Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / March 17, 1919, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE GASTONIA GAZETTE PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. OL. XL. NO. 33. GASTOXIA, X. C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 17. 1919. $2.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE. ML W. T. RANKIN TALKS OF TRIP TO EUROPE GASTONIA DENTISTS VICTIMS OF ROBBERS CITIZENS TO VOTE ON CHANGE OF CHARTER CAPT. R. GREGG CHERRY TALKED OF FOR MAYOR TERRIFIC TORNADOES IN MISSISSIPPI VALLEY Gastonia Business Man Found People of France, England and Belgium Hopeful for Future He went Through Some f the War-Swept Area Still Thinks Old Carolina the Best Place on the Map. ' England, Frame ami Belgium wore vi-iU-'l by Mr. Wiley T. Rankin, nf Gasto La, who returned tin' tirst of last week f rum a. six weeks trip overseas. While tin- limiti'il tiini- lie wsis abroad did not afford hiia an opportunity tn do any ex tensive traveling on the continent nor to make :l thorough study of conditions ami prospects, he nevertheless saw many things ol' interest ami talks most enter tainingly of his trip. Sailing from Halifax. Novia Scotia, on tUf Acquitania, one of the Cunard liners, he. hmded at Glasgow, Scotland. He went direct from there to London where he spent only three .lays. lie foniol that the laboring people of England had plen ty of money, having made big wages all Willing tin' war, but were unalile to buy many things ln'cai.se those things were lot to lie 1 1 : i . The English people are somewhat short on rations ainl are still undergoing a stricter rationing than we be-e in America I i 1 umler the mo-t striu- ; grit rules Mr. Hoover hail in force at j any time. The Englih people, thinks Mr. K:i ii kin. are in a position to recover pii.k)y from the ell'ects of the war ami I'n-m what he saw ami Iniiril it is his opinion that things in John Hull's conn try will eie lung he si jj:i in aliont normal. I'rnni England he went to La I lav ic. Frame, sailing from Southampton. This French port is at the month of the Seine river, lie struck out at once for Paris jnd spent ten da.vs in the great French eapital. The city was crowded with Am -ri.:in sohliers ami, sai.l Mr. Rankin, "I was prom! of them the finest looking lot Of' teilovvs over there or anywhere else. They were by all oibls the finest bunch of soldier I ever saw." They were he having themselves, too. There are 1 ,!tt)0 M. Ps. ill Paris but they really ilo not have a great deal to do. He did not see A ningle soldier intoxicated, notw ithstnml ing the fact that plenty of drinks were Available on all sides. All of the officers anil nurses, without exception, praise the American soldier as the bravest in war. ever flint hing under the most trying cir iimstances. Hut, they add. the soldier, who in just an average American, is giv en to doing more or less knocking sifter the fight is over. To this disposition is attributed the knocking that hsis been -.lone agsiinst the Y. M. '. A. Mr. Kan kin says that the Y. M. ('. A. and the Wed Cross are the two agencies which have done and sire doing more fur our Ixiys overseas than any other agency or agencies. In Paris the Y. M. '. A. and Red Cross establishments look after the interests of the boys, provide sight sir ing trips for them, furnish them sleeping quarters, loafing places and enteitain irwnt ami. in fact take care of them in rtrst-rlass style. There is no discounting t-ne work done by the Salvation Army amj the Knights of Columbus, he says, but those, organizations had very limited means ami outfits; in short their opera tions were on a far smaller scale. As far sas their work went, however, it was good. Half a day was spent at Versailles, where the peace conference is sitting, and this was one of the most enjoyable events f his trip. He went with a party of ."in army officers and they were shown through the magnificent palaces whose richness of architecture and furnishings are of world renown. A guide took them through ami gave them the history of swh room ami told them mm h of the history which centered around this para-, dise of kings liefore and during the French Revolution. The party was shown the hall in which the peace conference is holding its meetings. They ssiw the ta ble on which the treaty of 171 was sign t anil on which, they were told, the peace treaty now lieing formed will be signed. After viewing the glories of Versailles Mr. Rankin left by rail for Brussells. The trip was inside by rail, the trains making five or six miles an hour over the territory lietween Paris and Brussells, most of which was through