Newspapers / The Review (High Point, … / Jan. 30, 1913, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Review (High Point, 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
: "r , - ; t . ; , I r r t 'IP'4 1 llfr Ml , Hi: s if i " If"! " ',11 m 0 j SB i jrt 1- IF' IS 1 1 i ! Stf. ill It ' ill ; r. f i J i f ;'! i t ! f; . i '. -if? iJL' - Iff ' 1 1 ft ' Vhw IV : fv Jir- 1 M L J! ft iff - i ft i 1 I S S RttlUMATIC ipVICE , Prominent Doctor's Bist Prescrip tion Easily Mixed at Home. : VFrom your druggist get one c ounce of Torls, compound (in original sealed package) and one ounce of : syrup of Sarsaparilla compound. Take" these two ingredients home and put them Into a half pint of good whiskey. Shake the bottle and take a table spoonful before each meal and at bed time." This is said to be the quickest and best remedy known to the medical " profession for rheumatism and' back ache. Good results come after the first dose. If your druggist does not have . Toris compound in stock he will get it for you in a few hours from . his wholesale house. Don't be ; influenced to take a patent medicine Instead or this. Insist on having the genuine Toris compound in the original one-ounce, seal ed, yellow package. Hundreds of the worst cases were cured here by this pre scription last winter. Published by the Globe Pharmaceutical laboratories of Chicago. SHE KNEW BETTER. "Did your wife give you particular fits because you come home at 3 o'clock the other morning?" "No, she didn't say a word. It's too near Christmas." Burduco Liver Powder. Nature's remedy for biliousness, constipation, indigestion and all stom ach diseases. A vegetable prepara tion, better than calomel and will not salivate. In screw top cans at 25c each. Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs Charlotte, N. C. Adv. Just Because. "Why was the beauty doctor so an gry with Anna?" "Because she told him she was com ing to him to get a few wrinkles." For SUMMER HEADACHES Hicks' CAPUDINE is the best remedy no . matter what causes them whether from the heat, sitting in draughts, fever ish condition, etc. 10c, 25c and 50c per bottle at medicine stores.. Adv. Men are like trees; they either crooked or straight. grow Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. Adv. Adam lost out when he parted with one of his ribs. PAINFUL, TRYING TIMES Housework is hard enough for a healthy wom an. The wife who has a bad back, who is weak or tired all the time, finds her duties a heavy burden. Thousands of nervous, dis couraged, sick ly women have traced their wfy 'Picture Tells, troubles to sick a. story" kidneys have found quick and thorough relief through using Doan's Kidney Pills. The trying times of woman's life are much easier if the kidneys are well. A North Carolina Case Mrs. J. W Wilkinson, Statesvllle. N. G. says: "I suffered aeutely from almost total suppres sion of the kidney secretions. My usual weight was 140 lbs., but I had run down to 90. Doctors said an operation was my only hope, but I would not consent and was given up to die. Doan's Kidney Pills cured me completely." Got Doan's at Any Storo, SOe a Box DOAN'S lAV FOSTER-MUJBURN CO- Buffalo. Now Yorlc Highest Market Prices PAID FOR ALL KINDS OF HIDES Furs, Skins, Tallow, Beeswax, Scrap Rub ber, Metals, etc. Write us your offerings. Price list, tags, etc., furnished on request Standard traps at wholesale cost. Oar deal ings guaranteed correct and on the square. SUMTER JUNK COMPANY SPARTANBURG & SUMTER, S. C. . ; ; : Kodak Finishing Cheapest prices on earth by photographic specialists. De veloping any roll film 5c. Prints ,2c and 4c. Mail your films to Dent K. PARSONS OPTICAL CO.. 244 KING ST., CHARLESTON, SO. CAROLINA W tell m howt and p7 bent market prleea. Write fer refereaeea aad Wfiefcly price Itat. M. BABEL SONS, LOUISVILLE, EY. Dealer la Fan. Hide. Wool. KUbUnkediaM. V Opium,WhISkey and L-rutr Habits treat ed at home or at Sanitarium. Book on suDiectBree. Dli. K. M.WOOLLEY, 8W YICTOB SANITARILY. ATJLASTaT 6E0SGU wtfrli a i 1 in Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Oood. Use in time. Bold t)T Drnzeitta. " 1 fb&mmmjmmmf- n,. -.,-. m JT z2 ilii mi iiiiiin 'fryi 1 Streets of St. Petersburg Are a Semi-Oriental Sight. Houses Like Huge Human Hives- No Crowds Permitted to Congregate and Newsboys Are Prohibited From Calling Their Wares. St. Petersburg. As one mo vet about , the streets, he Is struck most of all by the wasteful use of space. It is at once apparent that Petersburg never slowly evolved from embryonic beginnings. But It would be unwise to proceed further in describing Pet ersburg's streets without noting the fact that she has two kinds of streets, namely, the Nevsky Prospect and others. An ordinary "oolitza" or street except late in the afternoon (when Petersburg wakes up!), is a semi-Oriental sight. Save on court holidays, when each house is required , to hang out the national flag, there is no color in the streets, the houses are dun colored and monotonously alike. There are no hills, no small homes, no large ones just huge, hu man