Newspapers / The High Point Enterprise … / Jan. 12, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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...-. i.-.i i t . . . , 'I ICr.ow YLat Good ik.I.li It After AH These Years, Zs.y . Mi. L. A. GAINS 10 1X5. CM TATO-AC "I know what pood htailh b ain. ftr all the vr a j appetit U tiae and I can eat anything without ill -tTvt ; I kvp thrvuga thf wfcole night ad am rffrcfhed la tor snor-unf; ar rousoea ahsa left; -I have gained tea' Bemads and am feeling "food ia every! way." The speaker ni Mrs. L. A. MoT' rs of 807 East Co m merer street. High TVint. . "I am m grateful for my changed rendition that I am ftad to hare thu opportunity of telling stto what Tan lac baa done for me," continued Mr. Morris. "Before taking Taalae t bad suffered 'from indigestion and stomach trouble for Ter seven , year. Finally I was forced to quit eating meat or any aoiid food even rdy e rackera. g?e an pain and distrffs. I was nerroua and tired out and could not sleep. Too, I loot in ttrength and weight I waa treated and tried moat everything, but without good result, unti .friends induced ma to tale Tanlac." Thia U but another atory of Tanlae's good work, a atory from a person right her In High Point, which explains the relief a that may be expected through Tanlao from those people Buffering from stomach, liver aad kidney ailment,' ca tarth, rheumatism, nervousness and I general rundown condition. . Genuine Tanlae U sold ia thia city only at the Ilart Drag store; Handle man, Bandleman Drug Co.; tille, ThomasTUle Drug Ca. Thomas- PlflUMOITIA SXASON AT HARD. State Board of Baalth Adriaes Every j Precaution Afaaast It "Pneumonia aa a cause of death is 4 about a top notcher," says the 8tate Board of Health, "as it ranks third and y ia outclassed only by tuberculosis aad organic heart diseases. It is a seasonal disease and wa are sow ia the midst of that season. During the winter and early spring season pneumonia ia great ly on the increase and causes about 10 per cent of all deaths. "One of the most jwediaposing causes of pneumonia is ths presence of other diseases, especially those diseases ' pro ducing a debilitating effect. .Such dis eases might be mentioned as colds, grippe, bronchitis, and other respiratory diseases. Debility developing from any cause incrcsses susceptibility, therefore it is all important that alt functions pf the body be kept in good working order and that resistance be kept as high as possible. "Resistance ia lowered by overeating, lack of exercise, lack of fresh air to live, sleep and work in, lack of regular sleep and relaxation, and irregular" living hab its. ExcesHcs of all kinds decrease re sistance and predispose to pneumonia. Kxeesttivo heat, worry, fatigue and un . due exposure to cold are factors predis posing to pneumonia. Alcohol has been railed by the United States Public Health service "the handmaiden of pneu monia." 1 "It is a well establiuhed fact that pneumonia is a germ disease, People sick with pneumonia should not be visited for two reasons: Their chances for re covering will be better wfthout visitors, and the chances for the spread of the disease will be reduced." (Fl.orll in NVw Yoik Ti:tn-s.) Cvkwl CoJr, "Lirutrtant (Kn 1 tbe Hon. William F. Cody," as the Loni.n papers usn1 to call hia in the JubHoe year when Le was ahowbg the quevu about his Indian cassp and the Prince of Wales rode in the Deadwood stage, was the picturesque and genuine iacar nation of a wes-t that is gone, of the ear vhen a million buffaloes "roamed the plains," as ia the novels of Mr. Bea die's and Mr. Munbo'a series, dear to the youth of oldsters. Some of those old ters