the war swept area. The roads are being worked on but are yet in bad condition. On this trip he passed through the Soninie battle ground and went through Amiens, Albert, Lens, Arras, Bethune. Lille, Toule, which is on the frontier, and then to Brussells. Amiens had the appearance of having been badly battered up. Alliert was wip ed eff the map and a down or so small towns along this road were practically annihilated. Lens was shot up pretty bad and Bethune was riddled. At Be thune is the LeBasse eanal where the Germans built great eonerete dugouts which they occupied for two years or snore. The town of LeBasse itself was shot all too pieces. Some work is being done on the rail roads and a few farms along the road are being worked. Mr. Rankin saw lots of Chinamen engaged in rebuilding rail roads and at one place saw a thousand or tore German prisoners working dirt roads. German prisoners were also being msed to clean out the LeBasse eanal. Belgium, says Mr. Rankin, is in much better conditio, physically than France. There was not so much property damage except around the fortified cities where tbeOermans first entered Belgium. The Germans, evidently expecting to retain A thief, supposedly si professional, en tered tiie dental offices of Prs. I. E. Mc oiiuell ami P. R. Falls while the dentists were sit dinner soon after noon Saturday sind helped himself to the gold plate. He first visited Dr. Kails' office where he secured $-) or rf.ill worth of gold plate but overlooked gold solder worth perhaps as much. Half an hour later he entered 1 1 r. Met onnell 's office across the street and took several dollars worth of gold plsite. oei looking some, however. At both places he gained entrance by prying open a Yale lock. The thefts had the appestritnee of being the work of profes sional dental thieve-. So far no clue has been secured. Ssiturday night or Sunday morning the dental offices of lr. Waller and Kibler in the Kirst Natioikal Hank building, Charlotte, were entered and robbed of iO worth of gold, ifOini iii Liberty bonds and . 175 in War Ssivings Stamps. The robbery in Charlotte, like those here, had the si ppesi rsince of' being the work of a professional, which leads to the belief that a gang of dental thieves are again at woik in this part of the lountry. MUSIC CLUB WITH MRS. J. H. MORROW. The Ca-touia Musi.- club will meet Wednesday afternoon sit :i:.;u o'clock with M:. J. II. Ihiml Morrow. BETTERMENT TO OBSERVE HEALTH NIGHT FRIDAY. On Kri.hiy night. March L'lst. ;it the Central school auditorium, the Health Department of the Woman's Betterment Associat ioi, ill have Health N ight ex ercises. A good speaker will be secured for the owning, and the women of this Association sue anxious to have si large crowd present. Play at Union School. ''A Kentucky Belle'1 will be present ed sit the I'n ion school house Friday night sit s o'clock by the pupils of, that school. An admission fee of l."i and '-' cents will be charged, the proceeds to go to the fund for improvement on the build ing. Marguerite Clark in "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch" at the Gastonian Tuesday. NEGOTIATIONS BROKEN OFF. (By International News Service.) LONDON, March 17. The Allies' ne gotiations with Germany for the delivery of potsish have been broken oil', ssiys si Rotterdam dispatch today. Belgium permanently, took good care not to tear up the country except where they found it necessary when the war first started. He spent two days in Brussels, a city of a million people. Things were apparently g;iy. Kveiybody wsis busy. During the two days there Mr. Rankin did not encounter a single beggar. In fact every poison almost seemed to have something to do. The attitude of the Belgian people towards America he found to be fine. They hold us ami our country in very high esteem. This, of course, is but natural. The Belgian people he found to be the best fed and best dressed people he came in contact with. Kroin Brussels he went back to Paris si ml from there to LeMans where he spent a day with Prof. Joe S. Wray, Gastonia 's it school superintendent -who is over there doing Y. M. C. A. work. He found Wray hanPat work doing everything pos sible for Mie boys and he found that this Tar Heel Y. M. ('. A. man was immensely pirpular with the sohliers. Twelve miles out from LeMans he found ('apt. R. G. Cherry and the 115th Field Artillery, now nearing home, by the way. Capt OierrT and all the boys were well and in fine spirits. While there he also spent a day with Major A. L. Bulwinkle and Capt. Reid Morrison, who were also stationed near LeMuim. He also saw Lieut. Clar ence Stroup, of Company B, lo."th Kn gineers. All the hoys, he said, were anx ious to get back home again. At Le Mans he visited Base Hospital No. 7i which is in charge of Dr. Mc.Brayer. of Asheville. It contains 1,."