Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWELVE
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‘ BY VIVIAN BROWN
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AP News Features
Just because we throw every
thing to the winds, sun, sand
and meonlight come summertime,
we have to pay the piper. We go
picnicking in the woods and a
harmless little weed coats us with
poison ivy rash. We drink cool
¢drinks on a hot day and get a hor
rible synburn, We play golf or ten
nis and suffer from heat exhaus
tion. We work in the garden m‘“
around the house and get'cuts and
bruises and perhaps a spminml{
ankle, |
We ean be cautious and avoid |
some of these mishaps, or if we |
can’t avoid them, at least acquaint |
ourselves with quick treatment.
Here are some suggestions: |
Poisen Ivy, Sumae, Qak. . .If you |
are not acquainted with these boo- |
by traps, look them up in the dic~
fionary for a good description. Af
ter a tramp in the woods, be sure
to wash your hands with a good
lather of yellow kitchen soap con
taining naptha. If you've stumbled
into a patch of the poisonous stuff,
douse the infected area with al
echal after a good soap scrubbing,
which should be done within five
minutes after contact. Cover with
calamme lotion to help ease itch
ing. Dressings soaked in a solution
of epsom salts will help. After
there is rash itching or burning, it
is too late for the soap treatment,
advises the N. Y. Allergy Society.
Insect Bites . . . Whether it be
bee or flea, try a paste made of
baking soda, witch hazel or a
compress soaked with amrmonia
water. If a red streak runs up
from the bite, call a doctor at once.
Remove your ring if you are bit
ten on a ring finger or else it
might swell and the ring would
have %0 be cut off.
Susburn . . . New lotions contain
ingredients which make them more
effective, It would be a shame
not t¢ use one in order to save
the few cents involved. These new
lotions shut out 90 per cent of the
burning rays while permitting 90
per eent of the tanning rays to
penetrate. If you should get a
bad burn, get a good prepared
cogling ointment at your drug
stone, If you are at home when it
‘happens, use cooking oil or a poul
tice made of baking soda. In any
;:an if it is bad, consult your doc
or.
Stemache Ache . .. Ice - cold
drinks, particularly after a session
of exercise on a hot day, may
cause 2 pain in the stomach which
nfln your entire day of fun.
can be caused by eat
ing eombinations of food such
as potato salad and ice cream, or
by leaving the picnic basket in a
warm place, which might cause
food te snpoil. Some food, particu~
larly han, salad, tuna fish or other
dish sa¥ Js, seem to spoil more
msily ti-en others,
Heat and Sun Exhaustion . . .
This might be avoided if you take
salt gmblets, drink plenty of water
and avoid the sun from 12 to 2.
if you do feel woozy after a ses
sion 4n the heat, let’s hope your
friends will keep you warm, put
your head down, give you salt and
anter. -
Bumps and Bruises . . . Natu
rally, you'll get your share on
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Their simple classic lines and well-bred looks will F ~
take you through many a summer in comfort and style. \
Sizes 9-15 and 12-20 and 1615-24114.
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PENNEY'’S
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SAILING TO VICTORY — The Caribee, owned by
Carlton Mitchell, moves along Chesapeake Bay course to win a
cruising race at Annapolis, Md. The Royano is in background.
vacation, even if you decide to
spend it at home. Let's hope you
get nothing more serious than a
fall off your garden swing (you
should know how to bounce). If
you should trip over a rock in the
garden or fall off a ladder and
hurt your ankle, keep your leg
elevated until the doctor arrives
and don’t put compresses on it,
Usually, if you apply cold, the
doctor will say it should have been
hot, or if hot he will have wanted
it cold—so better leave that alone
until he makes his examination.
Alcoholics Hold
ConfabMarki
AA Anni
By NEA Service
CLEVELAND, —(NEA)— From
10,000 to 15,000 incurable alcohol
ies will ocnvene here july 28-30.
But no extra police and no
‘drunken riots are anticipted be
cause all these wvisitors will be
cold sober—men and women as
sembled from all the states, Can
adian provinces and foreign lands
—celebrating the 15th anniversary
of the founding of Alcoholics
Anonymous.
The organization that now
numbers*wvell over 100,000 mem
bers was born in Akron, 0., in
the summer of 1935. A New York
securities salesman, whose idea it
was to maintain his own sobriety
by helping other alcoholics, met an
Akron doctor who had become a
hopeless drunk.
These two men, recognizing the
fact that they were “incurable
drunkards” as long as they drank
evolved the principle of AA which
has brought thousands of other
alcoholics back from the gutters,
from physical, moral and mental
bankruptcy to respectability.
In simplest terms, the code of
AA is: “I am a drunk, I want to
quit drinking, I will not drink to
day, I will ask a Power greater
than myself to help me, I will
help others to accomplish the
same results.” *
Steps Planned
At this first international con
ference, th stride of AA int oin
dustry, education and social wel
fare will be reviewed and more
steps planned. The idea has been
absorbed rapidly into industry
where such firms as E. I. duPont
de Nemours, Thompson Products,
Eastman Kodak, Consolidated
Eidson and others have embraced
it.
