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The Purest Milk Obtainable from" : the finest bred cows Delivered at your door twice. If you tryr our milk you Will" V ; use no otKer . - Can supply your wants in any quantity LOWE BROS. DAIRY Phone 3425 We havejit in all grades. Better put in your winter's supply before prices advance High Point Ice & Fuel Company Both Phones 109 Just Arrived A Fresh Supply WOOD'S GARDEN SEEDS Marge andcori plete Assortment Come in and Look Them Over Mann Drug Company The Stanley Printing Douse First Class Work cX treasonable Prices. (tlmata Work tad Given Execute DeHveree Pro It will pay you to Patronise 'C "Shop Around the Corner" n Broad Street. km 275 20 Years Exfsrksci Are You ia Arrears on your ubcription ? Yon know WE NEED THE MONEY Subscribe for THIS PAPER 1 mptly 3 j DO IT NOW QUESTION -OF BUILDING NEW . BATTLESHIPS INTERESTS ; :; C O N GRESSMEN. H -: -': -' "J DIVISION IS NOT PARTISAN Underwood, Leading Opponents of In crease, May Be Forced to Compro mise One or Even Two Great Ves sels May Be Authorized. . j By GEORGE CLINTON. Washington. No other piece of leg islation now before congress or to come before it prior to the incoming of the hew administration stirs the personal interest of the members so much as the question of the increase in the strength -of the navy by the building of one, two or three battle ships. Congress in a way is divided into two forces, a land force and a sea force, and the signal is set for a fight between the two. ; Representative Oscar W. Under wood, the Democratic leader, is not in favor of adding another battleship, let alone two or three, to the navy at this session. It seems likely, how ever, that Mr. Underwood may com promise as he did once before to the extent of withholding his opposition to a navy building program which shall contain a provision for only one great "ship of the line." If Mr. Underwood, who believed with a good many Democrats that the money spent for battleships should be put into the improvement of riv ers and harbors and into public build ings, does not agree to with hold his opposition there seems to be a strong chance that the Democrats who are kindly disposed to the navy will defy leadership's wishes and, with Repub lican aid, sanction an appropriation for one ship and possibly for two ships. Whether it be one or two, it is certain that with the new vessel authorized last year and now under construction the next dreadnoughts of the American sea service will out class in fighting abilities anything now afloat in the navies of the world. Cannot Be Postponed.' Matters of greater seeming Impor tance in legislation than the naval in crease are being shoved ahead into the future because then the Democ racy will have control of the two houses of congress and also of the ad ministration. Then, they know, they can pass such legislation as they wish almost unimpeded. The battleship building matter, however, Of necessity comes up for action at every session, for it is an integral part of an appro priation bill and as such it must be passed upon with the rest of the ap propriations if the government is to have money to pay its expenses. It is a sort of a relief to have a mat ter of large importance under debate In committee rooms or on the floor, which has in it little of the rancor of partisanship. Factionalism enters in to the navy matter, but each opposing faction is made up of conservative and progressive Democrats and regular and insurgent Republicans. Those who are bitterest among them on most occasions get together in comradeship in the ship matter, each eide under its own flag. The navy draws Its friends and its foes not only from all parties, but from all sections. No Mason and Dix on lineand no Mississippi river divide the fields of the opponents and propo nents of a greater navy. Men who agree on nothing else agree on bat tleships, and men who disagree on nothing else disagree the instant that the building of a dreadnought is men tioned. Want at Least One a Year. On an average two battleships ev ery three years are put Into he out-of-date class. This means that with one new battleship a year the strength of the navy Is increased slowly, but It marks progress and that is what the sailors are after. One ship every two years would send the navy back, and this country would soon drop be low France if such& building program were to be adopted? Most of the Dem ocrats seem to be willing that the navy should be kept at