hives with courts in the rears, and icons constantly lit by tiny oil lamps in the front. There is little noise. No crowds gather; the newsboys are not allowed to call their wares; bands, hand or gans or street vendors seldom dis turb this solemn city of the north. Even the tram cars creep by noise lessly; they are "curve-squeal and rattle proof. Ah, but how different, kaleidoscopic Nevsky Prospect! It is the Fifth aye- nue, the TJnter den Linden, the Re gent street of Russia's capital. Less than three miles long, it is yet one of the world's really unique highways. There is nothing like It elsewhere. Some visitors come and go; others stay; but foreigners never seem to weary of gizing upon this peculiarly varied. marvelously cosmopolitan sight. Over the spacious wooden pavement between the two low banks of glittering stores, flows a motley stream of traffic. Here the ends of the earth seem to meet Everybody from everywhere rushes hither and thither. Red French automobiles, their horns singing tuneful, metallic ditties, swerve and dodge about ragged peasants bearing burdens with wooden shoulder yokes or driving primitive, home-made carts. Royally appointed equipages, flaunting purple plumes and golden braid, prance se dately by. while continually up one side and down the other pours a Palace Drawing Room of the Empress at St. Petersburg. steady torrent of cabs. Perhaps a funeral is creeping by (people die much in. Petersburg) ; the golden, tin seled casket in the shabby, boat-like cart flames brilliantly in the sunlight, and peasants stride proudly by it as though they are escorting a prize pumpkin to market. Inexhaustible is the fascination of this animated thor oughfare. And the people! How varied and gay are the colors! How .dazzling are the uniforins, the Parisian gowns, the flashing of trailing swords! Sol diers armed cap-a-pie seem to make up half the parading multitude. They meet, halt, salute and pass on. On the Nevsky Prospect there is time for everything. There are Frenchmen, Germans, Dutchmen, Finns, Tartars, The women 1 are beautiful. Every true male Russian presents a study in whiskers. It is the land of the great unshaved. There is a peasant sweeping .the street with a witch broom of twigs a tattered edition of Tolstoi himself! - Before the street icons the faithful halt, bow, cross themselves and murmur a phrase of a prayer. What a human melange! Here the nations of Europe pass in review. ' What a pot-pourri of lan guages, sentiments, traditions and cul tures boils and mixes and disappears into a thin, black rivulet far down at the further end of Russia's one fas cinating, nervous highways, the Nevsky Prospect! Loses Savings, Attempts Suicide. Middletown, N. Y. His home robbed of his savings of $87,. Wm; D. Gannon, a contractor, attempted to commit suicide by swallowing arsenic, but doctors saved him. Invents Aluminum Solder, Pittsburg, Pa. Patrolman H. M. Chatham, a member of the local po lice department, has invented a solder, for aluminum. ODEt CEREMONY; !i TURKEY Picturesque Occasion Occurs Weekly In Constantinople When the Sul , tan Goes to Pray. !;, ' -. - y ,; ' ;'..!.,-.' Constantinople. One of the most picturesque sights in Constantinople la aSeiamlik,or sultan's levee, a cer emony which takes place weekly. Those Invited under - the ex-sultan's reign had seats in a pavilion which faced the mosque and thus saw the arrival and departure of his majesty when he went to pray on Friday, the Mohammedan Sabbath. Nowhere out of Constantinople do more nationalities jostle each other,, and the color and variety of dress is amazing. The hill leading to the mosque where I attended a Selamlik was a blaze of color, writes Lady Jep son in the Queen. Cavalry and ma rines, foot soldiers and sailors lined the road, and behind these stood Turks, Serbs, Bulgars, Greeks, Levan- Mosque of the Sultan at Sweet Water, Constantinople. tines, English, Americans, Germans and Russians. Many were the curious Jtales which" teached us of Abdul Hamid." He lived chiefly on eggs, they said, served a la Coq, because' it would require the skill of a Borgia to poison them. His terror of assassination was so abject that he never left the Yildiz palace ex cept to say his prayers once a week at his mosque, and he employed a "taster" like any mediaeval mon arch. The ex-sultan, as all the world knows, was and Is an enemy to prog ress and reform and excessively nar row in his views. The Young Turks had a bad time of it under his sway, and women a worse one. He en forced strict seclusion for Turkish women, forbade them even to leave the country after they were old enough to be veiled, and obliged all respect able women to be indoors by sun set. """sss Even now, under a more enlighten ed rule, although they go out and about the streets disguised in yash mak and ferejeh, the Turkish lady is lucky if a spy does not follow in her wake ready to report to a jealous husband the slightest indiscretion. One of our party passed a high wall on his way to the Selamlik, which his dragoman informed him was that of a harem. "The