Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Nov. 18, 1910, edition 1 / Page 7
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FIUDAT, NOVEMBER, IS, 110. TIIE CASTOXIA GAZETTE. VMill KKVEN. FOR SALE on West Air Line, Cottage with six rooms and pantry electric lights and water, also barn on lot South front, size 100x200. Only three blocks from court house. Terms easy. See me for price. J. White Ware - Gtiiens National Bank Building Real Estate & Fire Insurance Phones 201 and 213 Queen City Granite & Marble Works CHARLES FORD, Gastonia Agent A Marble or Granite which shows lettering well Is what yon need for memorial. Oar fine grained American Ligat Marble or oar Wlnns boro Bine Granite will give yon very durable, handsome monuments and distinct Inscriptions. Call and see them. Take the Large stock on hand at our works DUworth Street Cars. Phone 1018. Boulevard & Palmer Streets, Charlotte, N. C. NEWS NOTES. Mr. Ashley Home, of Johnston countr. baa resigned as a member of the State Hoard of Agriculture on account of his recent election to the lower house of the General Assem bly. Mr. II. D. Edgerton, of Loulsburg has been appointed by Governor Kltrhln to the position on the State Board of Agriculture made vacant by the resignation of Mr. Ashley Home. James A. Cromartle. aged 69, of Soperton. Ga., disappeared from the Seaboard Air Line Hotel at Hamlet Wednesday. November 9th. and so far no trace of him has been found. It Is feared that he met with foul Plaf. Gen. Julian S. Carr, of Durham has announced that he positively will not allow his name to be used In connection with the speakership of the House of Representatives at the coming session of the Legisla ture. The Statesville landmark says that the building of the Statesville Air Line Railroad, which Is to con nect Mt. Airy and Statesville, is now actually in progress. A squad of State convicts went to work on the grading last week Wednesday a handsome monu ment In the Federal cemetery at Salisbury was dedicated to the mem ory of the Pennsylvanlans who are buried there. A special train brought a large number of Pennsyl vanians to Salisbury to participate in the ceremonies. A soeeial from Newton to The Charlotte Observer of the 1 2th states that Judge Pell gave John Rader. convicted of burning the warehouse of the Newton Hosiery Mills two years in the State peniten tiary, this being the minimum pun iwiiAn fk w c- u ishment for 8uch aH offen8e fT 11CUL U1C 1U111UU1C mCUI VfCU iJIliAl A dispatch from Duk says that tho TT.rwln fnttnn Mills, wblch have Steen years ago when the furniture man was slightly been running on short time forsev indisposed in his Bedford estate a diagnosis developed that eral months, have started up full li ...CC : c j i . ... . ..... time, six a ays in me wwt, una mo wo. .rum appcnmciu., oroncnnn, nllin5, announce that they will I gastritis, peritonitis, lumbago. -pneumonia, measles, whoop- make full time from now on if the ling-cough, pink-eye, small-pox, yellow-fever, rheumatism, Bigns of the timB keep brighL r1f,ni kn'l.i:..... Fire at Ashevllle TueBdav night diphtheria, pleurisy, myopia, paralysis, tuberculosis, sciatica, typhoid and abscess of the brain. The doctor prescribed a half-gallon of kerosene; three sticks of dynamite and a box of matches and to BUY HIS FURNITURE from the ARM STRONG FURNITURE COMPANY, where you get the The flames started m Iprice and also a chance on the FIFTY DOLLAR mahogany Iparlor suit with every ONE DOLLAR purchase. V Pits I .:-'''.. . . ' A TURKEY CUTS a big figure at this season. So do our special Thanksgiving pies, cakes, etc. We warrant them to be the equal of any "mother used to make." Couldn't say more than that, could we? Better order yours early. Our ovens are big, but so is the number of people who propose to 'eat its products. m Todd's Steam Bakery totally destroyed Trinity Episcopal church, entailing a loss of about $40,000 with insurance of only $14, 000. The structure was elected In 1881 and was one of the handsom est houses of worship In trie city. the furnace room. To Be Given Away I A dlspatchi from Monroe under date of the 11th states that the Su preme Court has affirmed the decis ion of the lower court in the case of Charles B. Plyler who was convicted nf murder In the first degree for the killing of Carter Parks, his brother In-law. Plyler will be electrocuted hut thf date has not vet been set .fir nu.amk 9Atf 1Q1D ft v ui. ..ll I w" f' " Svc wy nr. Thomas R. Little one of ie $50.00 genuine mahogany parlor suit. Beginning Greensboro's most promtnent young Wednesday, November 9th, and .continuing to December L Ufiadav from unknown caaes. His 4th, we will give with each $1.00 purchase, one coupon family was away and w,ien h was titling you to a chance at the uii. Don t fail to see this jn a dying condition. The opposi tion is that, in a fit of coug.':.g, he bioke a blood vessel. FixKi) von oun folly. suit before you buy. Remember we make the price. CASH - OR - CREDIT C. B. Armstrong Craig & Wilson Building PEARSON ON THE RESULT. 