Newspapers / The Graphic (Nashville, N.C.) / Aug. 17, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Graphic (Nashville, 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
crel:atio;i of shc.it .:lcl.h luz:.h uk:.;Ts Publlohed Weekly. .. : 't ' ' i:i!fl SHOT TO IL NASHVILLE, N. C. Keep cool and you win be cool ' I V " AS. ilJ V t if Also, kwk the pest that rocka the be greet to be akinny In bot Do Mot overwork yourself taking hot advloa, . Mora popular than othaim are .hot TW with broken back. How the man who eleep oat of .finds it seslsr to make converts. There ought to bo a Nobel prlie for tb personage who Invented shirt Waist. About the only time the woman are oo4 Ustenera la when the preacher la talking. Kew Tork complain of a shortage f water, despite the fact It Is ur roemded by It , Detroit's team loaes a game on rare occasions to prove that Its players are merely human. Chicago Is now adrocatlng air baths, A abort time ago one of its cltliens died In a bathtub. A New Jersey man wbo ate pie twice a day for 89 yeara la dead gone to his desserts, aa It were. After college professors reach a certain age they dont aeem to care what they aay about women. There haa been discovered one of fhoao old-tashloned baseball games In which one team scores 20 runs. At the Hoe library sale "The Swan Book" brought $21,000. Its new owner would not read It for twice that London dressmakers now propose at gown with a detachable train. Hub by, we presume, will be the switch- However, the avlatcr who threatens to lly up Broadway will not be the only high flyer on that wicked thor oughfare. "The earnings of the average New Tork lawyer amount to about $1,000 a year. "Earnings" is a diplomatic way of potting it Stealing a base on the rest of the country, a Massachusetts school. Is using batting averages to stimulate In terest in mathematlca New Tork haa Just sent $2,000,000 of won out money to Washington. The fellows the New Yorkers took it away from were probably sent to the hos pital A New Tork miser committed sui cide because be was lonesome, and yet yon can hardly blame people for not wanting to keep a miser's com pany. A western railroad haa placed on Its rails a car reeerved for women only, but the women do not after all prefer an Adamless Eden on wheels. boat be discouraged If the reaults to get from your garden make It eons expensive. The price put upon Madison Square garden In New York a ttoo.ooo. A chewing gum famine la threat ened In Chicago aa the result of a strike. Our old-fashioned notion of nothing to worry abou Is a chewing gsn famine. A canvass of the co-eds In Chicago university shows that only two per cent of tbem are planning matrimony. That's all right; there's no need to hurry the girls. There are a great many unreason able persons In the world, but few are snore so than the New Yorker who tabbed a deaf mute because be failed to reply to a question. A Boston street car conductor found a $5,000 necklace on the floor of his car. And we thought that -women who wear $5,000 necklaces al ways rode In automobiles. Brooklyn woman who Is 101 old attributes the fact to her kabtt of arising every morning at 6 o'clock. Many feel that getting up art every morning la enough to make .anyone old. Professor Sargent of Harvard has It figured out that flowers will reform lafl boys. The next time your youth ful eon pours water Into the gasoline task of your automobile, hand him a 95 batch of violet. "Let the baby squall by all means," way Professor W. A. McKeever of the Kansas Agricultural college. : thereby proving that all the massive Intellects have not been coralled by fbe eastern universities. St Louis has provided a farm borne for the boraea of the city departments wheat tha animals grow too old and tafiraa for work. , Appreciation of any kind of past usefulness la nubile work 1m an rare, either In man or beast, that tMa grateful act to faithful four-footed arsaata does credit to tha city's pub Ha spirit and generosity; t The decision of a District of Colum bia court that street piano , are ve hicle eon Arms tha long entertained atad widespread suspicion that they are not musical Instruments. . Luther Burbank la said to be trying to develop a better strawberry. There Is a atroier demand for the lmprove- xs t cf t e strawberry, box. ... , A Harvard professor saya women j -r t' ss s vw re state. R would , j to tear Us other sld Mm Spy Says American WASHINGTON. The United State government has Investigated a report to tha effect that the Maine waa blown up In Havana harbor by an American who bad been con demned to death by the Spanish, but won hla freedom by destroying the American warship. The spy who turned the story Into the secret service