Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Oct. 17, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Gastonia Gazette iiWeUillS-UYciiii TUESDAY, OCTOBEn 17, 1918. 11 " a Lot In TODAYt TUESDAY" FANNIE VAKD' IN. it EACH TEAR Paramount WEDNESDAY The Greatest Vampire of th Screen !;:r':'j: . Theda Bara in ; "DESTRUCTION" A Fox Feature in 5 Acta C I;: - FRIDAY v DUST IN FARNUM IN "The Paiibil V AY- T&s Paramount -v DRIUKAIJRAVOr.IAW Play Havoc With "TJieDevaatHisebow" A 5-Act Metro WonderpUy t ; v ; Starring . ' " ; DOROTHY GREEN . AND 1 um: CLIFFORD BRUCE COZY THEATRE 'Jl WEDNESDAY: v J'The Pacifist," featuring Harry Dunkln son; "Meter ia the Kitchen,' comedy with Ivy Close; "IoIaa Promise, Blograph re-Issue featuring Mary Pick ford. I n; THURSDAY; "Secret of the Submarine,' fourteenth chap ter; "A Deluded ',WM,', with Virginia Norden. f Phone 612 GASTON IN THE EIGHTIES Interesting Events fit the County Thirty-Odd Yean Ago as Recorded la the Gazette To Which la Added State and General News Notes and Some General Heading Matte " That Proved of Ineresi a Third of a' Centnrp Ago. FIXTY.XITTI1 1XSTALMIENT ... ; ; Local jou& (From The Gazette of Not.' 19, 8L Dr. Jas. M.TempIetoff-oTDallas, la attending the Baltimore Medical (ol- Uie, and . will be absent three months. . . . - , ., Messrs. Lewis Bros, fired op thetr -engine for the first time last Satur day. ' Now there axe four steam mills In town. rS ; i -v. -:f , Mr. J., B. Richards purchased this week of Dr. R. H. Adams, 57 acres of land situated one and a half miles northeast of Gastonla. The consld eration was 11,100. Mr. James C. Jenkins has located In Atlanta to practice law. His office Is on Marietta street, where we hope to hear of his success. : , . " . White kilUng frosts visited this section "Wednesday and, Thursday mornings of this meek. On Thurs day morning Ice was an inch thick. Mr. J,' Rankin Falls, who had i fine mule killed at Gastonla last sum tier, had the misfortune of having its ate seriously ' Injured Monday ev ening. - - .. .-V.T ; v ' ' Abont 6 of the best looking young business men of this town went down . to Kings Mountain Sunday evening to get a look at the girls. Bad! , bad'. bad!!! on Gastonla., i i ! Mr. Charley W. Boyd and wife, nee Miss Laura Davis,-have returned to Gastonla and it is rumored - that they will make their future home in Gaston county. Plenty of room for such folks as they. .. Mr. ;B. L. Wilson; of V Pleasant Ridge, has sent The Gazette two, well-developed ears of. corn grown from the same shoot, filz ears are frequently seen on a stalk, but when If comes to two from the same germ some one ought to explain. The Gastonla Btfnd baa recently undergone considerable changes. Mr. 7. M. Fayssoux Is now' musical . di rector. " v '--. . '', Mr. Wm. T. Whitesides, a well-to- o and bard-working farmer of .Crow T I.IKE THE MOST OP ITY. PROSPER. Every man should keep Qt these vs and make the most of his op- -t unities. No man can work his t handicapped with disordered eya and . bladder, aching back, '.en joints, stiff muscles or rhea t rains. Foley Kidney Pills pay t'.fnlve a hundred times over '"i isprovemenL J. H. Kenne i i x (Adv.). A PEARL" THURSDAY y "THE WOMAN AND THE " ' Pathe Drama of Pariamint,' a Big Man in TODAY TUESDAY. ders Mountain; Gaston county; died ai nia restdence Tuesday, 'November isthr of cancer -of the throat. ' He was about 3 s years old and leaves wife and five small children. " uoc itoDtnson, tne noted pos sum hunter of Gaston county, has caught this fall, 148 of the ugly ani- maia, ranging in weights from two ounces to 12 pounds. Greatest num ber caught In one night, 13. He says