Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / May 8, 1917, edition 1 / Page 3
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
I TUESDAY, MAT 8, 1917. THE GASTONIA GAZETTS. -.f Price Real Estate 'aiicls lifeurance Co. PLANT YOUR MONEY IN GASTONIA DIRT AND SEE IT GROW If you want a bom in Gastonia or a farm in Gaston count you can get it from us. Yon don't bare to invest a large4 sum or money. We build your bouse and let you pay for it by the week or month. We have many bouses and lots for sale. We can suit you. What better investment can you make than to buy you a home in Gastonia? . SEE US FOR BUSINESS J. L. PRICE, General Manager A. E. MOORE, Pres. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Frank L. Costner REGISTERED PHARMACIST (FIP- TEENTH YEAR.) R. H. Jordan Co., Charlotte, X. C. Telephone and mail orders receive prompt attention. Nurses' Register. W. B. MORRIS REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST Eyes examined and glasses properly fitted at Torrence-Morrls Go's. GREENSBORO GASTONIA J. D. HIGHTOWER CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT H. C. DWELL E 210 Realty Building Phone 627 DR. R. Z. LINNEY Rectal Specialist P:lAa Fissure. Fistula, Ilea pruritu. Etc. INo confinement. Practice limited strictly to disease of Rec tum. Offices 605 and 506 Commercial Bank Building-. Charlotte. N. C. DR. W. M. WHITE PHYSICIAN Oflloe at Kennedy's Drug Store, Phone 84. Residence, 424 South York St., Phono 439-L. H. M. KEEXEY REGISTERED ARCHITECT Office 120 W. Airline Avenue Opposite Depot GASTONIA. N. C. Phone 539 It's SAFE because I secured It from an agency that represents ON LY high-grade, time-proven strong companies. Questionable insurance is NOT In surance -you want insurance that is ABSOLUTELY RELIABLE and it is the only kind that you will obtain here and at the same rates you will pay for the uncertain kind. J. WHITE WARE INSURANCE Represented by V. E. LONG Phone 201. at. Nat. Bank Bid. Cocker Machine Builders of Textile Machinery Gastonia, N. C Soft Clean Grey Iron Castings ' - i. ! . -i ,f rBaBp.MassBsjsasaissslsMsMsrPHHas.HPaPM w t -1 J D-L..:u. 'V5"--'"" '' TT6 ACpui OUU iCUUUUi Uachinery, Boilers, A. E. WOITZ, Sec. & Treas. $12,000,000 ASKED OF U. S. BY INDIAN'S, (By International News Service.) MARSHFIELD, Ore., May 5. The Coos Bay tribe of Indians is making a campaign to obtain a $12, 000,000 allowance from the Federal Government. The tribe makes the claim that the Government failed to give it lands around Coos Bay under an agreement made more than 50 years ago. An old treaty has Deen unearthed which, it is said, will bring the sum demanded. (By International News Service.) WASHINGTON, May 5. Naval and other officials expressed surprise this afternoon that the discovery of a satisfactory "subma rine cure" was allowed to become public. For some time it has been understood the mightiest brains or the nation were nearing success ;n their search for a means of combat ing Germany's lT-boats. Secretary of the Navy Danleis re fused to discuss the matter in any way. AFTER GRIPPE Vinol Restored Mr. Martin's Strength Wap: oneta, Ohio. "I am a farmer by occupation, and the Grippe left mo with a bad cough and In a nervous, weak, run-down condition, and I could not seem to get anything to do me any good until I took Vinol, which built me up, and my cough and nervousness are all gone, and I can truly say Vinol is all that is claimed for it James Mabtin. Vinol is a constitutional remedy for all weak, nervous and run-down condi tions of men, women and children, and for chronic coughs, colds and bronchitis. J. H. Kennedy & Co., Adams Drue Co., Gastonla, N. C. