Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / April 25, 1907, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Hickory Democrat (Hickory, 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
Accused Philadelphia » Man Attempted Suicide 1 f New York, April 20.—Benedict Gim bel, a Philadelphia merchant, whose " arrest on grave charges here was fol- c lowed by an attempt to commit sui- § cide in Hoboken passed a fairly com- t fortable night in St. Mary's Hospital. > The Hoboken doctors have hopes that c he will recover. Gimbel was arrested f while going to a New York resort with £ a crippled boy. Gimbel's wife and brothers remain- 1 ed close to the hospital during the t night. 1 In a statement issued by the family it is announced that Gimbel has been t in poor health and at times his mind I has been blank. Gimbel's arraignment in the police t court will necessarily be postponed i pending the result of his injuries. ( Mrs. Gimbel Talks. 1 Mrs. Benedict Gimbel, who was with her husband today; said: 1 "My husband has been a crazy man for a year and was insane when he at- j tempted to kill himself. "I did not want Mr. Gimbel to come j to New York," continued Mrs. Gimbel, l "because I realized he had been acting . queerly for a long time. 1 "We know he is absdlutely innocent of the charges against him, and we ] intend to fight them to the end. It is evident that blackmailers were in- j formed of his mental and i have prayed upon him for money." W,|LL FURNISH MINUTES 1 Minutes of Conference to be Present ed to Interstate Commerce Com- mission. • Washington, April 20. —The pro duction of the minutes of the 1903 conferences between the Suez and Pacific ocean steamship lines, which resulted in the alleged agreement on 1 the rates on cotton fabrics to the Orient, resulted in reopening the case in which these rates are complained of before the interstate commerce 1 commission. 1 To show this, they agreed to fur- nish the minutes of the conference. These minutes were produced by Wil liam Boyd, of New York. Attorney Sithall, representing the complaintants offered to submit the case without arguYnent, but represen tatives of the railroads desired to be heard and the commission set May 14, next, to hear the argument. Letter to H. C. Killian Hickory, N. C. Dear Sir: The cost of a gallon of paint put-on is about $5, no matter what paint you buy. 100 gallons Devoe put-on $ 500 110 " next-grade " 550 120 " next-to-that " 600 130 i " next " 650 140 " next-to-that " 700 150 " next " 750 160 " next-to-that " SOO 170 " next " 850 180 " next-to-that " 900 190 " next " 950 200 " next-to-that " 1000 210 " next " 1050 ?20 " next-to-that " 1100 The strongest paint is the one that talces the least gallons; least gallons to buy; least gallons to paint; and the strongest paint wears longest. These lessons are useful. Yours truly 23 F W DEVOE & CO P. S. F B Ingold sells our paint. Valetta, Island of Malta, April 20. While manouevering the British tor pedo boat Ariel collied with breakwa ter and sank. One man was drowned. HARD TIMES IN KANSAS. The old days of grasshoppers and drouth are almost forgotten in the pros citizen of Codell, Earl Shamburg, has not yet forgotten a hard time he en countered. He says i "I was worn out and discouraged by coughing night and day, and could find no relief till I tried Dr. King's New Discovery. It took less than one bottle to complete ly cure me." The safest and most re liable cough and cold cure and lung and throat healer ever discovered. Guranteed by C. M. Shuford, W. S. Martin & Co. drug stores, 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottle free. It) goes without saying that a talk ing machine does not say without going. A pretty girl's cheek goes for more than its face value. HOW'S THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not. be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have nown F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be lieve him perfectl yhonorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous sufaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation. The acquitted woman (young and % pretty) kissed her lawyer. "Madam," said he, with an attempt at firmness, "my stipulation was that there should be no fee in this case. You must per mit me to return it."'