(M) beds, most of which were occupied. He saw there two Gaston county men, Nichols from Lowell and Patterson from Mount Holly, neither of whom was seriously sick. In this hospital he was stopped by a man w hom he did not know who turned out to be a Wisconsin man who was with the 77th Field Artillery wliich trained at Camp Chronicle here. The man had seen him here and knew him. Mr. Rankin sailed from Brest, France, on the 28th of February and was nine days en route home. He came on the New Amsterdam with 2,100 officers and men of the 107th Regiment of the 27th Division, composed of New York men. There were also on this ship 12.1 A. E. F. nurses. These are regularly enlisted base hospital nurses and had been in France for many months. They repre sented two units, the Phillips unit from Detroit and the University of Maryland unit from Baltimore. j Though pleased with his) trip and im pressed with the countries he saw Mr. Rankin says that they do not compare : .L. a : ... . .1 i ri j xr .i- Tfiiii Auiiriica pun uio vstu iurm oiawl particularly Gaston county. The pretti est -flection he saw -was Brittanr. Change in the cily charter iff place Gast-ini.i under the commission -manager foi in of government will be voled upon bv the citizens of the city at an early date, the tsill for the election appealing in The Gazette todiiy. The change was recommended by the present city solininistrsition several weeks sign. The Chamhur of Commerce was sit the time asked to give the matter invos tigation. A special committee consisting of Col. T. L. Craig. Col. C. H. Armstrong ami Attorney P. W. (iarland was named to go into it. This committee reported to a special meeting of the board of di rectors Kriday afternoon, recommending the change. It was found that no.es-.suy petitions would have to be gotten up bv Saturday evening. The directors adopted the report ami named a coi ittee com posed of Missis. W. I). Anderson, A. K. Winget, Kiel I.. Smyre and li. Grady Rsiiikin to bee that the petitions were se cured. An.tlier conference was held Sat li.dny atteriioon. Scimtor M.iiiL'iiui beine called in to o,, ,,ver some of the legal point-. The work of getting signatures Was thru staited. in si ny mole tlisui (lie re quire I pel i cut being secll'id. Kull puhliriiy will be gien the plan .'Hid meetings held ;,t which time full op portunitv ,,i .lis. ussioii will be afforded the taxpayers, so that they may thorough ly understand the pmposed ne.v chatter be fin e t hey ote on it . CHAMBER OF COMMERCE DINNER TUESDAY NIGHT I'lsins for the annual membership din ner of the (Jsistonisi Chamber of Com merce at the C. B. Armstrong Community Hall, formerly the Clsira Hall, tomorrow night at 1 :'M oYlock, are now complete. It will be si gieat occasion ami over L'n'l members of ( isistonisi 's boosting orgsini zsition will be present Owners of automobiles are asked to go by the offices of the Chamber of Com merce on their way to the hall and pick up any members there. The dinner will ststrt at 7:-'!ip o'clock sharp and everyone is asked to be sit his place by that time. A program replete with interest will be gion an. I will start sit 7::in sit the same time as the dinner begins. A fie piece orchestra, ;i male quartet and the address by Dr. D. W. Daniel, one of the leading orators of the South, will be special feat ures. But two or three well known citi zens who are always good to hear will be on the program, too. There will be plen ty of ''pep'' to the occasion. And the movies will be of interest, too. Kvery member attending is asked to be at his place at 7 :'! shap. WITH GASTON'S SOLDIERS Mr. and Mrs. Hdgar Love, of Lincoln ton, received si cablegram this morning from their son, .1. Frank Love, a member of Base Hospital No. (i, Breni.er's unit, stating that he would sail for home today. Young Love is a nephew of Messrs. L. T. and R. C. McLean, of Gastonia. While no definite information is at hand on this point, the supposition is that the entire unit is sailing todiiy from Bordeaux. Mr. T. C. Abernethy, of Lincolnton. son of Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Abernethy, of Gasto nia. is a member of this unit. Mr. ami Mrs. L. F. Wet.ell received a telegram yesterday from their son. Fred S. Wet.ell, notifying them that he had ar rived from overseas and was at Camp Merrit, N. .1. He expects to be at home within the next ten davs. A letter from Sgt. Max I). Abernethy of the ti7."ith Aero