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PAGE TWO For Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Flatulance# Nausea and Sick Headache* due to Constipation. FOR HAIR AND SCALP JAPANESE OIL Tb« Scalp M«dicin«- Di««rMt from ortfiwry Heir To»l«» - lOc «tX. FEEL IT WORKl Al All DfugglfH wriu fOf FRfE Booklrt Tr»«» A^t Tl» H»lr.” N*t)c«»l e«.. K«w York Watch YouK Kidneys/ Be Sure Tliey Properly Qeanse the Blood kidneys are constantly I ing waste matter fioni the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in their woik—do not act as nature lo- tended—(ail to remove impurities that poison the system when rained. Then you may suffer nagging back ache, dirziness, scanty or too h«quent urioaiioa, getting up at night, puHiness under the eyes,- (eel nervous, raisera* bie—ell up^ Don't delay? Use Doan’s Pilh, Doan's are especial]^ (or poorly (uoc* tioning kidneys. They are recom mended by grateful users the country ovex. Get them from any druggist THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE doctqr JOHN JOSEPH highlands MACONIA^ THURSDAY, DOANS PILLS HANDLE SUMMER FOOD WITH CARE Disease germs have three ave nues of entrance into the human system. They may be inhaled, swallowed, or may get in t'nrougii scratched or incised wounds of the skin. In warm weather, when most of our houses are wide open, the dang er of inhaled germs is practically nil. Pure air is a wonderful dis infectant, capable, except against the tuberculosis germ, which should be guarded against at all seasons. Most acquired infections in sum mer, are of the digestive tract; the bacteria are swallowed with food or water. We should, therefore, be discriminative at this season. Edi bles taken raw, must be scrupulous ly clean, and thoroughly masticated. Fruits should be i^ipe, fresh, and free from punctures by twigs or specks of decay. Don’t give the child a banana that is green, or part-ripened, or punctured through the skin. Potato salad that is car ried over from meal to meal—better throw it away, or do without the mixture entirely. See that all cooked food is thoroughly done, especially meats. It is not good policy to eat the boiled ham that you had left over from the picnic, especially if it reposed in the basket on the ground for a few hours. The same / HA\^ you HEA120 CAMEU'5 NEWTUESPAV NIGHT CATJAVAN WITH -RUPE15.T HUGHES ANp S«ILK-R.ET'5 CONCERT G1?C+HES-nRA? y£S, ANV THEy -HAVEl BENNV GOOVMAN’S '5WING-' BANO ANT) HOLLYWOOV GUeST STAKS too! NEW! HOLLYWOOD RADiO TREAT. Camel cigarettes bring you a FULL HOUR’S ENTERTAINMENT! Benny Goodman .. . Nat Shilkret... Rupert Hughes, Master of Ceremonies . . . Hollywood Guest Stars. Tuesday — 8:30 p m E. S. T. (9:30 p m E. D. S. T.), 7:30 p m G. S. T., 6:30 p m M. S. T., 5:30 pm P. S. T. over the WABC-Columbia Network. Mechanically Perfect Used Cars We must put our money into a USED CAR before you plut y.our money in it. We do not trade in junk. Buy from us with confidence. Easy Terms. 1931 Ford Pick-up, A-1 condition $225 1927 B'uick Brougham, ex cellent condition . .. $200 1934 CWv. Truck, 19,000 ■miles, good tires. . . $450 1934 Chevrolet sedan, come see it 1935 Chevrolet P i c k-u p A-1 condition $390 1935 .Chevnolet 1^^ ton truck, good buy . . . $500 Experienced men, schooled in automobile repairs, work in our shop. We 1*0 NOT “tinker” with your car, but FIX it. Let US Care for YOUR Car TRY and you will BUY the CHEVROLET A Car yioii will be PROUD to own BURRELL Motor Co. Phone 123 Franklin, N. C. is true of cake, '^rapped paper and kept in the sa n'l^gy Flies haunt outdoor picmcs. ^ love to crawl over deviled potato salads and the ^" pleasant to think of what they Y shake off from the.r filthy feet and bodies. , ,, It goes without saying that ai drinking-water ' these days shou d be attested in purity, by ^ capab rather than a political official. A stitch in time saves more than nine. Put nothing of doubtful pur ity into your stomach, and be care ful not to overload. today their them. W low RANK PARKER BRID6E HABITS .... hard to break j\lan is a creature of habit. Most of our actions and most of our so- called thinking are what they are because we have acquired the habit of going through a fixed routine and don’t have initiative enough to change our habits of work and thinking. I think this inherent trait of hu man nature lies at the bottom of most of the failures to change the world overnight. Reformers of all types are prone to overlook the hold which habit has on the human animal. It would .not "be difficult to make the world a much