—Philadelphia Ledger. CURED RHEUMATISM. Mr. Wm. Henry, ot Chattanooga, Tenn., had rheumatism in his left arm. "The strength seemed to have gone out of the muscles so that it was useless for work," he says. "I applied Cham berlain's Pain aim and wrapped the arm in flannel at night, and to my re lief I found that the pain gradually left me and the strength returned. In three weeks the rheumatism had dis appeared and has not since returned." It troubled with rheumatism try a few applications of Pain Balm. You are certain to be pleased with the relief which it affords. For sale by Shuford Drug. Co. GIRL MOUNTAIN GUIDE Member of Noted Pennsylvania Fam ily Adopts Unique Vocation Lake of the Woods, N. Y., April 22. "I do not see why it should follow be cause one happens to be a girl college graduate that she should cling forev er to the cities and hold only to the vocations and avocations which are considered as peculiarly belonging to her sex. Therefore, I cannot see why so much ado is made about me —a very ordinary girl—simply because I love nature so passionately that I wish to be always in touch with her and because I am going to act. for the coming season at least, as a guide through the magnificent wilds of Northern New York. The foregoing is a statement made today by Miss Ella Marion Young, for merly of Philadelphia, and a direct descendant of Ethan Allen, of Revo lutionary fame. For the last three years she has been a nomadic resident of half a doz en villages in the Adirondacks and along the shores of the St. Lawernce. Miss Young is at present occupying a little rustic cottage belonging to her brother-in-law, Dr. John A. Miller, of Atlanta, and Situated upon Green Is land, in the Lake of the Woods. An announcement appearing recent ly In a local paper stated that Miss Young would act in the capacity of guide during the coming season, and the girls of a score of villages whis pered and wondered. But now they know Miss Young "means business." Dr. William H. Young, Miss Young's father, ,was a prominent surgeon of Philadelphia, and at once a professor of medicine at the University of Penn sylvania. He died a widower in 1901, leaving a comfortable fortune to his daughter. SHELTON AGAIN RESPITED. Respite Refused and Granted Both In One Day —Playing With a Life. Columbia, S. C., April 19. —After having refused yesterday morning to interfere with the sentence of the court Governor Ansel late yesterday after noon granted a respite of two weeks to John Shelton. who was sentenced to be hanged today at Spartanburg. The negro's life has been played with for a year in a strange and mysterious fashion. In response to a letter from Attorney C. P. Sims of Spartanburg, received yesterday morning, Governor Ansel called up Mr. Sims on the telephone before noon and informed him that he had refused to grant the request in his letter for a respite or commutation and then he wrote Mr. Sims to the same effect. In the afternoon after a consultation with Chief Justice Pope, who had granted a stay of execution until today, after Governor Ansel had previously refused to interfere two months ago, the Governor consented to grant a respite until Friday, May 3. It would seem that if anything tangi ble is to be done in this negro's be half it should certainly be done within the next two weeks. Ask For Marine Band at Raleigh Celebration Washington, April 20. —Senator Sim mons and Governor Glenn, of North Carolina, requested the President to or der the Marine Band sent to Raleigh to attend the Mecklenburg celebration and the unveiling of the Bagley mon ument. The President referred them to the Secretary of the Navy, expressing the hope that the latter would find the way clear to grant the request. Peace For Salvador And Nicaragua Washington, April 19. —A tentative agreement for peace, according to ad vices received here, had been arrang ed between Nicaragua and Salvador which probably wiil en the Central American war. Orders have been issued for the withdrawal of the Nicaraguan troops from Honduras. OFFICERS OF D. A. R. Vice Presidents-General Elected Today —Other vOfficers Chosen for Daugh ters of American Revolution. Washington, April 19. —Mrs. Donald McLean, has been elected president general of the Daughters of the Amer ican Revolution. The remainder of the administration ticket was also suc cessful. Newspaper Men Must "Keep Off The Grass" Washington, April 20. —Secretary Loeb announced that hereafter news paper men will not be allowed to congregate in 'the White House grounds after nightfall, or to go to the door of the White House in search of information. CLOAK MAKERS RAISE RIOT. Strikers Attack Senior Member' of Firm, Causing Riot. New York, April 22.