PACE TWO Rid Yourself of Kidney Poisons DO you suFfer burning, scanty or too frequent urination/ backache, headache, dizziness, loss of energy, leg pains, swellings and puffiness under the eyes? Are you tired, nerv ous—feel all unstrung and don't know what is wrong? Then give some thought to your kidneys. Be sure they function proper ly for functional kidney disorder per mits excess waste to stay in the blood, and 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. We CUT Your Suit To Measure But We Never Cut the Quality We make only from All Wool Fabrics $23.75 to $45.00 J. T. Moore & Co. Specializing in Taylor Custom Made Clothes UIOMUNDS MaCONIAN THE doctor )HN JOSEPH GAUiE5.MIi TMUHSIj, PNEUMONIA AND PLEURISY ..vhen the lung is in the stage of !‘‘dctennination,’ mean. J Counter irritants arc agents! during the mi i which produce temporary '''’"'tation j on in the ’ in another area than the infected j are wasted e or . part. They arc seldom used any ; j jjj,^ turpentine, in just streng i more, yet tbcy are worth a bit of i redden—which may he usc( study, because of the good | longer, because of the benefits o may do in an emergency. | inhaling it? vapor. But we must be Counter-irritants in coijimon use , ^l,^. kidneys are sound, t ore in the household may be named ' ■ rx tiiruen as, pejiper, mustard, turpentine, croton oil, and the like. We base |n a cnromc the use of these things on our j ^vh-n recurrent—in aged persons, knowledge of infection and inflam- | ^^ith hacking, dry cough, the mation beneath the surface. In j over the pain may be just touched very acute ])neumonia, and “pleur- ] a. cotton-tipped toothpick, wet isy” we have two deeper seated in- ! with croton oil; this old method is flammations which are often bene- j jy^t as useful today as it was sixty fited by counter-irritants—but al- I ye.ars ago. 1 have a neighbor now, ways to be used in the early ^ho attends to his “pleurisy-pains stages, mind you. satisfactorily himself with tnis ap- A lobar i)neumonia may be abort- plication, it produces vesication, ed, or the attack rendered much I (slight blistering) which he says milder, by the judicious use of I “draws the poison out.” At any mustard-plasters applied vigorously | rate, it gives him relief over-r.ight. SUIC Uiv we permit any contact of turpen tine wit'h the patient. ’n a chronic pleurisy, especialh Sugar or Hollow ‘^TOTATOES: Sweet; set slips. pepper—Seed, all varieties Sqijj^SH: Yellow Crookneck, White & Yellow bush. SPINACH: New Zeland (sum- ""sxVsS CHARD: (For greens). TOMATO-Set in open, set nlmts- all varieties. ' '^WATERMELON: Kleckley Sweet, Ston'e Mountain. Field Seeding CORN—Holcomb Prolific, Yellow Dent etc. All varieties. GRASSES: Sudan. OTHER CROPS —Soy Beans: Va Brown, Yellow ^lammoth, La- redb, Tokio Cow Peas, ^fillet; FRANKLIN SHOE SHOP SAYS WE ARE STILL MENDiNG SHOES When your heel's roll And your soles flop, We’ll save your sole Before you drop, FRANKLIN SHOE SHOP Opposite Courthouse "We Buy and Sell” Box 212 Troy F. Horn TODAY »ni vm Farmers Supply Co • SPECIALS L.ard, 8 lbs 97c FLOUR: Superior 73c Dixie Limited 89c Hoosier Belie 98c COFFEE; Peck 1 98c “Good-as-the Knob 4-Ib. pails 69c Cornflakes, 3 for 25c Salt, lOO’s 99c Read Proverbs—and learn to vote: “When the wicked rul« people moan; when the ri eous nrfe the people rejoice. h#ow t5i« jht- Brooms, 2Sc, 35c and 49c MAKE your old clothes NEW. Putnam’s Fadeless Dyes, all colori. WANTED: A few more good hams. We pay CASH. Toilet Paper 5c, 8c and . . . . 10c “Tater’^ Plants (while thtey last) 100 for 15c Soap and Powders, 10 for . . 25c Lemon and Vanilla, pts 19c When you trade a DIME, we don’t ask you to give us a penny extra. Read ProverKs and leam how to take an inventory of yourself. Thank you J. M. MOORE, Mgr. R2ANK PARKER STOCKBRIPeE SPINACH .... takes a rap Some people eat spinach because they like it, but most children eat It because their jiarents ha\e been told that It is good for them. Now comes along Dr. Clittord .Sweet, a California child specialist, and tells the American Medical Association that spinach isn't any better food for children than any other green vegetable, ile also ridicules the common idea that everybody I'-e- quires a completely balanced diet at every meal. il think most of the diet faddists have thrown away the most impor tant ingredient, which is common- sens'C. Jf all the nonsense that is talked about malnutrition were true, few of us would ever have lived to grow up. But 1 imagine it will be a long time 'before mothers generally will get rid of the notion that a fat baby is a healthy baby— or, for that matter, that they can keep themselves slender and well nourished at the same time. DOUGHNUTS . . . over the.re They had a celebraticui in New York the other day in honor of Helen I'urviance, the Salvation .'\rniy lassie who fried the first doughnuts in France for the boys of the A. E. F. in 1917. 