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THE FRANKLIN PRESS and THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN THURSDAY, NOV. 2Z, 1934 U1C IUX VI WiMV" mmt and which con tains Four Grett Tressurei "The Holy Bible," ma wiiiui w - eVWUUU'tiAKION Bnuce Barton AN OLD MAN SETS OUT PAUL left Ephesus after the riot, but not to return to Je rusalem; he was going across into Europe again. We may imagine the conversation that took place for we get a won- "You are going over the same ground again, Paul?" "Yes, but every time widening the circle. This is my third time out, and each time I make a little larger swing, and see the work growing." "When do you get back to Je rusalem?" "Next spring at Easter. I an going to take back the biggest col lection that the Jerusalem church ever received." "Are vou eoinn to stay there?" ' v"Stay there? Do you think I rmilfi ever be content to settle down and stav in Jerusalem?" "But you are getting to be an old man, and travel is hard on you and dangerous." "Yes, I have been in dangers of many kinds. It has been my priv ilege to travel farther than any of the other apostles, in labours more abundant, in stripes above measure, in pris ons more frequent, in deaths oft. Of the Jews five times re ceived 1 forty stripes save one. Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thrice I suffered shipwreck, a night and a day I have been in the deep; x In journeyings often, in per ils of robbers, in perils by mine own countrymen, in per ils by the heathen, in perils in the city, in perils in the wil derness, in perils in the sea, in perils among false brethren; In weariness and painfulness, in watchings often, in hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in cold and nakedness." "That is a long list of perils, Paul. It must nearly have broken you down. "I have still a heavier burden, my anxiety for all the churches I have established. "Do you carry them in your mind and feel responsible for them?" "Who is weak and I am not weak? Who is caused to stumble and I burn not?" "You have done a great work and haye much to be proud of." "I am proud of it, and have been criticized as being vain about it. I have sometimes been ashamed of myself for letting people know my pride and joy in all this. Yet, while I have sometimes made my self a fool by seeming to boast, I really am not boastful. God for bid that I should glory, save in the cross of Christ and in the joy of service." "When you go out again where shall you go?" "Back again over the same around, but more widely, to all the Roman sub-capitals in Asia Minor and Greece, and then to Rome." (Next Week: Paul in Irons) Terrell Co., Hosch Bros. Co., Sharp- Zachary-Horsey Co., The Cox Hat Co., Ferry-Morse Seed Co., Hy grade Food Products Corp., Myers Dry Goods Co., Wingo-Ellett & Crump and Newport Milling Co., in the above entitled action will take notice, that an action, as above en titled, has been commenced in the Superior Court of Macon County, North Carolina, to the end that the plaintiff may foreclose a mort gage covering lands upon which these defendants have liens, and the above named defendants will toln nnfirp that tViPV aTP reflllired from maple treat annMr w;rtiin thirtv davs in the when I was a boy off; n( th nri- nf th Snnerior Court of Macon County, North Carolina, and answer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said com plaint. This the 12th day of Nov, 1934. FRANK L MURRAY, Clerk Superior Court. N15-4tc-J&J-D6 THE FAMILY nor tor JOHN JOSEPH GAINES, M.D. OUR GRIM VISITOR 1 write this, thinking of old Winter grim to most of us who live in the so-called "Temperate Zone." Winter certainly adds to' the householder's responsibilities as well as to the duties of the family doctor. The kiddies are going to school . . . What a blessing. Have you immunized your little dears against possible contagions they may en counter working in the little army? Diphtheria may put in its ugly ap pearance. Scarlet fever should be Now is a good time to take in voice, as it were, of the children's feet.' Give those toe-nails a going over. See that each little treminus is in proper shape for the winter's housing. . . . Those little feet that take a thousand steps to your one! Select shoes for winter wear with capable soles that give a natural casing for the growing foot. Above all, do nothing that will cramp the toes. Also, insure against cold or wet feet. I do