—The striking cloak makers at the establishment of Oscar Margolin & Son, assaulted a senior member of the firm and created a riot, in which several hundred per sons participated, and finally were dis ■ persed by the police. i •= v ' Professor Smith Gets Allowance. New York, April 22. —The secretary of the Carnegie foundation for the ad , vancement of teaching announced the . retiring allowance to educators, among : others, to F. H. Smith, for years pro : fessor of natural philosophy in the • University of Virginia. \ CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. ; The Kind You Dan Always Bought 1 i eSTur'eof &£&£££& NfGRO CRIMINAL ' SETS TEN YEARS • - ' ■ "* Wadesboro, April 19. —The Anson ian has moved its office. The paper is now published on the corner of Wade and Morgan streets. Blue, the noted blockader of Rich mond county, was fined $3,500 for blockading by .Judge Council last week. We verily believe that a sentence of ..six months on the roads would have been better and ultimate ly accomplished more good in the end. Cotton is bringing on this market 11.25. It is now thought that a large majority of the old vets in this coun ty will attend the re-union in Rich mond, Va., the latter part of May and the Ist of June. Most of the boys in Anson fought in the battles around Richmond and this makes the desire stronger to go there. Anson camp may charter a car for its use. A call for a contribution to help pay the way of those who are unable to pay will be made on our people. I have no doubt but that a generous re sponse would be made to such an appeal. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Hendley, of Charlotte, is visiting friends near Wadesboro. FORTUNE TCLLER CHASED. Angry Citizens Thought He Had Evil Designs and Almost Lynch Him. Spartanburg, S. C., April 20.—Fred Ford, a fortune teller and peddler of spectacles, who claims Shelby, N. C., as his home, is being given a pre liminary hearing before Magistrate A. H. Kirby on the charge of as rault and battery, laying hands on Miss Splawm, a cripple, who lives with her aged mother, a widow, at the Saxon Mill village. Ford after being arrested narrowly escaped vio lence at the hands of angry citizens of Saxon, who chased him a long dis tance, and the prompt arrival of President J. A. Law, of Saxon Mill, no doubt saved Ford's life. Several days ago Ford went to the home of Mrs. Splawm and finding Miss alone offered to tell her fortune, at the same time laying bis hand on her arms. She became frightened and made an outcry and neighbors rushed to her home to lender aid. Ford became frightened and made a Wish out of the house. He was fallowed by a large crowd aud after a chase of a mile was captured. President Law followed (he mob in his buggy and his timely arrival saved the day for Ford, for the crowd of citizens believed that Ford had attempted evil designs when he laid hands on the woman. This charge he denies, claiming he enly wanted to tell her fortune. Important invention. Union, S. C., April 19.—Mr. N. S. Tramel, who is in charge of the spin ning department of the Excelsior Knitting Mills, has invented a "knock off motion" machine. This invention will be able to stop any machinery or machine that may be running at any time when it is de sirable to have the machine stopped immediately. Mr. Tramel has been made several attractive offers by persons to go in with him and obtain a patent, but as yet he has not decided what course he will pursue. It seems, of all persons, Mr. Tramel should he exceptionally good authori ty, and be able to put on the market the best "knock off" machine known, for it will be recalled that only a few months ago he acquired national noto riety through his ability to "knocli off" and "keep off" two men, a mar and his son, who held him up at the point of a gun, and by his alertness coolness and nerve was able to disarm them both without injuring himself oi disabling them. Nearl 0,000 Natives are Homeless, Result of Fire Manila. April 20. —The latest reports from Iloilo say the fire has been check ed. The property loss is estimated at SIOO,OOO. Several hundred houses were de stroyed and from 8.000 to 10.000 na tives are homeless. * Adequate relief measures have beer taken. There was no loss of life bv th earthquakes. The shocks, while the most sever* experienced in 15 years, were not vio lent enough to cause much destruc tion. » Dispatches from points in severa provinces report severe shocks but lit tie damage. EARTH TREMOR AT CHARLESTON .Charleston, S. C".. April 19. —A sligh earth tremor was felt here today. No damage has been reported as i result. HIS DEAR OLD MOTHER. "My dear old mother, who is nov eighty three years old, thrives on Elec trie Bitters," writes W. B. Brunson, o Dublin, Go. "She has taken them fo about two years and enjoys an excel lent appetite, feels strorg and sleepi well." That's the way Electric Bitten affect the aged, and the same happ: result? follow in all cases of femah weakness and general debility. Weak puny children too, are greatly strength ened by them. Guaranteed also fo stomach, liver and kidney troubles, b 1 O. M. Shuford, W. S. Martin & Co. Druggists. 