Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / April 3, 1934, edition 1 / Page 3
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What's Wh[at*at: a Glance JKTwa s h I rak By CHARLES P. STEW ART j Central Press Staff Writer. Washington, April 3.—NBA's sup porters point to a queer thin If. 39 In dicative that the business recovery campaign is beginning to si need. Efficiency is slumping rapidly »n commerce an dindustry, tihej say. From this fact- if it be a fact— they draw the conclusion that into l ior help at last is being e> ensively i e-emplnyed. The deterioration in servici is men tioned as being most noticeal •* in re tail trade. Clerks, it is asset <‘d, are, ( >n a perceptible average !<<* com petent and attentive, than th > were. Mistakes are referred to as increas ingly numerous. Complaints '! unre liubility in deliveries are dec red to he multiplying. Far from being discount;ed by these manifestations ,to which they (ictually lay claim, NRA officials .-.peak of them with satisfaction, rea soning that employers finally art finding themselves compelled to “take whatever workers they can get Mack of retailing, a decline in the quality of industrial production is re ported not. yet so obvious, but sure to ccome more so good authorities predict. o The theory is that, in gen. ml. the li-t craftsmanship has survived the depression. That many first class workingmen have been included in the rinks of the unemployed and that a few indif ferent ones have managed to pull ilwough is not disputed, hut in the main, it is argued at NRA heiiilquar ti-r.-i, the fittest have hung agiio their jobs, inferiority has gone g finally more and more into the dls.md, as 111 e economic pinch has been intensi fied and prolonged. He employment, then, if ,tm- hy pothesis be accepted as sour, t auto matically is lowering the ave-ire. NRA functionaries, and atm lees pro NRA senators and represt ( dives who e e tenure depends on the ~.tes of the efficient an dinefficiem alike. aro anything but ready' to he quoted a.«* upholding the doctrine that the de pression has marked a distinction be tween classes of workers. Talking confidentially, howei> they practically are a unit in expressing the opinion that such, unavoidably, mu't be considered the case, This, to be sure, is not to b. inter preted as implying that an enermoua number of erceptions should pass un recognized, or as implying either that the group of secondardy efficiency bhould be denied an opportunity to support itself adequately. The essential point is that a failing off from the maximum dep.res.Mon le vel of quality does imply the incr. as i~7 re-absorption of the secondsrdy class. Bv LESLIE EICHEI. Central Press Staff Writer New York, April 3.—Arne . a is peaceful in comparison with • t,«- re mainder of the world. Prance for weeks has been over u volcano. At times a revolutk* < -ms inevitable. England, whose statesmen refuse to fa-e issues, is drifting rapidly 10- ward fascism. Unless British v.va'lh Mikes soon for fascism, there will be socialism. for British worker* ire in the ascendancy. The chances m.* tharf It’s Mutual When a customer de posits funds with us, or obtains a loan from us, or transacts any other busmen a i the bank, or comes to us for infor mation or advice, —we do not consider that the accommodation is all on our part, that it is simply a matter of our * doing something for him. Wo i (‘cognize that he is also doing us a favor, we realize that his business is worth something to the bank, and We appreciate the opportunity to add whatever we may to the bank’s namings. Yours reciprocally! First National Bank In Henderson Anderson, N. 0. ity, ln the noajor- Germany, ** derTdiot '**"#*"* un um. he < all liberty clam ela G^ n er al Cl rvli y h^ aded for *as,- will depose of ® Blue Shirts liberal. President De Catena, D»* Vaji. r I" Shman ~W ho f “‘* ht with Valera tol, ,h freedom e he m ° ment he restricted h BPGech - Te ‘l an Irishman tim- bv IT a thln ® he win - This man will olnß the thing, the Irish but h d ?, P, ' ive hiraself <>f freedom action* W :‘ haVe the satisfaction oi a 8 a »nst the government. Behind it all, the British Tory cab net is pulling the strings. They sure ly must he smiling.” IN UNITEI> STATES Florida has had the most profitable year on record. Americans who have gone there ‘have spent money like water.” Newspaper men returning tell of unprecedented display of wealth. It all furnishes ammunition for the increasing number of persons who are demanding “distributioni of weatlh.” Evidently some persons did have