this Is a poor year for 'possums notwithstanding. - - ' . Two Men Cat. (From The Gazette of Nov. 19, 81.) James Night, white, and - John Wright, black, both of Gaston coun ty, got into a difficulty Sunday after noon, in wnicn JVlght got his throat cut to the windpipe. Whiskey was ins cause. , Another Marriage. (From The Gazette of Nov. 19, '81.) weanesday, at the home of the bride's father, Mr. Jonas Hoffman in Dallas, Mr. O. P. Rhodes, a popular young merchant of that town was united lit marriage to Miss Alice nonman. The ceremony was, per formed by the Rev. J. R; Peterson, of the Lutheran church. The bride Is one of the most popular of the Dallas young ladies. They took the 6 o'clock train for Lincolnton, where they will be received by the family of toe groom. y. :, . , . ' Married. ' (From The Gazette of Hot. 19, 81.) In Gaston county November 17th. Dy ev. j. J. Kennedy. Mr. John A. Craig and Miss Lou Womble. . Local Dots. (From The Gazette of Nov. 28, 81. "Marvin" la married. .. Cotton la 11 and a Quarter cents. This was a rainy and sloppy week. The thermometer stood freezlnz at iz o clock M. Friday. v Diabolic acid was called for at the 1 drug store this week. "uoc" Robinson refused 840 in I gold for his famous 'possum dog, buck. - . . Mr. Wade Rankin sent Mr. Jonas Hoffman a 'sweet potato which meas-1 USED IT ELEVEN YEARS. ' There Is one remedy that for many years baa given relief from coughs, colds, croup and whooping cougn. Mrs. Chas. RIetz, Allen MUls, Pa., writes: "I have used Foley's Honey ana Tar ror the past eleven years and I would not be- without It." , It promptly relieves ' hoarseness, tick ling throat and wheezy breathing. J. H. Kennedy A Co. (Adv.),1 v 1 ey III . ABOUT CONSISTENCY, ' '..-;iV7-(By Savoyard.) ; : Some folks believe It was Thomas Carlyle, and other :. think . It was Ralph Waldo Emerson, , who said that consistency la' the . hobgoblin of little mlnda. If that be so, our glorious Union has much more than its fair share of diminutive thought mills. A great ado la made of some of the thoughts and words and ac tions, of Woodrow Wilson that-conflict with one another. : Home great men see in it weakness, vacillation. cowardice, and so forth. .Others think he is dishonest and depraved, i Let ns take a glance at some of our great statesmen of the past. How about Major General Andy Jackson? When a Senator In Congress General Jackson was a supporter of the Unit ed States bank, but when. President Genera. Jackson smote that . bank and It. ceased to exist, , ', How about Henry Clay T - He began political lire the adfersary of that same United States bank, t but .subsequently as Senator and Speaker of Congress Mr. Clay was its ablest defender. " : i John C. Calhoun, who had ' the most exquisite mind American states man ever was endowed with, - ana personal character ' - "Chaste as the Icicle That's curdled by 'the frost from ; purest snow - And bangs on DIan'a temple John C. Calhoun, early In his Con gressional career, was an advocate oi ar protective tariff. - Tet a time came when he threatened the national life of the Union because of the "Tariff of Abominations" passed In 1828 And how - abont Daniel Webster, whose mind, possibly, was even lar ger. If less profound than that of the great South Carolinian? In 1824 Daniel Webster made the most pow erful argument against the dogma of a protective tariff that ever came from any American, and yet a. few years later he advocated a protective tariff because Henry Clay's Idea had prevailed and a protective tariff had withered the shipping industry . of New England and turned .nat sec tion into a manufacturing communi ty. ' You see