not believe in "darning needle toes"- for shoes, either juve nile or adult. The feet are very provided against. And, there is 1 important organs. They are the a good immunizer against whoop ing-cough. It's nice to be safe, you know. I shall not attempt to advise you best of servants if properly re spected. I perhaps need not say this but feet of boards, scantling and slabs, worth forty or fifty dollars a thousand rough-piled on the lot. There are, I guess, ten acres of woods to every 'acre of cleared land over most of Berkshire coun ty. Counting household fuel and merchantable timber, the annual crop pays big interest on the land value. Five dollars an acre is a good price for most of the pine covered mountain tops. Trees are a good investment for a man who is content to stay put. Not so good for therrian who is always on the move. SUGAR . Down Last when 1 was a few country folk bought "store sugar." Unrefined brown sugar cost five or six- cents a pound. In the 1870's I remember that granu lated sugar was ten cents and more a pound. We bought some "black strap" molasses, but there was bet ter sweetening right in our own woods. Maple sugar. A farm wasn't a real farm in those self-contained days unless it had its "sugar-bush." Up on my hilltop, where the land levels off before you get to the slopes of Tom Ball Mountain, possibly a hundred huge sugar-maples remain of the old sugar-bush. They have not been tapped in years. Store sugar is too cheap and farm labor too high to make it pay. I asked for maple syrup tjje oth er day in a city restaurant, where I had ordered a plate of buckwheat cakes. There wasn't any more maple in the syrup than there was buckwheat flour is the cakes. I've a good notion to ask the head of the CCC camp over at Lee to send a bunch of the boys over next March to tap my sugar trees. It would be an education for them, and maybe I could get some real maple sugar once more. HORSES . still with us Say what you please about the "vanishing" horse, I notice more real interest in-horses and more of them in use, in the East at least, than for a good many years past. I went to the National Horse Show in New York a couple of weeks ago, and was specially interested in the handsome six-horse team ex hibited by one of the big milk dis tributing companies. It used to be the- "brewers' big horses" that were the last word in horseflesh; now it's the milkman's. Farmers are replacing gasoline tractors and trucks with "hay -burners," for which they can grow the necessary fuel and at the same time cut their fertilizer bills. And in the city streets, nobody has yet built an automobile that will move on to the next house by itself while the milkman is making his morning .deliveries. It takes too much gas to start a car, especially in cold weather, to make it as economical as a horse in any kind of business that calls for frequent stops and starts. TREADWAY of Stockbridge The Congressional district in which I vote, the First Massachu setts, has sent its Representative and my neighbor. Allen T. Tread way, back to Congress for the twelfth time. We are inclined to WEAK AND SKINNY MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN Saved by new Vitamins of Cod Liver Oil in tasteless tablets. Pounds of firm healthy flesh instead of bare scraggy bones i New vigor, vim sad energy instead of tired listlessness t Steady, quiet nerves! That is what thousands of people are getting through scientists' latest discovery the Vitamins of Cod Liver Oil concentrated in little sugar coated tablets without any of its horrid, fishy taste or smell. McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Tablets, they're called I "Cod Liver Oil in Tablets", and they simply work wonders. A little boy of t, seri ously sick, got well snd gained 10 'A lbs. in just one month. A girl of thirteen after the tame disease, gained S lbs. the first week and t lbs. each week after. A young mother who could not eat or sleep after baby came got all her health back and gained 10 lbs. in less than a month. You simply must try McCoy's at once. Remember If you don't gain at least S lbs. of firm healthy flesh In s month get your money back. Demand and get McCoy's-the original and genuine Cod Liver Oil Tablets approved by Good Housekeeping Institute. Refuse all substitutes insist on the original McCoys there are none better ssiWsSsSHS ewvw ... - u,ipiei mammmmmammmaamm my big.parent-heart is right. I do