money' stored away. PUBLIC OPINION Letters still are coming in to New York papers on the airmail contro versy. Approximately 90 per cent of those published (at least) laud the president for canceling the contracts. They chide Colonel Lindbergh for his stand. Here is an excerpt from a typical letter: "Would Colonel Lindbergh wait to have a contract, In which he felt him self deceived and exploited .ended in court, meanwhile continuing to em ploy and pay the exploiters, or would he do wharf. anyone with any sense of gumption would do, refuse to continue dealings and fight it out after? “The President was right in what lie did, and it showed juot how poor the army fliers and their equipment were, thanks to former administra tions.” GERARD’S “HERBAL” GIVEN UNIVERSITY Chapel Hill, April 3.—Dr. W. C. Coker has presented to the University Library a copy of the rare, valuable and tremely interesting Gerard’s •‘Herbal.” John Gerard, most famous of all the English herbalists, was a barber surgeon who flourished in the late fifteen hundreds and cultivated an ex tensive garden, containing over a thousand different plants, in what is now Fetter Lane in London.ln 1596 he published a. catalogue of these plants, tne first, complete catalogue cf any garden, public or private, and in 1597 came the first edition of the "Herball or General Historic of Plantes.” The copy of the “Herbal” given to the library is the edition of 1626, the best issued, having the latest correc tions and the rare frontispiece show ing a portrait of Gerard holding a potato plant. ‘‘ft is much more than an illustrat- MMMw, W.ay dAllydiMtlh, 'luLspai, Aim 3, m ed catalogues,” says Librarian R. B. Downs. “He describes with simplicity and charm the localities where va rious plants are to be found, and em bodies much of the contemporary' folklore.” Marginal Trading To Be Determined Proposed Law 'Continued from T»age One.) largement., but today it was taxes to pay the bills. The House returns to major legisla tion tomorrow after the field day’ for private minor bills, such as for homo town bridges, pensions and the like. Several committees, meanwhile, studied various bills for Federal aid to education, a Washington mone tary authority and anti-crime pro posals. As to politics. Postmaster General Farley gave out that hewill resign as New York’s State Democratic chair man at the State convention in Oc tober. He did not discuss any succes sor or any time for his projected giving up of the national chairman ship. Whatever the congressional pen chant for the professional mind, capi tal committees continue to hear from a number of educators on such disput ed proposals as the Wtegner bill to increase the NRA labor board. NRA received a Labor Department appeal that* the proposed telegraph code bar employment of youngsters under 16 as messengers. A House sub-committee unanimous ly sanctioned a report vindicating the action of Henry H. Woodring, assis tant secretary of war, in connection with $7,500,000 army plane purchases. Rumor Dillinger Is Near Columbia ■* (Continued from Page One.) ed to Blaney, about 20 miles from hen today to investigate a report that a man with a machine gun in an auto mobile had been seen there. Magistrate J. G. Watson, of Blaney’, telephoned A. R. Ward, assistant chief of highway law enforcement, he fell the man in the automobile might have been John Dillinger, mid-weeiern out law and killer. Watson said the car was traveling at a rapid seepd toward Columbia. He said he distinguished what he took to he a. machine gun in the rear seat In addition to dispatches to the pa trolmen to investigate, Wjard asked city and county officers here to keep a re-doubled lookout. He said he re guarded it doubtful if the man seen was actually' Dillinger, “but we don't want to take any chances." DRAW A CIRCLE AROUND iH9k tui? rt?ATTrtj ai? tutc HHsir lnii 1-Ciiv 11110 WBM& FINE TOBACCO PLANT **s' ':.£' : j Leaves —the Mildest Leaves the heart of Lucky Strike As you can see from this picture— leaves —for which farmers are paid Luckies’ tine* smooth quality doesn’t higher prices—for the center leaves are just happen—for we us z only the center the mildest leaves—they taste better— ‘r leaves! Not the top leaves because then—“lt’s toasted**—for throat pro llgplly ;•/ *<*&?&£*those are under-developed—notripe. tection. And every Lucky is fully packed C^ : .J’ *!i,V ;f' Not the bottom leaves because those with these choice tobaccos made |y • v " * * 0 are inferior in quality—they grow close round and firm—free from loose ends * r ' coarse, sandy. We select only the center Luckies areall-wayskindtoyourthroat. “It’s toasted” » Luckies are all m ways hlfld to VOUV tflVOClt NOT the top teavet— they*re undtr-devthptd r Only 'the Center Leaves—these ~are "the Mildest "Leaves They ~taste "better I - "Nl OonTriaht. 