Squadron, Kelly Field. San Antonio. Texas, states that his ap plication for discharge from the service has been approved and that be will re ceive it March .'list. After spending a few days with his brother, Mr. .1. ). Ab ernethy, at Houston. Texas, he will come home. His many friends will be delight ed to see him. Private John C. Saunders, of the lofith Depot Brigade, Headquarters Company, Camp .lackson, arrived home Friday, hav ing received his final discharge from the service. Mr. Saunders is a son of Mr. ami Mrs. M. T. Saunders, of Groves Sta rt Private Rolert Owens, son of Mr. anil Mrs. Marion B. Owen, arrived home last Friday night, having received his final discharge from the service. Marguerite Clark in "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch" at the Gastonian Tuesday. April 1st Clean-Up Day. April 1st has been designated as regu ular Spring Clean-Up Day by the civic committee of the Woman 's Betterment Association of which Mrs. Frost Tor renee is chairman. On that day the city wagons will begin hauling off the trash. All residents are requested to clean up their premises on that day. GERMANS ARE EXECUTING SPARTACIDE PRISONERS c (By I ntei i. a; i nal News Sen ice. ) BLRLIN. Maul, 17. -.Sunday.. Fif teen hundred Sp;n '.sn ides, including insiny women. hne been executed sit Moabit prison .luring tN past four days and it will tsike smother week to kill all the Spartacide prisoners so far sentenced to .lesith. it is stated today. The battle of Berlin ended Friday. Another outbreak is expected by the end of March. BOLSHEVIKirAREf FINANCING REVOLUTION IN GERMANY . By International News Sonne. IIKI.SI.NCKOI.'S. March 1 7. - Russian HoKluiiks arc sending 1 7."i,ntMi,noo into ibrmany to finance i evi dot iousi ry org.'iu iations, it wsis learned ant horitsit I vely today. There is now grave dsuiger that Nsthiinia is conteiiipl.it i ng a sepaiate i'l-.'i.e uith the Soviet government. DEATHS .1 KWKTT GKL'K.N'. .b u.'tt. the infant daughter of Mi. and Mrs. IVrtey W. (ireen, siged about two vesns died Saturday morning lit their home at Mayworth. The body was brought to Lowell for burial. CIIRISTIVK MORRIS. Christine, the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. .1. li. Morris, aged one year and I!' I s i y s, died last Wednesday sit the home of her parents, :i:!s South Vance street. Funeral serv ices were held sit the home at :! o'clo.k Wednesday afternoon, followed by fiii ill in Hollywood Cemetery. liLI LAII SMITH. following an illness of only a few days Miss Heulah Smith, aged 17 years. a diinghtei of Mr. L. I'. Smith, who lives near Belmont, died at the City Hospital at an eailv hour Saturday morning. The body wiis taken to the home Saturday sin. I the funeral and burial ncie held at LbenoiT Methodist church. n m:i;.i. wk .iis. uohi.vson. I'linersil services oxer the remains of Mrs. .1. I.inwood Robinson, whose sad death was chronicled in Friday's Gazette, were conducted at the residence in lyow ell at I I :.:o o'clock Saturday morning by Rev. W. ,1. Roach, pastor of the Lowell I'resbv fi i.-in church, assisted by Rev. Mr. Kennedy, pastor of the Lowell Methodist church, and Rev. A. L. Stanford, pastor of Main Street Methodist church, Gusto nia. The ceremony was brief but impres sive and was attended by ii huge con course of sorrowing friends and relatives. Among tl ut of town relatives present were Mrs. Robinson's father. Mr. V. L". Long, of Ciistonta. her sisters, Mrs. I. Mcl'hail. of Hamlet, Mrs. Victor B. Hig gins, of Knoxville, Tenii., ami Mrs. .1. B. Reeves, of Gastonia. as well as many friends and relatives from Charlotte, Kings Mountain, and Lincolnton. The pall bearers were Dr. ,1. V. IvVid, and Messrs. Coit Robinson, Paul Titman, P. P. Murphy, .1. II. Ramseiir and T. P. Ran kin. Mrs. Robinson was greatly beloved by all who knew her. She was a friend to all and won lasting friends by her sweet ness and generosity of disposition and by her sincere good will. She was an ideal wife and mother, finding her greatest pleasure in the welfare of her home and loved ones. The love and esteem in which she was held was bountifully attested by the qusintities of beautiful floral designs which more than covered her grave. Mrs. Robinson wsis a member of Main Street Methodist church, Csistonia, until after her marriage, when she joined the Pres byterian church at Lowell, her husband's church. MRS. BKLLK RHVNK. Correspondence of The Gazette. DALLAS. March 17. -The passing of Mrs. Belle Rh.vne at her home here Sat urday at " o'clock, closed a long and beautiful Christian life. Having been born in Dallas Sept. P'. 