better place to live in for everybody, if only enough people could be jarred out of their habits of living and made to see that there are better ways of doing things than those to which they are accustomed. RUTS get deep Most of the world runs in ruts. We stay in our ruts because it is easier than to try to get out of them, or because our fathers be fore us traveled in the same ruts. The deeper the rut, the longer people have moved in it, the harder it is to get out of it. The only really free individuals are those who succeed in getting out of the ruts in which their fel lows are moving. Once in the rut, the individual is merely one of the crowd. He is not free to move in any direction except that in which the crowd is moving. He has to follow a pattern or a trail marked out for him by others. No man is e.ntirely free from some sort of restraints. The worst slaves, however, are the ones who could be free but who prefer to stay m the rut and revile the more enterprising ones who have succeeded in climbing out of it. It is human nature, never to shoulder the blame for one’s own condition, but to try to fmd a scapegoat who IS responsible for all of one’s in dividual troubles Nobody can watch the world go by for as many years ,as I have been permitted to do so without coming to the conclusion that the chief obstacle m the way of human progress IS not greed or tyranny but stupidity. Show me a man who ti^vf conserva- wi.i It”™. ","S t;: VSJ Se”hTb”„ perfect'crse“f’uft"He'''%“’" >ng things might be beUe t himself free from the m- set himse hibitions which b.n^^^^ ^ 1 persuasively that first a :.Ki then the many are m- ‘’’•f V°leadefs are rare. Not very of them are born in any gen- So„° particularly one young man who has ach.eved he ^residency of a great busmess en r, ise because he was not afraid to ry new ways of donig things, andhL been successful m persuad ing huge numbers of people to ac St new ideas, while his rompeti- tors in the same line of business have been content to stay m the rut and follow the patterns which predecessors laid down for While they were losing money he started new ventures .at the bottom of the depression and made them pay. Germany Col. Lindbergh, who has just been looking over Gerinany’s aircraft development, was surprised at what he found there. Germany is far ahead'of the rest of the world in lighter-than-air craft and is recov ering the leadership that s.he held before the war in heavier-than-air navigation. I was reminded of a remarkable prophecy written nearly 150 year.s ago by an almost forgotten German scholar and author, Jean Paul Rich ter. Richter died in 1825, and years before that he wTote that the time would come when England would be master of the sea, France master of the land, but that Germany would be ruler of the air. I don’t know on what Richter based that prediction, but it has come near to being a reality. Banish Boi Perspirati 1| with YODORA,the. cream which conci„“ and counteracts, Yodora 18 a 6cientificai|„ white, soft cream harmiss to iLZVdJ Will not stain fabrics. For those who , whether under the am! valuable. It is a tniP body odors. be had m both tube an/! costs only 25^. ^ AT YOUR FAVoii drug sTom tej “Yes, I like to give my husband variety in his meals., especially at dinner time.” “Really, bow do you manage it?” “Well, I give him boiled ham, but I buy it from a different shop every day.” their keenness neve • MADE SINCE'1! Inventors of the original Star Single-edge Blad«B of precision experieni .to their keen, bi edges. If your deal not supply yot, 10c for 4 blades t( PS-1, Star Bladi sion, 88 Johnson Brooklyn, N. FIT GEM AND EVER-Ri Why Gulf is the Gi for August things everybody, Lncludbg hlmsd""' i CIO not mean to for e new way or the IS always the better way cons‘e7vatfv;,° i^h*^ j'- true will look at any new i ’"‘®'!‘gent, open mind and an instead of dismissing them consideration merely hf ™ do not conform to ideas. Preconceived leadership The only way the mass'of ,kmd gets out of the oTd * the IraUB >vh,„ „„.e charSLr wh“ WHY NOT BEAT AUGUST by driving someplace 1 swim? And if you want to your gas bills down, doa get you need a fuel with i mxA?Lthatfits hot weather. 0 wise your gas doesn t completely—part of it esi through the exhaust unhi wasted. Stick to That Good in August—it’s “Kept io with the Calendar” spC' refined for summer drivioj of it goes to work, none of* to waste. Try Gulf and s®® ■
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 13, 1936, edition 1
2
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