1M«. Tfa. Am«riau» g y |Wi mmmm NOT the bottom leave*— they*rt inf trier in """ “ quality—coarse and sandy l Tbe Wedding of Nick and Alice, A Brilliant Wlnte House Affair jj—~ Characteristic pose of Nick Lonswortlk AN OUTSTANDING social event at 1906, one that attracted interest outside as well as inside the United States, tvas the brilliant White House wedding of Alice Roosevelt, daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt, and Nicholas Longworth, a prominent young congressman from Cincinnati, O. The ceremony, one of the most colorful ever held in the executive , mansion, was staged on Feb, 17. in “P fincess Alice", as sh* looked some ago,? , the east 100 m, in the presence of’sai® ciety leaders, politicians mats. Longworth, known to'thou sand.-# as "Nick”, had a spectacular political career, which was cut short by his death in 1931, while he served as speaker of the house of represent atives. Mrs. Longworth, who became known far and wide as “Princeai Alice”, still is a promjne<it_figur«L_l» political circles, r “Spinal Anesthesia 5i Wilt Deaden Nerves , Stop Pain By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. A FRIEND of mine, who is not a physician, recently visited a surgical clinic, and t,he thing which seemed to surprise him the most was the Dr. Clendening procedure. “He Is just a trunklesa head.” said the surgeon. This method of anesthesia was sug gested a good many years ago, but surgeons. In general, were afraid of it. At that lime they much preferred to have their patients completely un conscious. It took long years of ex perience with local anesthesia. In which only the part to be operated on i s deadened, to make them realize that there were many advantages to a method which did not render the patient completely unconscious, and spinal anesthesia was revived. The principles of the method are quite simple. The entire central nervous system floats or hangs In a clear fluid, which is manufactured by a gland at the base of the brain, circulates slowly, and is absorbed by certain little bodies on the surface of the brain. It is possible, by put ting a hollow needle between the ver tebrae low down, to remove some of this fluid and to replace it by drugs such as novocain .or procaine. These drugs will completely deaden the NOW IS THE TIME TO RE-ROOF Prices still low but will certainly be higher as building gets under way. See us about your roof problem. Tile, Slate, Built-up and Asphalt Shingle Roofings. We make skylights, cornices, ventilators, TANNER ROOFING CO. 134 Horner Street Phone 006 nerves going into the spinal cord, mi that pain impulses will be stopped. Under these circumstances, a surgt dfethod of producing spinal anes thesia. cal operation can be performed on any part of the body, from the neck down, without causing any sensation whatever to the patient. The advantages are that it seems to he quite as safe as ether or chloro form and other Inhalation anesthet ics. and to he free from the after effects which accompany them, such as nausea and vomiting. Then, if It is necessary to get fluid or food Into the patient soon after the operation, he can he told to sw’allow, which he Is usually able .0 do. The patient’s sensations usually be gin to return in from three-quarters of an hour to an hour and a half after the operation has been begun. Patients who have had several op erations under different forms of an esthesia prefer this to all others. EDITOR’S NOTE: 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-oent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening. in care of this paper. The pamphlets are: “Indigestion and Constipation,” “Re ducing and Gaining” “Tnfant Feed ing.” “Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes.” “Feminine Hygiene” and “The Care of the Hair and Skin.” method of anes thesia. The first patient operated on was anesthe tized by deaden ing hts spinal column —a meth od called “spinal anesthesia”. At the time the op eration was be gun he could not move any mus cle. nor could he feel any pain from his neck down, but he was perfectly con scious, and even interested in the PAGE THREE
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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April 3, 1934, edition 1
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