walls must be high," said the Turk, "since women are so bad." We waited long In our pavilion for the sultan, and were relieved when at last his coming was heralded by men who scattered gravel before him on the hill. Abdul Hamid was a hand some old man with refined features, a prominent nose and a good carriage. He was dressed simply and he wore no decorations. As he drove past the troops cheered him in a strange low key, unlike any other hurrah I have ever heard. . It is etiquette that all eyes should be cast down as the mighty sultan goes by. Behind Abdul Hamid the ladies of his harem drove. in closed carriages, but they " did not enter the mosque, women in Turke yhaving no souls! FIREMEN MAY FORM UNION v Boston Hose and Ladder Men to Talk Over Plan to Have an Organization. Boston. Boston's firemen are con sidering a step that may. earn for them the distinction of being the first of any city in the east to afliliate them selves with organized labor. The members of the departmentthe hose men and laddermen have agreed to meet to decide definitely whether or not 'they want to afliliate with the American Federation of Labor. It is believed the bulk of the firemen will favor such a step. The promoters of the movement explain that, ile the proposed organization will be a regu lar labor union there will be no dan ger of its members making arbitrary demands upon the city for, increased pay or shorter hours, much less of a "walk-out" when called to fight a Are. Parrot Uses Ball Slang. Pittsburg, Pa.--"Cut the salve!" "Can't get them over!" . "Take your ase!" "Your control's rotten!" were ame of the things Policeman Charles vslhoun's parrot hurled at him after . caping from its cage to a high wln w ledge. Calhoun, is a baseball lyer in the summer. ' : - - GRINDS ROOTS FOR POULTRY Machine Intended Mainly for Chop ping Cabbage Will Be Found of Convenience for Fowls. The grinder is intended mainly for chopping cabbage when making sauer kraut, but' it is also- of much service in grinding vegetables and roots to be cooked for poultry, says the Popu lar Mechanics. The base, A, is made ot a plank, at least one foot wide and four feet long, with a nine and olio- fourth by nine and one-half inch hole cut in the center., The grinding part, or cylin der is made of wood three Inches in diameter and nine inches long, with eight-penny nails, spaced three-sixteenths inches apart, driven partly into it and then cut off so as to leave one-fourth inch projecting. The cylinder is turned by means of a crank attached to the end of the shaft. A hopper, B, h constructed four by nine and one-half Inches inside measurement at the bottom and as large as necessary at tho top. A space is provided at the bottom as shown to receive the concave C, which consists of a one-inch board, three to four inches wide and nine inches long, with nails driven in and cut off as de scribed in the cylinder. The hopper is securely fastened on the top of the baseboard and over the cylinder. The concave is slipped into place and held with wedges or by driv ing two nails in just far enough to fasten it temporarily. The concave Root Grinder. can be adjusted fm grinding the dif ferent vegetable products, or. replaced at any time with a new one. the ends of the base are supported on boxes, or legs may be provided if desired. When grinding cabbage, cut the heads into quarters and. remove the hearts. Press the cabbage on the cylinder and turn the crank. Fine bits of cabbage, suitable for sauer kraut will be the result. SUCCESS IN RAISING TURKEYS clrst Consideration Is Desirable Loca tion and Suitable Range Few Other Essentials. What do I consider the most impor tant essentials to be a successful tur key raiser? First important consider ation desirable location and good range; next, sound, healthy fowls of standard breed to begin with, for no one can succeed without sound, heal thy birds to start with. Third, careful feeding. Fourth, keep free from lice. Last, but not least, dry roomy coop so they can be kept out of sudden showers. These equipments, coupled with sound judgment and proper care of poults, should make anyone success ful In raising turkeys, says a writer in an exchange. The way I manage mine after years of experience, I gather the eggs daily, keep in a place neither too cool nor too hot; turn eggs ever day. When the hen gets ready to set make a coop In some dry place, placing 15 or 16 eggs in nest; bring hen up late in evening, place oh nest, keep fastened up two or three days, turn out so she can get something to eat and drink. Watch to see if she goes on same nest. When eggs hatch leave poults In nest 36 hours. Move hen and poults to large roomy coop inclosed in pen to keep anything from running over them. Dust hen and little ones with some good insect powder to kill lice. Feed them egg bread first few days. Give them plenty of fresh water. When they are a few days old give them lettuce and onion tops chopped fine with bread crumbs. Also give them a little chicken feed consisting of grain, small seeds, grit and oyster shells. Keep fastened in coop until strong enough to keep up with hen; turn out in the morning, but see that they come home at night to roost. Sprinkle a little black pepper occa sionally In their food, but be sure not to overfeed, as it brings trouble and disaster in its train. Rules for Poultrymen. ' It is urged that all farmers and poultrymen adhere strictly ; to the following rules in handling their poultry and eggs : , v 1. Keep the nests clean; provide one nest for every four hens. 2. Gather the eggs twice daily. C 3. Keep the eggs in a cool, dry room or cellar. 