a high tariff and a mer chant marine dont go together,, yet there is that august and doleful me diocrity, Charles Warren Fairbanks, running up and down the country preaching high tariff and merchant marine. You will as soon unite the church and the grog-shop. A protec tive tariff is made to destroy trade. A ship is made to Invite trade. How about Thomas B. Reed 7 What of his consistency? Was he weak? Was he vacillating? Waane ure'd 22 Inches in circumference and weighed 6 1-z pounds. Rev. S. Head has recently become one of the large real estate owners in Gastonia and has already ' begun to cut down the old field pines whlcn is a mov d the. right direction. He has beautiful property. Some hands working for Mr. W . D Glenn on Crowdera Creek were tear ing down an old house last week (the old Patterson house) and found embedded within the walls a . bag containing 8 65 In gold and silver coins. Married. (From The Gazette of Nov. 2681.) November 8th by John Rutledge, J. P., Mr. Wallace Reel and Miss Ma ry Summey, daughter of Andrew Summey, deceased. ' Died. (From The Gazette of Nev. 26, '81.) Near Gaffney, 3. C., Nov.. 19th, of Irritation of the brain? Minnie Tor- rence, infant daughter of W. D. and Mary M. Rhodes, age 9 months. In this county. Nov. 17th. Mrs. Nancy Ormand in the 80th year of her age. She was the widow of the late Col. Ben jarinn Ormand and was a member "of Long Creek church for many years. In her Infirmities and afflictions she manifested Christian patience and submission. In the ag onies of death she said. He leadeth me." She leaves a large circle of devoted children and grand children to lament her death, whose loss is her eternal gain. J. J. K, , ... . News Notes. (From The Gazette of Nev. 26,81.) At Athens, Ohio, Chris Davis, a mulatto in jail for an outrageous as sault on Mrs; Locke, an elderly lady, was hanged by a mob on Monday nlzht. Tha sheriff was overnowered and held while the mob broke into the cell and took Davis out. Yester day morning his dead body -.was found hanging to a bridge. The populace at - Washington Is down on Guiteau. - With - half r a chance they would swing him higher than Hainan." They have raised, a purse of 8300 to defend the man who shot him .the other day. . Guiteaa has always been taken to the court in an ironclad ambulance, supposed to be bullet-proof, ' and the precaution does not seem to have been necessa ry. The mob wants nis oiooa. : - . (To ba Continued. ) -' CUT THIS OUT IT IS WORTH :' v MONEY. :v -: " .'' DONT MIS3 THIS. Cut out thU alip, enclose with. 5c to Foley & Co.. Chicago. 1114 writing your name and address clearly. Yon will receive in return a trial package containing Foley's Honey- and Tar Compound for bronchial coughs, colds . and croup; Foley Kidney Pills, and Fol- Cathartic Tablets. Specially com forting to stout persons. , J. H. Kn- nedy A Co. (Adf ;) v i I! Cflfc 1 iAW Plate 1 t in iiw i? i ana mma i our nose i 1 1 3 . . ii :: Accorc!lsr to rosr clzna. -' 1 1 .. .... m L! I 3 : i Hie tens are iuj too. Come u and talk it orer. ti uastoma insurance and Realty Company J:'' Real Estate Depti il W. T. Rankin, Prea-Treas. . rl R. G.:Rankini -. ;- S i Andrew E. Moore, Vice-Presta, h r j A o isiuTTiAif. oecrexry - - t J a coward? was he dishonest? , Was he deprived ? Let us see. . In tne Fif teith Congress at least it was one of the Congresses of which John D. Carlisle was SpeakerMr. John Randolph Tucker, a Democrat from Virginia and a great constitutional lawyer, proposed a rule authorizing the Speaker of the House to "count a quorum" In order to relieve , tne body of mischievous and reckless fil ibustering then so prevalent and