Newspapers / Greenville News (Greenville, N.C.) / June 16, 1917, edition 1 / Page 7
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- Five Pobts.'ghon,e-19.v l(;;'r1rprN'-,Vvy7i ' i " V,fvcffn'-' WAWXhw . j KEY BROWf V-V.: V.---" ii I - - - - -.- . - w .t v..- , y-.N. , t .... ..: ,;..;t, . 1 ! A 1 , ' V A . j ..,, i j I . , " ." "'' 1 1 ' " '' " ' i A .'" J .tt't 4" .. ..--. - v y,J. V t- a.:.:-".AW Vf V.. -rvv? . ' 'ui . - , , .,.. , , . - -V, ' L . " - -y- - .- - ., -7 - - .r v .. K-y ' '..r;, - s 'V:rCREAilf DOES IT ' Our cream jfs wellfrozen and, eliciotis tahe taste. All flavors served and you ffet a bij dish for a little price. are Canutes IV VMwS A full asrtoentpf candies and fruits are served at all times. They are strictly fresh hiffh-CTade andsold at popular prices.: , STORE CAMFORNm FRUIT Phone 436 '.PEKING SEESDEVIU ;DICEx.1AN' js ivoRTH 1,000 ' EGGS .1 Varieties of the Peanut. Roughly peaJUng . three Varieties of ' Ceremony Instituted During the Ting Sam ndredientl Are to Be Poond In .Peanut ireVgroMnria tm wtiTed. r - Ago, Enacted by Priest. Both Valued at $2.45 for II- lumlnatlng Purposes. white-ind sSiianlsb -The", white, .th most Import! nt variety, has a nut with. two kernels .witlK pijik .skias ? ijts Srine- What "is a man) How much Is he spreads ahng,theround, in this re- Peking recently witnessed the fcere- monyJ instituted durine ,the Tslne wnrtTi fmm bh otiha AnnintT 1 spect kinlike that of the red variety , dynasty, .over 200 years ago; known -as - According to one way of looklne at grows more upright and in tm the "devil dance. It took place In the Jt a man Is worth about $2.50 a day11 The, pod, of red nut. holds Lama '-temple,, and was witnessed Jaj from his shoulders' down and any-Ltaree and .sometimes four kernels, juki several thousand .devout "Buddhist where from $50,000 to$i0o6,000 a deeP d skin. r TheSpanlsh is a L wnrahfnpm ? cava v.nt oWi ftWoaf w-.ii ut. .1 . mu t t much smftlifr nut 1th a liehter son T Eighty riestl danced In groups vary- saido be the estimate of the average, and wilder flavoKJ:han either of, thr ing 10, numoer irpm 'two to--twenty, successful business man. All the" celebrants, wore gorgeously em- : The scientistT hbwfever, looks at the i broidered silk robes and masks repre- question from another angle. Accord senting animals. Conspicupus ' were ing to him a man is worth $2.45 -for heads of. tigers, oxen, sheep and lleer.. Liiiuminating purposesT since a man The dance ended at two o'clock 4n the weighing" 150 pounds' Contains about afternoon, when a procession of the r300 cubic feet of : oxygen,2 hydrogen others possesses. The entire ctopis shelled and, used especially in thjelcon fection known as nougat., - . priests formed ahd proceeded to. the east gate of the temple grounds,, where.. the paper effigy of a nude woman was burhed. ' . .. and nitrogen in his constitution, which at 70 cents per 1,000 cubic feet equals the price above, Also a man contains enough carbon to make 9360 lead pen cils ; enough phosphorus ti make 800, 000 matches or enough t kill 500 per sons, and enough water to fill a 38- DRINK c6(3a-c6la in bottles THE MOST SANITARY WAY X j The'legend which the ceremony com ; memorates is , that the devil,' n' form f of a woman, ran about the country, casting spells and working: mischief to nuart reservoir. crops, animals and humans. Attempts Furthermore, it makes no difference j to catch her were futile until the' Bud-. : how sour a man may look lie contains dha sent a charmed horse to run ner about 60 lumps of sugar, ax great deal down, The animal overtook the nee- Cf starch, chloride of potash, magnesi- TESTED THE DENTIST'S WORK inS woman after a race of 10,000 ii, um sulphur and hydrochloric acid in Coca-Cola Bottling Works JAMES M. HINES, Proprietor i $85 j (TnTTfi i $85 Khedive of Egypt Had Followers' Teeth Pulled So HeJouId See Whether Jt Would Hurt. To illustrate Oriental habits of thought, NLord Cromer tells, Tn , the Quarterly Review, this story of Ismail Pashar the. khedive of Egypt It once happened that Ismail was suffering seized her in his teeth, brought her to a place of punishment where she was publicly destroyed by fire. Thef emale figure is not alike on-all occasions f sometimes an old hag is represented, but generally the woman is young and comely, as being more dangerous to mankind. The ceremonial recalls to those who .have traveled in Mohammedan coun- from toothache.. He sent for a Euro trles me reugious iervor oi tue uauc- pean dentist, who told him that he in dervishes." ought to have the tooth out. Ismail ; said that he was afraid it would be very painful. He was informed in reply that, if he would allow th,e den tist to administer laughing gas to him,, he would feel nothing. He still doubt- his system. There