least at its present strength, while there are enough of them willing to grant a yearly Increase to keep the navy mov ing forward, and to accept the aid of the Republicans who happen to be of the same mind. The dreadnought ordered last year will be in the service in-time to take part In the naval demonstration in force at the time of the opening of the Panama canal. It is barely pos sible that the dreadnought which prob ably is to be authorized this year can Join its sister ship at . that time, and if such shall prove to be. a fact the United States will be represented at the Panama canal celebration by two vessels, which perhaps no navy of the world can equal. Arctic Thunderstorm. A Russian mining engineer de scribes in Meteorologlsche Zeitschrift a severe thunderstorm far within the arctic circle. It occurred in Spitzber gen, where the writer was making ex plorations, on the 13th of last August. The storm , lasted about eight hours, with Incessant lightning, loud, thunder, and heavy rain. Contrary to the pre vailing belief, thunderstorms are by no means rare In the polar regions, though they are less comman there than in lower latitudes. The storm In question, however, appears, to have been altogether exceptional in vio lence and duration: tor that part of the world. EXP LAN ATI ON 6 F WO RK BUREAU : OF: SOCIAL HYGI EN E HOPES ; - TO ACCOMPLISH. ABOLISH WHITE SLAVE TRADE John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Tells of theN Plans for the Investigation of Vice Conditions. New York. In order that the . pub lie might better understand the Bu reau of Social Hygiene, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., gave oflt a statement explaining the; origin, work and the plans of that .institution. The bureau, he said, came, into existence ' about two years ago as a result of the work of a special grand jury appointed to investigate the white slave traffic in New York City. This jury recom mended that a public commission be appointed to study the social evil. Mr. Rockefeller was foreman of that grand jury and he thereafter gave the subject deep thought and conferred with a large number of the leading men and women. "These con ferencese," says Mr. Rockefeller, "de veloped the feeling that a public com mission would labor under a number of disadvantages such as the fact that It would be short lived; that its work would be done publicly; that at best it could hardly do more than pre sent recommendations. So the con viction grew that in order to make a real and lasting improvement in con ditions, , a permanent organization should be created, the continuation of which would not be dependent upon a temporary wave bf reform, nor upon the life of any man or group of men, but which would go on, generation after generation, continuously making warfare against the forces of evil. It also Appeared that a private organiza tion would have, among other advan tages, a certain freedom from public ity and from political bias, which a public appointed commission could not so easily avoid. ' y "Therefore, as the initial step, in the winter of 1911 the Bureau of So cial Hygiene was formed. Its pres ent members are r Miss Katharine Bement Davis, superintendent of the New York state reformatory for wom en at Bedford Hills, N. Y.; Paul M. Warburg of the firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Co. ; Starr J. Murphy of the New York bar, and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. "One of the first things undertaken by the bureau was the establishment at Bedford Hills, adjacent to the re formatory, of a labratory of social hygiene, under Miss Davis' direction. In this laboratory it is proposed to study from the physical, mental, so cial and moralside each person com mitted to the reformatory. This study will be carried on by experts and each case will be kept under obser vation for from three weeks to three months, as may be required. When the diagnosis is completed, it is hoped that the laboratory will be in position to recommend the treatment most likely to reform the individual, or, if reformation is impossible to recom mend permanent custodial care. Fur thermore, reaching out beyond the in dividuals involved, it is believed that thus Important contributions may be made to a fuller knowledge of the conditions ultimately responsible for vice. If this experiment is success ful the principle may prove applica ble to all classes of criminals and the conditions precedent to crime and lead to