Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Nov. 18, 1910, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
rar. SIX. TIIR OASTOSTIA GAZETTE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER, J8, 1010. 31 A Splendid Fifty Cent Pocket Knife 1 EE .O NwJ' ViaJ ... id il Several Hundred to be Given Away During the Next Six Weeks. The Gazette has inaugurate a vigorous and active campaign for new subscriptions and is going to spend some money to get new readers. It now has the largest subsciption list any newspaper in Gaston county has ever had but there are still hundreds of people who ought to be on our list who are not. The offer we here make is the best offer ever made by a newspaper in this part cf the country. Here it is: From now until January 1, 1911, we will give to every new subscriber who pays for one full year, $1.50, in ar'vancc, a handsome pocket knife which does not retail fr !.-. ' an Zj a n's nnvwVre and in rno-:t :.!accs is so'd for (-0 cents, and in addition will give them the pancr free from now until January 1, 1911. It simply means we are giving you $2.20 worth for $1.50. . TO THE OLD SUBSCRIBERS who renew between now and January 1, 1911, we will send the paper for one year and give this handsome and useful pocket knife free. We give the old subscriber the same we do the new ex cept in the matter of a few weeks time added to the sub scription of the new reader. The Gazette has been Gaston county's leading news paper for more than 30 years and is still holding its own and gaining ground. It is published twice a week, Tues days and Fridays, eight pages each issue, and gives all the' news of the town and county with state and general news condensed. It is the HOME PAPER for Gaston county people. This is the best opportunity you've ever had to subscribe. Give your subscription to our so' e 'er, MR. A. E. EEAM, call in pcrrcn a' cur cf;!ce cr reir.it ly mail. I.i any cace you will get t!:e knife. If you are ml convinced that it's a bargain woIL we'll know that yea do not know a bargain waen yea ccc cne. AdJess a!l orders to RE 236 West Main Avenue ompaiiy Gastonia, North Carolina ir1 Your Patronage Solicited We wish to announce that we have just completed the erection of an up-to-date gin plant, consisting of three 80-saw gins, operated by electrical power. It is located near the Gray Manufacturing Co.'s mill at the intersection of the Pisgah and Kings Mountain roads and is well situated for the convenience of the farmers on these two roads. We have also erected a warehouse for handling seed and will keep a supply of cotton seed meal on hand for exchange purposes. This plant, to gether with the one situated at our mill, gives us a total ginning capacity of 75 bales of cotton per day, conse quently we can assure our customers of the promptest and most efficient service. Let Us Gin Your Cotton. Southern Cotton Oil Company Gastonia, N. C. Real Estate is One of the safest and most profit able investments you can make these days. We are in a posi tion to show you some of the nicest building lots that it has been our pleasure to show for sometime. Also if you want a farm just let us know the size and kind and we will do our best to supply your wants. Come in and see us and let us talk to you about this matter of Real Estate and see if we can't help you to make ready for a rainy day. Let us make you terms and prices. Gastonia Insurance & Realty Company Champion Strong Man Dead. Lynn, .Mass., Nov. 15. Charles Orrin Breed of this city, formerly world's amateur champion strong man, and one of the most prominent Methodist Episcopal laymen in New England, dropped dead from hear; disease today. Mr. Breed was ."4 years old. As a young man he be came famous for his extraordinary strength and traveled throughout the country giving exhibitions of muscular prowess, meeting strong men everywhere and never once be ing defeated in strength tests. If is said of him that he could lift a bar rel of flour and hold it at arm's length above his head. Eugene Belvin, the three-year-old son of Deputy Sheriff E. G. Belvin, of Durham, choked to death Tues day while eating a raw potato. LOST HER HAIR. Woman Almost Baldheaded Grew Four Inches of Hair. Here is a piece of live news from Browntown, Minn., that ought to en terest skeptical men and women read ers of The Gazette who are losing their hair or have dandruff or itching scalp. Remember that J. H. Kennedy & Co. sell Parisian Sage under a post tive guarantee to stop falling hair and itching scalp and eradicate dandruff in two weeks. Parisian Sage is a most refreshing and daintily perfumed hair dressing, free from grease or stickiness. It makes dull, lifeless hair radiant and lustrous. "Parisian Sage is the best hair grower and beautlfler and dandruff cure. I lost all my balr throuzh ty phoid fever; I was almost baldhead ed and my scalp was as sore as could be. I tried everything, but hi vain. Finally I tried Parisian Sage, and after using on bottle my hair started to trow, and has grown three or four Inches inside of two months. I advise every lady who wants beautify hair to use Parislaa 8age' Kiss . Heta it. Kroger, tfrowniown. Minn., June 8, IS 10. "Parisian Sage is only 50 cents a Urge bottle at J. H. Kennedy A Co s. and druggists everywhere. "The girl with the Anbira hair is ba ev ery package. 