Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / May 30, 1916, edition 1 / Page 3
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HOME FROM COLLEGE. r v.. What Do Yom ICiriow About Tine Maxwell Car ? THIS U the time of the year when more people are considering the question of "what car to buy" than at any other time of the year. This community has its full share of people who will soon be driving their first car or a new car to replace the old one. Now, we know that we are going to sell Max well Cars to a great many of these people de pending upon how many we are able to acquaint with the merits of the Maxwell The generous value offered in the car is so evident its past record is so full of good performance- owners speak so well of it that when the buyer knows these things, he is eager to buy a MazwelL In order to tell as many people as possible about the merits of the Maxwell Car we are going to spend a lot of money in the next few weeks in this paper advertising Maxwell merits to those who do not know them. The reason we want to sell as many Max wells as possible this season. Our future allot ments will depend upon how many Maxwells we sell now. You may know that the Maxwell market is a buyer's market, not a seller's market broadly speaking. The demand for Maxwells the country over is greater than the supply. For this reason cars are allotted to dealers by the factory according to the size of the dealer's business. We want to make a showing and be in a posi tion to get a generous allotment of Maxwells hereafter. Because the more Maxwells are sold in any community, the greater is the future demand. We realize.the opportunity to do an ever-increasing Maxwell business. This is only the first of the several messages we are going to print a few days apartconcern ing the Maxwell Car. But we. don't expect to be able to adequately present Maxwell' merits in printed words alone. If you are one who is going to buy a new car you will find it decidedly to your advantage to find out all you can about the Maxwell before you place your order. Come in and talk it over with us and let us demonstrate the car to you. Then, don't take our word alone, but ask those who now own Maxwells. Get "posted" about the Maxwell and you will realize more satisfaction and get more "value re ceived" for your motor car money than ever before. And we are just as willing to have you investi gate other cars just as fully as you do ours. The Maxwell will not suffer by the comparison. Why not start your Maxwell investigation today? Touring Car $655 Roadster $635 F. O. B. DETROIT Gastonia Garage Co. 114 E. Airline Ave. Phones 193 and 201 Time Payments if Desired IIP The ieadliet Wewpon. Teddy and all of his sons will go To war, east, north or south; . And we would like to see the foe When Ted shoots off his mouth. Houston Post. All the railroads of the State will give a special rate to the annual meeting of the North Carolina Good Roads Association, which meets at Wrightsvllle Beach, Wilmington, June 21 to 23. A round trip fare of three cents, plus 35 cents, will be tn effect from all points in the State. Tickets will be on sale June 19 and good returning until June 26th. CONSTIPATED UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK. DON'T STAY BILIOUS, "DotWs Urn Tom" Will Cleai Your Sloggisfe Lfor Better Hub Calomel aid Ch Not Salivate. Calomel makes you tick; von lose a day's work. Calomel is quicksilver and it salivates; calomel injures your liver. If you are bilious; feel laxy, sluggish nd all knocked out, if your bowel are constipated and your Dead achea or Stomach is sour, lust take a spoonful of ikannleas Dodson's Liver. . Tone, instead of using' sickening, salivating' calomel. Dodsoa's Lhrer Tone is real liver medi cine. 0 You'll know it next morning be cause you will wake up feeling fine, your liver will be workings your. bead-, ache and diuIneM gone, -your stomach will be sweet and bowels regular. You will feel like working. -, You'll to ebeer fah full of energy, ihi ambition. Your drugjist or dealer sells you a 50 cent bottle Of Dodson's Liver" Tone under my personal guarantee that it will clean your sluggish liver better than nasty calomel; it won't make you sick and you can est anything you want without being salivated. Your druggist guarantees that each, spoonful will start your liver, clean your bowels and straighten you up by morning or you get 'your money back. Children gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone because, it is pleasant . tasting and doesn't ' gripe or cramp or make them sick. I am selling millions of bottles of Dodson's Liver Tone to people who bave found that this pleasant, vegetable liver medicine takes the' place of dangerous calomel . Buy one bottle on my sound, reliable guarantee. Ask your druggist aiwui me . . - " ,-- I , .