remember when buffaloes could be shot from the windowe of Vaion Pacific train. The strain of adventure and romantic Jtempersment was ia his blood. Irish, Spanish, English. He trapped and hunted aad fought Indiaas when only a boy. He waa in wild Kansas, now so tame, ten years before Mr. Douglas brought ia the Kansas-Nebraska bilL All the excitementa oi the frontier and the trail were his. He was a man, it may be saH, at 10, whea his father waa killed in a row over slavery, the seed of dissension between men, and par ties and sections. ' He was freight wagon courier, pony express rider, he drove stage. The sum of hia accomplishments and activities was all that the boys of 50 years ago deemed admirable and he roic. He waa a hero such as "Ned Bunt line" or Emerson Bennett or Mayae End eould not strive to depict. He waa a brave and wary scout, Phil Sheridan's chief of scouts, the slayer of Chief Yel low Hand. Ha was a brave soldier. Oth er men were these. It waa Cody's crood fortune and that of the country, and a good bit of the rest of the world, that he bodied forth the heroic age of the west. ... One seems vaguely to remember in the dark backward and abysm of iorty-odd years ago his not too successful appear ance in "The Scouts of the Plains," or some such border play, rudely enough composed, probably, by that same "Ned Buntliae," a god to a generation of boys brought np on novelettes and weekly story papers, The Flag of Our Union, The Ledger, Street and Smith's Weekly, and now a name writ in water. It was not as an impersonator, but aa himself, that Buffalo Bill delighted millions and became better known than the equator. the Wild Weit 1 C f Li i t.;t t oue't tf the cLI'J cf a sis.; I , r tixe so to ask? Apua the uU'eni-;.' j and world-Lttking toice of Nte .L-tury "announce," heralds tie j-ant. : Ponies, mostangrs, horses, Iid'.iZi cf Cue' feather and ferocious port; scouts, Mexi-; canj cowboys cowgirU, buTaloes -be-; fore these became museum pieces, so to! speak, curled darlings o preserves and parks aad Buffalo Jones not too wild! cattle, "backers" that kkked the sun, Arapahoes, Cheyenne, Pawnees, Sioux, all sorts oi Tawnies; the .Deed wood: coach, better than all the gilded coaches al VaDoleon. rattlinv mnA m rri n m mX-m t - I p O i - MWU, pursued and rescued, to the sound of shots innumerable and the darkening of heaven and earth with dust. It was a grand show, let the slaves of the movir habit say what they wilL It pictured an extinct civilization and bar barism. It waa honest, manly, courage- j ous, of the open, like its master. We can see him still, n little stiff in the legs lat terly, but a gallant figure. He has rid. den around until the spectators are dii- ty. ne lifta that patriarchal and ven- erable hat it looks gray or ia that The; mist of memory? aad bows from the saddle. ." j . He played good game of poker. He was straight aa a trivet - He knew the men and manners of many cities and countries. Emperors, kines. Drineea and princesses, sculptors, painters, statesmen, ' halfbreeda, papooses, he was at home with all There was something essen tially poetical -and artistic about the man. The frontier boy waa naturally a cavalier and a courtier in the good tense, the man at ease everywhere,- sure of himself. In certain portraits of him one geta a glimpse of a sixteenth-century iook. n u rrobisher, Drake, Raleigh, born li(. Iowa and bred amonar horse thieves, border ruffians, and exiles' from civilization. , He got a lot out of hia long life En durance, valor, horsemanship, marks manship: it waa a pretty mod univer- aity, his show. The symbol of a noble period of American history, a frientl of the youth of many of us, depart. "Even BS a mother covers her rMM jmrMt W cloth, 0 Earth, cover thou hlml r ...... MOTHER OP THAW TALKS OF HIS SOU'S "BIltlVOLENCE" Hughes to Be Prealdeat. New York, Jan. 12.