be conservative in New England. in this important procedure; I'm 'not believe in, nor endorse in any If a man is doing a good job we just reminding you that it's time degree, the cute little nothings that usually keep him on it as long as to see Dr. Goodheart, your family I see worn by my ladies and little doctor. He has all the things you daughters out on the streets in need, ! winter. And I look at feet often. TODAY ed Off FPANK PARKER STOCKBRIDGE la LAND . . soon in demand If 1 am any hand at reading the signs of the times, then the coun try is in for another big era of land speculation. And when you stop to think of it, the whole his tory of America is a histoTy of speculation in real estate. The urge' that brought most of our ancestors to America was the chance to get land cheap and sell it "at a profit, except such as they needed to subsist on. George Washington was the greatest land .nai.,,litnr n( ttip 1 Rtri fpntnrv. In an old newspaper in which his j beech and maple for cordwood. My death was reported I saw an ad-1 share w.l go a long way toward vertisement of lands for sale along; the iyjb taxes. the Ohio River, "Address George Just below me, Will Seeley has steaders into the West, the open ing up of Oklahoma and the Chero kee Strip, the great rush of settlers into Southern California, innumer able suburban booms around a doz en cities, and the great Florida speculation which collapsed in 1926. It looks to me as if the com bination of better highways, cheap er cars, Federal encouragement, higher city taxes and the beginning of a return of prosperity is certain to stimulate the demand for land farther and farther away from ur ban centers. Look for the next big land boom to set in around the end of next year and reach its peak in, say, 1937. . TREES . . good investment The cheapest crop to grow and the one that assures the greatest return in the long run is trees. Up my way the annual harvest of the tree crop is beginning now. Down by the river an my farm Bill Howland is cutting birch, he wants to stay, especially if he is "home folks." Congressman Treadway was born in the same little country town where he still lives, Stockbridge, Mass., and owns the old Red Lion Inn there, which has been a tavern since before the Revolution. The defeat of Representative Britten of Illinois makes Mr. Treadway the "dean" of the Re publican representation in Con gress. My guess is that Allen Treadway will pull a strong oar in the com ing reorganization of the Republic an Party. LEGAL ADVERTISING NOTICE North Carolina, Macon County. In the Superior Court The Federal Land Bank of Columbia, vs R. M, Shook. Belle Shook, et alf The defendants, Sea Board Gar ment Mfg. Co.. J. F. G. Coffee Co., Theodore Stivers Milling Co., Kingdon & Co., Hickory Overall Co., Levering Coffee Co.. High point Overall Co., N. & W. Over all Co., Allied Drug Co., C. M. Washington, Mount Vernon, Vir-j moved his portable sawmill into Miller Co., Inc.. John H. Wilkins gmja ' j Noble Turner's pine grove next to Co., Abraham Golden and Samuel I have lived through many land the old burying-ground and will Golden, trading as Golden & Co., booms, including the rush of home-' saw out maybe a hundred thousand , Dunlap Milling Co., Inc., Woffard ' Forcoo11?1' . give " Here's the&fl Qf COLDS-CONTROL (!) To Help PREVENT Colds (8) To Help SHORTEN o Cold At the first sneeze or nasal irrita tion, quick! a few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol. Its timely use helps to prevent many colds and to throw off colds in their early stages. At bedtime, just rub on Vickt VapoRub, the mother's standby in treating colds. All through the night, by stimulation and inhalation, VapoRub fights the cold direct. fc) To Build RESISTANCE to Colds: Follow the simple rules of health that are part of Vicks Plan for Better Control of Colds. The Plan has been clinically tested by practicing physicians and proved in home use by millions. (You'll find full details of this unique Plan in each Vicks package.) I 99 MILLION FOOT-POUNDS f ciuri a i d I, , nsv.i.r-r PER GALLON ? H.c , I y -L gasoline! Mil Drive in and Try This Gasoline at HENRY - ANGEL MOTOR INN, FRANKLIN, N. C STELLA BROWN'S, ON GEORGIA ROAD MRS. W. M. PARRISH'S, OTTO, N. C.
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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Nov. 22, 1934, edition 1
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