Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / July 16, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAG£ TWO THE FRANKUN PKESS AND ™E „,CHUANDS MACONIAN THURsDj^Y THE FAMILY DOCTOR, JOriN JOSEPH CAWaiyie GET PLENTY OF NITROGEN AND OXYGEN {^xyi'i'ii i'. ''iiitily e s!-r.tia! to luiinaii lifti. I.fl the >ii))])ly -if oxy- ;',cn Tji; ii]iiiiii>rii(I ami llic !ii-altli ui'i ordiiU'ly. 'I'luTc is ii" of ati (iviT-iH]j|ily of (jxygcn from the air about us. 'Jxyj tn ir ;tiiiuilai)t--tonic. I’urt- o'-y;':ii f-'.i'i is a (lestroy;r, and i.s not met with, .;;vc in the hibora- tory. It is a iuiiportcr of oombus- lioii a -ntcfl vvati'hsprin;-, will burn in il, ;r, a pine ,|)Hnler will burn in the air. ()xy"cn burriN U|> ini- Jjiritii . in tlie blood, reachinfi them thnnu'h nur Iuiil- Oxym'ii in iiroper dihi4ion with tiilroyen makes up the air we l)reatlur. Our "bounden duty” is to v’t lilenty of ])Ure air. There i:. little dan(-;pr of vcttiuL an o\cr- (lo- : , If viu are in the Iiabit of lying in bed until nine o’clock these mornit!;-,, you are not L;ettinij the he:dtli-Ki\ini’ uipply of (jxy^;en that you niust ha\e if you would be vi'.'oroiis. Tht: liabit of lyinK in bed lonv' after sunri.-.e is pernicious in tli'i extreme. 'I'hat heavy dinner wlileli you de\oured at six o'clock the eveninK before, and which you should not have taken at all, gave lip at least fifty per cent of deaden ing impurities. Yo.u felt dull, apa- theW'c, and ai)l>ctitelcs>i when you crawled out of bel at nine in the nioruing; you were simply j)oisoned, and did it VQiirs‘lf. If a phy.sician tried to poison you, you’d want to thrash him, iH" worse. You ])refcr to commit your own sujcide. iS'itrogen deadens. VVhen you consuni'c an over-lose of nitrogen ous food.s- -its effect i.s certain. You lakr away the nitrogen excess with oxygen, derived from both air and water—for water is one-third oxy gen, derived from both air, and harness th'e lungs with bed-covers nine or ten hours, it is no wonder you feel la/.y and incapable. (let up early and drink freely of water t«.> ^et back your “pep.” m FCANK PARKER SrOCKBRIOeE Drives One Million Miles Without an Accident 'I'o drive a million miles is sonie- thi.ng that is rarely achieved, ex cept by only a very few jfcrsons. To drive that many miles without a major accident is even more rare. To drive this distance without even scraping a fender seems almost an impossibility. Yet H. W. (iibbs, a (iulf sales man of Collingswood, X. J. has just completed such a record. JJur- ing 19 years of driving motor ve hicles in his work for (lulf, -Mr. (iibbs has covered over a million miles, over all kinds of roads, re gardless of surface condition, with out a single accident of any kind. This .unusual record is all the more remarkable because (lUlf tabu lates as chargcabk- accidents even such minor mishaps as damaged fenders. (iulf is deeply interested in safe driving', and is especially active in promoting safety ideals among the motoring public of America. It wants 'every motorist to be a safe driver, and in order to put into liractice what it urges ,npon others, it insists that all emitloyees who ojierate (^lulf vehicles do so care fully and lawfully. ]‘!rosion has damaged 735,000,000 acres, b’ederal experts find. Why Gulf is the Gas for July THE "DOG DAYS" Start in July. Hot, sticky days that play hob with your car’s mileag less you use a fuel tailored to the weather. If you don’t want part of your gas to go out the exhaust unbumec/, wasted— That Good Gulf in July. It’s specially refined for summer driving—“Kept in Step with the Calendar.” And that’s why all of it goes to work, mne'ofit goes to waste. Try it MOVIES . . • ■ ‘'“J 'i'here is. no (k-ubt in my mmd that the moral tone of the movies has been greatly elevated m the liast few years. There is also no doubt that there is room for im- provement. ^ In these beliefs I am in complete agreement with His Holiness ms XI, .Supreme I’ontiff of the Roman Catholic Church. The Popes re cent encyclical letter to all prelates of the church on the subject of mo tion pictures is the most conipre- hentiive and truthful analysis of the evil effects of vicious films upon immature minds i heve ever read. The ]’oi)C calls on all bishops to take steps to pass U]wn all new pic tures, and u])on all “right-minded {>ersons” to stay away from, and keep their families away from films that do no; pass