MONDAY, DECEMBE2 13, 1911. VAGu SEVEN. THX GASTOIfIA GAZETTE. For His Christ Any man would appreciate any of present : ' NICE SILK SHIRTS GLOVES COLLARS HANDKERCHIEFS SUSPENDERS NECKTIES You will find here everything in tlie is complete and up-to-date ami our come in and see us. Gents Furnishing Co. West Main Ave. LETTER TO SANTA CLAUS. Gastonia, Doc. 20, 1918 Dear Santa: My names Jim Work man, (they call me the devil) I work in the Oazet office. I want a stick f can dy an apple or two, and a watermelon, if you have any; also an Jews harp and a cap pistol Yours, etc Jini Workman. P. 8. Please do not forget my little .friends C. K. Marshall, Jr., I think he would like to have a horn, a cap pistol, jewg harp and a watermelon too. JAMES M. WORKMAN. Dallas, N. '., Dec. 18, 1918. Dear SantaClaus: 1 am a little girl eight years old. I want you to bring me a doll and a ed ami a trunk and a cart and a little chair, candy, apples, oran ges and nuts and nigger toes. So I will close for this year. POYL HOLDER. Dallas, X. '.. Dec. IS, 19 IS. Dear Santa Claus: I am a little girl nine years old. My name is Sudie (Joins. I want you to bring me a little bed and a little doll and a tea set and a little chair and some apples and candy and or anges and nuts. Santa Claus, plane ex cuse me for writing such a long letter this time as I only get to write you once a year, so I will close for this year. Your little friend, Sl'DlE COINS. Dallas, N. C, Dec. is, 19 IS. My Dear Santa Claus: I am a little boy 10 years old and my name is t'arr Lee Goins. Now, Santa dear, my father is) dead. I go to school and I can read and write. I'lease don't forget me. I want a cap pistol anil some caps too, aud some shots. I have an air rirle and I want some apples anil figs and oranges and fruit. I will close for this year. cAim lke coins. Gastonia, N. ('.. IVc. IS. 191 S. Dear Santa Clans: I am a boy nine years old. My name is Albert. 1 want two books, "The Lost Prince, " and "DeYe Mabel." 1 have a brother six years old and his name is Rupert. He wants a gun with a stopper and a pile driver. 1 have a sister four years old. Her name is Dorothy and she wants a doll with brown hair and a sweater ami cap. And, Santa, please clun 't forget the little French nnd lielgiuin children. ALKKRT SLOAN FORD. 32:5 S. Columbia Street. Gastonia, N. C. Dec. IS, 19 IS. Dear Santa: I am a little boy eight years old. I want you to bring me a hobby horse, tricycle and a bag full of candy. I'lease bring my friend, Charles Wilson, a little train on a track. Now, Santa, I don 't want von to forget the other little boys. RAY SMITH. Richburg, S. C. Dec. 19, 1918. Dear Santa Claus: I am a little boy seven years old. I want yon to bring me a little hammer and a little gun ami an ax and don't forget my little brother, Olin. He is four years old. He wants a little train and lots of fruit and candy. Your little friend, FRANK CARPENTER. Richburg. S. C, Dec. 19, 1918. Dear Santa Claus: I am a little girl TERRI3LYSV0LLEN Suffering .Described Ai Torture Relieved by Black-Draught. Rossville, Ga. -Mrs. Kate Lee Able, ol this place, writes: "My husband is an engineer, and once while lifting, he in jured himself with a piece of heavy ma chinery, across the abdomen He was so sore he could not bear to press on himself at all, on chest or abdomen. He weighed 1G5 lbs., and fell off until he weighed 110 lbs., in two weeks. He became constipated and it looked like he would die. We had three different doctors, yet with all their medicine, his bowels failed to act. He would turn up a ten-cent bottle of castor oil, and drink it two or three days in succession. Jle did this yet without result. We became desperate, he suffered so. He was swol len terribly. He told me his suffering Could only be described as torture. I sent and bought Thedford's Black Draught. I made him late a big dose, and when it be3a lo act he fainted, he wa3 in such misery, but he got relief and bean to mend at once. He got well, and we both feel he owes his life to Thedford's Black-Draught." Thedford's Black-Draught will help you to keep fit, ready for the day's work. Try it! ' NC-131 las the following articles aa a Christmat HATS CAPS BELTS HOSE HOSE SUPPORTERS gent 's furnishing line. Our stock, prices are right. We invite you to :-4 nine years old. 1 want you to bring me a doll and a locket and a ring. I'lease don 't forget my sister, Mary Bell, ami my brother, James. He is 1 1 years old but still he is looking for Santa Claus, so I will close this