bureau at Washington asserted that George B. Boynton. a "soldier of for tune" who died recently, wss the man who actually blew up the Maine. Horace Smith, biographer of Boynton, declares the story Is false and be can prove Boynton was In Venesuela at the time of the explosion. "The Spaniards," said the Informer to Chief Wilkle or the secret service, "were entirely unprepared for the visit of the Maine, which waa sent to Ha vana suddenly and without warning. Consequently there wss no mine at tached to the buoy at which she was moored. "Captain General Blanco and his staff did not relish having a hostile warship In such an advantageous posi tion in the event of war with the United States, which they then re garded as at least a possibility, and it Warns Banks Against Lax Operations CONTROLLER OP THE CURRENCY MURRAY has been strolling through some of the national banks and glancing over their stock ledg ers. As - result the banks must do a little better housekeeping. In one case the controller spent a whole day with one of the national bank examiners In a bank In a middle west city and personally balanced the stock certificate book, and although this book bore the initials of several examiners as evidence that at differ ent times it had passed through their hands, be found In the book that some of the certificates bore no indorse ments; some were Indorsed, but the signatures were not witnessed; some were indorsed and witnessed, but were not canceled In any way, and In almost every Instance the signature of the president and cashier on tlie face of the certificate was neither punched out nor crossed out with lnk or any other material In any manner whatsoever. As a result of the controller's Inves tigation be Issued the following in structions to all banks: "All transfers of stock1 should be executed either by the stockholder in person or by duly authorized attorney. "In all indorsements for transfer, the name on the back of the certificate must correspond in every respect with the name on the face and the full legal name and full address of the transferee, the number of shares transferred, and the date of transfer should be given. "All signatures should be witnessed and signatures not known to the of ficers of the bank should be satlsfac- Capital Prisoners fi see THfYVf A pinmPB "hedT PETE" NEVER DID TRUST DAT CUY -.' M11TITHOUT newspapers prisoners IT in any Institution are almost unmanageable. They get nervous and are always wondering what Is going on In tbe outside world. They do not keep their minds on the things they are doing and make poor workmen. Give them newspapers and they seem to feel that they are in touch with the world and are partly content" This statement by Louis F. Zlnk ham. superintendent of the Washing ton asylum, to the comptroller of the currency, has led to the comptroller authorizing tbe payment by the gov ernment for newspapers for tbe in mates of the asylum. In the future prisoners at tbe asylum, will have the pleasure of reading both morning and evening papers. Ever since he took charge of the Washington asylum. Superintendent Zlnkham haa noticed that Inmates made great effort to have newspa Dressmakers Tried THROUGH the espionage on dress : makers .' maintained . by . special treasury agenta with the co-operation of Collector Loeb and Surveyor Henry, a new scheme for defrauding tbe gov ernment of customs duties baa been uncovered and checked, resulting in the aavlng to the treasury of an amount, it la estimated in Washing ton, between $75,000 and $100,000. . Included tn this sum to be coveYed Into the treasury through the watch fulness of eagle eyed special agents la a, $10,000 consignment of women' wearing apparel shipped from Paris to shopkeepera In New York. Philadel phia, Baltimore and Boatoa which baa been ordered seized. , : The American dressmaker would pay in Paris one-fourth or one-third cash and take a bill which on the face of If was the bill for the entire amount paid for model gowns and trlmt '?.' The .Tench dealer would send this "short bill" to the American consulate for certlflcMon, and tha dressmaker upon ber arrival here would show the consular Invoice to the appraiser on Blew Up the Maine was decided to blow her up. under such conditions aa might make It appear aba had been deatroyed by aa accl dental explosion of her own magaalnes A large boiler from the navy yard waa taken to the arsenal and filled with powder. It waa provided with a mech anism by which It would be exploded by electricity and then hermetically sealed. - "The boiler Waa lashed In a sllnft under a lighter, which waa towed across tha bow of the Maine at alght When tha lighter was directly la front of the battleship tha line which