PAGE TWO
THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND
the highlands MACONIAN
THURSDAY
FR££/to sufferers of
STOMACH ULCERS
^ HYPERACIOITX
Willard’s Messaqe oiFRelief’?
PRICELESS INFORMATION for
1 those suffering from STOMACH OR
DUODENAL ULCERS, DUE TO HYPER-
ACIDITY-POOR DIGESTION. ACID
DYSPEPSIA. SOUR STOMACH, GASSI-
NXSS. HEARTBURN. CONSTIPATION,
I BAD BREATH, SLEEPLESSNESS OR
I HEADACHES, DUE TO EXCESS ACID.
Explains the marvelous Willard Treat-
I merit which is bringing relief.
I ^Id on 15 days trioL
J
PERRY’S DRUG STORE
the
BABY POWDER
ihati
ANTISEPTIC
Don’t be satisfied with ordinary
baby powders that are not anti
septic. Without paying a cent
more you can get Mennen Anti
septic Powder—which not only
does everything that other baby
powders do, but also sets up an
antiseptic condition all over
baby’s skin and fights off germs
and infections. It stops chafing
and rawness, too. So get a tin of
Mennen Antiseptic Powder at
your dru2gist’s today.
powb's
I I II M-r i-
DO you suF^r burning, scanty or
too freqiittnt urination/ backache,
liMdache, dizziness, loss of energy,
leg pains, .weilings an; pufFiness
under the cy«? Are you i sd, nerv
ous—feel all unstrung e. d don’t
know what is wrong?
Then give some thought your
kidneys. Be sure they function '^ropeN
ly for functional kidney disorder per
mits excess waste to stay in the blood,
«nd to poison and upset the whole
system.
Use Doan's Pills. Doan’s are for the
kidneys only. They are recommended
the world over. You can get the gen
uine, time-tested Doan's at any drug
store.
Now Ease
Neuritis Pains
Fast
Bayer Tablets
Dissolve Almost
Instantly
In 2 Beconds by stop
watch, a genuine
BAYER Aspirin tablet
starts to disintegrate
and go to work. Drop a
Bayer Aspirin tablet in
to a glass of water. By
the time it hits the bot
tom of the glass it is
disintegrating. What
happens in this glass
• . . h^^ens In your
stomach.
For Amazingly Quick Relief
Get Genuine Bayer Aspirin
If you suffer from pains of neiu'itis
what you want is quick relief.
Genuine Bayer Aspirin tablets
give quick relief, for one reason, be
cause they dissolve or disintegrate
almost instantly they touch mois
ture. (Note illustration above.)
Hence — when you take a real
Bayer Aspirin tablet it starts to dis
solve almost as quickly as you
swallow it. And thus is ready to
start working almost instantly . . .
headaches, neuralgia and neuritis
pains start easing almost at once.
That’s why millions never ask for
aspirin by the name aspirin alone
when they buy, but alw^ays say
“BAYER ASPtRIN” and see that
they get it.
Try it. You’ll say it’s marvelous.
15c Fcrt
A DOZEN
2FULL9:;,,
DOZENfc“^
Virtually
Ic a tablet
I.OOK FCfit THE i
?oss
THE
...DOCTOR
JOHN JOSEPH GAINES.M.J3,
JUST BETWEEN US BOYS
I am frequently asked which is
the more dangerous for a man,
smoking or chewing tobacco? Be
cause so many men do one or the
other, if not both ! Especially is this
so in rural life-—that sort of living
that comprises most of human lib
erty if not luxury.
I can hardly concede danger in
either phase of tobacco-using, pro
vided always that moderation is
strictly observed; the limit of the
safety-zone is TEMPERANCE, and
that applies to food and drink and
work and play as well.
At the time of my graduation, I
had learned to be a fiend for smok
ing; ambitious to succeed, I observ
ed very keenly that my pockets
carrying the smokers’ fragrant mix
tures offended some of the fine
patrons almost to the point of dis
gust. This wouldn’t do, I banished
the old pipe and betook myself to
the seductive “plug.”
15ut, oh, the filth of that! The
abomination that goes with the cus
pidor! Smoking threatened to rum
my business; chewing menaced me
with a divorce court. I resolved to
quit—had to do it And I did it.
Here’s how: , , j
I bought gum, plenty, f chewe
a wad of gum till the sugar was
extracted from it; then, I added
to the tasteless wax a small bit ot
tobacco, making a very smooth
“chew.” It had the seductive flavor
of the plug, without the eternal
spitting and bad breath. One bolus
would satisfy me continuously for
half a day; my tobacco was reduc
ed to the vanishing-point; 1 be
came free.
And, there's a method by which
the excessive chewer may make
himself decent in a very satisfac
tory way, I wonder how' many of
my masculine readers w'ill try it
and be convinced? It’s so easy to
shake off a very filthy habit, if
you care to—and as the wife wants
you to do.
of the neces-
NOV,!
make a camera
TODAY «">
FRANK PARKER
SF0CKBRID6E
overhead skylight, and could not
make any pictures at all on a
cloudy day, when I was a boy.
Then, too, it was the custom to
“retouch” every negative until all
signs of liuman expression had
been rubbed out.
make me a present
sary lens.
1 managed to , , ,
when I was about 14 and my father
gave me the lens out of a stere-
opticon, or magic lantern, which he
had used in giving illustrated lec
tures on the Philadelphia Centen-
Among my souvenirs I found
some of my early efforts at photo
graphy with that primitive camera,
which served me for a number of
years until I began to earn money
enough to buy a better one.