year. Your little friend, ALMA CARPKNTKR. WHAT TOM SPARROW THINKS OF A COUNTY AGENT. (State Extension Bulletin.) "I like the plan of allowing the pigs to make hogs of themselves instead of waiting on them like they were in a ho tel, " remarked Tom Sparrow, of (iaston county. "I have leeu feeding my hogs perfectly good high-priced corn, with just a little accidental pasture occasion ally, until this year when County Agent J. B. Steele got me to try a field of soy beans and corn, and put a temporary fence around it so that tlx- hogs could help themselves. I like this plan so well that 1 am going to double my herd of Berkshire, and use soybeans for the fall and winter feed, and other grazing crops the rest of the year. In tliis way I get both a crop of corn and a crop of hogs. The soybean vines and keeping the hogs, also, greatly improve the land. This is about the only way that I know that a man can 'eat his cake ami keep it too. ' "This year the demount rator helped nie build a silo, put in stanchions for my Jerseys, and put waterworks1 in my kitch en. Of course, I don't give him credit for everything I do, but at the same time he is well worth having around, and I am always glad to see him come." MAJtY CONVALESCENT OF 30TH AND 27TH BROUGHT HOME ON THE LEVIATHAN Officer of Old Hickory Division Says "It Was Next to Impossible to Hold Them Back." New York, Dec. Hi.- The giant liner Leviathan, which docked here today with nearly !,immi American soldiers, veterans of overseas fighting, also brought home many convalescents from the L'7th and .Xuth divisions. Homer Weeks, of Kpworth, C.a., 117th infantry, came home with a wound received in the attack of the ;:oth divis ion o:i the Himlcnhiirg line near St. (jtientin. "There never was a bunch of men who could fight like the :tnth." he said. "The only kick we had was our officers would not let us go ahead as fast as we wanted to. " Lieut. L. D. White, of New York, praised the men of the .'(0th and 27th. Of his own division, the ;(0th, Lieut. White said, "they were poor trench fighters, as it was next to impossible to hold them liack when there was a fight in front.'" Many of the convalescents of the two divisions, however, were loathe to talk of their experiences. Private 7.. L. Jenks, of Henry, X. ('., with both arms and legs cruelly torn by shrapnel, would not have missed "the show" for any thing. LONDON, Dec. 20. A new executive council will replace the coalition "conn cil of six" now administering the gov ernment of Ocrmany at Berlin, says n press dispatch from Amsterdam today. The political condition throughout Cier many remains unsettled. FROM COAST TO COAST From north to south, from east to west ; In every city, every community; In every State in the T'nion Rings out the grateful praise for D an 's Kidney Pills. 50,000 representative people in every walk of life Publicly testify to quick relief and lasting results. And it's all for the lienefit of fellow so fferers. In this grand chorus of local praise Gastonia is well represented. Well-known Gastonia people Tell of personal experiences. Who can ask for better proof of mer it? W. A. Gardner. lOi Trpnton St tuc "My past experience with Doan 's Kid- , ney Pills has been more than satisfactory ; for they gave me quick relief from kid- ( ney trouble. I recommend this remedy as being just as represented. ' ' Price 60c, at all dealers. Don 't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Gardner j had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffa lo, N. Y. COME TO STUDY ENGLISH MSP ) '''"v:,:'r':-:':'':' ' ' x J w . nfc. e.. w. 1 . . r .- Til Z I Vvf t w i urn In. J f I 4 . rrrrw - rnrrrnnn."!?! Mile. George Lequlmener, above, and Mile. Jeanne Rlou, below, two French girls sent to the Pennsylvania State college for their education. They were members of the party of 62 French girls who recently came to the United States as part of the educational reci procity program between France and America Involving the exchange of students and faculty members. They will eventually return to France to teach English in colleges in their na tive land. YANKEES ENJOY CHOW Pershing's Husky Men Are All Good Eaters. Variety In Uncle Sam's Menu Makes It Attractive Doughboys Grow Talkative. With the American Army In France. "Chow time" means one of the most picturesque sights along the front, es pecially with the Americans. It seems to mean more to the Americans than to any other army, perhaps because American "grub" Is better. Happen along through a ruined