Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Dec. 2, 1938, edition 1 / Page 7
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DAILY cross word puzzle ft? h WX’X hi n sf. i" r §- l' 6 n gp~h- I'lr W~zz mSS ?p— --jrzz%--~%5% —y% 3? HO 77/ HI " & & H? 3 ACROSS 23 —Reacted ' 26 —Short poem 28—Guided 30 —Dart 32 The (old form) 33 High in pitch (music) 35—Compensa tion for profession al services 37—Indian prince 39—Rage 41— Identical 42 Fashioned 43 Plunder I—Crush into p ulp s—Cheeped 10— A fancy 11— of a tube 12— Perfume with odors 14— Particle of negation 15 — Likely 16— Seventh note of the scale 18-Cease 20 — A deed 21- used to form feminine nouns DOWN 8— Caressed 9 Edema 13—Engrave with </orro sive fluid 17—Kingdom of Europe 19—Esker (geol.) 1— Isinglass 2 Proficient 3 Dispatched 4 Possesses s_Symbol for plumbum 6- period of time 7 Greek god of love BARCLAY ON BRIDGE By Shepard Barclay “The Authority on Authorities” CONSIDER YOUR TASK YOUR PLAN OP play depends tartly upon the height of the con jct What would be the sole pos de chance to make a three spade contract may be utterly wrong when you are playing for only two spades. Then you may be able to sacrifice a trick on a safety play which makes the success of the contract a sun thing or very nearly one, ♦9B 4 3 * ¥52 , . ♦Q4 3 2 IWm - ♦A 8 2 4 Q J 7 n 4k 2 VKJ9• ¥ A Q 8 7 4AJ7 6 v ‘ E 4KIO 9 8 *QJIO s 4 7 6 4 3 4 A K 10 6 5 ; ¥1064 3 ' * V ♦ 5 "y. •••> 4. ♦ K 9 5 v;. (Dealer: South. East-West vul nerable.) South bid 1-Spade on this deal, West passed- and North bid 2- Spades, which ended the bidding. West led the club Q, which de clarer won. He then cashed two rounds of trumps. Next came a heart lead. West won and then Copyright, 1938, King Features Syndicate, Inc. Happiness Is Up f To Optic Thalami Kese Groups of Ganglia in Brain Are Cepters for the Co-ordination of Sensation Slogan clendening, m. d. JlyP exam ine a series of brains in? J oWer in an ascend thew e to man » we nd that in Is ?iv o er forms tba to P °* the brain nervonJ 1 over „ to large masses of *ithlre ha which have to-do he ar i ach t j nng3 aa smell, vision, Tliehiiv and m °tor co-ordination, tonriio r you the more these it jg jf ffi ara covered over by real— but we S * find a word for ifc » When Vo 1 Ca ( .. lt “thinking” tissue. the< 'thfnki T f°» i° the . human brain, °n ton anAl t ssue 1® a great mass do i d the ganglia that have to slmo ' rt tad CL are t her e just the same, toour hann? POrta P t and necessary Ve Prob P an m ’ SS they are » t oo * You P gro bab y r i ever heard °f one of halami °/v ?'ha—the optic Hpinesso'i he lfe » lib erty and upon one of you de " »Ptic thalan.i h mtact ness of your Co ordinate Sensation ?® VamfX 0 T e u cribe just w hat of sens Tbey r «P c ®i ve ina- Pleasure tho ®« and discomfort and fc nthe yrel a v han S ea of state, S ln , the higher h* 111016 discrinS 0 lgher centers if there Por ln 1H a disorder of the l 20—Dipthong of Latin origin \ 22—Peers < \ 23—8e1l tower of a church 24 Shift 25 Termina tion of the past tense 27—First note of the scale 29—Blaze 31—A river duck 33 Partly open 34 Plural pronoun 36—Evening before a holiday 38—Viper 40—Man’s nickname Answer to previous puzzle h-ua ER A S pli .L TTCTpj r oraJAyKtalftc lul [c L E. hEma|nJtJßl]eJ7l £ NpEEjsmrjßlAjTj A G a| 1 NaßLlElAlctol t|e|n|eltMllelt[hTei Copyright. 