Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Feb. 6, 1940, edition 1 / Page 6
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■ DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Throw off 5. A volcano 9. To fray 11. Wild yellow plums 12. Winged shaped 13. Eskimo canoe 14 A metal 15 Supernat ural object 17. Sainte (abbr.) 4. Thrice imus.) r>. < luuio'shigh cst note 0. I'laythings 7. Tidiest 8 Questioned 10. French city 11 Frying pan 16. Friends 22 Devoutness. 2 i. Imply 24. African antelope 25. Shakes pearean character 29. Kind of green tea 31. A dog :>2. The pintail :>4. Amuse :?6. European kingdom .•>7 Strips of wood 40. Fat 42 Coin of India 44 Distilled drink i i" ■ i ■ j Vcslordi.v'« Answer 46. Unit of work 4S. An age n 2 r 12 I !W IB I / / 10 13 19 16 13 e> 6 7 II 20 21 22 23 24 2^> 26 27 123 •27 30 rn /> 3/ 32 Va 33i 34 1 ;_Tbl 37 36 5£ 2 38 1^2 /i3<? NO I 141 42 43 4S 46 47 46 44 r 50 Fx ir2 19. Nothing .70. Editor tabbr.) 21. Letter writers 26. Transgress 27. Spartan bondsman 28. Newt 30. A cap 31. Simmers 33. Born 35 Organ stop 37 Note of tli? scale ?S. Snare 39. Behold' il. Scraps of literature i 2-. Parrot . •. Umbrella part Ringworm ii'. Desert *9. Masculine name :50. Couples u. Metallic dross c,'' A number DOWN 2 Muse of pC'ctrv i r:e silk net '•"Ystt ibtttod by Ktns Features Syndicate, Inc BARCLAY ON BRIDGE » -»«. \U-.Lt OME .AYL'RS are ticked to ■ymn they pick up a hand k full of cop cards. Yet such i ds, which are so strong that your partner is unlikely to hold much of anything-, are among the •liost difficult of ail to handle deft ly in the bidding. It is sometimes almost impossible to find out whether the feu- cards of rank possessed by the plaver opposite you are really of any value at all. A 7 5 2 V 10 7 4 2 * Q J 6 5 Jb J 4 Q 10 9 f J65 4 9 S 7 4 *6 3 A J 4 V Q 9 8 3 ♦ K 10 3 *Q 10 9 I 4 A 8 6 3 f AK 4 A 2 A A K 7 5 2 i Dealer: South. Neither side /ulnerable.) South bid 2-Clubs to open this Jeal in a rubber game. North re sponded with the conventional 2-No Trumps. Then South bid 2 Spades, North 2-No Trump? and South 3-No Trumps. After East led the heart 3. South put down his hand with pride, expecting North to je more than pleased v. tih such an immense dummy. Poor North could count only six sltive tricks, however, his only .xi chance for »_-xtra ones being in clubs. After taking the first trick, he cashed the clut. tops and led a third club to East. When in again with the heart K, he led an other club to East, who cashed his heart Q and put declarer on the board again with a spade to the A. Thus a total of seven tricks were taken by the declarer, his six top tricks plus one more in clubs. Had North held even the queen and another club, with the suit divid ing evenly, game would have been made. But how can o. bidder find out such things ? Unhappy experiences with hands of this type have caused more and more players to prefer opening them with a minimum bid, in this case 1-Club, to find out if the partner has enough for a response. * * * Tomorrow's Problem ♦ A V A K 6 ♦J9853 4k A Q J 2 ♦ 9 7 4 —IT— A K Q 10 8 ♦ 8 7 3 . 6 ♦ A K 6 4 >' <4 V 9 5 *5 4 3 c ^ Q 10 7 1 *K98 ♦ J 5 3 2 V Q J 10 4 2 ♦ 2 „ * 10 7*6 „ (Dealer: East. East-West vul nerable.) What is the correct play at 4 Hearts by South on this deal if West leads his top two diamonds ? Lenten Diet Trims Figure for Easter By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.' LENT begins tomorrow The church orders it as a season of fu.st- i ir.g. Let those weak-kneed ones who can't stick to a reducing diet solicit the church's aid and set aside Lent for our 40-day reducing diet, j I will print a diet every day in this column all through Lent. It is dated the day before ss> the house mother can order in tuns. It is not: Dr. Cleadcning will answer i questions of g r.i'tal interest only, and then only through his column. ifastic—the time is long enough to |Aake it scientifically feasible. It is tilanced as to vitamins and miner Pi. The first effects should be felt n ten days. Anyone should lose 10 8fcl5' pounds by Easter. 