held the boiler were cut, and It dropped Into tha mud. "The Spaniard than fixed on Boyn ton as the person to set off tha mine. He had been captured shortly before while conducting a filibustering expe dition tor the Cubans, whom h bad aided durln the the Ten Years' war. and waa then Imprisoned la Cabana fortress. "According to the story, be waa tried and sentenced to death, but was offered life and liberty If he would press the button that was to destroy the Maine, and awear never to reveal the secret He accepted these terms and on the night of February 15, 1898, when the Maine awung around until her bow was directly over the mine, with her keel only three or four feet above it, he wr- taken to the Machlna wharf, where he threw the switch that caused the explosion. Then he waa set free and left Cuba" torlly suthentlcated. "All transfers mcde by attorney administrators, executors, agent guardians or trustees should be ac companied by evidence of their au thority to transfer, and all transfers from corporations, associations and societies must be executed by duly authorized officers only, and accom panled by evidence of authority to make the transfer. "When stock is held In trust the word trustee' should appear on the face of the certificate, and in all transfers to trustees, corporations, i soclations and societies their author ity to hold the stock must be shown by duly authenticated copy of the In strument creating the trust copy of by-laws, or of the directors' resolution. or other authority. "Transfers to or from minors should be made through their guardian and authority to act must be sworn when ever necessary. "Surrendered certificates must be msrked 'canceled' on their face, and the signatures of the bank's officers thereon either cut or punched out or crossed out In Ink, and If a stock cer tificate book is used, the canceled cer tificates should be securely attached to the stubs; otherwise they should be filed and carefull preserved." May Read Papers pers smuggled Into them. Soma of them could go without tobacco and other things they were accustomed to, but all made constant demanda for news from the outside world. Often be caught Inmates having outsiders bringing them papers. "It Is an absolute fact that prisoners are harder to manage when they are deprived of newspapers than when they are given the papers every day," says the superintendent "When they have tbe papers they are satisfied. They can sit down and read the news, and this gives them topics to talk about "Now that the comptroller haa au thorized the payment of government money for the papers, I feel satisfied that I will have a much more con tented lot of prisoner .than i bad formerly. We alway have allowed some of the prisoner to buy papers, but all of them did not have the neces sary money. "It is particularly noticeable that al most all of the prisoners want par ticularly to read about tbeJr own cases. Sometimes' they are not sat isfied with what they read, and often It makea them down-hearted, bat they would prefer to read bad newa than no news at alL" . to Beat Uncle Sam ITWHKnJ lconlim TV the pier, with the design of having It approved and her good assessed on only the face rain of the invoice. ' : Later on the Paris merchant wouM mall to tha American modiste a gen uine bill for the goods. In order that the customers who ordered imported gown and finery might pay a subatsn tial profit upon the real coat of tha dress good. Marriage a la 'Mod,.; "I suppose yon are engaged to th duke." 1 .' "Well, nearly." ' "What' th bltcht Awaiting tis father's consent?" ... "No; be can't marry without a ma jority favorable report from hi creditor." 1HJ 4M 3 .AvVVaW.:', NLaV YORK. A cremation of short measure market basket took place recently at tha Wsllabout, market Brooklyn, by order of Commissioner of Weight and Measures Walsh. There were over three thousand- of them; all were of the bushel persuasion, and tbe late property of farmers who wend their way daily to Walla bout and Gansevoort markets. For some week Inspector hsd been waylaying the wagons of tha guileless rus tics with the result that many of tbem were found to contain "bushel" basket that were from four to fourteen quart short It Is ststed that the seizures will probably reault In congress taking action to the end of com pelling a standardisation of so-called barrels and bushel all over the country. As matter, stand, tha term are variously Interpreted In different sections, and Invariably to the disadvantage of tha consumer. . " . ' DANDELION AS PEST Unusually Luxuriant Crop Weed This Spring. of No Safe Remedy, 8sy Experts, Ex cept to Get Down and Dig Them Out by Roots Big Damage la Seen in New Jersey. Chicago. Dandelions are getting a strangle hold upon Chicago's lawns this yesr. While otber cities are estlr.