'Former Minister to Greece Is Caus tic. Asheville Dispatch, 9 th. Hon. Richmond Pearson, former Republican Congressman from this district and later United States min uter to Greece, when asked how he explained the dean sweep of the JState, said: "Four causes were oper ating- concurrently to produce the re sult.. First, keen disappointment at IMr. Taft s constant preference of Democrats over Southern Republi cans; second, the Illogical, inconse quent and grotesque action of the Greensboro convention In trying to endorse Mr. Taft without qualifies tion and in the same breath nominat ing to our highest tribunal the Iden jtlcal men whom 'Mr. Taft had sever ely and successively Inspected, in sulted and turned down for an infer ior office; third, the anfblguous, Im pudent and obviously deceptive plank pn local self-government; fourth, bat greater than this, than these, than all, saddling upon the Republican party the Responsibility for alleged acts of Mr. Marlon Butler, commit ted or performed at a time when Mr. Butler was fighting the most cher ished principles of the Republican party and assailing its most beloved ind most honored leaders. This form of TicaYious punishment stands sut unique in the history of political tactics, and men llks My. Simmons An Associated Press dispatch sent out from New York Tuesday says that reports from various parts of the country indicating a fall in the price of meats are reflected by sim ilar reports from local dealers. An- Gastonia, N. C other dispatch from Cincinnati says that meat prices have dropped sharp ly in the past few days there, bacon leading with decline of five cents a pound. and Mr.. Aycock must have laughed in their sleeves while the remorse less work .proceeded. "I believe that the fierce and pas sionate denunciation of Mr. Butler hurt the Republican cause less than Mr. Butler's admission that while holding the State's highest commis sion be prosecuted and later collect ed a claim against the sovereign power which had thus honored Mm. There Is no statute law against such an act, because until now it haa been considered unnatural. If not impossi ble for United States Senators are like ambassadors and not even a Tallyrand or a Machiavelli, though each was a genius of ardent and dar lng nature, ever prosecuted a claim against the government whose high est credentials he bore. It may be said, without harshness or intemper ance that this act alone disqualified Mr. Butler now and forever from be coming the Republican leader of North Carolina." ThanksgiTfng Service. The annual Thanksgiving service participated In by the congregations of the Presbyterian, Associate Re formed Presbyterian and Methodist churches will be held next Thurs day morning at 10:80 o'clock In the Associate Reformed Presbyterian church. The sermon will be preach ed by Rev. George D. Herman, pas tor of Main Street Methodist church. Robin J. Cooper, charged with the murder of United States Senator . W. Carmack, of Tennessee, was giv en a verdict of not guilty Tuesday in the criminal court at Nashville. When the case was called the attor ney for the State recommended such a verdict and the case was not tried. This is the closing scene of one of the greatest tragedies ever enacted In Tennessee. A very interesting case Is being tried In the United States circuit court at Columbia, S. C, In which the United Commercial Travelers Association is resisting the payment of a 5,000 accident policy to the widow of W. O. Houghton, of Spar tanburg. The defendants claim that the bloodpoisonlng which caused his death resulted from a finger scratch on his nose, his widow claims that the bloodpoisonlng resulted from be ing struck by the nozzle of a hose accidentally. Soma Ktartlmg CommrUona Show inic lite Wasteful and Extravagant AdmlrUtrutlon of Our Govern mentMore 8Hnt for Prepara tion for War In Time of lVaw Tluut for the Education of Our Children. Exchange. Rube, you and John Henry sit down here for a few minutes, I want to talk to you. I wunt to try to pound an Idea into your heads. 