are 50 grains, of iron in the blood of &jx ordinary man, enough to make one spike large enough to hold his weight. . What is a man? This, is the some what cynical ariswer of one scientific man: f, "Break the shells of 1.Q00 eggs into a huge pan or , basin and you have in gredients from which to form him from his toenails Ato the most delicate tissues o& his brain." Popular Sci ence Monthly. Cats as Hunters. Dr. A. A. Allen, professor of birds FVERY FUR SEAL HAS HAREM . Guided by Magnetic Currents.. Recent experience ;-ixas- tended r to show that carrier pigeons and other , birds of passage- are guided- by mag netic; currents. M- A, Thauzies, a; French Student tf pigeons, htts 1 noted, that 6n two ;, occasions when pigeon flights were " junsa,tislEactpry ; magnetic storms were occurring, and the flights of these birds have been becoming, of ten uncertaM" a less telesr.abhy v came into extensive ed, but told the dentist to bring his at Cornell, suggests that anyono who is skeptical about the hunting ability of the cat should go out in the early apparatus to the palace and he would ftnd track the wild animals of fail morning after a light snow fau i and track the wild animals of the : then discuss the question. ; nearby woods. Perhaps you -will -find j xne aentist complied, and explained the tracks of a red squirrel ; squirrels the process to the khedive. Jsmall then are very , clever and. usually manage summoned an attendant and told him to exist even In cities. Perhaps you to send up the sentryLwho was at his -:' will find'tbe tracks of a cottontail or door. I f two; rabbits 'ar,e very prolific and When the man arrived the khedive (' stand '. a great deal of persecution, ordered him to sit down in a chair,!' probaoljr you -tjiU find the tracks of a and requested the dentist to take out1 !'lew iraand mice ; but be assumed you a tooth on either side of his Jaw4 wfli 1i 'tiiiDritAM Ismai V then asked the1 man whether,," trackr crossing! and jrecrossijigV Doc he had felt anything, and the man, tor Allen , does not i believe tbere is a tola him that he. had not.. But Ismail waff not yet satisfied. He said that the sentry, yfas a young, strong man, and that he would like to see theex periment tried on someone of weaker physique. Accordingly he summoned a slave girl from the harem and had the den tist extract two of her teeth. Find ing that she did not show evidence of extreme suffering, he then consented to have his own tooth out. It is re lated, although possibly that part of Hindrances to Usefulness. 'The great hindrances to usefulness in those wuo think they wish to "be use- thertory is apocryphal, that the denlvful. yet have never really tried to he, . tist then received an order on the re pusillanimousness and ambition. f Columbia Graphanola it plays all records " QUINN-MHXER & CO. . Dickinson Ave. Egyptian treasury for one thousand pounds. s Foolish 'Gator. "While one of our leading fishermen was indulging in a nap on the banks of the river," says the Winsett Cour ier,' "a hungry alligator crawled up and swallowed his boots. One of the boot legs had a pint of corn liquor in it, and as an alligator was subsequently dis covered trying to climb a tree, it 'is thought to have been the same one that swallowed the boot with the liquor in it." Atlanta Constitution. Vain Pepinings. "By right of conquest," he declared, the maid belonged to him ; but as along life's path they fared his eye sight growing dim. her temper waxed sharp and i shrewd, ''her tongue became uproarious ; and he wished, as his past place fin the , eastern United , States within five miles of a human habita tion where you wilTnot find the tracks of the? domestic cat more frequently than those of any wild' animals, squir-. Male Sometimes Gathers More Than 100 females on the Section of Beach Which He Controls. Fur seals are extremely polygamous and the old males, ; which weigh from '400 to 500 pounds, "haul ! up" first on the breeding beaches. Each bull holds a certain" area, -and as the females, only one-fifth his size, come ashore they are appropriated by . the nearest bulls until each ("beach mas ter" gathers, a harem, sometiines Con taining smbre ' than: 100 members, says V' Belated Vindication. ..; s ' The persiansf of the time of Cyrus were fcoroastrians. Tbe Persian relig ion .was primitively monotheistic,' and they allowed no idols- or other mate-. rial symbols of deity In-their "tem ples. There jvas less enmity on the part of the Jews -against the Persians -than agahist the vpther great x nations witbf' whom they came in contact,1 due probably to the -monotheism x which , characterized the Persian religion. Sp Cyris, whatever else may be said of him, .was certainly nCt an idolator.