50. % Miss Bess Hutchison has returnei to the city after spending severa weeks at Lexington with Mrs. Ricl ard Springs. CHILDREN CRY FLETCHER'S CASTORI/ Indian Longboat Won Marathon Race V Boston, Mass., April 19. —The elev enth Marathon race of 25 miles from Ashland to Boston, which started at noon, in point of number, is the greatest in history. \ > The official entry list contains the names of 126 long-distance runners. The chief interest was centered in the entry of Tom Longboat, an Indian. The men got away in a bunch. Boston, April 19. —Tom Longboat, the Indian, won the Marathon race. His time was 2:24-20-4-5 seconds, un official. Caught In Machinery And Crushed to Death Statesville, N. C., April 20.—While attempting to adjust a belt this morn ing Miller, who with his brother own and operate the city roller mill, was caught in the machinery and so badly injured about the head and shoulders, he died soon after being taken to the Long sanitarium. Mr. Miller was a progressive young iran and his tragic death has sadden ed the hearts of many. He was married only last summer and his young wife survives. Water Foot Deep In Streets of Mobile Mobile, Ala., April 22.-Last night Mobile was visited by a torrent of rain delaying trains and interrupting the wires. The streets in many sections of the city are covered with water a foot to two feet deep. Children are unable to reach the schoolhouses. The new union station is complete ly surrounded by water. Earth Shocks Were belt at Manila Manila, P. 1., April 19—Earth shocks were felt here today. Reports received from the southern part of the Island of Luzon announce that severe earthquakes were felt at that place. No loss of life Is reported. SHIEFFIELD WON TROPHY In Presence of 100,000 Spectators Shieffield Won Over Everton, Hold ers of Trophy. London, April 20. —Sheffield defeated Everton, holders of the Trophy, at foot ball in the presence of 100,000 people. VERDICT AGAINST RAILROAD. Greensboro, April 19. —In the Super ior Court today in the case of Burton against the Southern Railway, for per manent injury, the jury gave a verdict J of $6,000 against the railroad. This, with the verdict last night of SB,OOO, are two of the largest verdicts ever given here. A court at Chicago has decided that it is /gainst public policy to pay insurance on the life of a person executed for murder. Want Increase in Wages. Baltimore, Md., April 22. —General Manager Stebbins, of Merchants and Miners' Transportation Company, said that the demands for the increase of wages had been prepared by first, second and third»officers of the line, and the company had the matter under consideration. They ask for an aver j age advance of about S2O over the , present wage scale, and threaten to go out May 1, unless the demands are ac [ ceded to. President Entertained Trinity Ball Team f Washington, D. C., April 22. —The President gave a special reception to . members of the baseball team of ' Trinity College, Durham, N._ C. Rest is the great restorer. We tire . our muscles by exeieise and then rest . to restore them; yer a great many of us do not stop to tnink how little L vest we give our stomachs. As a usual thing no part cf our bodies is so gen » erally overworked as our digestive organs. A tired and overworked tom » ach will give signs of distress to which . we pay no heed until at last Dyspep sia takes hold. Indigestion is just a warning, and if we heed the warning [ we can easily avoid further conse quences. KODOL.is a most thorough stomach relief. It digests what you eat and gives the stomach a needed . rest and greatly assists in restoring it to its normal activity and usefulness, t KODOL is sold on a guarantee relief plan. It is sold here by C. M. Shuford i and W. S. Martin. "Yessir, I helps support a large family." "You old fraud, you're not r married." But I patronizes a saloon - keeper wot is."—Washington Herald, f R A WOMAN TELLS HOW TO RE LIEVE RHEUMATIC PAINS. I I have been a very great sufferer 3 from the dreadful disease, rheumatism, for a number of years. I have tried J many medicines but never got much ' relief from any of them until two ■ years ago, when I bought a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. 