-.rtlng In six figures the loss caused by l. con demned yellow blossoms, Chicago gar deners are looking with disgust upon one of the most luxuriant crops cf the big-leaved weeds that tbe lawns upon which they sowed grass ever bore. Tbe late spring, followed by the unusual hot weather, seem to have been Just what the dundellons have been waiting for to show what they can do in the way of rapid growth, and some of them have al most leaped out of the ground In their eagerness to mount skyward. In some of tbe parka. In . plscss where much tramping has weakened the more delicate grass, a second crop of dandelions is blooming In the paces left by the first The earlier crop Is now going; to seed, and for large area the grass Is almost Invis ible. The leaves of many of the plant have been lifted clear of the ground by tha rapidity of growth. Other cities are watching the dande lion crop with even more concern than in Chicago. Gardener In East Orange, N. estimate that a damage approximating $100,000 haa been done the lawns In that section within the last fortnight In other of the eastern states where much pride 1 taken In the appearance of the lawn the dandelion have se cured an equally strong start Tbe belief is stated by some of th natur alists that some natural enemy of the dandelion which has kept It more within bound In former years ha been absent this season. That continued activity with tbe lawn mower and careful fertilisation of lawns are safer preventives of the dandelion pest than any chemical preparations was the advice given by several Chicago gardening experts In speaking of means of dealing with tbem. Like many antidotes for poison, their main objection 1 that they kill tbe patient aa well aa ridding him of the trouble, tbey declare. Sulphate of Iron, which la recommended aa sure death to dandelions, Is almost. If not quite, aa hard on the grass. :-; ' "Dandelion are, beautiful early in May, but for th rest of th year they are ugly, and therefore we have to keep them out," said Jena Jensen, tn peaking of thla year' crop. "Tha only way to deal with them In large area 1 to keep the grass close cut and In healthy condition, ao that there won't be any bare spot for th seed to get through to the ground and sprout. "If you keep their heads cut off be fore tbey have a chance to go to seed you prevent them from spreading. I don't know of ' any preparation that doesnt do too mack harm to tha vege tation you want to save to be safely used In killing them. , Of course, if yon have a small lawn, th best thing I to get down on your knee and dig them out by th root." O. C Slmond. landscape gardener : for th Lincoln park commission, waa of much th same opinion. . "Dandelion are pretty difficult to cope with, and there certainly are a lot of them thla year," be said. "Sul phate of iron Is recommended by WHY HE YOItE IIAUI! cnuiicii Rv. John Timothy 8tone Tells ef Ex pedient Used by Lonely Man to Have Himself Spoken Ta. ChicagoTo Illustrate the "offlsh- aM" of soma churches -Rev. John Timothy Stone, pastor l the Fourth Presbyterian church, speaking at the First Presbyterian church the other atfht told a story of a man who sat Vv 4 J'.O; many, but it undoubtedly 1 pretty hard on the grass. It Is a little harder on the dandelion than It la on the grasa, so In many cases It kills the one and the other survive. It Is rather a desperate remedy, though." MEN MAKE BETTER TEACHERS President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard 8ays Plsn to Equalize talarlea Is Most Destructive. New York. In regretting hi Inabil ity to lecture In New York on tha ques tion of equal pay for men and women teachers, which th board of educa tion proposes to adjust by reducing tbe salaries of men, former President Cbarlea W. Eliot of Harvard writes to Joseph Van Denburg: "The sex of the teacher 1 of abso lutely no Importance In education. ' It Is a perfectly clear result of much experience that men make better teacher for boy over twelve than women do. You tell me tha board of education 1 planning to reduce the salaries of men teachers. A more de structive policy could hardjy be Im agined. There are two reasons for paying women teacher lea than men. First, with rare exceptions, they do not and cannot do tbe same work. Secondly, teaching a a temporary oc cupation for young women la more de sirable among tha occupations open to women than It la for young men among the occupations open to men." PINEAPPLE VESTS WEAR LONG Englishmen Returning' From India Brings Garment Made From Strong Fiber Cost SmaU. London. Pineapple underwear 1 one of th latest wonders threatened by