19J8, King Features Syndicate, Inc cashed his spade Q. As a result, South lost three heart tricks, a dia mond, a club and a trump. Declarer should have attempted to set up hearts-'before drawing trumps. Had he played that way, he would have lost only two hearts and a trick in each of tftd other suitdL Had he been playing for a 3-Spade contract his procedure was correct, as finding the trumps divided was the only possible chance to moke his contract As the cards lay, he would have gone down two, however, * • • Tomorrow's Problem - H *AK Q J ■. 4 J 8 6 4 * • + 10 6 3 4 9 3 n 4k • ¥9743 w J ¥B6 5 2 4Q9 5 3 w * 4AIO 7 2 4A Q 7 s " 4K9 8 4 4 K Q J 10 B’7 5 2 m ■; ¥io 1 ■ - 4 K •4J 5 2 (Dealer: North. East-West vul nerable.) > What is the correct -defense . against South’s contract of 4- l Spades? thalami, the patient says, “Some thing is happening to me; I am be ing hurt”, instead of, “You are stick ing a pin into the back of my hand”. The usefulness of the thalami probably lies in the absorption and sorting out of sensations. We are constantly having more sensations than we -can handle. The thalami receive all these and classify them and adjudicate them. If they art important, the. thalami send them up to the big boss. The cerebellum does the same sort of thing on the motor side. To my way of thinking, the cerebellum is the most marvelous organ in the hu man body. It is the only one that is absolutely perfect, and woe be unto you if you lose thegucoroipgof your cerebellum. Here is what the cerebellum does. Tou are sitting in your chair read ing this newspaper. You decide to toss it on the chair nextJo*you, and with uncanny accuracy it lights ex actly on the seat of the chair. If you measured the exact distance, the weight of the paper and the amount of muscular force required to throw it there, and then proceeded on the basis of your mathematical calcula tions, the chances jure your attempt would be an abysmal foflurt.,,/Bufc the cerebellum.doesaU thiscaloolat ing for you and the result is perfect. It is, you see, a combination of eye, equilibrium, awareness of muscular control and the balance of the body in space. All of the elements are centered and co-ordinated in the cer ebellum. THIMBLE THEATRE Starring PQPEYfc » For Hitting A Lady Regiiteied U. S. Patent Office.. By LES FORGRA ! p cleaned os. orawa o«hes x lept V I VBw! and murk's anuooesL t\vjs\ i ukes N CRAXV LIKE SRE TO I VNOOLObYT A OOiE ) CLEAK4 OM VAV BEO SOOPTEK) AtAO Wim BuT SOT XO BE T&OSUX XO / 1 A\N‘T OTT-OW vt! T - LL SSE ABOUT OAT, TOO, — t m THE OLD HOME TOWN Registered U. S. Patent Office By STANLEY 1 ; — ll VHEISES THE BooksN l A' ll \\ ,// /You FOLKS OISDEEER. 'v ( - —- IS, \II/') ‘1 , ( EACH ONE JUST SIGAJ ) FAMILY SECRETS WILIIOUI X J Copr 1938, King Features Syndicate, fnc., World rights reserved. |i-A-38 w i i.i ii i mini, mini ■ i n ■ FAKETI y X By PAUL ROBINSON aW HATS THE IDEA OF HIM 1' ' sIN A JAM ? J f PLE’NTV/ I'M ENGAGED) IN THAT CASE I DONT S a PARKIN6 HEI2E 1 ? VOUfeE J >/' —* <! TO DICK, HCS SOI2E J “SS? ANYTHING TP P° BUT i - r , - J, j ; ■. ■■—■■■■ \ '’’ 7 : •• 4 ‘ THE GU MPS THE MEETING a—. .—— mtmmLrnmmmm ■—— (cqcycct PIKiCH 1 NICE W \ AAA ANDQEW 6cOT la/\Y'L n —P lieuten- hajiß#Mt OE I him AWAY B fo*. m V HEBTOEESOtf, (U. CL) I>AItY IDISPATCH FRTOA y, 2, 1938 SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK _By R. J. SCOTT .ar! .. . Peru •S'fAMP a flesh-eaTin<; plaht (7\>~rr* stk>w? K ROAP CAN BE. MADE “so ' MAPOFSOMEOF EAf SAUSAGE.-* 77 c/ , co ukYry'^ MA*fURAL FOOD 15 IKSECTS7'_ WHICH BYEXUDIM4 I*ESS OH ARE AMON<3 A SUBS-TAHCE DAY -<HE HI^HES*T Gopr 1938. King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved 7 in -the world PAGE SEVEN
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 2, 1938, edition 1
7
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