THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1835 THE FRANKLIN PRESS and T HE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN PAGE SEVEN I TODAY and WW ADVICE . . .to graduates I have been reading the address es of numerous university presi dents and others to their graduat ing classes. I wish there were some way to put aU of these into a book and put that book in the hands of every young man who thinks that the world is conspiring against him. Doctor Hopkins, president of Dartmouth, expressed an idea which every young person ought to take to heart, when he said that he hoped that his graduating class had acquired a sense of accountability, combined with, humility of thought and simplicity of life. Doctor Con ant, president of Harvard, express ed much the same idea when he urged the necessity of evolving a solid philosophy of life which en ables its holder to face the future unafraid. He pointed out that the man who is afraid is almost certain to make the wrong decision at a critical time. Those are eternal truths which every new generation has to learn all over again. Those who believe that there are some new rules of life that will work better than the ancient teachings are due for a tremendous disillusionment. HOOVER Brat job Speaking to the graduating class of his own Stanford University, former President Hoover told of his experience in hunting a job when he graduated forty-one years ago. ? He could' not get a "white collar" job, but - found employment at manual labor in a mine. He emphasized the point that he found employers greatly interested in helping young people to get a ' start in life, and he expressed the belief that this human helpfulness has increased in the intervening years, while the special training of ; a university carries more weight with prospective employers than it did. in his day. I think Mr. Hoover's statements are particularly true. And I think his example is one that young grad uates might well follow. I have seen a good many boys come out of college in the past few years, and the ones who have succeeded in getting their feet on the ground with the least trouble have been the .boys who did not think their diplomas entitled them to a soft job, but .who went to work with theif hands. One of them came in to see me not long ago. He was just off an oil tanker on which he had made several trips to South America as an ordinary seaman, and he had nothing but contempt for such of his classmates as were wasting their time- trying to find easy indoor jobis. PRESIDENCY , ... not Hoover It seems to be difficult for any body to mention or hear Mr. j Hoover's name these days without somebody expressing the belief that he is trying to become the Re publican Presidential candidate next year. I don't think this is true at all. I know Mr. Hoover pretty well, and have talked with him several times since he left the White House. I. know how glad he was New Alkaline Powder Recommended to hold FALSE TEETH If you have sore gums or your plate drops if you are self conscious or ner vous and your plate will not "stay put" you should use FASTKETH. You will be delighted with the comfort and security afforled by this new alkaline, adhesive powder. The mild alkalinity of FASTBBTH prevents nn acid sore mod ;Tf and gums and keep plate firmly in pkace-because It holds Us consist ency Z lonKcfc. and will not seep away. SwcjlensTeath. Allows you to chW your food properly. Buy FA8TEBTH today, at any drug store. I to be relieved of the strain of the Presidency. As the last President of his par ty, Mr. Hoover is in a sense the head of the party, and in that po sition he is entitled to give advice and counsel, and that advice and counsel are sought by many Re publican leaders. Beyond a doubt he will play an important part in shaping Republican policies for 1936, but a great many persons who are much closer to him than I am, agree with me that he has not the slightest ambition or de sire to go back to the White House. GOBBLING m Africta Mr. Mussolini has lately been at tempting to justify his apparent in tention of adding the Kingdom of! Abyssinia to the Italian colonies in Africa, by pointing out that Eng land, France and many other na tions have been engaged for cen turies in gobbling up parts of Africa, and that they ought not to criticize him when he tries the same thinig. There is a measure of truth in what he says. The acquisition of territory in Africa, with more or less disregard of the rights of the natives, has been very much like the acquisition of North and South America by English, Spanish and Portuguese conquerors. The prin ciple difference between Abyssinia and the rest of Africa is that the Ethiopian Kingdom has been a fairly civilized and organized gov-j ernment for a thousand years long er than France, Germany, or Eng land. As I write this, it begins to look as if the protests of the rest of the world were beginning to get under Mussolini's skin. LIBERTY . . here and there The one important difference be tween most of the European na tions and the English-speaking na tions, including our own, is the dif ference in their conception of liber