-Oharles E. Hughes, late Republican candidate for President of the United States, is slated for election to the presidency of the New York State Bar association at the annual meeting of the association which began its sessions today in Brooklyn. Mr, Hughes was unanimously selected for the honor by the nominating com mittee, of which Alton B. Parker, one time Democratic candidate for President of the United State, la the chairman. The nomination is equivalent to elec tion.;. - j Meeting of OkUheou Editors. Oklahoma City, Okla Jam It-Oklahoma publishera aad - deitora rounded np In the capital today to wrestle with the high cost of print paper and other problem confronting the newspaper maker. The occasion was the annual midwinter meeting of , the ' Oklahoma Press association, of which Byron Nor re 11, of the Ada News, is president. " KOTICSt .On December 29,. 1816, B. H. Bradner purchased B, B. Power's interest ia the concern of Bradner and company, and all owning thia concern frill please come a soon a possible and Settle their ac counts, so the purchaser caa pay all bills "v owed by ths old cqffif any. . , . . (Bigned.) ', .-X:;;.:,;, . . B, CL CnATJSI : B. It. rQf'ULL. Pittsburgh, Ta, Jan. li-Mrs. Mary Copely Thaw, mother of Harry K. Thaw, late yesterday issued a statement bear ing upon hia indictment in New York for assault upon Frederick Gump, Jr, a school boy. In the statement Mrs. Thaw refers to the fact that while her husband, the late William Thaw, fre quently assisted poor boy to secure an education and that Harry did likewise, her own opinion "fortified by long expe rience and observation," is this form of benevolence is too susceptible pf abuse to be endorsed." " "It is not surprising that Harry should offer a scientific training to a lad whose ill health had compelled his fam ily to move to southern California," Mrs. Thaw says in the statemnet, but adds that "in this, particular instance, the combination of needlessly asjumed guardiannhip and the obvious result of Christmas conviviality , resulted disss trously". . . ; ,.. .... . . . '.. . MRS. GUMP GLAD HER BOY IS OUT OF THAWS CLUTCHES Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 12.-Mr. Fred erick B, Gump, mother of the high school boy mentioned in connection with' the indictment against Harry K. Thaw, when told, that Thaw had attempted suicide broke her silence in regard to the case. "I have schooled myself against all surprises," she said, "and I have won dered what Thaw would do when he was cornered.". "I'm so glad my boy is out of his clutches,' ahe added. Mrs. Gump declined to tell her son's story of the alleged hoggings, but she said she believed the case against Thaw a '"very- strong 'vm.J, Wilaoa toSpeak at Church Anniversary.' , Washington, D. C, Jan. .President Wilson has accepted an invitation to speak tomorrow at the celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the found ing of St. John's Protestant Episcopal church in this city. St. John's has the distinction of having been ths place of worship of more President than any other church, in the capitaL President Wilson is of the Presbyterian faith, but Mr. Wilson is an Episcopalian and since his marriage the President has fre quently accompanied his wife to the Serv ice at St. John's or one ol ths other Episcopalian churches ia Washington. Absolutely Removes Indigestion: Or.opiclcago proves it 23c at all druti REV. MILTON WEBB, FATHER OF E. YATES WEBB, IS DEAD Shelby, Jan. 12. Rev. Milton Webb. father of Congressman Webb, and one of the pioneer Baptist ministers of the state, died at the home of his son here last night from the effect 'of 'a second paralytic stroke suffered last Monday. The deceased was 85 vears of are. Ha retired from active church work 11 years ago, when he was first stricken with paralysis. He was known for his relig ious fervor and athletic ability. h 2 ' ! i - ) i s : ! !' 