Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / March 3, 1934, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX H 1.h1i.1i.. Du ring I : lr\t Yor ..FR0....,!. A -.1 m l i.l.mrioi. M(.\ Prohibition repeal i Signing: gold bill This layout depicts the highlights in the first year of the adminis tration of President Franklin D. Looking Backward Over First Year of New Deal •* a f' ft'siut ni liooscven ends m.s first year at the helm of the nation and as the man who handles the deck in the New Deal, a review of the trumps played thus far is not. amiss. Since his inauguration on March 4, 1933 (center), the I resident brought the Civilian Conservation Corps (No. 1) into being; with General Hugh .Johnson (No. 2). he brought the NRA nlue hasrle into industrv: received Commissar Maxim Litvinoff (No. 3) HERE’S MOLD FOR NEW GIANT TELESCOPE MIRROR Thl« photo ahowa the huge mold with which will be made the 200- inch teWecope-mirror, hugest of j Roosevelt. The important events transpiring since his inauguration, I March 4. 1933. as illustrated, are it* kind in the world, at a glass plant in Corning, N. Y. The 17-. loot “eye” will enable astrono HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, MARCH 3, 1934 the calling of the bank holiday; formation of the NRA and other organizations for relief, such as and recognized Soviet Russia; started the wheels turning on the gigantic Tennessee Valley project (No. 4); made a personal appeal to Congress for two billion dollars to carry through his recovery program (No. 6); and, what most Americans consider ace of trumps, acted as spearhead in the drive that brought repeal of the National Prohibition Law and signed proclamation (No. 6) that 21st Amendment had become law. mere to see four times farther than ever before. The telescope is to be placed at a site in California. the AAA, PWA, CWA, CCC, and others; recognition \of Russia; repeal of and the How Vestigial Structures Are Sources of Infection By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. ONE OF THE principal differences between man and the lovfrer animals is the absence of a tail, even this proud distinction is occasionally lost, and we find a . •< ||B|j&. ■ Js||| Dr. Clendening any large pro 'portions, but there are frequently lit- < tie growths in the region at the base of the spine which faintly resemble tails—a few hairs giowing from a little nubbin or button. They are known as “pilonidal cysts .and fra .'cjuentlv become infected, being *spe daily subject to disease, as all vest!- ■ gial structures w*. Xhy wctfe U*l| , adoption of the new LVil, providing for the mm&.mfjftl . the dollar' Winks Blinks Now mm # •••• Ifii |jf:* J| |i|i *jSr The new White House setter, Winks, is in a bad spot. Other dogs at the executive mansion have been exiied because they enjoyed nipping strangers. But Wrnks doesn’t waste nips. He polished off a dozen break fasts in the servants’ quarters when no one was looking and blithely faced the camera afterwards. (Central Press} Is worse than useless—it is a positive source of trouble, and frequently is broken off in the process of child birth, giving rise to considerable pain and discomfort. If you scratch the sole of a new born baby’s foot, the large toe draws away from the other toes and moves upwards in a peculiar monkey-like gesture. This reflex is soon tost, as is the apparently prehensile ability of the infant’s toes. The way a baby folds its toe almost over the sole of its foot, as if it could clutch something, is reversion to our early arboreal existence. The fact that the child also can face the soles of its feet together is another indica tion of the same thing. Young in fants can support themselves by hanging to a branch or a cane hy their hands. EDITOR’S NOTE: p Six pamphlet* by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending 10 cents in coin, for each, and a self-addressed envelope stamped ..with a three-eent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of f,T ls . papei ’* The pamphlets are: Indigestion and Constipation.” “Re ducing and Gaining," “Infant Feed ing.” "Instructions for the Treatment of _ Diabetes,” “Feminine Hygiene’’ ‘TPhe Car* 9 t Its u*ix as# skis.” h u man being with a fully de veloped tail. • In *kll of us there are rudi mentary s t r u c tures and bones at the root of the spinal column, which constitute a potential tail. These bones are known as the “coccyx". It is not often that an atavistic tail in a human being reaches Wife Preservers ' Unless your family objects to the flavor, put a small onion in each end of the roasting pan vyheh roasting meat. It adds a nice flavor to any kind of meat. Muscles Which Move Ears In Some Usually A troph led By LOGAN CLENDF.NING, M. D. IN CERTAIN fish which have lived for thousands of years in the waters of the Adersberg cave, the eyes are no longer organs of light. Lot small rudi- mentary spots These fish, how ever. are horn with eyes, which, being unneces sary in the dark ness of the cav erns, gradually shrivel. In our own bodies there are many organs of this kind which were once useful at some stage of existence. A learned German, Professor Wei dersh eim, has i>». Cletidenlng written a book called, “The Construc tion of the Human Body as a Testi mony Towards His Past". We have several times in this column called attention to the mus cles of the ears, entirely atrophied in the human being, but. sometimes sufficiently developed so that some individuals can wag their ears. Other skin.muscles, as the platys ma in the neck, are reminiscent of the animals that can twitch their skins with a fully developed system of such muscles. In our voice box there are two little pouches which represent the rudimentary hellows bags’.of the monkey, and sometimes Winning Point at Senate Hearings my 1 H| * H wmL m. mis: ipf a r Sm .So emphatic have been the objections of Richard Whitney, president of the New York Stock Exchange, shown above appearing before Sen. Duncan Fletcher, chairman, and other members of the senate banking and currency committee, at hearings on legislation to regulate stock exchanges, that plans are now being made to modify the proposed Fietcher-Jifiwbuin bill, designed for that purpose. And Now "Casey Comes to Bat” • > • ————». .I Baseball hopes in Brooklyn have been revived again with the signing ot the colorful Casey Stengel as manage) 1 of the Dodgers, to succeed Max Carey. Stengel is shown above as he affixed his signature to. a two-year contract to conjure With the fates of the Flatbush nine. (Central Press) Held for Murders jSSSwSPfev * gWRHfIK .v,y .. ■■■■ jJ&UgU John A. Cane This is John A. Cane, who is be ing held by police at Oklahoma City in connection with the mur ders of his wife and three chil dren last June. Cane is alleged to have killed his wife and chil dren with a shovel and then bid their bodies in a grave, we find people covered with nan temi n \scent of "hat our bodies must have loci: ed like hi a |«rsrr,- dive state G s civilization The appendix ifi the vest te !a | remaimk i ~t the great intestiiiat sets or the |,er bi\ otous aniiiiiitg Ueves sa i v ior them because herbivorous t,,od is too Bulky , u be ■ on,- entratci- I,v niitr ill od« These vestigia, structures, beans useless, ate par. ticularly likely to cause trouble A— Muscles il hieh move ears In most they are atroph led. B~ Dartv i n notch ; remains of animal ear. The appendix t* a good example or this, it h a ~ nu earthly usefulness except, to ui geons. It is especially liable to in come infected, and has little pow*, of self-resistance to such infection. EDITOR’S NOTE; Six pamphlets by Dr. (Mendening can now be ob tained bv sending hi cents in coin, tut each, and a sell a I.tressed envelope stamped with a three-rent statu],, In Dr. Logan ('Mendening, in care us this paper. The pamphlets ate: “Indigestion and Constipation,” ‘ ip ducing and Gaining" “Infant Kent, ing,” “Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes,” “Feminine Hygiene’ and “The Care of the Hair and Sirin ” Seeks Senate Post George Harvey Cole Here is George Harvey Cole* prominent attorney of Peru, h“t . who has announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for junior senator from Indiana. He opposes R. Earl Peters, 10 mer Democratic state chairman, who has been campaigning foi poet for several month*
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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March 3, 1934, edition 1
6
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