lines of action not only more scientific and humane, but also less wasteful than those at present follow ed." That its work might be done intel ligently the bureau employed George J. Kneeland to make a comprehensive survey of vice conditions in New York, and Abraham Flexner to study the social evil In Europe, and their reports are now being prepared. In conclusion Mr. Rockefeller's statement says: "It cannot be too strongly emphasized that the spirit which dominates the work of the bu reau is not sensational or sentimen tal or hysterical; that it is not a spirit of criticism of public officials; but that it is essentially a spirit of con structive suggestion and of deep sci entific as well as humane interest in v great world problem." Ryan's Bond Refused. 1 Chicago. For the second : time the United States circuit court of appeals declined to approve bonds submitted for 1 the release of Frank M. Ryan, president of the. International Iron workers union; R. H. Houlihan and William Shupe of Chicago, convicted of conspiracy Jn connection with ille gal transportation of dynamite. Dis trict Attorney Miller advised the court he had inspected the sureties and found them insufficient. Bonds of William Bernhardt of Cincinnati for $10,000 were accepted. Speedy Justice Meted Negro. Gulfport, Miss. Within , seven hours after he had shot and killed Chief of Police Charles Dickey, Per cy Newkirk, a negro, who had been trapped by the officer while in the act . of burgla'rizing 'a store was in dicted by the county grand jury, tried on a charge of murder, convicted, and sentenced to be hanged just one month ; from date. Notwithstanding the quick justice meted out to the ne gre, a large and excited crowd throng edi the streets near the court house and threats of lynching made, , GREAT MEN ENRICH LANGUAGE , Famous Names Are ..Used as English Nouns and verbs How . Word ; v , v. , . Boycott" Originated. . .. London. -The " growth . and '-ehangt which are, inseparable 'from all living languages cannot fail to4 interest the student, and a special Interest, at taches to the ; incorporation of ' the hames of well known men. Thus Well ington has : come : to mean a sort jof boot ; : Brougham, a' carriage, and Glad stone, apparently enough, a travel ler's bag, as that great man advocated the "bag, and baggage" policj which seems likely at length to be adopted.: Other names have been turned into verbs as well as. nouns. ' Fori instance, the murderer Burke's name is perpet uated in the word's to burke, burked, burking and burkism, , while in quite recent times Captain Boycott's experi ences resulted in the language being enriched by the phrases to boyebt, boycotter, boycotting, etc. The most notable case was probably that of the great and good man. Rev T. Bowdler, D. D., who by. publish ing a "family" edition of Shakespeare in 1881 added the words "bowdlerize" and "bowdlerism" to our language. DIG UP STOLEN TREASURE Fifteen Hundred Dollars Supposed to Have Been Taken From Texas v Bank Recovered. San' Marcos, Tex. Fifteen hundred dollars in currency, identified as part of the $17,000 stolen from the Kyle State bank at Kyle, Tex., where; the bank vault was dynamited several years ago, was unearthed by telephone linemen, who were placing poles here.. In a Literal Sense. Juveulle remarks are not always so naughty as they seem. Small Sana, for Instance, had no intention of using bad language when he got Into such severe trouble in class. His teacher was trying to press home certain facts concerning a vol cano. In reviewing the lesson she drew on the blackboard her own con ception of a flaming mountain, using colored crayon with extraordinary ef fect. "What is It?" she asked, the picture finished. The scholars shook puzzled 'heads. "You don't know? Vell, what 'does It look like?" the teacher persisted. Piped Sammie, whose home boasts a colored pictorial Bible. "I think it looks Itke hell." Chicago Record-Herald. ECZEMA FOR TEN YEARS, 1809 Little Walsh. St., Baltimore, ;Md. "I was afflicted wijth eczema for about ten years, the most tormenting and agonizing. It was dry eczema, all itching. It was scratch, scratch, scratch and burn, burn, burn. By scratching I brought sores which scabbed. I tried all remedies which I knew or heard of; some gave me tem porary relief, but none permanent cure. I couldn't sleep for scratching, after which there was burning. I saw the advertisement for free samples of Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and wrote