- PUBLIC QI KSTIOXS. Farmer Would Like to Know Where legislative Candidates Stajid on Certain Questions. To the Editor of The Gazette: It has been suggested by a number of the members of the county farm ers union that the several candidates to represent Gaston county in tne State Senate give the voters of thetr county their views on the following subjects, which were submitted toy the State council of the farmers un ion to the State candidates: 1. Repeal of the merchant's crop lien. 2. Provisions permitting neigh borhoods to adopt race segregation in land ownership. 3. A just and equitable system or taxation, (a) lightening the burdens upon labor by putting a larger pro portion upon inheritances, (b) with constitutional provision for a lower rate on resident than on absentee landlords and (c) Increased rate on lands held out of use. 4. Provision for incorporating ru ral communities. 5. Initiative and referendum. 6. 'A stringent anti-usury law, and laws regulalng banks as public service corporations. ' 7. Giving some official authority to vegulate Insurance rates. . ; - 8. A stats warehouse system some what like the South Carolina plan. 9. A simplified and popularized Torrens system, ofxegUterina; . . land titles. H. Provisions for furnishing text-books to the people at cost. 11. Requiring retained attorneys for public service corporations to sever such connections before enter ing the Legislature. An expression from each of the candidates, published in the local papers, would enable the voters to choose intelligently among those seeking office, after finding out how the various candidates stand on these questions. UNION' FARMER. Mr. N. A. Morris, of the Trenton Mill, 8 pent Saturday and Sunday with friends In Charlotte. FEEBLE, AGED WOMAN Says Vinol Made Her Strong v Grand Saline, Texas. "I am an aged woman and for a longtime was weak and feeble but Vinol restored my health and strength so that I feel almost young again and am doing all my housework. Old people who are weak and feeble should try Vinol and know its merits as I do. It is the best medicine to create strength and for chronic colds I have ever taken.' Mrs.FANm E. Rodgebs. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonie,is sold on our guarantee to benefit or your money will be returned. J. H. KENNEDY & CO.. DRUGGISTS Gastoalav if;' C. . IM) YOl' KNOW THAT Life is a constant struggle against death? Dirty refrigerators may ina!e sickness? The 1. S. Public Health Service Issues free bulletins on rural nanita tion? The defective citizen of today is ofttimes the unhealthy child of yes terday? Every man is the architect of his own health? Its the baby that lives that counts? Tuberculosis is contagious, pre ventable, curable? The full dinner pail the open window the clean well make for health? COLDS QUICKLY RELIEVED Many people cough and cough from the beginning of Fall right through to Spring. Others get cold after cold. Taks Dr. King's New Discovery and you will get almost immediate relief. It checks your cold, stops the racking, rasping, tissue-tearing cough, heals the Inflam mation, soothes the raw tubes. Easy to take. Antiseptic and Healing. Get a 50c. bottle ot Dr. King's New Dis covery and keep It In the house. "It Is certainly a great medicine and I keep a bottle of it continually on hand." writes W. C. Jesseman, Fran coula, N. H. Honey back if not sat isfied but It nearly always helps. Adr. 1 Mount Holly Yomg People Back for Vacation Threw Deaths He Mill Hornsea Going Up Other Live news items, - , -.: - .. . Correspondence of The Gazette. . MT. HOLLY, May 27. Good ralea have prevailed, crops are Ipmrorttx and all are cheerful. The following parties are at homo from the tedium of school life: Mr. Thomaa Belk, who has been at A. V M.; Misses Lollle Rankin, at State. .-Normal, ureensooro; urace ; n . Kohn and Camelia Hamilton, Le- nnir Ciill.ffA l4ijlrA.r anil Vf 1 a Christine Kutledge. who has bee a teaching the past year In StateiviUe. nrln. .Ka ..a.., L. . n a, V. have come and gone, having enjoyed the hospitality of the town. . Mr. Kooert vostner. or uincomton. Is visiting his sister, Mrs. R. C. Belfc, and brother, Mr. J. A. Costner.- Mrs. Miles P. Hoffman, who baa been visiting her parents, Mr. ' and -Mrs. A. P. Rhyne, has returned ' to ; her home at Ambler. Pa. ' : . ' Our community and parts near have suffered from death the past ....t ... 