-p Christian Herald. . . Pity th Poor D -speptic. , "Back home" we useil to gather -around the piano of an evening, a God---fearing, respectable family, and Sold. orgies of sentimental melody, seeing Nellie, home, ar 1 impKng the winds of heaven to brin-back)ur Bonixieto us. To a chance dyspeptic sitting., on jfhe hydrant outside, It mjist have been. 'slck'ening.-T-Robert M. Gay, in the At lantic. ' : ' ' ;,' ' '4-: .. Human Lob$trs. ' ..' .y -f Many -women -an? lik&;the species" o lbteE whji," if ne 'ikM' by the "receding tide, waits for tjifere- turning: tide to float it :f rom its tempo- wlldsr faf from houses. Grit. reis, raDDits, mice exceppeo xrayyra ! (certamty among thousahds qf : ap catch them m tneir traps sex in i m0h, wt fnnns." From the ages of on to four years fur seals are extremely playful. Theyj are marvelous swimmers and frolic about In pursuit t)f one another now diving deep and then one after the other, suddenly leaping high above the surf aceln graceful curves, like porpoises. Squids and fish of various species are their main food. Their chief""" natural enemy is the killer whale, which follows their migrations and haunts the sea about their breed ing ground, taking heavy toll among them. They are twin sisters. To put it oth erwise, there is the fault of not.thihk ingit worth while to do a little be cause it is little, and of not caring to do something because it may not lead to much. Bishop Thorold. Bacteria Long Lived. How long some bacteria may live un der proper conditions Is brought "out by M. W. Lyon, Jr., of George -Washington university in a letter to Sci ence. He tells of a culture of organ isms of paratyphoid beta kept for more than -ten years sealed in a test tube at Howard university, which, when transferred to another medium, pro duced the reactions that proved the bacteria to be alive and active. v New Danger. , Once we have this wireless phone in common use it ougnt to De easy ior suspicious wives to locate errant bus he viewed, that be hadn't been vie- bands compelled to stay late at the :orious. office. the Natiobal Geographic - Magazine. 1 prlgon, r rherfe W the; rocks It would remain to die, althougbr'a slight effort would enable it to reacp. tne waves, tossing only a few feet below. There are many human,! lobsters, mere "hangers on" of society,. who are enter-'' taining.; themselves witb the; idea that because they are, 'woniiMfyar be helped ?without putting" f?rth nyr ef fort.. themselves. . .. . "V- Here the young are born, and after the mating season, the seals which have remained ashore without food from 4' to 6 weeks,- return to the wa ter. The mothers go and"" come,: and. each Is able to find her young with Chautauqua Circle. The circle was organized in 1878, with the aim of enlarging the influence of the assembly, which was organized in 1874. Anyone may become a mem ber of the circle by sending an applica tion together with $5 for the "unit books" membership book and maga zine for one year to Chautauqua, in--stitution, Chautauqua, 'N. Y. Roses That Soon Fade. The roses "of pleasure seldom last long enough to v adorn, the brow of him who plucks them ; for they are the only roses which .do not retain their sweet ness after tey have lost their beauty. Hannah More. . Education. Our public-school System is the raostf successful social enterprise yet under taken by any people, and5 on it we spend three-quarters of a billion dol-' lars a .year. Education is indeed our foremost industry, from whatever point of view it may be regarded. Just the Thing. . The way of the transgressor is hard, but that seems to make the motoring; all the better. a a a id COUNT THAT DAY LOST, WHOSE LOW DESCENDING SUN, FINDS WORK BILLED OUT AT COST, AND BUSINESS DONE FOR FUN. ' ' ( r We are not in business for fun and are not ddins work for cost, but if you need printing of any kind we will be fflad to serve you at prices consistent with the quality oour work. 'if I ii s 2 "1 V Fbdne- 6 y . ' 111 EUg (Silliiefil: "Charge No More, Do it Better' GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA '-r. M. ' i - ,-'4-; ".f. 1 1 To Have Bright, Clear Light. A smoking lamp 6;otte with an un pleasant odor Is usually causel. by dirt. Sk,ng the wiefcahd occasion ally the orrner in strong vinegar for an hour and then rinsing It in fresh vinegar rnd drying thoroughly will keep these, parts clean. ' Darkest Just Before Dawn. . When, you get in a tight place, and . everythihg goes against you until It seems as If you cannot hold- ona mln. ute longer1 never give up ; for that is just 'the place and the time that the tide will turn. Harriet Beecher Stowe. I r. a. r': '? v ..V
Greenville News (Greenville, N.C.)
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June 16, 1917, edition 1
7
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