vil lage or a woods In un American sector fifteen minutes before "chow time" and you would think the place deserted. Probably there wouldn't be more than one or two stray doughboys in sight. Come along fifteen minutes later and you wonder "where in thunder they ull came from." They'll be lined up, and in front of each line there'll he- a Held kitchen steaming away, with a perspiring nrmy cook dishing out grub that makes you want to "grab some tools and get In line" too. There's lots of animation at "chow time" among the Americans. A crowd f Frenchmen Is quiet while eating, the only time French soldiers are quiet. They munch their bread and meat and vegetables and drink their wine In silence. Not so with the Americans. It's a big time. First of all. there's specula tion on "what's the chow for today." There's variety In Uncle Sam's army menus. Then, as they sit around on the ground, on ruins, or under trees, and that satisfied feeling of having eaten a good meal grows upon them, there's lots of life and Joking among the doughboys. "Ikuighboy chow" is good. Usually there is soup. Then there are meat and vegetables, usually two kinds. There are always big slices of white bread and coffee. Nine times out of ten there's dessert, probably pudding or fruit Each man has a pan with a handle that folds Into it, and n cup. Some way they get some of everything In a four-course meal into these two Instru ment and never mix foods. Only one of these "war experts" could do that. 2 PLEADS TO REGISTER; i 20 YEARS TOO OLD tion booth on registration day. He had given his name and ad- dress, that of a large family ho- tel here. The man's eagerness dispelled all doubts of his age qualification until the registrar J asked him the date of his birth. The fact was then brought out $ that he was nearly 20 years past the forty-six-year limit "You don't have to register," said the board member. "But I want to register," re J plied the man. "I am physically fit I want to get on the list so 2 that Uncle Sam can call on me for anything he wants." J His face clouded with dlsap- i ! polnfjient when told that he j could not be registered. j MAIMED BY HUNS Iry K v 1 ir Marie Joseph Coutant of the quaint little village of Louatre, near Sotssons, the daughter of Monsieur Coutant, once a comfortably situated mechanic of Louatre, Is shown above with her right arm missing Because of, the fact that the Germans attended the celebration of ber eighth birthday. On Marie's birth day her mother end herself, along with several other refugees from the threat of the Hun at Solssons, were swarming Into cattle cars that were pressed Into use In the emergency, when a German lncendinry bomb fell among them, killing her mother and making herself, a nonccmbatant, go through life a crip ple with only one arm. She has been adopted by Muurice, the dancer of America, now a Red Cross worker In France, as his "war baby," nnd has been sent by him with her father to Limoges, France, to complete her con valescence, i FEAR FRENCH TANKS Machines Spread Terror in Ranks of Foe. Armed Car Helps 15 Yanks to Cap ture 700 Huns in Recent Drive. With the American Armies. Greater laurels daily are being won by the French liht tanks which are co-operating with the American forces In pushing the Germans back toward the Rhine. Among the many individual feats of the tanks and their drivers which have come to light, one of the most Interest ing is that of Brigadier Cellier, who has been decorated with the cross of the Legion of Honor for his work In a light tank which enabled 15 American soldiers to capture 700 Germans. Several hundred of these tanks led the counter-offensive from the Villers Cotterets forest In July, which marked what appears to have been the turning point of the war. They broke through the enemy's lines, destroying his ma chine guns, overcoming strong centers of resistance and spreading panic and demoralization In the German ranks. Where the Infantry was preceded by the "chars d'assaut," as the French call them, the advance was three miles a day. It was these same French light tanks which preceded the Americans In their advance upon Juvigny and Terny on the Solssons plateau. One of them, manned by a lieutenant, killed more than 200 Germans on the plateau. Documents that have come Into the hands of the French staff show that the Germans are greatly worried by the light tanks and are studiously coaching their men in methods of de fense against them. The light cars have the advantage of greater speed