PAGE SIX OUK YESTERDAYS—— When George V Was Crowned King of England, One of Europe's Alost Brilliant Ceremonies "N ... . W *!>• * mß&k .UWk ' BB|Er f|| - 1' fS 'tql ■tfffilfPK '\. ... "**■ k 5 >• x j *T fsllPisgsi .. : 4-$. : . 4X: '' S ' t T: aMSg- wßKw*£&-'£ Sa& ™iiMBL lim 1 - ,'* I f/Sm. &Ai> mßmf> / | I t ’ , JP; > n rafT? f ; , ililiir *! Jim. i,§ ffe JJ— |V* MdWEt Jf $♦ • i uHPL i- me Is# Biflni w«« Ml Ml |» % P| Vs |pi I gjj|§ /aHMf life • eUM .’^kSaw ! tsT§j|l * fa * l; * or --' ‘ nd Q u "" M * r » *> coronation _' L „ e Ki „ s E4 W ,„| VII A. Prince of W.le. > v v „ , THE more brilliant : «:gurt' < Premonies of Europe in tlie ‘twentieth century was t!:e crown of Kins Oeorae \’ and Queen 6s. rulers of G reiit Britain evnd itfjj donning. Kins 1 George, > Ace Woman Flier Still "Baby” to Mother rf' * MTrs. Amelia Farhad Putnam, first woman to span Atlantip and most of Pacific in solo flight, is still “my to All . Amy ttlis Farhart, New Fnglalid-born resident of Los Angeles. Mother fondly shows photos *f' Amelia at ages of d and 7, reproduced here from family album, as nation takes off its hat to Mrs Pufnnp: thown above as she was given a. New York greeting; ( Central Press) ■ HAUPTMANN JURY TAKES TIME OUT FOR EXERCISE The jury which is hearing evi- I d«hce in the murder trial of Bi u- BOSTON BIG LEAGUE BALL PARK GOES TO THE DOGS ';'■/ Braves Field, Boston The Boston Braves of the Na tional league faced loss of theii £ij»hchtee literally became the tiid on which they play. pictured T w - . . VjJftKia *'-V..' ■ known popularly throughout the i i empire us the “Sailor Prince”, as- I ! sumed the throne upon the death : of his father, King Edward VII, } j in 1910 when George was 45. The j j second son of King Edward, he I no Hauptmann for the kidnaping \ and slaying of the Lindbergh j here, has gone to the dogs. The I field was reported leased to a syndicate organized for grey- i hound racing. Efforts were be- ! HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1935 became crown prince and was awarded the title of Prince of Wales at the death of his elder brother, Albert Victor. He was married in ISO 3 to Princess Victoria Mary of Tech. baby, takes a walk between corn, sessions at Flemington, N. J. ing made by the club to obtain Fenway park, Red Sox playing field, but it was reported the American league wa» unwilling. Doolittle Does a Lot! i l gP»88&»»~ v ff[ w 4 1& te m • | §||PmMi Hw .:.:....^^nHHHSSHSHHHH| • ininiv Doolittle, onetime speed king of the Army air corps, quit setting 'vanscontinental records because his wife thought it was too dangerous, was flying with him when he set a new record for spanning the coun try by living from Glendale, Calif., to New York in 11 hours and 59 min utes. He is seen helping her from the chip (inset) on their arrival. tGentral Press) Did He Make Kidnap Ladder? I .. •~' x ‘v-- £:% > Abe Samuelsohn, Bronx, N. Y., carpenter, declared to have made the box in which Dr. John F. “Jafsie” Condon delivered Lindbergh ransom money, asserts he also made the kidnap ladder (shown in background) found at Lindbergh estate, for “Hauptmann and three others.” Latter is denied by prosecutors. (Central Prest ) Old and Modern Methods ()f Trea tmen t for Dia hetes By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. i HOW DIFFERENTLY Ihe an nouncement that he has diabetes is received by a patient today'in com parison to the prospect which the! verdict indicated : onlv a tew years i ago. In my \ own time 1 have ; seen patients 1 blanch and faint ! a w a y, even] threaten suicide, | when the diag- j nosis was ilis- i closed. Now- ' adays, the pa- i tient knows or soon learns that ] it does not mean | any curtailment j of his activities or shortening of j life: It means Dr. Clendening a moderate; amount of self-sacrifice in eating, j natural to and, under any circum- j stances, beneficial, to those aftei j middle life, who constitute the tna- . jority of patients with the disease. No attempt of any kind to treat I the disease was made until John P.ollo, an English army surgeon, in 1791 proposed a “diet to consist ol animal food principally and to be thus regulated: . j “BREAKFAST— One and a half pints of milk and half a pint of lime water, mixed together. “NOON Plain bicod puddings made of blood and suet oi\l>- “DINNER —Game or old meats which have been long kept, and as far as the stomach may bear, fat and rancid old meats, as pork. Io eat in moderation, “SUPPER —The same aa break \ Rollc emphasized rancid meat. Why it should he rancid is difficult to'fell from his writings. Os course, we would not subject any patient io exactly shell ft diet today. Rut his f method ’ obtained results not ; nit? viously equaled at that time, the [good results coming from lhe eli,m --: ination of starchy foods in the di.pt, ; and their replacement by nitrogenous I food! It should be noted also that 1 lie insists on moderation in the ! amount of food, a wholesome thing ! for any diabetic. i From Doctor Hollo’s long account of bis first case, we find that a 1 situation arose with which the most | modern medical attendant still lias [to deal. The patient. Captain Mere | ditii, broke rules, lie decided to eat i wliat lie liked. And he got worse Then we read: | “The patient was strongly re no:i --| strated with and told the conse ! ciuence of repeated deviations. Fair ! promises were therefore renewed, j and absolute confinement to the j house, entire animal food, were j prescribed and agreed upon.’’ I Nowadays things can be made much pleasanter for such a patient Captain Meredith broke over princi pally because he liked bread, and 1 would eat it. In our time we have [ plenty of kinds of diabetic bread, ! just as palatable as ordinary bread, i We could change and improve his diet in other ways. ,We would cut down on the amount of fat he ate. and we would give him some veg etables —vegetables, indeed, that he had never heard of; which had not been introduced into common use in his time, and delicious ones—toma toes, endive, broccoli, watercress, grapefruit, spinach, avocadoes, ba nanas. onions, etc. ARTIFICIAL. THROAT INSERTED TO SAVE BABY’S LIFE Little “Miss X” was born “with- j out a throat.” Whereupon the baby was rushed to a Baltimore hospital. Dr. P. Insley is shown with “Miss X.” following’ inser- i —OUR YESTERDAYS iVhen Roosevelt Visited Kaiser ; A Friend WboßecanieHisEnein) j|L The kaiser and Roosevelt in Berlin Theodore Roosevelt Kaiser Wilhelm .WHEN THE United States en- | tered the World war. no American was more eager to get into the thick of the field than the late President Theodore Roosevelt who had led a crack cavalry troop in the Spanish-American war Al though, lie did not go, Roosevelt wanted "to lead a force to France Fiol'.t to Keep Father’s fortune _ •. Bertrand L 1' iylor, Jr. (left), and Countess rii Frassi (right) are battling in New York court Geraldine 0 center) of Kansas City, Mo., from collecting widow’s share of their late father s $5,000,00 estate to win he claims she is entitled as his common-law wife. Her mother, Mrs. Louise Cut. toid how year-old Tayim. a banker, wed her 27-year-old daughter with a six-carat ruby ring, acting as both f brw<* groom and pastor, and then took her on trip to Europe, where they are shown (below). The banker’s emk dren deny her claims, (CerUr^ifliff 1 Dr. Insiey and “Miss X’" tion by Dr. Insley and his assist ant, Dr. Bay, of a rubber tube down the child's throat through which to feed her while they sought to extend the esophagus to battle the troops of Kaiser Wil helm. with whom lie had been on friendly terms not so many years before. Returning from Ills Afri can hunt in 1010, Roosevelt made a really triumphal tour through Europe, lecturing at .vaTious cities. One of his stopping- points was Berlin, where he visited the kaiser. by the grafting of living th.na X-ray pictures had di-clo d that the esophagus led only to the collar bone instead of the :tom aeh. Savings, l oan Head %* W. Paul W'agner W. Paul Wagner of Canton, 0., has been named Ohio superin tendent of savings and loan as sociations, He has accepted thi appointment made by Alfred A Benesch who is to be Hie Eitate'fi new' director of commerce, Wije Preservers fe . ■ i. For tea stain on your linen, cover with sail, then with lemon jnF® a,ul place in the sunshine to dry