mechanical science. It ha long been known that the fiber of th plneappi leaf can be man ufactured Into the most dainty, muslin like material, but the cost of extract ing the fiber ha mad the price of the fabrio almost .prohibitive. A retired Indian colonel, who 1 .the proud possessor of three undervests made from pineapple leave, said they were more luxurious and comfortabl than the very finest llk. "They coat me aomething like $20 apiece," be aald, "and though I have worn (hem tor over thirty yeara, they show no signs of wear even yet . "I doubt If they era procurable any where In London. In India th natives extract the fiber,' from the pineapple leavea by hand, and the process Is long and laborious. . The products of ramie, or China grass, are fairly well known, but only a few know of the luxury of the pineapple." .;; While pursuing inquiries on thla In teresting subject among silk brokers and aUk manufacturers, whose busi nesses are threatened by thla new In vention, it waa found that the exist ence of pineapple silk waa scarcely known..- , "After an. allk Is silk," said a lead ing broker, "and this new invention or discovery will -rank' among artifi cial silk, of which there are already enough to form a market amongst themselves." ' :,". In tbe office of one of tbe prldpal fiber merchants of Mark lane were een specimens of a beautiful llk-mus-Un fabric which had been manufac tured from the pineapple fiber under the aupeiintendence of Charlea R. Dodge, the liber superintendent of th United State government : , - "While touring on the continent," through th service on Sunday morn ing wearing hla hat When requested to do ao by the ush er, he removed the hat smilingly. The usher ifterwarda ' asked him if h had worn the hat purposely or If It was merely absent-minded negligence, y "No," said th man, "I have bp"n r t tending this church regularly for tf ly two years snd no one ta ev?r f ISOLATE LEPER UNTIL END Lss Tung, Afflicted Pittsburg China man, to Llv Rest of Life Away From th Public Pittsburg. Lee Tung, the local Chinaman wbo la suffering from tu bercular leprosy, waa taken to the municipal - hospital the other day, where he will llv th rest of hla life, Isolated from the public. The Chinaman's face la badly swol len, and ugly blotches mark hi wrist and forearms. He contracted the dis ease eight yesrs ago while on a visit to China. Dr. B. A. Booth, th city physician, says that the leper probably will llv for four or five yeara. In the mean time th city will have to provide bom for htm. During th warm weath er be will lire in a tent on th hospi tal grounds, but before winter set in house of some sort will hav to b built for him. , Students' Food I Costly. New Haven, Conn. The appetite ot the average Yale undergraduate looms large In food statistics compiled by th management of th university din ing hall, where 900 student eat three time dally. During th first flvs month ot th college year, it took 120.000 quart of milk. 20,000 quart of cream and 215,000 fresh egg to satisfy the college boarder. Othei notable items are 7,600 . pounds of, breakfast foods, 14,000 pounds of but ter, four and a half ton of cracker. 460 barrels of flour, 10,000 pounds ol roaitbeef and 19,000 pound of chick en. . . said 'a well-known fiber expert, "1 found that pineapple silk waa stocked by some of th leading draper, lly wife bought a quantity ot It but when on our return she tried to purchase some of It In London aha. failed to find any shop that kept It "For trimmings I think It la excel lent, but I doubt If. in its present state of development it would be equal to very hard wear. - But fp great trouble wttn tneae laoric. tex tiles Is that the planters will not guar antee a large and regular supply of the raw material and English manufac turers will not alter their machlna to suit it until thy 4o." r j: : SETS TOWN TO SCRATCHING School Boy I Accussd of Distributing "Cow ltch"-rJoksr Will B Pub- . , lle,y Flogg . Wllkeebarr. Pa. A practical Jokei recently haa had naif the resident of Conyngham, a country town near bare, scratching continuously at the great' ly irritated surface of their skins. . A special committee ot the schoo) board I endeavoring, to ; find . and ' punish hm. V.