for them. They did me good immediately and I then bought a box of Cuticura Ointment and a cake of Cuticura Soap. I was cured in two weeks." (Signed) George Wooden, Jan. 21, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston' Adv. , - - Some men begin to economize after marriage by growing whiskers. It takes a genius to save money or write good poetry. ir.IPieirce fgggggggggggggg . Will Bring nicb Relief Dr. R.' V. Pierce found years ago that a glyceric extract of Golden Seal and Oregon grape roots, queen's root and bloodroot with black cherry bark, "would aid in the' assimilation of the food in the stomach; correct liver ills and iniiature's own way . enrich the blood, tone the entire system and con sequently help in the restoration of perfect health. Many who have used Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery tes tify that they have been restored to health when suffering from stomach and liver ills. Let this famous old medicine start today to lead you to health and strength1 ' . Now if you preferyou can obtain Dr. Piercers " Favorite Prescription tablets of your druggist at $1 per box, also in 50c size or send 50 one-cent , Vnn ran learn all about hvcriene. anatomv. medicine, etc. from the GOT LEFT IN THE RUSH. Ruth is engaged to be married the coming winter." "The mischief she is! I Intended to propose to that girl myself when I got time." . v Fair to All. "Recently, 'says a Richmond man, "I received an invitation to the mar riage of a -young colored couple for merly in my employ. I am quite sure that all persons similarly favored were left in little doubt as to the attitude of the couple: The invitation ran as follows: v V 'You are invited to the marriage of Mr Henry Clay Barker and Miss Josephine Mortimer Dixon . at the house of the bride's mother. All who cannot come may send." Llppincbtt's Magazine. A Household Remedy. Which works from outside. CHES TOL (Chest Ointment) will relieve quickly croup, coughs, colds, pneu monia and all affections of chest and thrOat Use freely and RUB! RUB! RUB! Now sold by all medicine deal ers. Should be in every home. Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Adv. Whipped Child's Protest. "Mamma whip's you only when she has reason for it." "I won't stand it any longer, papa! I'm not married to her." TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA AND BUILD UP TTTK RVSnSTVf U Take the Old Standard OBOVK'S TASTiSLKSS UUIU. TONIC. Yon know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on ererj bottle, RUowing it is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the most effectual form. For grown people and children, 60 cents. A.dr. The Kind. "What would you recommend the fish diet for sailors?" . "Roe, of course." as SHAKE INTO TOUR SHOES Allen's Foot-Ease, the Antiseptic powder for tired, aching, swollen, nervous feet. Gives reet and comfort. Makes walking a delight. Sold everywhere, 25c. Don't accept any sub stitute. For FREE sample address Allen S. Olmsted,. Le Roy, N. Y. Adv. Real Test. Gabe How do you tell a genuine diamond from a fake? Steve Try to hock it. DOGS YOUR HEAD ACHEf Try Hicks' CAPUDINE. It's liquid pleas ant to take effects immediate pood to prevent Sick Headaches and Nervous Headaches also. Your money back if not (satisfied. 10c., 26c. and 50c. at medicine stores. Adv. Many a woman prays to get into heaven and fights to get into society. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugx-coated, easy to take, as candy, regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not gripe. Adv. When fools are glad wise men are sad. It takes a practical fisherman to detect the lie in a fish story. ITCH Relieved in 30 Minutes. Woolford's Sanitary Lotion for all kinds of contagious itch. At Druggists. Adv. Nature generates facts, but fiction is manufactured by man. tommsaellii saimdl Do you start the day feeling that the whole world is against you? You cannot nope to "make good" under these cir cumstances. Nobody can. You must have a clear brain and every organ in perfect trim to do justice, to yourself. (Wiem KffleiScM Ico)veiry gsgEXBSBBslBBBmBB - BgsssjgBBSSSSSSBIBBBBBB (sjHBBBBBIlBlBBiBBSBEBBDBSHBBBB Peoples Common Sense Medical Adviser, by Dr.- R. V. Pierce, revised, upto-date edition of which is now offered, in cloth post-paid, lor ox cents in one-cent stamps, to cover cost 01 wrapping "- - and mailing only. Address, Dr. Pierce's Invalids Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.. Don't be poisoned by slaggish bowels. