THIMBLE THEATRE Starring POPEYE "3 T~7 T 77, 771 „
/hew) m ZX —VG>Rl.<=, HERE?^
by LES FORGRAVE
! V!P VUrv I mk*mmr ■SP’J 5^15 IT AUD I I q ut v\CTT ~(LaC> FACCfCC 1 llPUfflgMl -.aith, _J I g ZZ.
l iN UNT\L THE.Y SAFELX OUT & PF r~\ OvJ n MOA IHU . Hl\ b |j,
HAVE HADTIWVOF Tv4E \NAV |1 TOPWME EVSt'NHHR.B TWO FACtMT J I R A£ST ER SODP>; 1 ,| l|
TO MVSS BETH. f TyAEV LU SOONT FOR AM gif VAERE AMO \M "Tv4H IIP <STER -‘E
otva |
77 9 R - J - sC g n 1 THE OLD HOME TOWN by STANLEY
. \ / JUS? ;
r*?,} ,v, w Or window \V here, vmill be a* /(were, ooivr | Depot look
1 Poxes and) (“the way of the \ Wms flower set> m, sissy ;» ■
' I —'t' s' i tint Ij.l*l: i i*l a . £ r p. —£ »voio ji* ' '
Derived from an^lo- —V /-* pictures prisoners let the <SARDem club fiyupthe flower
SAXOK 'WORD HLAEFDICtE* 1 ' OF WORLD WAR DAW'S BERS A4ow HE ISEALI7FS mk n/ii t-at<-<=- *>7frNL£.'y
CHANGED BEHIND BARBED WIRE WMgM ITs Too late HIS Ml STAKE /
which meant loaf-maker COPVRICHT . „ 36 . CENTRAL ~ ' . ■ ""■»■■”»«»»-
■ ■■■"■■■ 'I *■■ ■"."”■ —"""*- 1,1 ‘ ■'" 1 " '■■ ■■■■> r i"» | '> '■■"■'■ i '■" mi"', i!■" ■' . t i-..^p l —■■■ ■ '■■■■ —'— ■■"■ .!■» a .*/■<-
ETTAKETT ( ? • by PAUL ROBINSON
B C lmJ= } ( VmiTHOUT VOU THIS place will Oe|' V\/ £lig^"J f* WHAT SAN.WE HAVE ATRIAL*")
AW -- I rJ A (3AI2DEN WITHOUr ROSES. X. A PUT, iNE-VNOULOMr CLICtC> p» ENc3ASE.HENr ? YOU IChiOW- j
V DON’r 1 J MAI2.I2W ME (SUAI2ANTEED s/ X I k/i I'/ JUST S£E IF WE CAN KEEP I v oU rtc 1
THE GUMPS —DON'T LOSE YOUR NERVE , BIM j
*3im^ee!^PjaS^l ¥ ap?ea^'nces/the°sea < 1 better bimbo 1
HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH MONDAY, MAY 4, 1936
DAILY CROSS WORD PUZZLE
\ 2 3 |jp ~A S -
3 0
—— -
. IS> j|pp is^
20 HP 3 "
24. 2LS 2& ' 27 2& 29
io ' 3I |||j 32
3-4- » ||p 3fe 37
38 39
I I I I I EH I 1 .|
ACROSS
I — Soft food for
babies
4 —A deed
6 —Mandate
9 —Border
ll To rescue
12— Loss
13— Bind
14 — A vase
16—An obstacle
18—Queer
20—A bone
22 Away
23 Indefinite
article
24 Overturn
27—To turn about
30—A protein
compound
contained
in pus
32—Indian
(combining
form)
31—A fossil plant
o'* the
earliest fos
siliferious
rocks
34—Cuts off
edges of
a coin
36—Mohammedan
prince
38— Sainte
t (abbr.)
39 Mimic
40— Assent
DOWN
1— A writing ,
tablet
2 Uphold
3 Scholar
5 A bay
6 Scotch lord
7 River in
England
\ntrlo-Saxon
letter <YV)
10— A large
• perennial
shrub
11 — Collection of
horses for
breeding
15—Dated
certificate!®
How Lack of Vitamin A
Affects School Children
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
MOST OF THE work on vitamin
deficiencies has been done on ani
mals and has been experimental in
nature. Under experimental condi
Dr.- Clendening
when the rat has been deprived of
Vitamin A, and have come to think, I
believe, that only these extreme ex
amples represent the effects of food
deficiencies.