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Having qualified as Executor of the estate of W. D. Quinn, deceased, late of Gaston county. North Caroli na, this is to notify all persons hav ing claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the un dersigned on or before the Mth Day of May, 1018 or this notice will be plead in bar or their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment. , This the 8th day of May, 1917. JOHN T. QUINN, Executor of the es tate of W. D. Quinn, deceased. J-12 c 6 w Call No. 13 on WASH DAY and shift the hard labor and inconveni ence of WASHING onto our broad shoulders and have the articles cleansed BETTER and with less wear and without exposure to dusty, sooty, germ-laden winds. Our FAMILY WASH SERVICE saves lalwr and wear Its a GENU INE HELP to the housewife. A tri al proves its excellence. c the pound. Snowflake Laundry W. M. MORRIS, Propr. & Foundry PimpivEngiiies, Etc Co. I The Blue- and The i Gray By Henry Wattenon in The Louisvili? Courier-Journal. When William McKInley, as brave a Union soldier as ever went to bar tie, wearing a decorative Confeder ate button and carrying a miniature Confederate flag trophies acquired from a bevy of pretty Southern girla -marched in triumph through tne streets of Atlanta, ringing with en thusiasm, notice was served "upon all whom it may concern" that the War of Sections was over. When William Howard Tart, an true an American and as sound a Republican as ever lived, named a Confederate soldier for Chief Justice rbr tho United States "by and with the advice and consent of the Sen ate" of the United States, and the universal approval of the people of the Northern section of the Union, proclamation was made that the War of sections was over. Yet. long before either of those events, the soldiers of the North ana South the men who had actually fought the War of Sections had composed their differences, had bur ied their hatchets and at least in the border States had blotted out the memory of old scores as they romped with children who could nor distinguish the grandsire who bad worn the gray. It was in 1895 that the Grand Army of the Republic held its first National Encampment upon South ern soil. That was hern in Louis ville. There were those who doubl ed whether the invitation and its ac ceptance might not be a little prema ture. The sequel showed them wrong. Never such a fusion of kindred sen timent; such an outpouring of brotherhood; such eager, spontane ous bursts of song. The big pot was llteraliy put in the little pot. Hospi tality took turns with patriotism. The welkin rang with the shouting Better Farming in the South TO USE FERTILIZERS Fertilizers 8upply One or More Crops Will Not Be The ambition of every farmer is to make the larg est crops possible every year, and it it his duty to make them when he can. But har vests of large crops remove large quantities of plant food from the soil. This de crease of plant food finally pre J. C. PRIDMORE vents good yields. Agronomist And unless some provision is made for restoring and then maintaining production, low yields and unprofitable returns will continue to be the result One can not draw money from a bank unless be has friends there. Neither can the plant draw upon the soil and get the necessary food elements if the soil does not contain them. Plan For Good Yields Every Year Every farmer should adopt for his land a system of farming that will give him good yields continually year after year. If this is done, he must teed the plants; for plants, like ani mals, must feed to grow. While plants require some ten or more elements for their growth, all, except three, are supplied in abundance in most soils. The three elements not supplied abundantly are nitrogen, phosphorus and potash. All these are generally deficient in most southern soils, and, therefore, have to be supplied In some commercial form to get profitatble yields. For a farmer to get the largest acre returns from his investment in fer tilizers, it is necessary for him to know something of the conditions un der which fertilizers may be used most effectively. He naturally asks: "Un der what conditions will fertilizers prove most profitable?" . Fertilizers are used primarily to sup ply one or more plant foods without which crops will not be profitable. But there are conditions Cher than plant foods that may Influence growth. It is very necessary that good growing HAPPY WOMEN Plenty of Them in flastonia. and Good Reason for It. Wouldn't any woman he nappy. After years of backache suffering. Days of misery, nights of unrest. When she finds freedom. Many readers will profit by the following: Mrs. S. W. Beattie, 807 E. Ninth St.. Charlotte, X. C, says: "I was so completely run down and felt so tired all the time that I could hardly drag myself around. My head felt bad and I was so dizzy that I could hardly .keep from toppling over. My