that rendered congress so Impotent to transact the business. Thomas B. Reed made the most powerful speech against the propos al to give the Speaker the power to count a quorum that was made by anoouy on tne question. He said: i he constitutional idea of a quor um Is not the presence of a majority of the members, but a majority : of the members present and participat ing in the business of the House. It is not the visible presence of mem bers, but their judgments and their rotes that the Constitution calls for.' In the very next Congress Tom i Reed counted a quorum without any ruie autnonzmg him to do so. Like Woodrow Wilson, he had a great big gigantic mind that refused to 'be bound by consistency. But how about Abraham Lincoln T -When he entered upon the office - or President he. declared that he had no constitutional right to Interfere with the institution of African slavery in any State where It then existed, and that, he had no disposition to do so. That was in March, 1861. and In Sep tember, 1862, by proclamation,, na declared free every slave ; in every one of the seceding States. , What they say : about .Woodrow Wilson's "vacillation now is mild when contrasted with what even Re publicans said of Lincoln's "vacilla tion" during the war. The New York Herald, that pursues Wilson in 191 with so much venom, called on the Republican party In 1864 to deny Lincoln a renomlnatlon, and in a single editorial denouncing the President for his conduct of the war. stigmatized him as "nothing but ' a smutty joker" more than a score of times,- Muat Halstead, the .Teddy Roosevelt of that epoch, wrote a let ter to Senator Chase, asking that dig nified gentleman to take Lincoln by the throat and jam his head against the wall and hammer some sense in to it. James A, Garfield, ' old ' Ben Wade and others met in convention at -Cleveland, Ohio, 'and nominated Jonn J. Fremont for President. a Bull Moose affair,' got up to scare the regular Republican convention - and prevent it from nominating Lincoln. Teddy Roosevelt is almost chaste and gentlemanly In his criticisms of Wil son when contrasted with the course and malignant vituperation Wendell Phillips poured out against Lincoln. ' . - victor Hugo in a great oration j said that the two superb forma -of glory came to him who was cursed by tne past and blessed by the future. That glory Lincoln has attained, and i that glory Wilson will attain. The Republicans are circulating a I campaign document calling on ait Northern men to vote against Wil son because he is of Southern birth, i So too was Lincoln of Southern birtn. every drop of his blood Southern. This document Is the production . or a Northern Congressman, one. Pess. whose jaundiced soul could no more appreciate the matchless" eulogy woodrow - Wilson bfbnounced on Abraham- Lincoln September . 4 than the faintest spark emitted by the di minutive ore-fly could eclipse - the moat radiant beam of the giorioui luminary that makes the day on our planet,; :-:.v-. .v.- .-r.'. j But how about Charles E. Hughes? July 31 of this year he favored leav ing; the matter of votes for women to the States. The very next day ' he came out for the Anthony amend ment, which forces woman' suffrage ! on all the States. - . . - . . f .Wash inrton. October 7. ' - Miss Madge Hanna Is spending a few days with Miss Annie Yoder at j Lenoir College, Hickory. ,- - ". To Cora a Cold la Oae Day Take LAXATTVB BROMOQnlalM. II Stop ttie Cni ana Heaoaca aaa works on Ui com. Dnirfitt refond moan if it fails to core. S. w. GKOVii S tgutart ea eack bos. Zic Your Fall and Winter Foohvear b ;j. ,' ." U: 'J.. " :. . ' . -rt; ' V..-'-,;. ..?: : ' .