144. her whole life of 74 years was sent here. A de voted memlier of the Dallas Lutheran Church since early girlhood, attending all services as long as health permitted and faithful to its every cause. Patiently, cheerfully and without complaint she bore the two years of sickness, during 13 months of which she was confined to her bed. She leaves to mourn her death liesi.le a host of relatives and friends the follow ing children and step-children: Miss Ida Rhyne. Mr. Eugene Rhyne and Mrs. R. O. Fordham, of Dallas, who were with ner when the end came, and Mr. H. G. Rhyne. of Dallas; Mr. G. R. Rhyne, of Gastonia. and Mr. E. M. Rhyne, of Ellerbe. Four sisters, Mrs. Betty Cost ner and Mrs. Lee 8towe, of Dallas; Mrs. Cynthia Rhyne, of Morgantan, and Mrs. Sarah Johnston, of Belmont, who is an invalid, also survive. The funeral services will be conducted at the Lutheran church by the pastor. Ycung Gastonia Attorney Wow at Head of Co. A, U5th Machine Gun Battal ion, Being Boosted for This Honor Is Now En Route Home from France Is Popular With Gastonians, Who Wish to Honor Him. Kiieinls of ( apt. R. Groglf' Cherry, of o. A, l'oth Machine (inn Battalion, "."tii Division, now en route home from I'l.in.e, have launched u boom for him for the i tlii e of mayor of (instonia. This tint will come to Capt. Cheny as a sur prise when he lands in the homeland, the his! of tins woik or the first of next. The An .4 . 's I':' mention of his name in connection with this office is without his knowledge or con sent but hi- friends believe that he would not t iro :i deaf esir t.i the call, which will be unanimous, of his fell iw citizens to accept this honor at their hands and serve t hem in tin- i si pacily, A anoiin. einent was inside some time sign by Ma,vor A. M. Ii..n that he would not be ii candidate for reelection. Fol lowing that announcement there began to develop, almost unconsciously, :i move ment looking to the choice of Captain ( 'berry. May ."th is the date for the regular bi ennial alderiiiiinic election. As will be noted from information given elsewhere in today's dazette there will be an elec tion on the day following. May lith on the proposition of adopting the city man ager foi in of gov eminent for tiastonia. Capt. Cherry is a Gnstnuia boy whose ciiieer has been watched with interest and admiration by a host of friends. 1'poii completion of the high school course here he entered Trinity College and was grad uated from that institution with high honors. He then studied law and. having formed a pin tnership with Ma ior A. I.. Bulwinkle, silso now en route home from overseas, he had just begun to es tablish a piactice in his profession when the call to at ins caiue. He at once volun teered .'in. I raised a machine gun compa ny. As has been previously told in these columns he and his men were in the thick of the tight over there and rendered un stinted service in the defense of thier country and humanity. THE BRAVES AND TIGERS. Ty Cobb, Hank Gowdy and Maranville to Be the Stars of Big Exhibition Game Here April 10th A Record Breaking Attendance is Expected. The keenest kind of interest is already being displayed, not only in this city but in the outlying districts, over the ap pearance here on Thursday afternoon, April I ut b, of the Boston National ami Detroit Aineriesin league baseball clubs. It is easily the biggest baseball affair ever staged here and it is the expectation of those who have guaranteed the large amount necessary to get the two clubs to stop off here on their way North from their training camps that the attendance will break all local baseball records. In this game between the Braves and the Tigers, as they sire known in the baseball world, will be presented abso lutely the biggest drawing cards of pres ent day ma.jer league baseball. Kvery -body has heard of Ty Cobb of the Detroit club, himself a Southerner and every where recognized as in a class by himself. He will play his usual position in the De troit outfield and whenever Cobb is in the line up there is sure to lie something doing almost any minute. Then there is Hsiiik Gnwdy, whose wonderful prowess with the bat in that memorable world's series of 1!I4 is not yet forgotten. But Gowdy has a more recent claim to fame for he was the first of all the big league players to see overseas service and for more than IS months he was on the other side, rising to the rank of color sergeant with the gallant Rainbow Division. The third of this great trio of stars is Rab bit Maranville, the diminuitive and pep pery shortstop of the Braves, easily the best shortstop in the game today as well as about .the smallest player in point of inches