ty of speech and of the press. We are accustomed to regard the right to speak and print one's opinions freely as being an inherent right of all human beings, that it is diffi cult to realize that few other na tions have the slightest conception of that idea of an individual liber ty. Neither the Hitler government in Germany, the Mussolini government in Italy nor the Stalin government in Russia understands what a news paper man is talking about when he tries to find out the truth and print it. The function of the press in those countries is to print what the government orders it to print, whether true or not, and to sup press the facts when they are not pleasing. Mussolini's latest demonstration of the attitude of a dictator toward a free press was the expulsion of the Chicago Tribune correspondent from Italy the other day. David Darrah had cabled some truths to his paper about the public dissatis faction with Mussolini's rule, and that got the dictator's goat. And because the New York Times criti cized II Duce in an editorial, that paper has been barred from Italy. Physical educators find that skill in archery is slightly greater in the morning than in the afternoon. JENOLAN CAVES The Jenolan caves are a series of remarkable caverns; in Roxburgh county, New South Wales, Australia. They are the most celebrated of several similar groups in the lime stone country. The stalactitic for mations are of great beauty. Church Hat "Vinegar" Bible The communion service given to the Old North church in Boston by the king of England bearing the royal arms is still in the posses sion of the church. It also has one of the celebrated "Vinegar" Bibles, so named from the heading of the twentieth chapter of Luke, which reads: 'The Parable of the Vine gar" instead of "vineyard," 1717. Urge Water Waste Water leaking from a faucet in a stream the size of a common pin wastes tou gallons a day, it estimated. is B Sort They Properly Geanse the Blood VOUR kidneys art ina waste -natter hem sW MnaJ teem. Bet kidneys sonsetUees tag m their work do not act as nature it poison Ike system whet Then you may suffer i ache, (fitxiaess, scanty or I limbs; feel nervous. mistceMe all upset Don't delay! Use Dona's Mb i s are especially lor poorly feac- boning kidneys. They are recces mended bv i ml.iyl sun nW caaaSn ovec Oct them from any dmogrsL Stomach Gas . One oae of ADLHRIKA. quickly re Have KM bloating-, cleans out BOTH upper an lower bowels, allows you to eat an sleep good. Quick, thorough action, yet entirely gentle, had safe. ANGEL'S DRUG STORE TIRED, ACHING, BURNING FEET itjBjBasnBBBnsensBBBHBnmaai Relief In 3 minutes or your money back. Zeeta proves God-send to foot sufferers. Widely praised by users, doctors, druggists. A new discovery called Zeeta has proved an untold blessing to thousands who suffered the tortures of burning, perspiring, tired, aching feet, Itching, cracked toes, water blisters. Just rub Zeeta on your feet and sprinkle ft in your shoes. Then take out your watch. If at the end of S minutes yon do not dance for Joy at the blessed relief, go to your druggist and he will cheerfully refund your money. Zeeta is sold and recommended by good druggists and department stores for S minute relief from aching feet, excessive perspiration, and also chaflne and sunburn. PAVED. SCENIC HIGHWAYS M FRANKLIN SHOE SHOP SAYS WE ARE STILL MENDING SHOES When your heels roll And your soles slide, We'll save your sole With old cow hide. FRANKLIN SHOE SHOP Opposite Courthouse "We Buy and Sell" ORE than 15,000 miles of modern paved highways coWed: iffipBrtof cities and county seats in the Carolinas. Highly improved secondary roads round out a network of transportation and communication between the urban area, providing market outlets for the millions of acres devoted to agriculture, manufacturing, fishing and mining. I .... ., y ' Hundreds of thousands of out-of -Carolina visitors travel our North-South highways each year. These travelers are seeking new scenery, new climates, new points of interest, new recreational facilities, new sites for manufacturing or agricultural enterprises. Visitors must learn where these wonderful highways lead--bf the opportunities and advantages that line these roadways. The Carolinas not only have modern paved highways but within the past few years there has been a definite trend towards beautifying highways with most helpful and restful results. That's the Purpose of The Carolinas, Inc. -"TO TELL THE WORLD" 7k CAROLINAS The Carolinas, Inc. Box 60, Charlotte, N. C. Without obligations, please sand full information con earning Carolinas, Inc., and copy, of the Carolinas Opportunity Bulletin. Name . .. Street City... . INC. The newspapers of North and South Carolina have donated the apace for this end a series of advertisements which will appear" for the purpose of bringing facts about the Carolinas before their people, that they may be better informed as to the resources, history and industrial importance of the Carolina, and that they may know how they can assist in the broad movement to advertise to the world the advantages of this favored section. Box 212 Troy F. Horn