and of being more easily handled than the heavier tanks. They require a crew of only two men, a driver and a gunner, and carry one one-and-a-half-inch gun ant a machine gun. GET MOLARS FIXED FREE Dental Operations for Soldier and Sailors Reach 65,000 a Month. New York. Free dental operations for soldiers and sailors to the nam ber of 65,000 are being performed in a month's time by members of the Preparedness League, of American Dentists in every state in the Union, according to the report Just made pub lic at the league's headquarters here. This record Is for the month of Au gust, which in normal times is a sea son of less effort for the average per son thes any other month in the year. This brings the total of operations ren dered since Its Inception to 550,000. . SHUN PAfiM OWNERSHIP. English Farmers Prefer Tenancy Amer icans Waat Their Own. New York Times. I A notable difference between the men tal attitude of the English farmer and the American farmer has been revealed by the efforts of the British Government to increase that country 's food produc tion and preliminary surveys looking to the same ultimate end iu this country. In Great Britain laws were enacted provid ing for farm land tenancy under condi tions menat to stimulate the tenant to buy the land. The terms were made easy and the prices attractive. Contrary to eietationx. hardly a tenant among the thousands has indicated desire for own ership. It has IxH'n found upon investi gation that the British small farmer shuns the responsibility of ownership ami looks upon the prospect of tying himself down to one spot as a hardship. There is no apparent discontentment over the terms and for the mrst part these farmers seem anxious to go on just as they have been going, paying their rent and taking a living from the land. On the other hand, the American farm er, almost to the last man, aspires to own his plan', even though ownership often entails responsibility, hardship und at least temporary reduction of income and increase of effort. In n rwent study of H.COii farmers in America it was found that more than nine per cent of them were brought up on farms, .'il 12 pet cent remained on their father's farms un til they became owners, and L'7 per cent till they became tenants, then owners; that Li 1 'J per cent passed from wage earning to ownership, skipping the ten ant stage; that Is per cent were first farm boys, then wage-earners, later ten ants, and finally owners. Government s'ntistics show most conclusively the ownership ambition of American fann ers. Of all the farmers in the country under L'.'i years of age, 7ti per cent are tenants. This percentage of tenancy s'eadily decreases as these farmers grow older until, at .rif years, only L'O per cent are tenants. RICHMOND, Dec. L'O. The wholesale stores of Haunders & Hons, grocers, were burned today. WASHINGTON. Dec. L'0.- Disclosure of mismanagement ami utter chaos in the construction of the Hog Island shipyards, tending to show the waste of millions of dollars of government money, was made in the report of the Department of Jus tice of its investigation submitted to the I 'resident in September ami made public today. Books For the Lover of Fairy Tales; (o the reader of War Stories. Atkins-Babe r Book Co. HELPS HUSBAND IN HIS BUSINESS Strong and Well Since She Took Tanlac Suffered For Years She Says. " Kver since Tafilac put nn end to my troubles 1 feel so well and strong that I not only do till my own house work, but I elp my husband at the store besides," viid Mrs. .liirnes Williams, wife of a well known grocer nnd marketman, who lives at .UK'? Metropolitan Ave., Dallas, Tex. '"Fur several years, '' she continued, 'I was troubled with seven1 attacks of indigestion, and about three months ago, I had a spi ll that was so much nurse than nn.v thi'i;; I had ever experienced before Mia! it really alarmed me. My stomach would blwa" up with gas, that pressed so on niC heart I could hardly get my breath, and thought I would smother to death. My head ached like it would si lit, I became so nervous I couhl hardly sleep, and in the mornings I would feel sii weak and fagged out that it was all I I'ouhl do to get up and dress f :i k en all sorts of mediiines and treatments without getting any benetiits. but when several of my friends praised Tanlac to me so highly 1 decided to try it. Well, it proved to be pist what I i led. for I began to feel better right off. I im I roved s i fast that I could hardly real ie it ami 1 am now eating anything I want and have no trouble at all with gas and indigestion. Those headaches are gone. I sleep like a child ami get up in the mornings feeling tine. I am pick i itig un right along, and have already gained several pounds. My confidence in Tanlac is si great that I am now telling II my friends about the good it has done me. ' ' 'l anlae is now sehl cx hidwly In (las- .hia by the danis Drug Co.; in Hesse "ier ity by the llorsh-y Drug Co.; iu Clorrvville by the Mien Drug Co.; in W- rth by the Il .rdui Mfg. Co.,; in Mt. M-.llv bv the Holland Drug Co. ; in Dal-l-s bv I'. ). Summev A. o., and in Bel Mont by the .stow e , a uud. 