1 found relief before I had used all of one bot > tie, but kept on applying it and soon felt like a different woman. Through my advice many of my friends have tried it and ~can tell you how yon : derfully it has worked—Mrs. Sarah A. Cole, 140 S. New St., Dover, Del. Chamberlain's Pain Balm is a liniment. The relief from pain which it offords is alone worth many times its cost. It L makes rest and sleen possible. For sale 1 by Shuford Drug Co. - 0 This man bought a supply of tobacco with- 1 but acquainting himself with the distinctive taste of SCHNAPPS Tobacco, which has the cheering qualities that gratify his desire to chew, and at less expense than cheap tobacco. \ I SC&NAPPS has been advertised in this Some day they'll get a taste of the real paper so that every chewer has had an Schnapps —they'll realize what enjoyment opportunity to get acquainted with the they've missed by not getting SCHNAPPS fads and know that drags are not used ago-then they'll feel like kicking to produce the cheering quality found in . , the famous Piedmont country flue-cured themselves. tobaccos, and that SCHNAPPS is what he SCHNAPP s is so ld everywhere in 5 ought to chew. Still there are chewers _ who accept other and cheaper tobaccos cent cuts, and 10 and 15 cen p that do not give the same pleasure. sure you get the genuine. GASTONIA NEWS. Bazarr By Daughters of Confederacy— Pergonal Items. Gastonia, N. C., April 19.—The ba zaar under tlif» auspices of the Daugh ters of the Confederacy was opened for business yesterday morning at ten "o'clock in the rooms of the Gastonia Library. This bazaar will continue during today ancr tomorrow from 10 a. m. until 10 p. m. Luncheon will be served during these hours. A very tempting menu has been arrang ed and the ladies hope that the bus iness men instead of going home for their meals will patronize the bazaar. Fancy work and candies will also be sold in tastefully arranged booths. The proceeds from the bazaar go into the general fund of the chapter and eventually will be us>ed In the erection of a monument to the Confederate veterans. The Arlington cotton mills have a new superintendent m the person of Mr. George K. Tate who came to Gas tonia from Quitman, GJL, and succeeds Mr. J. R. Withers who has been fill ing the position temporarily. Mr. With ers formerly superintended the Ozark Mills where he made a very envious record. Mr. Withers will take charge of the Flint Mfg. Co., now in course of construction. % . Work on the new store and office building being built on Main street by Mr. S. N. Boyce and Dr. P. R. Falls is progressing nicely. The Lu cas Co. will occupy the handsome store room on the ground floor and Drs. Falls and Willtins will have offices on the second floor. NO CONNECTION JN CASES. Judge Says Land Fraud Investigation is a Thing to Itself. Denver, Col., April 19.—Judge Burch special assistant United States At torney General, in an interview with a representative of the Associated Press, denied there is any connection between the land fraud investigation in Idaho and the prosecution of the officials of the Western Federation of Miners, on the charge of complicity in the assassination of former Governor Steunenberg. "The sensational reports going the rounds of the Western newspapers concerning the Idaho conditions should be very largely discounted," said Judge Burch. SERIOUS ACCIDENT. Mrs. Sapp Seriously Injured This Morning While on Her Way to Con cord. Concord, April 19. —While coming to town this morning, a young colt be longing to Mr. John Sapp, of No. 5 township, backed off a high embank ment with his buggy, which contained himself and wife. Mrs. Sapp was seriously injured and the doctors are now working with her. Mr. Sapp escaped unhurt and the horse was killed in the fall. It hap pened within a mile of town. Over 200 Natives Are Reported Drowned t _ Berlin, April 19. —It is announced that a message from the Island of Yap stated a typhoon swept over the Carolina Islands and that 250 natives of thte Uluthi group were drowned. SUFFERED FOR FIVE YEARS WITH KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLE. "I suffered for five years with kid ney and livor trouble, which caused se vere pains across the back and a blind ing headache. I had dyspepsia and was so constipated that I could .not move my bowels without a cathartic. I was cured by Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets and have been well now for si* months," says Mr. Arthur Strickland, of Chattanooga, Tenn. For sate by Shuford Drug Co. Case Dismissed. Washington, D. C., April 22.