4.1 1. Our Health Department only learn and practice individually Thanksgiving Day Orphans Day. the best medical principles of hy- j The work of the orphanages of giene, sanitation, and temperance, j North Carolina appeals most strong- but we must double the appropria tions and the moral support given our State, county and municipal health officers. Raleigh (N. C.) Progressive Farmer and Gazette. Making the South the Healthiest Portion of America. What improved methods of sani tation will accomplish was strongly shown by Caspar Whitney in a re cent issue of Collier's Weekly. Writ ing of Cuba, once fever-stricken and an object of fear for all who valued j their lives, he showed that its pres ent death-rate of 12.6 per thousand is lower than that of the United States or any European country, the j average death-rate in the United States being 30 per cent higher, or 162 per thousand. All of which goes to show that by keeping up the fight against our great preventable diseases tuberculosis, malaria, ty phoid, and hookworm disease we could make our own Southern States, which are more advantageous ly situated than Cuba, not only as healthful as any other section of the United States, but very much more healthful than any other sec tion. In a recent address in the House of Representatives, Congress man Ransdell, of Louisiana, speak ing of the health of the South, was interrupted by Congressman Goul den. who pointed out that whereas twenty-five years ago insurance com panies objected to risks in the Sou thern cities, there is now no dis crimination whatever against the South. The simple truth Is, as Surgeon- General Wyman of the United States Public Health and Marine Service declared to the Southern Commercial Congress, that while ne glect of sanitary precautions may be more hurtful in the South than else where, the general observance of health rules will accomplish even more here than elsewhere. We can't afford to let the Cubans beat us. If they have reduced their death-rate to 12.6 ner thousand against 16.2 for the United States as a whole, Chen we in the South ought to do better still. But to do this we must recognize the fact that neglect of sanitary precautions " is really more serious . ia the . 8outh than elsewhere, and we must not Mr. Charles H. Armfield, a prom inent lawyer of Statesville, . died Monday night at Morganton where he was undergoing treatment at the State Hospital for Bright's disease. He was 50 years old and was a son of the late Judge R. F. Armfield. He was a brother of 'Adjutant Gen eral J. F. Armfield of the North Car olina National Guard who died re cently. He was a member of the board of directors of the State In sane Asylum at the time of his death. Mr. Armfield was one of the ablest lawyers in the State. CATARRH SUFFERERS. Good Thing to Know. If you now own a Hyomei bard rubber inhaler, J. H. Kennedy & Co. wants you to know that they will sell you a bottle of HYOMEI for on ly SO cents. Remember this, all who suffer with catarrh a bottle of HYOMEI (pronounce it High-o-me) is put up in a separate package and sold for 50 cents, to accommodate the vast army of people who already own a Hyomei Inhaler. J. H. Kennedy & Co. will sell it to you at that price and give you the opportunity to begin at once to rid yourself of vile catarrh and the snuffling, hawking and spitting that go with it. Many people through years of ne glect have let catarrh get a strong hold upon them. Some of these peo ple unreasonably think that one bot tle of HYOMBI ought to cure them. No matter how chronic your ca tarrh troubles, HYOMEI is guaran teed by J. H. Kennedy 4b Co. to cure them if yon give It'half a chance. Just breathe it, that's all, and Its .healing, thing, antiseptic proper ties will make you feel better la day. If you own an Inhaler get a 60 cent bottle of HYOMEI at J. H. Kennedy Co's. today. If yon do not own Hyomei inbsW, ask for a $1.00 outnt, whieb: Includes Inhaler. 4-11. ly to reason and to sympathy. These institutions are worthy of the heart iest support of our people and they have a large place in their Interest and gifts and efforts. At the Thanksgiving season minds and hearts turn especially toward our orphanages and many are the practical expressions of gratitude made to this cause by a people richly blessed. These love-prompted gifts to car ry on this blessed work with these little ones surely must be accepta ble to God, the Father of the father-' less. It seems that, here in North Car olina, Thanksgiving Day has been specially set apart as "Orphan's Day" and we rejoice that this is true. The contributions made at this season help very much Indeed in the support of our various orphana ges. We trust that even larger offer ings will be made at this Thanksgiv ing season than ever before to the end that these institutions may be the better able to perform their ser vice. They need funds for mainte nance, for improvement and for the extension of the work. Kings Mountain's Floral Fair a Sno ceee. The Herald, 10th. The annual Floral Fair, given by the ladies of the various churches of Kings Mountain, was pulled off last Wednesday and Thursday, ovember 2d nd 3d, and was a success In ev ery particular. The spacious store-, rcom of the rew Patterson building on Mountain ifeet was filled with flowers, ferns and the sales booths An admission fee of ten cents was charged to everyone who went here, each person being tagged so as not to be charged a second time. The large vacant storeroom of Mrs. Ut ile Falls, just on the opposite side of the street, was turned into a large dlninghaU. not. unlike the busy res taurants in the cities, and this prov ed to be the drawing attraction. Those in charge of the financial side pf the fair report that about $560 In cash was taken 'In and are well satisfied; that they have never hai a , bigger success with a flower show. J 1 t
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 18, 1910, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75