1 - W f I .. DaKamaa U.m . ard, 77 years old, was stricken witn paralysis the 24th, lingered , a few davs and died, fehe waa a moat ex cellent lady, a joy to her community, and a help to her church, the Metho-. Mr. James McKelvey died at his home at Mountain island of tubercu losis, after a lingering Illness. He down early. He was ft consistent " member of the Methodist church. ;- AIoa i ta Unltanlatv flat I In aTnaiV roiDV 4vvais nviioviAVf utuu, in eae lotte and was brought here for Inter- , tian and given to doing for neigh bors and those in need. How true the Scriptural statement, "Man that is born or woman, is 01 lew aaya ana run or trouDie. The dwellings for the Adrian Mills, under the direction of the contrac tor. Mr. Robert Rankin, are going up rapidly. The stakes for the mill have been driven, the P. ft N. has put in a side track, and lumber is be- ing receivea as neeuea. ; o Miss Cqrrins Puett's music stud ents gave a recital May J 7th, which, was exceedingly delightful and was enjoyed by all, and the attendance was very generous. A splendid pro gram was rendered. ' " Messrs. Boyden and Hoover are at hnniA from f!hanl Hill. The . re port plenty of Work with some fun trown In. , (w TIIK REVOLT OF THE IXN FEIN. The Youth's Companion. " The pathos of the Irish revolt that rose and failed within a week lies to, the fact that it was the work of gen erous and unselfish young men who were carried away by a passionate, love for the land and the language ot their fathers, but who had not the wisdom to understand what was pos sible and what was not possible, or to put Into practical form the vis Ions that moved them. In part at least, the 61 nn Fein (pronounced Shin Fane) is an out growth of the recent Gaelic revival ' In poetry and the drama. The leaders ot it are not from the men of affairs, the merchants or farmers of Ireland. Those men know that the country is more prosperous to-day than It has been for a hundred years. nnri thv m In th increaaina' will. ingness of England to treat Ireland, fairly and justly a promise of greaU er prosperity than the Island could attain by itself. The leaders of the , Sinn Fein are not even the politicians or ireiana, ror tnose men are clever enough to see that home rule Is at- -tainable, and that Independence la not attainable at any price that' The men who led the uprising in Dublin were poets and dreamers. The "president of the republic" waa the principal of a college near Dublin and a writer-of Gaelic verse. One of the chief prophets of the move ment for Irish independence, al- . though he seems not to have been implicated in the actual revolt, is the proressor or early Irish history at I'nlversity College. Among the.' staff that surrounded President I'earse were a number of men who had taken part actively or apprecia tively In the revival of Gaelic liter ature. The rebellion was- inspired and largely fought by men in whom the dreamy, impractical side of the Celtic character was predominant. ;! Their failure was certain from the first. Their tolitical nrnirramme was sentimental and their military preparation Inadequate. They had no " ran 1 I ( U'M Aatttnirl mi itnnvt a - am rr people, and they had made it difficult to get any by offending and aliena- ting the Catholic clergy in a land where the influence of the Church of . Rome is strong. It is not by such means that the union of Great Britain , and Ireland can be seriously threatened. ' l. Miss Mary Rice, of the city schools faculty, left yesterday for her home at Farniville. Va. --Miss Mamie Aiken, of Atlanta, spent Sunday here with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. K. S. Aiken. She was en route to Atlanta from Monroe where she attended the funeral or the late F. F. Griffin. Mr. F. F. Griffin, who severar years ago practiced law here, died Friday in Atlanta of pellagra. The body was taken to his old home, Monroe, and was buried there Sun day. Mrs. Griffin and Miss Mamie Aiken, of Atlanta, accompanied the body. Rev. G. P. Abernethy; pastor of the Loray Baptist church, Is assisting . Rev. C. A. Rhyne in a ten-days re- ; vival meeting at Rhodhiss. The martin er is nrnrrMslnr tnlanAMTv and there are many professions. Mr. ' Abernethv will return to fiaafnnr before Sunday. AS nEAL SPRING LAXATTTE - A good and time tried remedy Is Dr. King's New Life Pills. The first dose will moTe the aluggish bowels, stimulate the liver and clear the sys tem of waste and blood impurities. You owe It to yourself to clear the system, of body poisons, accumulat ed, dnriag the winter. Dr. Kl2' New Life Pills will do it.. J 5c. st your DruggisU-Adn 1
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
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May 30, 1916, edition 1
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