We are coming, however, to un
derstand that under ordinary condi
tions of living it seldom happens that
a diet will be completely deficient in
any certain vitamin, but that when
there is a partial deficiency, changes
in the human body, less severe than
those which occur in experimental
animals, may result. Examples of
such studies are those which have
recently been reported from tfte Uni-
/tyOAH MIWSKUU- j
ViHAT'D Voo Fill IT 50
* vO y y\ full ? i cant;
v I
DEAR NOAH* IF THE CAB , \ .
DRIVER MISSED HIS )
DATE_ / WOULD THE TA*M y ' \ 1
MET-ER? geo vochosicA (_ OJV /))
OKLAHOMA OK LA. //\ ([ ,r CV &
DEAR. NOAH* IF THE! . -
FARMER'S OLD HEIN ~ X i
WENTONASTRIKE, \2^C^T
WOULD HEGOTOTHE 5, j;
MOUNTAINS TO GET - . , I I
HIMALAYA? o h clarvcson j jj j|lj|j \/Z4
AJA«.HVILLE / _ re_NN. I 1 11 tr‘l' r
- - - , •Hi 11 “ i
DEAR NOAH =HOW CAN ONE. c/ 00 Tva imk (
CHILD HAVE FOREFATHERS? LM Up— / ran
/OS£NS£
j
SS’. ■ Down
& fix, DEAR NOAH* if I MADE A
BET WITH THE ELEVATOR
Bov; WOULD HE TAKE - «
« *£. * *jc] AV*eSIU3H,CH*O.
DBArTi^H=TFvov7wEße'
HOT, AND THEN COOLED
OFF IN WATER, WOULD
4. - s , You BET TEMPERED?
*“ f ' FRANKUNPOX WEILKV, IOWA,
% . < ..... DEAR NOAH=-HOW MANY
V -, : l ' DEGREES IN THE ANGLE
® OF AN ANGLE-WORM?
-==T 1 ED. MERCEW QfICCN SPRING, w><). I
attached
to a bond
17—A little
toddler
IS—Often
(poetic)
19—Inside
21—Watch
secretly
23 —Furthermore
Answer to previous puzxle
c|a|b |o|o|s|e^r|a|m|
0_ B E R O Njll F A
R ~Wa QAtlt I C
R.|i l|| l_ v We]
[o IhToMhI ugh pjAln!
D_ U_ P J_ CA T 1 NG|
E «ASKsiANT
s H_2._u.JL v H_h H|§jl
w_i_t h|
ekkWFloklßMpk
versity of lowa on Vitamin A deft*
ciency in children. ,
Night Blindness Is Symptom
One of the symptoms of Vitamin
A deficiency is night blindness, but,
of course, this occurs only in ad
vanced examples of deficiency—com
plete absence of the vitamin from the
food. It occurred to. the lowa in
vestigators that less pronounced
grades of Vitamin A deficiency might
be detected by bringing the patient
into a dark room and determining
how readily they adapted themselves
to sensitivity to light. This test was
thoroughly checked, and it was found
that out of 213 children examined. 45
had sub-normal dark adaptation,
which was assumed to be due to a
deficiency of Vitamin A in the diet.
When this deficiency was corrected
by a complete diet and the use of
cod liver oil, improvement in the light
tests was marked.
Vitamin A is found in milk fat and
yolk of eggs, as well as in fish liv ( er
oils. ,
EDITOR’S NOTE: Seven pam.
phlets by Dr. Clendening can now ba
obtained by sending 10 cents in coin,
for each, and a self-addressed en
velope stamped with a three-cent
stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening. In
care of this paper. The pamphlet*
are: “Three Weeks’ Reducing Diet”
“Indigestion and Constipation", “de
ducing and Gaining”, “Infant Feed
ing’’. “Instructions for the Treatment
of Diabetes”, "Feminine Hygiene* -
and “The Care of the Hair and Skin".
tions it is pos
sible to remove
every trace of
a given vita
min from the
animals’ diet
and. therefore,
extreme grades
of disease have
been the rule.
Both the pro
fession and the
public have
seen pictures
of these ani
mals. such as a
large rat and a
small rat from
the same litter
PAGE SEVEN
25 Beleaguer,
ment
26 Masculine
name
28— Custom
29 — Foe
31—A store
35—Neuter
pronoun
37—That Is (Lat.‘