1 want you to listen to nie with patience, perseverance and pa triotlsin. In this country there are, in round numbers, sixteen million chil dren attending the common schools To educate these In the common schools It costs $330,000,000 per an num. That means about $3.3 expense for each man, woman and child In the country, or about f 20 annual ex pense for each family of six persons You don't begrudge that, for It is in a good cause. You don't want your children to grow up Ignorant. Just keep those figures in your head what it costs to educate your children. There is another ex-pense that you, perhaps have not thought of The appropriation for 'he sup port of the army in this year of our Lord is $'.16,000,000; for the navy $132,000,000, aggregating $ J 8 r. ,- 000,000 for the cost of war, when we include the pension list. In other words we are paying out more for war by $55,000,000 than it costs us to support our common school system. And vet we have no war, and no prospects of any. Think of it! $385,000,000 per an num for something we haven't got, don't want, and are not at all likely to have. This means $4.25 a year each for each man, woman and child in the natfon, or $25 for each family or six. That would put a thousand pounds of flour in the home of every family in the land. It would furnish bread the year round for every worklngman's fam ily in the United States. The United States has no use for a large army ana navy. It srot alone verv well without them up to within a few years ago In 1891 the appropriation for the army ws only $24,206,000. In 1898 it was but $23,129,000. In 1910 It has jumped to $96,- 440,000. In 1891 the appropriation for the navy was $24,136,000. In 1910 It has Jumped to $131,- 350,000. As between the United States and other nations there is no excuse for war, and no such contingency is likely to arise. There is no nation of any size or importance on earth that can afford to go to war with us. Our trade re lations with them are such that peace is more profitable to them than war. We contribute more than any two nations to the feeding and clothing the world. War could only prove profitable to the American manufacturers, Tich contractors and bloated money sharks. And it is this "power behind the throne" that is responsible for the increase in army and navy appropri ations. Behind these appropriations, this increase of the army and navy, is a purpose so sinister in its design and diabolical in Its nature as to make hell itself blush for shame. You're in very select company with a box of Nun nally's Candies. They're the highest grade, the top-notch in purity. And al together delicious ! candies are ex pressed to us a guarantee of fresh ness that helps make them so irresistibly good. J. II. KENNEDY & CO. FARM FOR SALE. 103 acres, mile east of Crowders Creek station, seven mlleB from Gas tonia. Two miles from Union ma cadam road. Five-room house, barn, crib and outhouses. Bargain to quick buyer. Apply to J. W. HILL Pegram House, City. N 28 p 1 mo. NOTICE. Is hereby given that all persons are forbidden to hire or harbor Sue Rbyne, col., aged 17, my servant and hand who has left my employ In vi olation of contract. ADAM LOWRY. N18 p 1 mo. Buy More t.and. Make Debts Easy. MONEY TO LOAN $1,000 to $10,000 On improved farms 10 years time; business property, 3 years. Ask. Building and Loan 65c share month ly. Loans anywhere. Fire and Life Insurance. DAVID P. DELLINGER Lawyer Notary Public Koom 203 Realty Building-. Gastonia. N C. WOOD Small Consolation. Greensboro Record. There Is Just a- little consolation for the Morally Stunted in the elec tion returns. Florida and Missouri killed State-wide prohibition, but it Is a long way to go to get a drink. Subscribe for The Gaxetts. Roosevelt's Mistake. New York Herald. Aeosop's fable of the ass that car ried the Idol is recalled by Mr. Roose velt's conduct since his return from Europe. Seeing all the people as he went along bend themselves in rev erence, the animal fancied that he it was to him they were paying obe isance, and in consequence picked up his ears and flourished his tall. Mr. Roosevelt, received abroad as a for mer president and hob-nobbing with potentates, fancied that it was to him and not the ' nation that obsei sance was paid, and came back with the megalomaniac notion that he was greater