kidneys were weak and acted irreg ularly. I was so pervous I couldn't stand the least excitement without getting all upset. Doan's Kidney Pills put ray kidneys in good work ing order and my back became stron ger. ; 'Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney . remedy get Doana, Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. - Beattie had. - Fpster-Mn-burn Co., Prpe.. Buffalo, N. T. t 1 of the braves. Not merely the public places glowed with emblematic slgnb mai me v ar or fcecuona was over. but through street and lane up al leyways and down by the riverside- every vista showed a flower garden of American flags. The walls of tne city, the hearts of the people were clad in red, white and blue. From Maine to Texas, the cry went up In praise and thanks to God. "The War of Sections is over." It was thought and said,' If there should come a foreign war, the proof that the War of Sections is over will even more vividly and impressively show itself, and the foreign war did come. Its earliest victim chanced to be a Southern lad With Wheeler, Fitz Lee and Wilson the self-same Wilson who had captured Jefferson Davis mated In Cuba, with Miles and Castleman in Puerto Rico, what more was wanted? All went well again. The proud and happy American, whether of Yankee land, or Dixie land, had once more a common heritage Kentucxy a little in the lead, for Kentucky was the birthplace of both commanders of the rival armies that fought the Aar of Sections and holds the two spots in reverence and honor, caring lovingly for each as for a shrine, so that the glory, the name and the fame of the soldiers who wore the blue and the soldiers who wore the gray became interchangeable. For ever now they constitute a great na tional asset, dear to every American who loves his country and Is true ho its institutions, for the nation la at length as it was Intended by the fa thers to be and as it was thought to be until stress and trial revealed the shortcoming and welded It together as never before. MOST PROFITABLY Plant Foods Without Which Profitable. conditions be provided for the plant so that the fertilizer used may enable the plant to grow most vigorously, and, therefore, bring about the biggest yields. Vigorous Seed The fundamental, good growing con ditions making possible the most ef ficient use of plant foods, are good seed, a good seed bed and good culti vation. All planting seed must have strong vitality to germinate and grow rapidly. Seed should also be of a,variety adapt ed to local conditions. Time and rate of planting must be given attention, for either one of these may very ma terially effect the yield of the crop. Good Seed Bed Conditions required In the soil for best plant growth, and biggest acre returns from fertilizers used, are a good, well prepared, finely pulverized teed bed. It shou'd be mellow and firm, so as to enable the roots to penetrate freely and deeply In search of food and moisture, and to allow suf ficient circulation of air. It should be well drained. It should be well supplied with organic matter, which aids in absorbing and holding moisture and improves the structure and tilth of the soil. Good cultural methods must be employed so as to destroy weeds and retain soil moisture. If the preceding conditions are sat isfactory for plant growth, then, and not till then, are crops able to make the most efficient use of plant foods within their reach. If any one of these unfavorable conditions exist, a plant cannot fully utilize the foods supplied in fertilizers. Under good growing conditions fertilizers are used very profitably, proof of which is fur nished by thousands of farmers all over the South. Fertilizers contain genuine plant food, and, of course, have a marked beneficial Influence when applied in sufficient quantity, and the plants are otherwise given a fair chance. The question now Is, Are you striving to so Improve your soil conditions that you may utilize the value of fertilizer to the fullest extent? TO GIVE GRADUATING RECITAL AT LIXWOOIi. On Thursday night of this week. May 10th. beginning at 8 o'clock. Miss Ethel Spencer will give ner graduating recital in piano in tne auditorium at Linwood College. Miss Spencer is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Spencer, of West