes your head feel fine. You can get a bottle of HYOMEI at druggists sverywhere or at J. H. Kennedy Co's. for only 60 cents. Ask for extra bottle HYOMEI Inhal- ent. But bear In mind that a HYOMEI outfit which Includes Inhaler and bottle of HYOXTEI costs 11.00. But as stated before, . if you al ready own an Inhaler, a bottle of HYOMEI costs but 60 cents. ' : HYOMEI Is guaranteed by J. H. Kennedy Co. and druggists every where to curs catarrh, sore throat, coughs, colds, asthma and croup, or money back. Try It on that gener ous, basis. 16-30.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 16, 1910, edition 1
6
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