1 would hesitate to say that the Salvation Army doughnuts won the war, but they certainly helped a lot in keeping up the morale of the American soldiers "over there.” And they jiut the Salvation Army into first place in the affections of mil lions of -Americans. 1 don t know which 1 admire more, doughnuts or the Salvation Army. I am an enthusiast about both. I ha\c to restrain my ap- Iietite for doughnuts as I grow older, but 1 find it impossible to restrain my atlmiration for the self- sacrificing labors of the Salvation .■\rmy. W hen 1 meet, as I often do, young nien and young women who have left wealthy homes or good jobs to don the Salvationists uniforms in order to help others, 1 always feel that these folks have found what Buddhists call ‘The Way of Life.” METHODISTS .... policy Through the union of its three great branches, the Aie^thodist Church, is about to become the largest Protestant denomination in America, lu its recent general con ference the Methodist Episcopal Church went deeply into the ques tion of the attitude which the church should take on economic and political questions. A strong element favored ad vocacy of a planned social economy, but the decision of the conference was for freedcKn under democracy. I like the language in which the conference report proclaimed that ‘‘a free church cannot long survive the death of the free school, the ship. Economic justice is to be won by extending democracy to the in dustrial order, not by setting up therein the autocracy of dictator ship.” It seems to me that the Meth odists have fully grasped and clear ly expressed the essentials of Americanism. FREEDOM .... fair chance The American system is based upon the freedom of the individual to plan his own life. That does not mean that society sliould not give him every jiossible aid, through school and church, to help the in dividual to fit himself for the struggle for existence. It docs im ply, however, that no child should be taught to ibelieve that life is anything but a struggle,' or that society owes him anything but a fair chance to make the best of whatever is in him. That is a hard doctrine, from the ])oint of view of the sentimentalist. But the hard way, what Theodore Koosev'Clt called “the strenuous life,” is the only way of life in which the individual is really free. It is not too high a price to pay for liberty. PURITANS .... standards Aly friend, W. J. Cameron, in one of his Sunday night broadcasts, ga\ e me a new thought on the character of the early colonists of New England. As one of the thirty million descendants of those 20,(X)0 i untans who settled in New Eng land before 1640, I was interested w'hen .Mr. Cameron pointed out that in their tim«, and judged by the standards then prevailing in Eng land, they were regarded as dang- erous radicals, they were so far ahead of current ideas in their liberal attitude toward life and hu man affairs. That is quite contrary to the cur- Puritan forefathers as narrow and hide bound. The world has moved in 00 years, and we cannot apply todays standards to the people of those times. But they did have one quality which measures up to th- highest standards of all tiL That erties of individuals and suspicion of everyone who tried to get alons without working ® In il. 8- A- FOR HASE? ANO SCAL5* DHhrtiit fren OfiJnary Koir T«nl«* IT'S A SC41P UtDlcmi Mciil. FEEL 1! V/OiiK! AJ All Drugaittl Writi hr FPEE e»k!»t “T(\» Truth About I HclT." Renely t»., Hew Yo^ The Politi^= Announce for repress Subject to the [T mary on June 6, j ^ for election as' Representative in ic sembly. ^ R-A. (BOB)fj p for REP^j.^"' Subject to the i pu mary, I hereby anme dacy for reelectjfits sentative of Macon Cieneral Assembly, au J- frank ;ks —_,tai FOR SHElts: I hereby announctj® for sheriff of ject to the Democr:: r June 6th. WADE C, AL, FOR SHEt"; Subject to the fees mary, I hereby ains, didacy for re-electimj ] Macon County. 7 A. B, SLithc FOR REGISTER!^ Subject to the Dt.n mary on June 6tli,>, nounce my candidao) as Register of County. If reelectei],-* render efficient and; ice, as good or bettfii ' the past. C. TOM al Democratic Prii;^; June fitlijj F or State Aiii^ Georg® —A Young Maii^ —A Business —A ReliaE This Adveri'^' Furnished by ^ 3 War Veterans \vli_ ed with GeorJ Pou in the Lasti ! SAFETY of our Deposits is INS by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpo?: up to $5,000 for £ach Depositor WHAT ™ PLANT THIS WEEK Courtesy Farmers Federation News Garden ^ BEAKS' All varieties. Crosby Egyptian, Detroit, CABBAGE-Stt all varieties s„„.ba„, CL CUMBERS: EGG*p?LaNT-So" plants. -Sow seed or set CORN: All varieties lettuce-Seed in Grand Rapids (curled) S^^^'den: MUSTARD: CurW o leafed. O'" smooth Before and After MaH> When a man takes unto himself a tor her*° to do ... a duty to' one way*® Wa SAVINS REGULARLY NOV/ Welcome Your Banking ^The Jackson County Bai' SYLVA & HIGHLANDS, N. C. Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank cniber Federal Deposit Insurance p Corporation ^ THINK! Have moneyi