Its spread abroad will be re
lated by one of the founding
fathers who has just returned
lfrom gisiting AA groups in Nor
way, Sweden, Denmark, Holland,
France, England, Ireland—even in
Scotland, home of Scotch whisky.
Medically, the simple therapy
of AA has received wide endorse
ment by physicians, many of
whom now add “Join AA” to their
prescriptions. Groups have been
formed in prisons, a phase on
which the visitors will be ad
dressed by Warden Clinton Duffy
of San Quentin. Headquarters re
ports many sheriffs and police of
ficials registering as observers.
Growth of AA, on lines of ut
most simplicity, has been astound
ing. There are no solicitations, no
dues, no paid officers or directors,
no - membership campaigns, np
controversies or forced reforms.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
The goal is self support by con
tributions of members who pay
their own way in every phase of
activity. Many legacies and offers
of gifts from outside have been
turned down.
Members maintain small print
ed bulletins in their communities
and support the Grapevine,
monthly published in New York
where the text ‘“Alcoholics Anon
ymous” also is printed. Confer
ence expenses -are met by $1.50
individual registration fees.
AA Work
How does AA work? First of all
an alcoholic whose life has become
unmanageable must have the sin
cere desire to quit drinking. A
member of AA calls on him and
becomes his sponsor. Then comes
hospitalization for at least five
days during which he receives
medication. ¥
When he is “out of the fog,”
members call on him with coun
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Men’s Combed Cotton
* °
Flat Knit T - Shirts
WEAR THEM AS UNDER- 69
SHIRTS OR POLO SHIRTS! c
Penney’s T-shirts are made from long, staple combed
cotton fibers that are knit strong and tight. That’s
your insurance for smooth finish and extra long wear!
They’re cut full and roomy to give you the freedom
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Men’s Combed Cotton
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SIZED AND DESICNED
FOR COMFORT IN 5 9 e
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These briefs are designed to fit snug, the way you like
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SPORT SHIRTS |l\ A 1
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sel, friendly help, and the man
learns that his story is not much
different from theirs.
Released from the hospital, the
man identifies himself with a
group of his fellows meeting
weekly, but he is not limited to
one group. In a typical city such
as Cleveland, he can go to a meet
ing every night in the week,
choosing any one of a dozen night
ly group meetings.
There are 12 steps toward re
habilitation. After admitting he is
‘an alcoholic, acknowledging a Su
preme Power and making amends
for, wrongs to others, he is com
mitted to frequent moral invento- |
ry and meditation and the desire
to carry to others the method that
helped him.
- One 14-year member, who went
from a Wall Street millionaire to
panhandling nickels on the Bow
ery, was asked to comment on a
new pituitary gland treatment of
alcoholism through hormomes and
adrenal injections. Reecent suc
cesses with this chemical proce
dure have been noted in New
York City.
“It sounds wonderful,” said the
veteran. “But we've got some
thing better than a physical pan
acea. Our treatment goes deeper.
'AA is a way of life that reaches
‘not only the mind and body but
the whole spiritual being!” *
EDUCATIONAL MOVIES
According to reports from coun
ty and home demonstration agents,
more than 765,000 farm people in |
Georgia attended showings of ed
ucational moving pictures last
year. Educational movies were
used by Extension agents in 151
of the state’s 159 counties. [
I |
Siriono Indians of Bolivia have
no domesticated animals, not even
dogs, of which they are terrified.
MORE for your money in
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Penney’s ACTION-CUT URDERWEAR
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At PENNEY’'S |
RYEGRASS IN FESCUE
Around 70 percent of the first
year fescue grown in Georgia for
certified seed this past season
failed to pass tests for certified
seed. Ryegrass in the fescue was
the cause of the failure to meet
standards in most instances, Ag
ricultural leaders say that the
tyegrass should die down and the
fescue should come along nicely
in the second and third year after
planting.
/N‘WAYJ' NEVER ASK FOR
QEMA ¥ “ASPIRIN"
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WORI.D'S J h
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AT 10 ASPIRIN ‘
TRURSDAY, JULY 20, 1950,
Bermuda was m 1
1609, when Admiral *Gcox;..
Somers’ ship, “Sea Venture” ...
wrecked on a sunken reef ang
colony was established on the ..
land.
Worry of
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laugh. Just sprinkle a little FAS
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B W—
BOYS' SIZES ............... 49¢
ATHLETIC SHIRTS ..........49¢
DOYR ' MIERY .. it s 398
KNIT BRIEFS ................5%
DOYE BIRRS .oissiivirmmisibiiiminiosissin 96
T-SHIRTS ..............ee.....69¢
DBTE’ SEEE i biiiinimisscisssivisessiss 96
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