who hss ever made good in the company of the top notchers. The contract calls for the appearance of all of these stars and in addition will Rer. C. E. Fritx, at 11 o'clock today and the body laid to rest in the burying ground aT Stanley. f?U ! n.i'rnationnl .Wwm Service.) MKMI'HIS, March 17. As report continue to trickle in today from along the Mississippi Valley, it is becoming ev ident that tornadoes, floods and storms during the last 4 hours have caused dam age aggregating around ."),t()0,(IO(l. Mora than ,i score of people are known to have lost their lives. Trains are at a stand still in many sections, with the worst con ditions around Memphis and Virksburg. A tornado tore through Sharkey, Wash ing! in and Issaquena counties, Miss., where the number of dead us placed at 17 and I ."it injured, si number of them fatal ly. At the .1. W. Johnson plantation at Panterben, Johnson, who is a million aire cotton planter, was killed. Sinai, plantation was razed with a loss of life, , ami the plat iitnion manager, K. P. Green, was fatally injured. Most of the dead sire negroes. SATURDAY'S TELEGRAPHIC NEWS (By International News Services.) WASHINGTON. March 15. The War Department this afternoon stated that the 115th Field Artillery with 1,500 men ami the lo.'ith ammunition train with 7 Id men, all from Tennessee, would arrive sit Newport News aboard the N'iilerlan den March U.trd. The 114th artillery, al so Tennesson ns, will arrive aboard the Finland, March L'nd. NASHVILLE, March 15. -According to Vice Grand President Degray, of the hrnthc iliooilrof railway clerks, the strike on the Nashville, Chattanooga and BL Louis Rail run . I will be adjusted or in pro cess of adjustment within 4H hours. WASHINGTON. March 15. A total of l,l4.t,Mi0 oHicers and men have lieea discharged from the army to date. Gen. March announced today. Demobilir.atios orders to date amount to l.7H,500. Of the last figures 1 .:tll5,0H0 were in the Uni ted States and ;t7o,5IHI from overseas. I'ARIS, March 15. An unoHiciiil a greemeiit has been leached on the ques tion of reparation wliich Germany must make, it is learned this afternoon. Details have not been published. Boundaries, disposition of the Kaiser and other ques tions are yet to be decided. PARIS, March Fixing Germany's new eastern and northern frontiers con tinued to engage the attention nf the peace delegates today. The supreme war council is not meeting today but will meet Friday. Latest reports from Ger many by American and other experta emphasize the extreme necessity of speed ily feeding the country. It is doubtful if the present German government can withstand another revolution, which is reported to be imminent. NKW VORK. March l.'l. Four per sons were held today charged with advo cating the overthrow of the United States government as a result of the raid hist night when polVe searched Bolsbe viki headquarters on Fast 15th street. Over 15(1 others arrested in the raid were released after a long close questioning. The authorities confiscated all books and psipers found. They now have the names of hundreds of Bolsheviks throughout the I'nited States. Marguerite Clark in "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch" at the Gastoniaa Tuesday. ( apt. W. L. Balthis, chairman of the housing committee of the Chamber of Commerce and also head of the Gastonia Housing Corporation would like for any persons who are interested in the build ing of an apartment house ami who have not Is-en seen by the committee to see him at their very earliest convenience. It has been impossible for the committee to see everybody and there are probably per sons who are interested in the movement who have lieen waiting for the committee to call on them. Billie Rhodes in "The Girl of Dreams" Broadway today. My Everybody loves a pretty girl ani adores a happy one. See BILLIE RHODES at the Broadway today. 1 Mr. John V. Hanna returnee! to hia home in the New Hope neighborhood yes terday after spending several days witfc the families of Mr. Harvey D. Hanna, Mr. 0. A. Spencer and Mrs. J. R. Shan non, west of the city. come to this city all f the other player of the two teams, regulars and rookies a like, making altogether a party of over 70 ball players to say nothing of mana gers, attendants and a perfect horde of newspaper men who are covering this tour of the clubs for the Boston and Detroit newspapers. It promises to b one of r the biggest days this place kaa ever see a.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
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March 17, 1919, edition 1
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