4. Market the egsg at least twice a week. . 5. Sell, kill or ' confine all male birds as soon as the hatching season 's over. Cleanliness Is Profitable. Cleanliness in the poultry pens puts many dollars Into the pockets of the poultry man. " ' ; Wedding Rings That, Wean : . ; " The next time you are married or,: If you will, when you are marriedr-r don't buy a gold wedding ring. v If isn't being done. Platinum wedding rings are the newest', thing. Mile. Jeanne Provost, a French actress, is to blame. She thought of the idea, and when she was married to fM. Firpo, she had one; Platinum rings are" more expensive than gold and wear better. Just why an actress," especially a French actress, should want a wedding ring that will last a long while the Jewelers haven't learned. VJ His Childish Wish. Here is an excerpt from Paul West's "Just Boy" letters, which read like a clipping from the "Little Johnny" pa:. pers by Ambrose Bierce in the early volumes of the Argonaut: "I ast my father why ministers move so much and he said he guessed they was forced to on account of thare sons " I wisht my father was a minister." San Francisco Argonaut. ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AVegetable Preparation for As similating the Food and Regula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of was l. u "I Promotes Digestion,Cheerful nessand RestContains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral Not "Narcotic fiipt if Old DrSA?fVlP7WEJt hi for 5 ftpptrmint - Clarfitd Suyar Wmkrfrttm. Ffttvor- id CO A perfect Remedy forConstipa fion . Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms,Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP Facsimile Signature of 3; 8! The Centaur Company. NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. ; - (KgUMSl 1 1 1 1 -31 Guaranteed under the Foodai Sloan's Liniment is a splendid remedy for backache, stiff joints, rheumatism, neuralgia and sciatica. You don't need to rub it in just laid on lightly it gives comfort and ease at once. Best for Pain and Stiffness Mr. Geo. Buchanan, of Welch, Okla., Writes: "I haveused your Lin iment for the past ten years for pain in back and stifTness and find it the best Liniment I ever tried. I recommend it to anyone for pains of any kind." IT TTtTTTTTV7TLTTPri is good for sprains, strains, bruises, cramp or soreness of the muscles, and all affections of , the throat and chest. 1 W, In much prevent The old POTT mv Vkltmf OS Rr . Backache Rheumatism Kidneys and Bladder RELIEVES SORE EYES W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 5-1 9 . SEEDS AND PLANTS ACMH PLANT COMPANY, YONQBS ISLAND, S r lei Our Seed Catalog Only the Best Garden or Field Seed; N. L. WILLEfSEED CO., Augusta, Ga. ..IX For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of For Over Thirty Years " OBPiTAllW OOMfANYj NIW VOMIC OIXV " ' J" J m m'"' 1 mmjm9mm "'f;"''l irinir iiiniririim iiinn in niiniil.niUm inViVlliliit latlli iBl(il ill mm H Wal U r AW Cot Entire Relief R. D. Burgoynk, of Miysville, Ky., RR. i, Box 5, writes: "I had sever pains between my shoul ders ; I got a bottle of your Liniment and had entire relief at the fifth application." Relieved Severe Pain In Shoulders f'V Mr. J. Underwood, of 2000 Warren Ave., Chicago. 111. , writes : " I am a piano polisher ) by occupation, and since last September have m buucicu wn.n severe pain in DOin snouiaers. I could not rest night or day. One of my k frinrla tnA mm Three applications completely cured me ana k will never be without it." Price 25c, 50c., and $1.00 . at All Dealers. Send for Sloan's free book on hones. Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan Boston Mass. Every Good 6olI Counts many cotton fields there is too To "weed" arid the bolls fall. this balance the plant food. idea that cottoh does not need much Potash is hard to eradicate. But the longer Phosphates have been used on -the crop the greater becomes the need of' more 'ASH Trya cotton fertilizer with 6 to 8 per cent Potash and use liberal side dressings of Kainit. It will pay because Potash Pays. Mix your old stylt fertilizer uvth an egtial quantity of Kainit. , -We now sell Kainit and all Potash Salts direct. Write us for prices and for our free book on Cotton Culture. ' GERMAN iCAXIRbe. r' Ntw Trk ' Unaiaock EImcIu OUm RMk A TnU EM.. Sannal 1 ' V 'l ' 1 ' ' - - I " ' " -ru . -
The Review (High Point, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 30, 1913, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75