the church’s tests of decency and good influence. A.s. a I’rotestant 1 applaud this renewed effort to clean up the films. It seems to me that every good Christian ought to cooperate. CENSORSHIP .... for truth i ha\e no sympathy with ceiisor- sliip, insofar as it implies any at tempt to dictate what I or any other adult person may read or hear or see. But until a child is mature enough to have some under standing of the world of reality, 1 am heartily for every effort to pre vent his exposure to the vwrld of unreality. The child mind cannot be 'Cx- ])ccted to understand that what it sees on the stage or screca or reads in novels is not life as it actually is. Instead childrrn too often get the idea that everybody —excci)t tliemselves and their im mediate circlc.s—lives in an atmos phere of glamoToiis romance and I>erpetually cxciting adventure. r am not at all sure that many of the books and films commonly regarded as good, or at least harm less, do not do more damage than some which are frankly vicious. 1 ant more concerned with truth fulness, in the nKn'ies and else where, than f am with what is unusually meant by “dcccnpy ” tongues ..... translated lit (cils of the “confusion of tongues” at the building of the Tower of Bab-i'l. There would be equal confusion in the Assembly of the League of Nations at Gw if It were not f :fieva. VI , . ingenious Yankee device which .enables every member to understand what any speaker is saying in any language, ^^hen Haile he!as.sie, Ethiopia’s league he other day in {he Amharic tongue, probably no one there could tinderstan.l a ^-ord of it. But on each member’s desk i„ a with earphones attached, and push-Lt- tons labelled with the names of the ^s?ee^^,’J•'1' Back of a scrten behind the speaker are ev ami speak every known lanmritfp All any member had to ..d li«e„ lator wlio I,as reijeating HailJ'*sr tnH ^ ^ u mer- toli m.e about it before it It was Mr (tone and what we intend to do. international chant, was tver Filene who paid bution toward better ' ' ^ understanding CHANGES J read and hear about velous new things that to be done, but I usually have to wait before they always slow many mar- are going . notice that I *t a few' years have been-wSg ^ for television, but it kasn’^a of the laboratory yet 1 j great changes which tti' of chemistry to ‘ j make, but! notice far^^ growing the same old cron same old way. ^he I think we are ■ r .».»ch ab,.,“:!,-;s E it all doesn’t come true over Sht%^°l'l‘= begin to doubt that it vfill ever come true. I am sure that great changes are coming, for I have been watch- g,he world do nothing btit change for more than sixty years. But 1 have got over expecting any im portant changes to occur m less fhan half a lifetime from the time they start. fourth One of the greatest changes that has occurred since I was a boy is the celebration of the fourth of It used to be that several hundred persons, mostly children, ;ere killed by fireworks and toy every Independence Day. in July. w pistols This year the repo„,, the nation recordea ' fatalities. this I believe,, must go to a ^ Chicago Tribune, campaign for a safe July many year^ Meeting of Aj*, Students Called Agricultural studcnij, lin school who are im ing to White Lakei camp, starting July 2, ed to meet at 6:3oji day night in the co„f for the trip ^ilj this meeting. “DIGESTION GOES AU SMOOTHLY" JOHNNY FAR. RELL (left) says: ‘'Smoking Camels during and after meals is a great aid to my diges tion.” Enjoy Camels steadily! They never get on your nerves. CHIiCbS FIRE-CHIEF FRi LIAR says: "Mydiji along smoothly wtj Camels.” Camels ii flow of digestive I line digestive fiuidi COSTLIER TOB Bryant’s Lea( The Best Stove on the Market for the The Bonus You ( When You Buy This Range economy Bryant’s Lpa^ S'l'aceful in its design, this field. ,It hai fn[| continues to lead the Wits concealed—--'* f9ns.truc|lon, with all • INF • IN p • IN s . H oookinff tan u’ 1 heavy reinforced • quiskly^^d retains ^ This ,stove **, «q«*PPed with itha exclusjve Kno it $65, but we are no quantities. Tofl ^ because we are buying the® ®nd stoves eveV^k'^* stocking the largest st®: ever brought to Miacon County. Other Ranges from $29.95 Up BRYANT FURNITimi franklin, n. c.
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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July 16, 1936, edition 1
2
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