PICTURES . . the old “stills”
Before the movies, the only way
in which most people learned what
the rest of the world looked like
was by stereopticon lectures, in
which “still” pictures were projected
on the screen by what we used to
call a magic lantern. My father
eked out his miniriterial income by
giving these illustrated lectures in
small New England towms, and I
was sometimes privileged to' accom
pany him on his horse-and-wagon
lecture tours.
Before the electric, light, the rriost
brilliant light obtainable was the
oxythydrogen limelight, A stream of
oxygen and one of hydrogen were
focussed upon a block of calcium
carbonate, which became brilliantly
incandescent under the flame of the
mingled gases. We carried the gas
supply in tw'o huge rubber bags; my
father made the oxygen and hydro
gen at home and filled the bags be
fore we started out. One of my
jobs was
to force
enough.
to sit
the,-
on tli« ,
gas to.
CANNONS PROVE ii,„ I
IN SWISS ALP
he first ^ actually 1
ever done by •, J L
found. 'l>as|
In Switzerland ,..1,.
avalanches cause much '1
take many lives can ^
drafted imo^iS:?
big snow slides when
dangerous and at a tim^ ri':
parations have'been mad (ti
Say Wihen
1 emperance Orator-Som.
cate moderation-otherc ,■
prohibition. What, I ask Jf
A Voice-Whafll ya„
PRIMITIVE
home-made
W atches
Jewelry
Spectacles'^
WATCH repairing]
BUY NOW and save n»|
prices are ladvancing.
GROVER JAMlSoj
NEXT TO POSTOFFICEl
CYCLING
still popular
One of the most interesting de
velopments of the past few years
has been the revival of popular in
terest in bicycling. More bicycles
are in use now than ever before,
people in the trade report.
In America, bicycling is still much
more a sport than a means of
transportation. In Europe the ordi
nary working man can by no pos
sibility afford to own a car. He
uses a bicycle to go back and forth
to his day’s work. I have seen in
European cities bicycles carrying
loads of tools and building mater
ials which we would consider a fair
load for a Ford, It takes an ex
pert to carry a 15-foot ladder on a
bicycle through the traffic of the
Paris boiulevard, but that is not
an uncommon sight.
Just now cycling is a popular fad
in America, but I doubt if it wall
ever come back in this country to
the proportions of 40 years ago,
when everybody rode bicycles.
SNAPSHOTS ed'ucation.al
I saw a statistic the other day to
the effect that tlirec families o.ut of
every five in America own cameras.
There are more than 16 million
amateur photographers in this coun
try and last year they took more
than 300,000,000 snapshots.
We are certainly living in a pic
torial era, I was interested to look
over a large number of amateur
photographs which had been sub
mitted for prizes in a nation-wide
newspaper photography contest, and
I was amazed and delighted at the
artistic effects achieved by many
amateurs and the apparent wide
spread appreciation of beauty and
symbolism among the contestants.
In my younger days, when I was
one of the few amateur photogra
phers, we were well satisfied if we
got any kind of a picture at all.
I think the influence of artistic
photography upon the generation
now growing ,up is going to be
tremendous.
PROGRESS ... in camera art
Thinking back, I don’t know of
any art in which the changes have
been so great in my time as in
photography. Rummaging through a
box of family souve,nirs the other
day I found several daguerreotypes
of my grandparents and an amus
ing tintype of my father, as a col
lege student, wearing a silk hat, as
was the custom of college seniors
in the 1860’s.
I can well remember when hav
ing one’s picture taken was a slow"
and not altogether pleasant process.
The victim’s head was held from
behind in an iron clamp and he
was supposed to look pleasant for
from one to three minutes without
changing his expression. That ac
counts for the wooden and fish-
fased effect of most of the early
photographs.
Photographers had to have a big
1 was reminded of my own first
camera, I was an inventive and in
quisitive boy w'hen an enthusiastic
amateur named George Eastman
invented the photographic dry plate
and laid the foundations for modern
photography—and a great fortune
for himself. I saw one of the new-
dry plate cameras and wanted one.
My father said that if I wmld make
a camera that would work he would
i’MANEWWOM
THANKS TO PURS)U
>Yes, Pxirsang contains elements of
proven value, such as Organic Copper
and Iron, which quickly aid nature in
building rich, red corpuscles. When
this happens, the appetite improves.
Nervousness disappears. Energy and
strength usually return. You feel like
a new person. Get Pursang from your
druggist.
sort IH 1937 Mu jf
PLYMOUTH
SAFETT STYLING!
iM
AMAZING new Ride sensation, new Silence^ new Siz^>
new Beauty . . . in the 1937 Plymouth!
Plymouth owners tell you that Plym-
outh has always built great cars. But
even Plymouth owners, who know they
can expect greater values from Plym!
car are amazed when they see and ride
m the new Plymouth for 1937.
Famous Safety-Steel body; 100% Hv
drauhc Brakes; Floating P^er engin^
ica’s best engineered low priced
are here in the 1937 models.
And you’ll find amazing ride impro''®^
ments . . . sensational extra siz^ ^
roominess . . . unmatched.
in the most beautiful, most tno ern
stylish car that Plymouth ever bui t-
You’ll be excited about this *'
beautiful new Plymouth as
you see it . . . just as we are. So co
in to see it soon. Come today.
mentsthathavemadePlym;ut~:
TK L o as $25 a Month
rough Commercial Credit Company’s Time Payment Plan
W. ROY CARPENTER
Telephone 111
Chrysler and Plymouth Sales and Service
FRANKLlN»!j