Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / April 30, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO ■JODAYand >roc HirHLANDS MACONIAN the franklin press and the HIGHLAW ■Snmmer Sport Suit ■. ■ Spectator or Acuve THURSDAY, APRlI m PARKER AIXOHOL from U. S. crops Mussolini riiles in a. motor car which uses alcohf>l for fuel. Ituly can j)roluce alcohol 'but it cannot produce gasoline. In America we have been talking about alcohol as a nioVyi fuel, or a mixture of al cohol and gasoline, for a long time. This has been put forward as a means of heli>ing the farmer. We still have jilenty of oil re- srrves and cheaper gasoline than anywhere else in the world. We also have cheaper alcohol, mostlj male from imi/rted molasses, for which we pay about 2^ cents a gallon. AU:ohol produced from American farm jiroducts w'ould be several times as ■expensive. More over, practical automobile engineers say that nobody has yet devised an engine that will work as well on alcohol at the present engines. I don’t think we are going to get very far in that direction. GAS many soUrces Up in the country a good many of my neighbors are using a “bot tled gas” for cooking. It comes in long cylindrical tanks, some of it WLIVEU the FANllS DOCTOl JOHN JOSEPH GAINEJ ^ ir-» ■» r o n Inrifro t NEW YORK . . . Here is a front and back view of a summer jacketed sport suit which bids to be popular this season. The dress was designed by Gladys Parker, illustrator and worn by Mrs. Alfred Wagstaff 3d. The material is Silsutta, a Mount Airy cloth. .Eli,nina.ion" » He .I.C .crm, n„t irom the system ot that are of no further pos- “S L. X .1...>”»■ "n po,.,.,dr harmM j believe we may set fault\ tion as the origin of most diseas “S»r'car„.d ot .je Wy can do no more harm. The hai^m they have already set up. usually subsides rapidly when the offender is removed. Hence the common practice of physicians: first of giv ing a good cathartic, and allowing plenty of water to stimulate the kidneys to their utmost capacity. At the same time the w'ise doctor limits the intake of solid food, to prevent more overloading of an al ready over-taxed .system. When the elimination organs are working properly, one seldom gets sick. These are the bowels, kidneys. coal gas and some . after luncheon 1 noticed that five yas under pressure. out of the ten cocktails were stil The other day an automobile ran i there, the glasses untouched. just ordinary natural gas Backed by Servica and Parts 'I'he Oliver Clip Cut ^tlower with the universal cutter bar which serves for all-purpose cutting. Four- sciuare balanced frame. GARDEN SEED Tomato and Sweet Potato Plants JJeans, Peas, Carrots, Beets Pepper, Squash, Lettuce GARDEN TOOLS, FERTILIZER, FENCE WIRE FREE PLANTING GUIDE SOY BEANS Yellow Mammoth, Va. Brown, Laredo Seed Corn, Ensilage Corn (irasses. Clovers NITRATE OF SODA Sheep \fanure, “I'airvvay,” INSECTICIDES “Cyanamid” Dutox, Bari-Cide, .Arsenates, Bordeaux SPRAYERS AND DUSTERS Farmers’ Fe«leration Incorporated FRANKLIN- PHONE 92 through the streets of l>etroit pro pelled by natural gas. Two small tanks carried enough gas to run a heavy car 70 miles. That is another interesting ex periment. Also, it is something that would 'be more useful in countries where cheap gasoline is not avail able everywhere. In London they are running busses on ordinary il luminating gas in tanks, (jasoline costs one-and-sixpence a gallon in England. That is about cents. It costs about the same in Gen- many, where they are running some trucks and busses carrying their ow.n gas generators, using wood, coal or charcoal to manufacture the gas inside the vehicle. All of those things are expedients which do not seem economical from the American point of view. CLASSES ..... ni»t here Ours is the lOiily country in whrch humanity is not divided into distinct and usually hostile classes. We have here no peasantry tied to tlie soil as they have on the conti- n'ent of Europe; no working class hopeless of ever getting out of that class, as in England. 1 see and hear of many efforts to make groups of Americans class conscious, but 1 don’t think any Of them will succeed in setting class against class, becatise it is so easy foj any American to remove him self from one social or economic group into another. Jf we ever do succeed in divid ing .Americans into two classes, 1 think they will be the self-reliant class and the beggar class. DRINKS .... easing down i ] went to the annual luncheon of j the .\ssociated Press the other day. .