Newspaper Page Text
HEALTH HINTS
■y Of. frank O. Plow**. FreuldeM,
National Chlroprattle Auoclatian
How To Bo Marrlod Happy - <
And
From the time young people ge*
“serious” about each other, to their
return from the they honeymoon, should or
even thereafter, no*
lack the advice of their elders on
how to establish a happy the marriage. advisors
Both the couple ideas ana what is
have their own questions on
most important and work? Must pop the
a up: Should a wife
■ couple be of the same faith? How
■ to harmonize with in-laws? The
■ questions are legion, but Are it is very both
■ seldom the question! fit for marriage?, you is
f F physically asked. Yet. the basic instinct be
j hind marriage is propagation of
I (the species, and the fundamental
health of both man and wife are
xerea lives —
reasons and of alcoholism, infidelity, incompati¬ and, a
majority bility, of find poor health in
the cases, is vital
iof one of from partners the psychiatric a
■factor. Apart marital unhappiness,
reasons for which
there are those situations of
have developed simply because
poor health. These people lack the
Igeneral vitality, the robust health,
to consummate a happy marriage.
. Most of the states demand cou¬
ples pass a physical examination
•before marriage. wife A with prospective bad
husband and/or a
heart condition, tuberculosis, perhaps or
any serious them, complaint, should both be un¬ ad¬
known to Such conditions of
vised of same. until
health should not be a secret
after the ceremony. man’s char¬
Checking hank a young balance, his reli¬
acter and hobbies,
habits, gious background, and driving H
manners chiroprac¬
cense is fine, but isn’t a
tic physical check-up more impor¬
Cold Windows
Cause Dripping;
Wood Stops It
One of the pet winter peeves
of home-owners who have metal
windows is moisture that col¬
lects on sash and frames and
runs down to damage painted
i walls and wallpaper, for this ailment is to
One cure sash the
install wood storm on Here’s
•room side of the window.
^Condensation collects during on metal cold
frames and - sash
weather because metal is an ex¬
cellent conductor of heat This
is the reason metal surfaces are
generally cool to the touch in
a heated room. Metal refuses to
hold heat well.
i With windows happen of ponderosa because
pine, this doesn’t The
wood is a natural insulator.
wood remains warm to the touch,
and moist heated air inside the
house won’t leave a deposit of
condensation on it.
For this reason, storm sash of
ponderosa pine installed inside
metal windows relieve moisture
problems by stopping warm air
before it can get to the chill sur¬
faces of the metal frame and
sash.
Goodbye to the dogleg in the doorway! Leave
it to Ford to sweep that annoying windshield pillar
forward, out of your way. No more bumped knees
or snagged hose!
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V “31‘s?” , “($01“ 1.:
_,
Eva-WWW“ “Mucus! sane-Hon ge‘ up to 5
Inches more lder loom, Indus mom tun room in the 1960 Fords. Posture
perfect seating makes long-distance fatigue a thing of the past. The man in
. _ the middle has as much comfort as the rust, thanks to full-width seat padding-
\ Nothing fits you like a Ford!
TBS CT^VStANB (GA.) CGtJRIER
FOW
BUFFALO Bill* COW KILLED 69 BUFFALO W ONE DAY/
IN jopplymm mutt for railroad
•MKrtf Ml KKUO 40ttm«MJMfOA
AMERICAS WMOT MM1ANIMAL WttSO
marly sxTiMcrm icor that iftwnti
SHIPPED WOT FROM INC M0NX2M19
THE WICHITA AAMt PRESERVE, OKU.
IMS SM4U.MR0 HAS MOWN TO IOOO.
"Ibllftf, ONE THIRD
oFlhc BIG GAME
IN THE U& B ON
YOUR NATIONAL
FORESTS
STATE, FEDERAL AMO
PRIVATE A6ENCIEE ARE
W0RKIN6 TOKTMIft TO
improve conditions
FOR WILDLIFE SI THERE
MU BE BltTER HUNTING
AND FISUINO FOR
AMERICAS SPORTSMEN.
PROTECT THE FORESTS ANO USE THEM WISELY
" IA/U& ma£coe towafafnatu,
urtt& cfoa/ufy fttTb aM,... n
. CO***'”’ PRINCIPAL AUTHOR AND
ARCHITECT OF DECLARATION
OF /NDEPEND£NCE;AS ONE OF
1 OUR FOUND/NO FATHERS, A
i CO-AUTHOR, CONSTITUTION
---- v OF THE UNITED STATES.
SECRETARY OF STATE
IN WASHINGTON'S PRESIDENT
vs? VA •A FIRST
\\ Kj cabinet; cabinet; third / n/Ki/
*3 PRESIDENT OF USA.
ACHIEVEMENTS AU OFJEFfERSONSi
MOWS STATU*£*
AS A MAN STEM
FROM HIS THEN
REVOLUTIONARY THE
CONCEPT, ACCEPTED TO
NOW W!SDDN\
BELIEF IN THB THE'
AND JUSTNESS INDIVIDUAL OF
EDUCATED
THEMSELVES I T/S OWN WORDS, MADE IN ENDURINC THE DECLARATION HISTORYL OF INDEPENDENCE,
*WE HOLD THESE TRUTHS TO BE SEIF -EVIDENT. -THATAU
MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL', THAT THEY ARE ENDOWED
BY THEIR CREATOR W/TH CERTAIN UNALIENABLE
RIGHTS! AM0N6 THESE ARE LIFE LIBERTY AND THE
PURSUIT OP HAPPINESS."
_
SEND FOR 5 OF THE WORLD’S ORE A T SPEECHES, ANO BROCHURE "DOES WOO SPEECH
SPEAK WEU OF YOU?W BOX CHARGE SS, SEND NAME CITY STATION, OF NEWSPAPER, NEW YORK YOUR -I9-N. NAME Y.