Gas tonla, and has a wide circle of friends who will be interested In her graduation. The public is cordially invited to attend the recital. The following is the program in full: Prelude Op 28. No. 20. C Minor, Chopin. Sonate Op 10. No. 1. C Minor, Al legro Molto e con brio, Beethoven. "From the land of the Skyblue Wa ter," "I Hear a Thrush at Eve." Cad mon. Miss Carrie pixon. Wiegenlied, (Cradle-Song). Josef- fy. J " Valse, Burnham. Scherzino, .Moszkowski. Polish Dance, Op 3, No. 1, Schar wenka. Tarantella. Heller. Concert8tuck, Op 79, Tempo di Marcla Presto grojoso, Weber. Orchestral parts on. second piano by Miss Johnson. Mrs. U J. Wilson left last week for Chapel -Hill where she will spend the next two months with her son, Dr. l. R. Wilson. Th Iron Mas Promises to Drive Indigestion and Nervousness Out of Gastonia. The Iron Man, as he is called, is now in Gastonia. He brings with him a gust of good cheer. He Is the personification of health and hope. Doesn't believe in disease; says there is' no need of stomach trouble; that it Is a crime to suffer with Indi gestion, nervousness and sleepless ness. Health is man's rightful in heritance. Disease la a foreigner and disturber. He advises every body to take an iron grip on them selves and come back into the pleas ant paths of health. "I am going to give all callers a taste of Nux-Iron and Paw-Paw free. I am going to have them feel better before they leave the store. I am going to con vert the people of Gastonia, just as we have Norfolk, Richmond, Winston-Salem and Charlotte, to Ironu ed Paw-Paw. "I shall be surprised," he says, "if this Remedy does not find its way into nearly every home in North and South Carolina. The first dose will make you feel better. You'll soon have a ravenous appe tite and a stomach that will digest all you eat. It will fill you with rich, red blood and give you strength. It will rest your nerves. It will put color in your cheeks and gladness in your heart. These are strong state ments, but I am going to prove them all before I leave Gastonla. I shall open Saturday morning at J. H. Ken nedy's .well-known drug store, and hope every ailing person will come in and see me. THE IRON MAN." Adv U-BOAT PERIL IS SOLVED i 1 1 " 1 NAVAL BOARD HAS "SUBMARINE CURE' .New War Machines Have Been Per fected by 1'nlted Ntates Inventors to lMtroy Submarine and Arm ic Thonias A. Edison and A MstnntK May Revolutionize World War With ll(icovery. (By International News Service.) NEW YORK, May 5. Warfare will be revolutionized and the mighty world conflict may be brought to a speedy close as the result of an in vention of the Naval Consulting Board. Not only will the submarine menace be removed, but newly de structive forces nave been found to wipe out forts and other defensive works. W. L. Saunders, chairman of the Naval Consulting Board, an nounced the solution of these stag gering war problems today. While few details were Riven, it is believed the chief honors for the so lution of the war menace go to Thomas A. Edison, president of tue Naval Consulting Board. Mr. Edison and his naval col leagues have been, at work for many months, working with might and main, to find a means of solving the big war1 preblems, and chiefly the submarine menace. With Yankee ingenuity sweeping the U-boats from the seas, Germany loses her chief weapon, and the ad mitted dangers of France and Eng land arising from the ruthless sub marine campaigns are removed, it may even open up the way for the in vasion of Germany. "We have submitted a concrete plan to the Navy Department," said Mr. Saunders today. 'It. is designed to handle the hostile submarine crart. It is not a theretic plan, but one which is based upon actual experi ments. More than this I cannot say at this time." American naval officers who have seen experiments made with the in vention have predicted that the Eu ropean waters generally will be cleaned of submarines within a month after the new machinery of war is put in operation on tlie other side. Mr. Saunders further announced that he was giving out news of the perfection of the invention to allay the growing fears over the U-boat situation. After the statement had been Is sued Mr. Saunders was questioned by reporters. In reply to these in terrogations he said that the inven tion could not only be counted upon to clear the war zone waters of sub marines, but will "blast whole arm ies out of existence and raze fort resses of steel and concrete." Mr. W. L. Grlce, of Norfolk, Va., spent the week-end here wita his father, Mr. J. L. Grice. Mr. G. R. Spencer leaves tonight for Atlanta, Ga., to attend a meeting of the sash, door and blinds manu facturers of the South. