ll.' *- ' . ...J M Mag 1 / "TO HELP BROOD THE V of Th/aT they \ I THt. FEMALE FROM H she *>o -they ma/ do / ;!V \..^^Some^o^Th el WU CftN QF-F A \r JOW. number OM ft dial PHOHb- VI!TM.QLIU pIrtUUQ AKiSWELH. ~rc MO Rr-LOW Copyi. 'lit, 1935. by Central Pros, THIMBPE THEATRE—STARRING POPEYE No Future, Rut What A Past By E. C. Segar n GOT TO S. " P7 i.u/N / BLfVST IT-V :fl Kf\HNUJf\N6 ( DEf\R 6HE6PS,) I 7/jSp •c SHEEPS BELIEVE UMV \ ( 1 &UOfV/S }• » UJf\NTCtt(\TO HkVEv—’/M, : J l*T AIM'T \ lU/YTI /^v \ Fo«geW o : FMTHiNME-rS p f II (AIN l Wnhl kOL, i v / |'t. i §§l ki i (i used to v IT'S WVW I'M kkt^ik kfe= if jj|f~ IE BIG SiSTER by LES FORGRAVE W c .\o' a-t -to \ I but ww"swe lif oom't \wor^v!l Hma'-jost |'Vm!hovj i ufe| A \ * J///M ■ I ES7EM! ARRT-JAU B\)EA l&I/A // ,, ' j j L ETTA KETT by PAUL ROBINSON EfT(\ dna 0>& crau: grc rac/n-0-io stand izisht here / f,rv tpditn " \ \BlN\ r' U /N AN EMERGENCY )M| t/y f$ ' Luke -mis-vs/Epy P # S^ YES T I. ' ’ _ * THE- BOYS, move "THE. HAMMOCK cPx. : ROM DNDER-THE TREES OVER to those &r4v ..PMENT POSTS - SHE LEFT IM A HOFF tEg v> ST/ANJi-Er CCNTRAU PRe toii/iA OFFSPRING* pqr- One. carried in a pouch. £Pj! TODAY’S DRAWING LESSON Thousands of years ago the wombat is supposed to have been as large as a rhinoceros and a very alarming beast. Today, however, he rather resembles a tiny bear and is quite harmless He feeds on grass and occasionally leaves his home in the forest to visit cul tivated fields. The wombat delights in sun baths dVul usually makes a hollow at the foot of the tree outside his burrow where he basks - for hours. But he is a nocturnal animal and a solitary creature, too. 11l Fitting Dental Plate f Found to A ffect Hearing By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. NEW DISEASES are not easy to aiscover. While it is the ambition of every doctor to do so, it is tliwart ‘ ed by the industry of our predeces sor s—p r a c t i cally every dis ease that flesh has been heir to has been de scribed. About the best we can do is to find a modern cause for a new set of symptoms. “Tennis elbow” was not known in the days of the Phara ohs. The “automobile spine” was not known to our g r a n d f athers. Dr. Clendening Sk I n eruptions from new cosmetics or digestive up sets from new drugs, all come under the heading of new diseases from modern conditions of living. Just recently we have another. It took real genius, I think, to connect ear symptoms with badly fitting den tal plates. I am very proud of the fact that a medical man from my own state made this observation. The set of symptoms to which I refer is due to the loss of molar teeth (the hack teeth) or to badly fitting dental plates. The remarkable thing Is that the symptoms which rny St. Louis col league describes, would be so likely to be passed over or ascribed to other causes. The symptoms consist of mild deafness or impaired hearing. Improved at once by inflation of the Eustachian tubes; dizzy spells re lieved in the same way; tenderness PAGE SEVEN over the jaw joint: headache on th« .side and hack of the head behind the ears, increasing toward tlife end of the day. There are all due to the fact that when the back teeth are lest, there ir an "overbite" which causes pressure of the lower jaw hore against the nerves of the face and the soft structures containing the Eustachian tube, that infbortant part of the ear structure. Ea&ily Corrected The condition can easily be cor* rented by proper plates, giving great relief to those afflicted in this way. The ear symptoms observed, be sides initialled hearing continuously or with intervals of improvement, consist of a stuffy sensation of the ears, more marked about‘meal time; a low buzzing sound in the ears and sometimes a snapping noise while chewing; dizziness, dull pain around the ears and sometimes very severe attacks of dizziness. All these ure relieved by inflation of the Eusta chian tube. The Eustachian tube is a canal which goes from tlie middle car to the throat. It allows air to pass ill and out of the middle ear, without which arrangement the ear drums would not be able to vibrate on the reception of sound waves and we would not be able to hear. You can demonstrate your own Eustachian tubes by closing your mouth, pinching your nose closed and forcing out your breath; you feel your ears become full from the air going up the Eustachian tube It Is easy to understand that If the tube is mechanically pressed shut there will be impaired hearing. Physiclafls who are unfamiliar with the condition would do well to consult the Journal of the Missouri State Medical association. May, 11)43, page 184.