-' ' -'" ' " ' , " r ' " '' - '' Here and ready for ybur approval. Good Shoes for aU tKe famfly. ; " ' ' " v - , '"V 1 .:..' ' ' ' . .- , - . ;v - . ' '.. : .. - ; - : ' " The best in Hats and Men's Furnishings., V -. ;: r r . - .' - . HOWaL-GROVES SHOE CO. i adj uaston Loan ana i rust Loinpany 1 ; ' i "TT"TT i i U.-I y y- " '. ...... .... , , J ri REGISTERED - BERK SHIRE PIGS FOR f SALE. We can furnish reg istered Berkshire pigs of different ages at most reasonable , pri ces. Bred from our selected dams. Pigs from 16 to $15, in cluding registration. u n u ii u M U P 11 n u u p p HILLACRES FARMS, Gastonla, N. C. R. G. Rankin, I S the place for you to is also the place to go or fine rich Ice Cream. i ' ' ' " ' i - i r 1 j - - - -w. . . ,t , i a mentioned and feel sure you will be pleased to patronize us if you care for something up-to-date. Come or phone us and we will be glad to serve you. PHONE 197. 1 v Yc:r Ch:::b cf r,i:: - - - . ... w nnon, raowi m run coior 111 ownif new cataiornc Jnn off trie press. There are rirhty-tbree R') o Hrr, uj. sbown at -pocoi rangiac foam 911.TS.tM3.fS.0li.ji ' CT""! f1 "rW write TOPAYfor ttta sew CtateWof'IUnT-krci. V TirM aud undrica at prion 90 low they will agttmieh you. Aim. full particntari of oar arrat sew offer to delirer to you all tttarart jtrrpaid your choice of any of tha4kfadaor; AGEa Kercies nw may select, for Oiik iuSTlTS FRKSTRlllu This woaderfal offer i ahttitotdw ou4na, , No one criliciaca your choice if it'ia ' P'"fr" thr aw. -. mjvk IU WUUU7N' ll..a.9 LU.rOf L..tlWtJalat..,iv UieUohtiiyjOUMM.t ta bicycle jnirtnent and Snndries as weU aa the Repair Part and Comb 1 il ... v "L. , it-1 liiub ywu w. mtrtn-Tiii wwwj tbiit linCTOTKeq. ai tiALtB LoUA.lt FMVa!. Our 1 r tn Mcyvre an inown ruuy lutntrated, at tlAur USUAli Fl uie "nrai,,""" ny any Bicycle caacera.. Bwn if yoa do not seed a aew or Kepatr Parts, Tires, etc., for jrour old Bicycle, yoa need this Catalogue to tell yoa , r icycic now, or nepair run, 1 ires, etc., I or tiie prices yoa should pay when yoado boy. f 1 f ITS 1 . iT?H Vti Me AtejHii eery Mishborhood to ride I. . - - i I tfJ and exhibit the aew BAtiQER.'' Yoo ca select the ticBlM- Style sailed to yOur owa Deeds. Boys and youns; men in all parts of the country are rx 1 10s- .Rancers" and takinar orders front their friends. Tbey make a rood commiwion on nrrr fie snd so a yoa. Onr arwrt-oatpiit. perfected methods and BUKbiuery enable us to QuaUty" Bicyclea st prices below sll competitors. , . . g-STCSSYCLB AJta AUTOMOIILB tU-VUB. 'rWl-eCaUloiiaos I, "TC W il9 U "TTT cpr4cTi Thoaaandsofour "Bicinnitomenof a swration airo renow barinsUiek Auto" Sundries of as, becanse Uxjr Jtoow "Mead " quality and prices ant ' always tight. - t ,.. rV , fl?,! J!!h&2 1 e'oToae en? win brineios the ; j; l. izz&D cycles co. j cHicACo, illi::c:3 : Sbcoribfor Tte Gazcitc iO Year IT- SEPARATE YOUH MONEY info two parts One to contain the cash -for your needs the other the amount you can spare. Bring the "second pile here and open a savings account" If you keep it by you Itta apt. to be frittered away needlessly. In 'this bant' it wW go, to work for you.' It will not grow less. It wilt graw more. - . t , '- ,.r- , J .-.-f . ,.V ' - .k .. w -.. ii .!. i . ,.j jnu maim ... Im, , i I 1 1 I 1 Proprietor. m i Li buy your Candies and Fruits, to get you a glass of good j We specialize in the above Ill W. MAIN AVE. Fc:r (M) Colors and' - .. ' . laoiona line , , Inner Tube. EIe-' . all the anrmt iaVas .aiwpair ran ana vommrmtioo uners tor seU
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 17, 1916, edition 1
2
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