tlhr jfnutidnt ^rrss nitft Che ^tghlnttfrs uua ap?M tn Ml ?i Iiioftty thaw _ of Th? Ptm?. Kdltoruk Mlecttd for npm&at'bw*, to Int. _ mn fhoan with a *t*w te prnaentloc ft TftrUtV o I vlewpolnte. Tturj an, Ibtl U. )?M (M Um caption an-OTlBW Oplnlonj.) So Often Disguised (Grand Rapids Press) Opportunities might be more easily recogniaed if they didta't so often come disguised as Imrd work. Full Moon And Drunks (Southern Pines Pilot) The Rockingham Poet-Dispatch, which last Friday celebrated Its 40th anniversary under the editorship of Ike London, re mains In a class by itself, one of the liveliest weekly papers we've ever seen ? packed with docens of big and little news Items, along with comments and jokes originating from er appealing to its Inimitable editor who was 72 years old this week. We note that in connection with the full uooa last week end, Mr. London again pointed out that there would probably be more drunks and law-violators In Jail over the week erMl than usual. "It seems", he wrote succinctly, "the full moon affects the inclination to get drunk." A typical London headline (front page) Is over this story: "Will There Be More Drunks This Week?" We'll bet that very few persons who picked ?P the paper failed to read that story. DO YOU REMEMBER? Looking Backward Through the Files of The Prese 65 TEARS AGO THIS WEEK (ISM) The roads are in a terrible condition on account ef mud. Mr. and Mrs. K. Ellas entertained a select party of Frank lin's elite at their residence last evening. Dr. A. C. Brabson, of Smith's Bridge, was In town Monday cracking Jokes with his friends. at TEARS AGO (1933) A formal petition for abandonment of the Tallalah Falls Railway, operating between Franklin and Cornelia, Ga., was filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission In Washing ton February 15. John E. Rickman, postmaster, who has been in Hot Springs, Ark., for the past week taking treatment, returned to his home here last Saturday. Misses Myrtle Wyatt, Bdwlna Dairy mple, and BMe Adder and Richard Slagle attended the Fritz Kreisler concert la Asheville Monday night. 1* TEARS AGO Several Franklin taxi drivers have offered their services in transporting persons living in Franklin and close vicinity, who lack transportation, to and from Franklin churches om I Sunday mornings, free of charge. The N. C. Little Symphony orchestra will appear In concert , In Franklin March 15. i "Your people here seem to possess the characteristic of 'live i and let live' more than any place I know", Dr. Jay B. Mae ! Gregor, dean of Cornell College, Mount Vernon, Iowa, who is here for a short time, said of this county. THE CHANGING SCENE Vanishing Spittoon Now Barred From Post Office Lobbies Billy Arthur in Elkin Tribune What's come over the Post Of fice Department in the last decade? First, it did away with the pen ny postal, so that it now costs two cents to write 'having fine time; wish you were here." Then, it threw out the scratchy steel pens and dry ink wells and subsituted therefor ball pointers, so that Jokesters now have to look to the State Department for their gags. Next, it said that any patron with a glowering dog would get no home delivered mall, so that pet fanciers now have to go to the post office for their month-end bills. And finally, It has turned a gainst tobacco chewers. The poet office ? an institution which has always taken tobacco chewers into consideration when furnishing Its buildings ? now has directed that use of cuspidors be discontinued. So, the last stronghold of the tobacco chewer Is going by the wayside. It's sad. ? When paved streets and side walks came along, one couldn't scratch a line in the dirt with the toe of his shoes, then back up and square off with the rest of the fel lows and see who could spit closest to the line. Then central heating plants took the pot bellied stove from the middle of the general store and no longer could the fellow: sit back and hold contests on whc could hit the open door bull's eye the most times. The post office lobbies were about the last refuge of the Jaw chawers. However, Instead of put ting up signs asking people to hit the cuspidors, please, the Post Of flee Department has said throw them away. ? 1 Elders of Front Street Method 1st Church In Wilmington were not that harsh In 1860. They mere ly posted signs on the back of the pews requesting the men not U chew tobacco In church. Bishop Thomas C. Darst of th< Diocese of Kast Carolina used to enjoy telling of a parishioner whc Invariably had his "chaw" durlni services. "Doesn't It make you sick to hold the tobacco In your moutl during service?" he was asked. "No. bishop," the man replied "I'm accustomed to It, been listen lng to you preach for two yean now." Sheriff R. B. Lane, of Craver County, said he once noticed a to bacco chewer Ignoring the court room cuspidor. When a deputj would discreetly move It cIom to i him, the man would push It away , with his foot and continue his i barrage on the floor. Finally, the > sheriff himself put the cuspidor > close to him. The man looked at It, then at the sheriff, and (aid, , "If you keep moving that pretty , shiny thing right under my feet, j I'm going to spit right on It." ; There's something about phew - ing tobacco that many people ean'i ' understand. One old-time Tar Heel editor write: "A boy can sit on a six taeh ! square place on a drawn wagon ? for an hour but couldn't lit still ) on a sofa five minutes for a dollar. ' "A man will sit on aa Inch board and talk politics for three i hours; put him in a chureh pew > for 40 minutes and he gets ner > vous, twists, turns and toe* to t sleep. "A man will drop a pleee of > .meat on his wife's clean floor and i will pick it up and lay It aside. But let him drop a plug of tobacco . on the sidewalk, hell pick It up, ? give It a careless brush on his t sleeve or the side of his pants and then take a big chew of it with i keener relish than ever." In 1884 Oeneral Thomas L. ? Cllngman, of Buncombe County, r announced he had made a dls > covery that chewing tobaeoo was a "specific in healing nearly all the ills that flesh is heir to," and published quite a number of in stances well authenticated. The Reidsville Times offered to "subjoin a few cases: A man whose eye had been injured by a splinter and became so that he could not see through it, had to bacco applied for a single day, and the next day the eye was well. Another case is given where sore eyes were cured by two applica tions. Many Instances are mention ed of prompt relief by application to sprains, bruises, swollen parts, Inflamed portions of the body, and even bunions, felons and corns are removed by one trial. It is also strongly recommended for all species of sore throat, diphtheria, and similar diseases. Dropsy and hemorrhoids, too, and even hag cholera are said to yield to it. Give it a trial." But where, we ask, today, are you going to get rid of It? Housewives have ruled out cig ars, because the smoke was too heavy, and cigarettes became pop ular. Then cancer scares caused lots of people to give them up and turn to chewing. Now cuspidors are being done away with. Wonder where I put my corn cob pipe?