Newspapers / The Alleghany News and … / Oct. 17, 1935, edition 1 / Page 10
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Clabber girl Baking Powder SPRINGBOK KILLS COW Springboks, which appear in mo tion pictures and to most people of Africa seem to be very demure ani mals, have their likes and dislikes. This was demonstrated by one dur ing a stock sale in Nigel. South Af rica, recently. As soon as It sighted a new cow the springbok broke away from its owner and drove Its borns Into the side of the bossy until the domestic animal was dead. Millions of women have discovered the remarkable economy—and tho wonderful baking results—gained by using Clabber Gnu. Baking Powder. Like Gangsters Bad luck comes all In a bunch, which is also true of laziness and dumbness. nfat a Coleman r LAMP Lamps xv uaya right in your own home. Prove to yourself, by test and comparison with any other type of light, that the Coleman meets every lighting need in your 1 home with its 3C0 candle- ! power “live” pressure J I PRICED AS ( LOW AS l $3.95 m and Globa Extra ilglU U1SI pivvcvuj jum Bight. This offer is se cured by a Money-Back Guarantee through your dealer. Just send a postcard asking for Test Certificate, giving name and address of your hardware or house-furnishings dealer, and we will send you a Teat Certificate to pre sent to your dealer. THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial Irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomul sion, which goe3 right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed mem branes as the germ-laden phlegm Is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (AdvJs Found! My Ideal Remedy for PAIN •"Though I have tried all good remedies Capudine suits me best because it is unusually quick and g-ntle.*’ For headache, neuralgic, or muscle aches, use either Capudine Liquid or Capudine Brand Tablets. CAPUDINE ECZEMA... To quickly relieve the Itching and burning, and help nature restore skin comfort, freely apply ResinoL Rid Yourself of Kidney Poisons DO you teller burning, scanty or too fit quint urination; bickidiif headache, dirtiness, swollen feet end ankles? Are yon tired, nervous—feel ell unstrung end don't know whet to wrong? Then give some thought to year kidneys. Be sure they function proper )y,for functioned kidney disorder per mits excess waste to stay in the blood, §nd to poison ind upstt tho wholt Use Doen'r Pills. Ooen's etc for the I kidneys only. They ere i the world over Let Our Matt* Be GOOD HEALTH BY DR. LLOYD ARNOLD Professor of Bacteriology and Pro* yentive Medicine, Umvi iversity of Illinois. College of Medicine. THE UBIQUITOUS TUBERCLE AND ITS RELATION TO MAN According to a report Just Issued by the National Tuberculosis asso ciation of New York city, the tu Derculosls death rate in the Unit ed States ranks seventh among the 30 countries listed. New Zea land, the Union of South Africa, Australia, C e y Ion, Denmark and the Nether lamis are tne countries that have lower tuberculosis death rates. These figures are tor 1928-1932. The listing for 1934 Is not available yet. because It takes time to tabulate the enormous amount of data. i Tuberculosis is one of the most prevalent of all contagious diseases.! It is rightly called the white plague.; It is spread over much of the known world. And It is different from most of ; our other contagious diseases, which are what we call acute. If any | one has typhoid fever, diphtheria, 'measles, scarlet fever, mumps, or whooping cough, he has a period of j a few days to three weeks when he Is confined to bed. But recovery j takes place promptly after the fe- j ver stage is over. Tuberculosis, on the contrary, Is a chronic disease. It can extend over a period of j 1 years. In the beginning stages pa j tlents may hardly be aware that they have it. It Isn’t only the human race that I has tuberculosis. Animals also can get It. Fish, turtles and frogs have | tuberculosis. Birds, chickens and ! I turkeys have tuberculosis. Cows j 1 have tuberculosis. The cold-blood-! ed animals are infected with a tu-1 [ bercle bacillus that grows only at j at a low temperature, and heneei cannot grow in man. Birds have a higher temperature than man, consequently It is hard to infect us with their tubercle bacillus. Some human cases have been reported, but avian tuberculosis In man is ex tremely rare, The tubercle bacilli that cows have, however, can grow ; in man and cause tuberculosis. But