3 - J rA' 'r r-i -n r r r ri , , - U ta i s ia Ni - a - ( j t , t mJ ATSGHGOLAUD1TOI1UM Tut2cd Night. Only, ;Jaiv IG A STUPENDOUS and gorgeous" aggregation 'of the South's best comedians, vocalists and dancers. Mag. nificient special scenery, dazzling electrical effects, immense eusemble chorus, travesties, monolougues, divenities and Vaudeville NovcIHiTheT.Ioct Ambilifiiu Production Ever Attempted in Hish Point. Pricey SOc and $1.00 6 i. ANNUAL KEETINO. The annual meeting of the stockhold ers of the Bank of Commerce, of High Point, N. 0, will be held in the directors room of the bank Wednesday, January 17th, at 10-20 a. m. for the transaction of bulsness that comes before the meet ting. -' " ' ;;; ,.; tf-17. H. A. MTTJ.IS, Cashier." " EIGHTY-SEVEN YEARS OLD '; H, H. Adams, Sprlngfleld, Mo., write i 'I had a severe attack of kidnev tmnM. I am mttlnir rilA tt t's-j jt , -p f si vB.a, 4 trtctt oil, lereat treatment, but none did me so. M,,"'"""""""""',,"""ittiHIM,OMllHI,,ilM,11l yastfcisK-sw jnVBE DRUGS, PROMPT IF . SERVICE, Ia What You Receive vhen you trade At H1RT DRUG CO. Next to the Postoffice. Both Telephonea No. 320 much goocTa Foley Kidney Pffli' lV ley Kidney Pills build np weakened Idd' neys, help rid the Wood of acids aad poisons, and reliere bladder troubles. For sale by Mann Drug Company. 3 3 Nprtfi Carolina Public S srvice Company U)0 ()(!() S'WN h4 tx r r tjuij ( " it You -Nesd a i Toiiic There are times In every woman's life when shs i needs a tonic to help her over toe hard phces. when that time comes to you, you know what tonic to take Cardul, the woman's tonic. Cardul Is come posed of ' ' pureiy vegetable Insredients, which tct . gently, yet surely, on the weakened womanly crr?-.s, c and helps build them back to strenTJi tnd tuVX It has bensHtsd) thousands end thousands cf vak, t!Hr.2 women la Its r::t half "century cf wen.f j success, tnd It will da Ihs sarri fcr vti. - You can't caka a c::tal:3 In taldnj ; ; " t"zi Ar.t!?i Vr n. R n lift a hi--, X t tUVPl f r--..-4 .tl .r-.V t T !GI COST OTUVING TO T1IE H n; " (ttion$ received ; from locsl de&lsrs on various articles making up the ordinary hooe-"- .' ; . Dec!. :;VA 1914. Flora, per barrel . $' 6.5 0 Pctitoe. ner bushel 1.20 Ikilcr, per pound. .40 Lard, per pound. . ,Wi Ep per dozen, . .25 F.Ur, per quart;'.; :;::.10 Apples, per bushel 1.25 Detf, per pound . . - .25 CUckenj, each . . , .50 ' TcrLsyt, per Ib.V, V.I8 Coal (Pocahontas) H ' per ton - 6.75 8.00 Shoes (men) pair. . 5.00 8.00 Ehsss (ladies) pair 6.00 r 12.00 dcU.es (ladies suits) Dec 1 1916 $11.00 2.00 .50 .22 .40 1.50 t .30 . .65 .22 . Pet Increase 95 67 -25 76- 62 :;25;:":v -v20;;; 20 30 , . 22 18 60 -1C0 . ... 25 00 30,00 iS20 AVERAGE CC3TC7 AEOVE tl6cOZn$ ) I. nMkJ) CwT C? gas, ixrirnuc far v.cr.:n. Li'.on I to xvcair, tz2 r.:rvc r;;::3 tr.d a pcf K. n c4j:r? n I evtr i r-i (-"-- p..-t T ' JP11"1 P SB . ...J mm mm m n to Uks Ca:.!. I was i had S"Cti a v .l C.zzf Uov I f;tl n v.:'l tr Jr-Teatr.:tfn:. I. 'My fit' i mm . - - ugiit, rcv.i? i aid thai 3 : 'rc : :;V: C-z-.t Ca Sas r.:r:u? jr mm ? E , Jk.m . a L x i-
The High Point Enterprise (High Point, N.C.)
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Jan. 12, 1917, edition 1
2
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