'i s Drug Co. I wish for every one a most Happy Christmas You "Auto" be happy and if you bought your car from me I know you are. Can deliver for Xmas, Reo Seven, one of the classiest closed cars of the season. Dodge Touring, Chandler Touring. See me at once W. H. WRAY Several Bargains in Used Cars SUFFERED YEARS WITH DROPSY Newton, N. Clad Complained of Female Trouble, Kidney and Dropsy Complaints. VISITED TWO HOSPITALS HAD NINE DOCTORS "Nine different doctors said I had dropsy and in two different hospitals I suffered agony with this dropsy, kidney trouble or female complaints and I'm now writing you to let you know how grateful I am for the wonderful good I got from using Genuine Indian Blood I'uriliei. "I was under the doctors care for over four years but since using this won derful Pearson Kemedy of the old time Indians, 1 am able to do all the work around the house such as washing, iron ing, cooking, etc., without any trouble, while before 1 took it my feet and legs were so badly swollen I could not wear my shoes. It seemed like my legs were near to bursting," writes Mrs. W. A. Holnnd. I'. O. Box 161, Newton, N. C. Thousands of women know such trou bles. Thousands suffer untold agony and go from months to months and year to year suffering ami complaining when a short treatment with Geneuine Indian Blood Purifier would relieve them. This splendid old Indian preparation used by the Indians has brough relief to thousands of women. Get a bottle at J. II. Kennedy & Co., sole distributors in Gastonia. LONDON, Dec. 20 President Wilson will arrive in England next Thursday, December 26th, and will be the guest of King George at Buckingham palace, Th Exchange Telegraph announced today.' The Htandard says he will arrive on the L'7th and will le in London four days. WASHINGTON, Dec. 20. Fixed pri ces on copjier will not lie continued after .lanunry 1, when they expire by limit t.itiou, the war industries board announc ed this afternoon. WASHINGTON. Dec. 20. The Let tish government has appealed to the Uni ted States for allied aid in banishing the Bolsehviki hordes from Lettonia, Russia. The Holshevikists are following behind the Germans as they withdraw from Russia, assuming control as the German! leave. The Bolsheviki are pillaging, tak ing hostages, demanding indemnities and indulging in other nets of terrorism. They have now advanced 60 miles east of Higa. DALG1IHKN, ILL.. Dec. 20. Rob bers early today bound and gagged Cash ier Aydt, of the Dnlghren bnnk, locked him in the vault and escaped with cur rency, Liberty bonds and securetiea ft mounting to a total of $15,000. Blood hounds have been put upon their trail. Subscribe for The Gazette. t ( TRY IT! SUBSTITUTE FOR NASTY CALOMEL . v Statts Your Liver Without Making You Sick and Cannot Salivate. Every druggist iu town -your drug gist and everybody's druggist has notic ed a great falling i ff in the sale of calo mel. They all give the same reason. Dod son 's Liver Tone is taking its place. ''Calomel is dangerous and people know it, while Dod son 'h Liver Tone is perfectly safe and gives better results," said a prominent local druggist. Dod son 's Lier Tone is pers mally guaran teed by every druggist who sells it. A large bottle costs but a few cents, and If it fails to give easy relief in every case of liver sluggishness and constipation, von have only to ask for your money back. . ' Do. I son's Liver Tone is a pleasant tasting, purely vegetable remedy, harm less to both children and adults. Take n spoonful at night and wake up feeling fine; no biliousness, sii-k headache, acid stomach or constipated bowels. It doesn't gripe or en use inconvenience all the next day like violent calomel. Take a dose of calomel today and tomorrow you will feel 'w-ak. s, k and nauseated. Don't lose a lav 's work! Take Do. Is n 's Liver Tone instead and feel fine, full of vigor and ambition. n