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. McLean and Miss Mary McLean spent the week end at Greensboro with Misses Re becca and Katherine McLean who are students at the State Normal College. They motored to Greensbo ro and back. Misses Gene and May Withers, of the city school faculty, also accompanied them. Mr. Alfred O. Lloyd, formerly secretary of the Gastonla Chamber of Commerce and now secretary of the Chester, S. C Chamber, was In town a short while Saturday shaking hands with old friends. He was en route home from a business trip to Charlotte. Wheaerw Yon Need a Oeoeral Tonic Take drove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless VH1 Tnnlf im eflnallv valuable as a General Tonic 'because it contains the well known tonic properties oiuuinum a and IRON. It acts on the Uver, Drives otxt Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Bonds up the Whole System, 90 cents. M an "IBON MAN" RECEIVING ORDERS. Danced With LaFayette. The Orphan's Friend. The boys and men who fought in the Civil War have passed over the ' river in great number; those still ' ' with us are bowed with age and have withdrawn from active life. The blushing girls of the sixties, thetr wives and sweethearts, have also; grown old with them. The CItII ' War seems very remote, yet long be fore the majority of these men and women were born, a generation be- , fore the war was begun. Mrs. Mis souri A. Hawkins was old enough to . dance with LaFayette when he visit ed America in 1824. This venerable lady died in New York City last week at the age of 102. We frequently; , hear through the newspapers of peo- ' pie passing the century, mark, 'yet It Is rare that the proof of age goes -with them. Among colored people and obscure people whose .claims cannot be scrutinized, nearly all of the reputed nonagenarians and cen- ' tenarians are around or even below the eighth decade. But here Is an authentic case of a centenarian. Citizens of Caldwell county ' are v" voting today on the question of issu ing $250,000 in bonds for -good roads. ' Thirty-eight more Tennesseans and Carolinians than the reserve .of ricers training camp can accommo date have qualified for admission.' - SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Arrival and departure passanger trains, Southern Railway Station, Gastonla, N. C. N. B. Schedule figures shown at information and not guaranteed. Arrive from 29, New York. Washington Blnn- mlngham 5:15 a. m. 4 2, Atlanta, Night Express 8:55 a. m. 39 Charlotte (local) 8:00 a. m, 36 New Orleans-Atlanta (U. S. Fast Mail) 8:53 a. m, 37 N. Y., Washington. (N. Y., Atla, N. O., Limited) 10:42 a. m. 11 Richmond (local) .. 11:30 a. m. 46 Westminster (local) 12:45 p. m. 12 Atlanta (local) .... 5:00 p. m. 4 5 Greensboro (local) .. 5:45 p. m. 38 N. O. Atla. (N. Y Atla New Orleans Ltd 7:61 p. m. 40 Atlanta (local) .....9:38 p. m. 30 Bham-Atla., (B., spl) 10.25 p. m. 43. Charlotte, Night Express 10:45 p. m. 35 N. Y.-Washington, (U. S. Fast Mail( 11:05 p. m. Depart for 29 Bham., (Bham., pl.,) 5:15 a. m. 39 Atlanta, (local) ... 8:00 a. m. -42 Charlotte, night express 8:35 p. m 36 Washington .N Y. (Us. S. Fast Mall) 8.53 a. m. 87 Atla N. 0 (N. Y Atla New Oleans, Ltd.) 10:48 a. m. 11 Atlanta (local) 11:30 a. m. 48 Greensbor (local)., 12:45 p. m. 12 Richmond (local) ... 6:0f p. m, 45 Westminster (local) 5:45 p. m.' 88 N.' O. Atla (N. Y Atla. New Orleans- Ltd. ,7:51 p.- m. 40 Charlotte (local) ....8:28 p. to. SO Wash., N. YW (Birmingham. Special) ....... ... .10:25 p. m. 43, Atlanta. Night Express, 10:45" . p. m... . . ' , t .. 85 Atla.. New Orleans (U. 8. Fast Mall) . ... . . ll:0r pAia. . For ..rates reservations or -. other. Information call on or write A. A. 8UTHER. T. JL, pkoae-22 G. C. ANDREWS. Aft, Phone TJ."
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 8, 1917, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75