—The Supreme Court dismissed the crimi nal case of Frederick Seymour, alias "Lord" Barrington, under sentence of death in St. Louis on the charge of murdering James P. McCann. Endorse Colonel Colt. Providence, R. 1., April 22.—The Re publican State Central Committee passed a resolution endorsing Colonel Colt for United States Senator. President to Oyster Bay. Washington, D. C., April 22. —The President will leave for Oyster Bay on June 12th. Most women are proud of their ability to humble a man's pride. CATADPH BLOOD V/A. A jTIIv JK. It DISEASED AND SYSTEM DISORDERED Catarrh is not merely an inflammation of the "tissues of the head and throat, as the symptoms of ringing noises in the ears, mucous dropping back into the throat, continual hawking and spitting, etc., would seem to indi cate; it is a blood disease in which the entire circulation and the greater part of the system are involved. Catarrh is due to the presence of an excess of uric acid in the blood. The Liver, Kidneys and Bowels frequently be come torpid and dull in their action and instead of carrying off the refuse and waste of the body, leave it to sour and form uric afid in the system. This is taken up by tie blood and through its circulation distributed to all parts of the system. These impurities in the blood irritate and inflame the different membranes and tissues of the body, and the contracting of a Cold will start the secretions and other disgusting and disagreeable symptoms of Catarrh. As the blood goes to all parts of the body the ca tarrhal poison affects all parts of the system. The head has a tight, full feeling, nose continually stopped up, pains above the jeyes, slight fever comes and goes, the stomach is upset and the entire system disordered and Ih»d Oaurrh for M fifteen f xt f J»>' "> is "«««■ «i* « waste °« Tears, and no man could have time to try to cure Catarrh with sprays, i washes, inhalations, etc. Such treatment suited. I then iegan s. s. s., and does not reach the blood, and can, therefore, fro^ d thf first 1 boW^ P and e after 1° nothing more than temporarily relieve taking- it a short while was cured, the discomfort of the trouble. To cure «Catarrh permanently the blood must be Catarrh is a bloo/disease, and thoroughly purified and the system cleansed ° f a » j rais ° ns, .,ri at "t Nobody thinks more of S. S. S. strengthened and built up. Nothing equals ti Lapeer, - Mioh. M * MAT3OII » S. S. S. for this purpose. It attacks the * * disease at its head, goes down to the very itite bottom of the trouble and makes a complete and lasting cure. S. S. S. removes every particle of the catarrhal poison from the • O 1 • blood, making this vital stream pure, fresh and healthy. Then the inflamed mem- PURELY VEGETABLE branes begin to heal, the head is loosened afld cleared, the hawking and spitting cease, every symptom disappears, the constitution is built up and vigorous health restored. S. S. S. also tones up the stomach and digestion and acts as a fine tonic to the entire system. If you are suffering with Catarrh begin the use of S. S. S. and write us a statement of your case and our physicians will send you literature about Catarrh, and give you special medical advice without charge. S. S. S. is for sale at all first class drug stores. THE SWiFT SPECIFIC COc, ATLANTA, GA. Plumbing, R^oofing —AND— Guttering ONE by expert workmen. Alt kinds of Tin Work on short nonce A full lino of Bath Tubs, Bowls and Sinks, with hot and cold fixtures. We will do your work right. Hickory Roofing and Tinning Co McCOMB BROTHERS DEALERS IN Groceries Fresh Meats, Butter, Corn, Hay, Cotton, Seed Hulls, 5 Meal and Country Produce. H I G KO R Y, N. C; Case of D. J. Sully. Washington, D. C., April 22. —The Supreme Court denied the petition for a writ certioari in the case qf the trus tee in bankruptcy of the New York cotton brokerage firm of Daniel J. Sul ly vs. McCormick and others, involv ing the details of Sully's failure in 1904. The effect of the court's denial is to leave in force the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals against Mil ler. Decided Against Company. Washington, D. C., April 22.-rThe Supreme Court construed the Missouri State law, providing that the suicide of an insured man shall not constitute a valid defense in resisting payment on a policy against the company.
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 25, 1907, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75