-'^t niv table were ten men, among .them some of the most distinguish- I'd publishers and editors of great skin .and lungs. The latt not understood by lavj,® should be. If a liver is\i; with work (from tcx) ut,:" and sugars), the kidney'^ tempt to carry off matters, as 'evidenced bt e output of fluid—and, V; may break down if is not attended to. Lorje dark-red, burning kidneyht should at once take tlf t his physician, who matjt. not the kidneys at faalirj cient intake of water, o'J liver. In either event iun elimination. ' , Tw'o things should served by men and intake of solid food, nation of the waste proi-tl must go on in conseiirrs cannot take heavy nijjb times a day without a ntil' eliminatiion through bowx; neys. The lungs and skii r. off solubk and gaseous A; cannot do the workoftyr sewers. ri — —1. St newspapers I every plate, 1 cocktail, i As we got in all America. Beside as we sat down, was a up from the table I think that is about the per centage of drinking in these days, anv.ng men whose business calls on them to keep their heads clear. I have noticed the same abstinence at several other recent public and pri vate dinners at which drinks were served. 1 think there has been a change since repeal. People no longer drink as a gesture of de fiance of an unpopular law. Neither do they take a drink whenever they can get it for fear they may not soon have a chance to get an other one. PRESIDENTS .... of ours Partly by accid’ent and partly in the course of my newspaper work 1 have had the opportunity to meet and get more or less acquainted with every President of the United States since Gen. Grant. Lately I have been meeting some possible future Presidents. A couple of weeks ago, I went with some friends to the White House, where we had a two-hour talk with President Roosevelt. The next day I had a visit with Senator Dickinson of Iowa, and met for the first time Col. Henry Breckinridge, who is an avowed candidate for the Presidency on the “Constitution l^arty” ticket. The next day 1 had luncheon with Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of ^lichigan, and a couple of days later, lunched with Col. Frank Knox of Illinois. Some one of the men I have just named is quite likely to be the nCxt President of the United States. I don’t know which one has the best chance. I do know that they all ha\e less aloofness and more of the manner of ordinary human bemgs than some of the Presidents I have known in the past. I think tlve time has passed when a statesman can get anj-where by posing heroically in dignified atti tudes and refusing to unbend in the presence of the common people. JUST RECEIVED Our New Spring and Summer Line of MEN’S HATS In .all the light shades, and featherweights. Buy one tomorrow and note the difference. E. K. Cunningham & Co, “The Shop of Quality" I he number of college men ap plying for free Navy air training has decreased sharply since last year. RidYouj'selfof Kidney Poisons burning, scanty or U urination; backache headache, dizziness, loss of enerqv Pfil"*' swellings and puffinew under the- eyes? Are vou 'iV you tired, nerv- ous feel all unstrung *nd don't know what Is wrong? * ly T'- mits excess waste to stay In the blo^*t5" uine, time-tested Doan’j atVn® f'"' store. drug FARMERS SUPPLY In Building Formerly Occupied by A &P- Flour: Superior Patent, 24*s ^ Old Reliable, 24’s BEST COFFEE: (we grind it) lb. 14c; pk Fat back (heavy) lb. 14c; side (streaK-o-lean) Pork with beans, No. 3 cans, 10c; No. 2 ; Cora, No. 2's, 10c; Spinach' ' Chickein, and Veg. Beef Soup, 9c; 3 for ' Po&t Toiasties, 3 for 25c; Post Bran g Salmon, fancy Alaskan, pink, 13c; 2 for ..../ " Miackerel, 9c; 3 for 25c; lOc-size sandwich spread Apple sauce, 10c; Apple butter ^ Orange Juice, 12c; Pineapple, 14c; Grapefrtiit P-Nut Butter, half pints, 9c; Pints, 14c; Quarts All 10c snuff, 3 for 25c; Smoking tobacco, 3 fior j Pioultry powders (makes ’em lay) ) Toilet tissue (1000 sheets), 5 for ' Garden Seeds, Field Seeds, Loose or Bulk ! Seed Beans—^all Kinds, Idiahio Grown * Come and see us—we will save you money. ^Ve don’t calls every whip-stitch for sales-tax. J. M. Moore, USED CARS for Business M 1930 iOhievrolet Truck 19,32 Chevrolet Coach is th^ti"*** saving—for a second car. A^' "'em. EASY TERMS^^^ ^ 1935 Chevrolet Pick-up 1931 Ford Roadster in jam up shape .. $490 °“Pe .. $295 IJhevroiet Save time and mon^v I-l Guaranteed repair Let US Care for YOUR Car try and you will BUY the CHEVROLET A Car yo.u will be PROUD to own BURRELL Motor Co. Phone 123 Franklin, N. C.
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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April 30, 1936, edition 1
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