AND ADDRESS TO P. 0. RADIO
ANSWER, to
OH, say can you see, with 55% greater sky-to-road vision. That sleek,
sloping hood reveaTTmore road than you’ve ever seen before. New Wide
Angie windshield gives you up to 17% greater glass area. Wider angle of vision
through rear window, too.
Even a child can load the trunk, thanks to its
lew level! The trunk sill is perfectly placed ...
just 27' above the street. Trunk holds 3 weeks’
supply of luggage! Ford is built for people!
Is your community next? Look what forest fires
do EACH YEAR—year in and year outl
lion Each acre* year of they land—an blacken area 30 mil- the
Size of the State of New York!
They burn make enough million pulp-size of
trees to 3 tons
newsprint!
Forest fires briog destruction, shortages and higher
prices that no one can escape! And it is a fact that
9 out of 10 of them are man-caused!
FOREST FIRES CAM BE PREVENTED IF YOU WIU
FOLLOW—FAITHFUU Y— THESE FOUR SIMPLE RULES
1. Hold your match 'til It's cold 3. Drown your campfire, than stir
—than pinch H to make sure. and drown again.
2. Crush out your cigarette, cl- 4. Ask about the law before burning
gar, pipe ashes. Use an ash trayl grass, brush, fence rov », or trash.
A Public Service Project of The Advertising Council
Tfc t/ ee m Sez -Only you can
PREVENT FOREST FIRES!
4 *ww**^*c- 0 n!y you can
PREVENT FOREST FIRES!
R. A. Bowling, left, a Georgia Power Company rural
engineer, and W. W. Harrell, check feed grinder.
Serving Georgia —
And Georgia Farms
MEET W. W. HARRELL, Cook County, one of
thousands* of rural and farm customers
served by the Georgia Power Company.
Mr. Harrell operates a farm small in size —
75 acres — but big in operations. He has a
flock of 28,000 layers. A Georgia Power Com¬
pany rural engineer helped mechanize the
farm so that electricity performs many jobs,
from grinding feed to cooling eggs.
For 32 years our rural engineers have been
helping Georgia farmers. They plan farm
wiring and lighting, help select and install
electrical equipment, find labor-saving meth¬
ods and advise on new developments in farm
applications of electricity. Their services are
provided at no cost or obligation.
The Georgia Power Company serves
directly 203,621 rural and farm cus¬
tomers. These are customers wholly
outside any corporate city limits.
* ................——
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
WINTERTIME
ACTIVITIES
SCIENCE IN i
YOUR LIFE
><
Preventing Shock
To most of us shock seems a
strange word to be associated with
death. It belongs Instead to mystery
tales. We tend to think of it as an
emotional aftermath to a frighten¬
ing experience.
So did the medical profession for
They destroy enough trees of
saw-timber size to build 86,000
five-room homes! ,
They destroy watershed cover,
causing soil erosion and loss of
valuable water!
“S
reversible shock” means just one
thing—a state of collapse caused by
a sudden failure of blood circulation
te the body’s tissues. It is a sequel
to battle wounds, accidents, opera¬
tions, and some diseases.
During World War II researchers
learned that shock has many out¬
ward forms—hut one constant—and
deadly—feature. When the tiny
blood vessels that nourish the body’s,
tissues collapse, death becomes in¬
evitable. Deprived of oxygen and
food, the tissues die, and when a.
vital tissue dies, the individual dies.
with it.
Recent research has shown that,
this collapse is caused by a poison¬
ous substance or substances. The
part of the puzzle that remains un-.
solved is the nature and origin of
the toxic agents which cause the
“irreversibility” of shock.
The famous Harvard University
researcher, Dr. Jacob Fine, believes
that poisons are released by the
bacteria that are always present in
the body. In shock, Dr. Fine theo¬
rizes, the body’s normal defenses
against bacteria are out of commis¬
sion. He suggests that antibiotics,
such as terramycin, be given to hold
bacteria in check when patients fail
to respond to blood transfusions and
death from shock becomes imminent,
even though no infection seems
present.
Dr. Fine's theory remains to be
proved, but the Korean War demon¬
strated that in certain kinds of shock,
apparently having nothing to do
with bacteria, antibiotics could save
lives. They reduced from 90 per cent
to 50 per cent the mortality o( a
type of sh.-ck which appears two to
five days after an i nury.
Storm Sash Cuts
Costs of Heating
By 20 Percent J
and ftTight-fitting doors storm windows
amount of can heating help reduce fuel the
sumed during con¬
ter by an average win¬
20 percent or more, ac¬
cording Storm to many studies.
sash and doors of pon
derosa pine are considered by
many home owners to offer the
greatest fuel savings because
wood does not conduct heat out.
aide as many other materials do.
• A further advantage of wood
atorm sash and doors is that
wood can be painted to match
rior or harmonize with other exte¬
colors.
DRAIN CLEANER HANDY
A convenient tool for opening
clogged drams can be made by
ometer connecting cable a discarded speed¬
tric hand to a %-inch elec¬
drill.
SHELLAC NEW KNOTS
Knots in new wood should be
shellacked with a mixture of 50
percent fresh shellac and alco¬
hol before a prime coat of
paint is applied.
-r
SODA STRAW HELPFUL
A the plastic soda straw placed
over end of an oil can spout
will make it easier to lubricate
hard-to-reach places.
100 years. We find
a 19th century
surgeon describ¬
ing shock as an
expression of sym¬
pathy by the body
for one of its mem¬
bers that has been
injured. But to a
doctor today “ir¬