--. P';-:;' . '"'y iV-y The afflicted onea did not know what waa wrong at first - Some thought it waa an epidemic ot hive; but it did not develop like hive; the kln mere ly grew red, there was a slight await ing and tfa Irritation waa continuous, while the number of those affected grew until half the residents wer scratching. xT;'-i:.'';;'-U:r Finally tt waa learned thafc It was all due to "cow itch," which had been distributed la th school, la two lodge rooms, th postofflce, and at a horse Sale during the week,, evidently by com practical Joker, probably pupil Th people are o Indignant after their prolonged irritation - that the Joker la likely to be publicly flogged if caught. . ..v'., -!', spoken to me In all that time. I Just thought I would lcav my hat on my head this morning to ee If it would serve as n introduction to soma one. I am glad to meet you" England' Cheese Production. Owing to th growing demand In England for oft chases, a Yorkshire agricultural college has Issued leaflets to encourage farmers to make chesses ef the types of CaaiemUert, Brie. Fort I'Eveque and Cervals, as mads U Franca. rwOYOUNQ DAUGHTERS OF KEN. TUCKY MOONSHINER ROUT A REVENUE POSSE. DEPUTY MARSHAL IS KILLED lister. Aged Fifteen and Eighteen,, Surprlaed l Their Mountain Home, Give Deadly Battle A Tragedy of th Kentucky Wild. ; , " - ' Sergenr, Ky After a 10-mll rid, ato th Kentucky mountain, now -ud thsn finding a stream swollfav by prlng freshets, the correspondent found among th towering pines shout Long Fork creek th Teckltt sisters, Bettla, agd eighteen, and Fannie, aged fifteen. Who recently gave bsttla to a pom ot rvnu officer, killed , wounded another and put . tha Ontted 8 tales deputy marshal, in ;ommand to flight ' ' . . ' A nsw-mad mound in th village burying ' ground marks tha place where lie Charlls 8mlth, deputy mar ibal, with a bullet still embedded In Che muscles of hi heart Th sisters ire charged with killing him. One or both admit it but they declar .they fought' in defense of their aged moth- r whom Smith had shot and beaten with bis revolver when a raid waa. made on their still in tb mountalne it Pike county. . Revenue nostrils had cntd stow ing mash tn tbe mountain back of Sergent, . In which com ' waa being xo verted Into whisky In violation. jf at least seven pages of govern nsnt statutes. Of courss tt bad to Deputy Marshal J. Matt Pottar, on ot th bravest officer la tb south. For , even yar he ha been la tbe rv- Ice ot Unci Bam, and mora than twice has shot off moonshiner who, Ired on htm. ' He picked Levi Small-, wood and Charlie Smith for such soral support and physical oartlcl pa- Jon as th occasions might require. Thty crept up the guich and cam . jo tha mountainside elearins at mid- - lay. Before the Tackltts knaw what was hannenlna tha son of the famllr ir as caught, handcuffed and placed on l rock, an -easy captive. Thfs wss inly th beginning of th fight Unci Oeorg Tsckltt, head of th 5amlly. waa away from bom. Thla Slstore Smwt to Kill. th revenue officer did not know. Tbey rushed th house to get him bat met bis wife Instead. Tefendlng her self with stovswood she beat off ar-: test until she was shot through the ' scalp and arm and beaten Into sub mission by Deputy Smith. Bettle and Fannie Tackltt ware not tnactiv dur ing till Interval but war gathering gun and ammunition for a fight that -lasted several hour In which three men wer pitted against two girl. Smallwood was wounded In th arm and crippled. Then a shot took off tha finger of hi trigger band and he waa out of the battle. Tha Ken tucky maidena 'were then pitted against tha deputies. . Finally Smith, underestimating th nerve and marksmanship of tha girl attempted to take th house by storm. He 'moved forward from hi shelter. covering both window with hi rifle. -- He raised th weapon to shoot but In an instant b waa fatally wounded . with a bullet In bis heart Potter re treated without hla prisoners. Both 1 girl wer put under bond for appear ance at court Tbey ar much ad mired for their bravery. - 1 Sh Had No Curiosity. -Rushvllle, Ind. A woman without curiosity, Mrs. John Plckerell, aged" slghty-slx, is dead at' her bom - In Richland township. - Sh never aw a train ot ears and never rod In a bug gy. Her entire life was" spent on the farm where she died, and she did not even visit her near neighobra. All ber life (he seemed perfectly contented with ber home, and entirely wlthou desire to leave It, even for an hour. - Threw Snake Into a School. Medford, Has. Lawrence B. Smai- tey, sixteen; Ros A. McDonald, Seven teen,' and Arthur E. Grant, sixteen, ail ot Medford, were charged with throw ing snake Into a school room of th Dam school, Medford, while th school waa In session, and Smalley and Mo- Donald were found guilty and fined five dollars each and Grant waa discharge t by Judge Bruce at-hi court la Mai den. . . Chokes to Death on Pesn. Glonwood, la. Louise, the two-ye old daughter of Elmer James, v. found dead in the jard of Ja ; bmne. The child tad choked on e bean Vl'.h which It hai t.: '!rS- v ... .' '
The Graphic (Nashville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 17, 1911, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75