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and fcovel3 Sagar coated tiny granules. 1 1 jppm TmmnVp tlrE'o'o I liUUULt "WITH ILLNESS Mrs. Stewart Tells How She Suffered from 16 to 45 years old How Finally Cured. Euphemla, Ohio. " Because of total Ignorance of how to care for myself when verging into womanhood, and from taking cold when going to school, I suf fered from a, displacement, and each month I had severe pains and nausea which always meant a lay-off from work for two to four days from the time I was 16 years old. ' ' I went to Kansas to live with my sis ter and while there a doctor told me of PmVViom yarnAiaa Knf T Tr iioa 'ft ' WUV JL UUkUCMU WXVIV0 avt V UiU AAVW UOW them then as my faith in patent medi cines was limited. After my sister died I came home to Ohio to live and that has been my home for the last 18 years. "The Change of Life came when I was 47 years old and about this time I saw" my physical condition plainly described in one of your advertisements. Then I began using Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound and I cannot tell you I or any one the relief it gave me in the first three months. It put me right where I need not lay off every month and during the last 18 years I have not paid out two dollars to a doctor, and have been blest with excellent health f or a wo woman of my ago and I can, thank Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound for it. " Since the Change of Life is over I have been a maternity nurse and being wholly self-supporting I cannot over estimate the value of good health. I have now earned a .comfortable' little home just by sewing and nursing since I was 52 years old. Inave recommended the Compound to many with good re sults, as it is excellent to take before and after childbirth." Miss Evelyn Adelia Stewart, Euphemia, Ohio. If yon want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi dential) Lynn, Mass. Yonr letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held In strict confidence. The Wretchedness AM Can Quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable act surely and gently on the hver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache, Dizzi ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature w0ZTi FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS f yon feel ont of sorts" "run down" or "got tn Dines," suffer from Udney.bladder.ner ous diseases, ebronlc weaknesses, ulcers, skin eruptions, plles.&e write for my FBKH book. It is the moat instructire medical book ever written. It tells all about tbese diseases and tbe remarkable en res effected bjtheNew French Kerned? "THEBAPION" No. 1. No.3, No.S and jon can decide for yourself i f itis the remedy for Jour ailment. Don't send a cent. It's absolutely RKM. No "follow-up"clrculars. Dr.LeClercMed. Co.. Uaverstock lid., Hampstead, Lradon, Kog, DROPSY TRHATED. Give quick re u"wr' lief, usually remove swel ling and short breath in a few days and entire reUef In 16-46 days, trial treatment FBEE D&.BISKSSSOSS. BexA.AtlanU.Gh KODAKS and High drada Finishing-. Mail orders given Spe cial Attention. Prices reasonable. Service prompt. Send for Price List. LAKSKACS aBT STORB. ' CHARLESTON. 8. G Yf1nnnrtMA Quickly reli relieve eya on caused rl IlllliirOUli O Irritation caused EYE WATER LuBootnZ JOHN L. THOMPSON SONS & CO.,Troy .N.Y. Agents, SoUcItors If you are a live wire and want something good write THE C LAM COMPANY, Omaha. Neb. "Xfutt Ced." FOR SALE 903 A. IN MECKLENBURG Co., N. C. ; 300 a. cult., 7, 8 and 3 r. houses, t barns, etc. J. W. Cross, Huntersville, N. C Tbe Best Physfcfana Gave Him Up X was attacked with a serere nervous disease, which was caused br a disordered stomach and llr er.' writes Ma. Jab. D. Ltvxlt. of rneup. I was adrlsed to try Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery, and derived much benefit a newly " covers, that not from same. My case naa run so . it naa become so coronic, nothiru? would effect a per manent cure, but Dr. Pierce's ..meojcine nas aone mncn ior me. ' and I hiarbly recommend it. I beartlly -aavise Its use as a spring tonle and furtber advise ailing people to take Dr. Pierce's medi cines before their diseases have run so tone that there is no chance to be cured." . X . - i wni i kiwi 1 V LYER m m m w-mw 1 4- - -at' 1
The Review (High Point, N.C.)
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Jan. 30, 1913, edition 1
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