than his country. He foolishly fancied that he could brow-beat and bully the voters of this State Into accepting his person al representative for their governor and the people of the United States into accepting his revolutionary and ruinous "policies." He doubtless this morning has a truer measure of bis own stature. He is not havlnr a "corking time." but he known more and now possibly will give ns all a rest Pine Stove Wood, cut and split ready for nse, good big load for $2. Pine Chunks for Wood Heaters, from $1 np according to size of load. I!ny from me and save the worry and trouble of having your wood rut and f-plit, also the waste of chips, bark, etc. In the course of a year I will save you several dollars on your wood bill. Gaston County Has 40,000 people, slzty-ons cottoa mills, $300,000 worth of macadam roads and thousands of prosperous farmers. Gastonia 10,000 people, sixteen cotton mills, l $60,000 court house nearlng comple tion, a $65,000 appropriation for poatofflce building, new passenger depot In prospect; Is on the new York-Atlanta National Auto High way and the Piedmont Traction Com pany's line. There Is only one sure way to reach these people, viz: through the advertising columns of The Gazette. Issued semi-weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays. Advertising rates reason able and made known on application. Carries several times as much adver tising as all other Gaston county pa pers combined. Write for sample copy. Address Gazette Pub. Co. 236 V. Main Avenue, Gastonia, N. C. SEABOARD AIR LINE SCHEDULE. These arrivals, departures and connections with other companies are given only as information. Schedule taking effect Nov. 6, 1910, subject, to change withont notice. Trains leave Charlotte as follows: No. 40, daily, at 4:50 a. m., tor Monroe, Hamlet and Wilmington, connecting at Monroe with 33 for j Atlanta, Birmingham; with 38 for Raleigh, Weldon and Portsmoutfc. With 86 at Hamlet for Raleigh. Richmond, Washington, New Yo. No. 4 8, daily, 7:30 a. in., local for '.Monroe, connecting for all points South. No. 133, daily, at 10:00 a. m., for Lincolnton, Shelby and Rutherford ton. No. 44, daily, at 5 p. m., for Mon roe, Hamlet, Wilmington and all lo cal points, connecting at Hamlet with 43 for Columbia, Savannah ami' all Florida points. No. 47, daily, at 4:45 p. m., for Rutherfordton and all local pointe No. 132, 7:00 p. m., connecting at Monroe for all points North, carries Portsmouth sleeper. Trains arrive in Charlotte as fol lows: No. 133, 9:55 a. in., from aH points North, brings Portsmouth sleeper. No. 45, dally, at 12:01 p. VL. from Wilmington and all loefel points North. No. 132, 7 p. m., from Ruther fordton, Shelby, Lincolnton and Cfc N. W. Railway points, Johnson Ci. No. 46 arrives 10:00 a. in., from Rutherfordton and all local stations. No. 49, dally, 7:25 p. m., from Monroe and all points South. No. 39, dally, at 10:50 p. m., from Wilmington, Hamlet and Monroe: also from points East, North anil Southwest, connecting at Hamlet and Monroe. Cafe cars on all through trains. Ticket office Selwyn hotel. All trains run daily. For further Information call on or address James KER, JR., T. P. A., Charlotte, N. C. H. 6. LEARD, D. P. A., Raleigh, N. C. C. B. RYAN, O. P. A., Portsmouth. Va. F. L Wilson PHONE 270 OR 285. Miss Janie Matthews, of Char lotte, Is spending some time in Gas tonia as a guest at the home of her brother. Mr. J. H. Matthews, on West Main avenue. HUNT'S CURE Guaranteed Cur for all SKIN DISEASE At AbernefJiy-Snieldi Drug Co. 50 cents A. B. Riofaardi Medicine Co.. Sherman. Texas STATS Warrants added to oar list of lsgal blanks, 25 cents per dot es. Mall orders receive prompt at tention. Gaxette Publishing Co., Gastonia. N. C. Legal Blanks Of All Kinds Warranty Deeds, Mortgage Deeds, Quitclaim Deeds, Executor's Deeds, Chattel Mortgages (North aad South Carolina), Bonds to Make Title, Agricultural Liens, Attachment Blanks, and others. Mail orders receive prompt attes. Uon. Gazette Pub. Co. 236 Main Ave., Gastonia, X. a LADIES LOOK Do yon cat your own stencil pat terns? It's much cheaper than baying- them already cat and you can find more desirable designs. W bars the stencil cardboard, 10x14 Inches, at 25 ci-nta a sheet. Aso carbon paper about same sis for It sents a sheet. r GAZETTE PUB. CO. 23d W. Mala Are. Phone SO.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 18, 1910, edition 1
7
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