the disease Is different from the true human type, as the lungs are j seldom involved in bovine or cattie; tuberculosis In man. Tuberculosis of the bones, joints and glands In children, however, are oftentimes caused by this particular kind of tubercle bacilli. Most of us have breathed in or swallowed living tubercle bacilli many times before we reach the1 adolescent stage. When the bacilli j enter the body they either are killed off quickly or else they find lodg ment in some organ, usually the lungs, and there they grow in a small local spot of tissue. When the growth is very slow, as It Is In healthy persons, then the surround ing tissues can wall off the infected area. It Is as if a few thousand soldiers of an enemy country had succeeded in entering the center of some state, and then the defense sol diers in that state, who could not drive them out, had sealed them up in a tight-walled enclosure. Now If these invaders were able to live on the water, air and food that percolate through the walls, then you would have the same situation j as exist in a walled-in tubercle foci, j The invaders are harmless so long as the wall holds them prisoners, | but if the wall gives way, we find J an invading army right in our midst. Undernourishment and long ! fevers, such as undulant fever and | parrot fever, and whooping cough, | mumps, diabetes and anemia, all : tend to lower the body resistance and open up holes in the walla en ' closing the germ prisoners. The ba : cllli swarm out of the opening, and spread rapidly through the adjoin ing tissues. The best way to prevent tubercu losis Is to prevent the tubercle ba cilli from getting Into our bodies. But this Is almost Impossible to do In the present condition of mod ern civilization. We have to mix with many different people. Do you ever count the number of persons yon talk with dally, shake hands with, or stand or sit next to In a movie theater, church, restaurant, store, street car or bust Some of them are sure to have tuberculosis. Ohlldren, too, come In contact with persons Impregnated with this dis ease. One should almost have to live on a desert island, with absolutely no contact with the outside world, to be safe from infection. Consequently, since we can hard ly prevent tuberculosis germs from coming Into our bodies, the next best thing to do Is to 'keep our bod ily health In such dally good condi tion that we can destroy the germs that do get In, or. If the dose is be yond onr ability to destroy, that we can Imprison them In the capsnle form Just described. Then our chances are very good for going through life without being invaded lie science Is conquer '■ «*■ THE FEATHERHEADS Short VUit 1 "a"1"’1: ISN'T SHB EVER CDMoOG in--standing- out there Tabbing- for. nearly An -1 HOUR. r I WISH SHfc-D / / HURR'f- I'M ) I—STASNinKS- I CcL OH-neKfc iou AKfe/ VHT PlDM't 'i’oti IMVtTE* HSR ID AMD TALK’ vWll.e.'feU iRSA l Ptp ASK — BUT SHE PlDM’t HAVE TIME to QpmE —^4>-n Write and Wrong FINNEY OF THE FORCE By Ted OTLou*h1i« c By WtMtr* Nf*«p»p<r Uni** WWUT5 "W MAtfgR?, SHURE AM '{ez Look WHUT WAPPINET? to YfiZ? Ot WUZ ON •TM' CARPBT -rotw,Y V/ELL-^AT OUffHT fo BE BET-TIER THAN ow ThG HARP oi caught a (Sll'f WT'OUT A GROWER'S 'LOicaaSE AM* OI GAnJE him A -ticket fer pARKifV— r" Are VE2. . T>uMB/ DID THAT ? L M \wv v\v\yw •=^-=y r»' rtm "v ' 'i \ 11 I_L11L. S’MATTER POP_Revising William’s Schedule By C. M. PAYNE \wvj >» urn I V6_ o ki i.*/ ^ot T+fE. c»m I'm e.at«nT - i I (Copyright, 1834, by Th« Bell gyndicite. Inc.) MESCAL' IKE bt s. l. huntley Another New Deal Wanted 1 ' A\M cone OKI, PA., VAJE’RE A-<oETTiKj' UP SWIFT. SWIFF.' skjiff: fvf DOOR AMO DEAL. ME A HAtMO INI A HURP-V! \ / / AHr bv I. L. Huntley. Trade Mark Re*. V. *. Pat. Office) Another Financial Crash “REG’LAR FELLERS’ I By M. G. KETTNER Our Pet Peeve m TAN6 OFAOTlWH |H THE Alp igm I LETS see.what I ft*. WtAWEBMAH HAS TO SAY FIGHTING SPIRIT OPPONENTS €0 THR006H FOR 10 YPRD 6MN * 6lfc Xa FEET AND TEUS H£*M ID COME OH ANP SHOW A Utm VhSHT STJttKS OP lb 11 HE With OENCHEP TlStS AND SC0WIIH6 FIERCELY Stops lb REMOVE MVP V-fr WEWU'l'FROM OEOT5 ^ GIVES "TROUSERS warlike with By GLUYAS WILLIAMS IkKES HIS PIACE IN tlNE AND SHOOTS AN INSWR A mK6"lEnS <SO!"OP FONEWfe COME 1»R0«H ft* (0 YfcRD fiWK. AND SO ON
The Alleghany News and Star-Times (Sparta, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 17, 1935, edition 1
10
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