1 f ■ First Day's DioS Here is the Lenten reducing diet range, one-half If teaspoonful butter, one soft-boiled egg, one cup coffee with one piece of sugar, one teaspoonf j1 of cream. h Lunch—Two grilled frankfurters or one lamb chop; one helping sauerkraut, string beans or cole slaw; two saltines, black coffee or tea with lemon. j.- Dinner—Glass of tomato juice, (•vegetable dinner—any one or two of jbjets, cauliflower, cabbage, broccoli, i-ewrrots, turnips, stewed tomatoes; $Wie slice of toast, one-half tea • spoonful butter, stewed apricots or ; pears (strain of? juice); one glass of milk (optional), black coffee or ; tea with lemon. Day's Calories: 1100 Treating Arthritis With Bile Salts What do conservative doctors j think of the treatment of arthritis < icith bile salts? The treatment is too new to allow of any definite pronouncement, pro .or con. The idea of the treatment began with the observation by Hench, of the Mayo Clinic, that when patients with arthritis devel oped jaundice, a prompt and dra matic relief of symptoms occurred. This was also true of certain eases of neuralgia, such as sciatica. About two-thirds of the patients were re lieved temporarily and about one third were less markedly but some what relieved. The relief lasted for varying periods, in some cases a month or two and in some three or four years. The average period of relief was four months. These observations fus is.--.heci an obvious hint for treatment and the use of bile salts for arthritis was begun. The best method of using the bile salts is by vein. Thompson and Wyatt, of Tucson, Arizona, reported this year on sev eral patients who were given injec tions of bile salts by vein. Relief in symptoms of arthritis occurred from this artificial jaundice as it did in natural jaundice. The relief lasts for several weeks and a second course of treatment results in an other period of relief. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS M. H.: "Will you ploase answer in your column and tell me if there is anything that will dissolve kid ney stones?" Answer; Nothing. D. L. M.: "Will enlarged tonsils affect the sight and hearing, and i3 there any danger of their becoming cancerated?" I Answer—Sight, no effect; hear ing, possibly. Tonsils are not sub ject to cancer. J. H.: "What is the cause and treatment of cold and sweating feet?" Answer—The cause is some dis turbance of the automatic nervous system. Treatment is by soaking the feet morning and night in a solution of formalin (tear.poonful to a quart of water), and by contrast foot baths—alternating dipping the feet in a bucket of very hot and then very cold water for 20 minutes morning and night. EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Clenileniisa has seven pamphlets which con be obtained l>y readers Each pamphlet sells for 10 rents. For any one pamphlet desired, send 10 cents in coin, and a self-addressed envelope stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Lugan Clendening. in care of this paper. The pamphlet* are: "Three Weeks' Reduc ing Diet", "Indigestion and Constipation". "Reducing and Gaining". "Infant Feed ing", "Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes". "Feminine Hygiene" and "The Car* of th« Hair and Skin". THIMBLE THEATRE Starring P OP b V - XYA REMAINED IN PORT \| ITWC WHOLE DAYS WREN yA WAS AAV AGE? , ' ThAA QldiHV, 1 DOME ft "AFTER TvwO DAV61 BCAME UESTLE^ I 6A\LED ABOARD A CATTLE BOAT AN'WAS GONE WEEN YEAR^r YA'LL DO THiE SAME, SON rT MO. / A4>A<lORLE*DS A HARD UFE. » WANT A LiTTLE WHITE HOUbE WITH ft 61PEEN ROOF AW ft G ARDINk \N\TK k RED RObE6 A'/HE lb MY POPPA, l(OLIVE-HEORT TO —v KNOW , Here's Your riat—What's Yo\j> t. " KTHE6t^>.,v'-^ ft BAILOR Cr_. -OPE YE, DON'T USTEN TO THE OLD 6jOAT IM616K1N *- np^V / VER Jl&T L\KE ME. \ / YALL6A\LTHE6EA€ ' ( T\LL MR. JONEb CHUCK4> \VA IN H\4> LOCKER^' ^=z~V fAWARDING \ _^\l^ [ WITH RED A . R06Ei! 70^3 BLONDIE r.crMfreii d s Ment office Maybe He Left His Car Running! By Chic Y OURg n 7" M L M * J WELL,TWAT'S If' ' nr>>p>...TUe:C?i='£ A" THE OLD HOME TOWN FMEYVE NEVER BUiL-T A MACRAE THAT COULP cheat ME !! stered U S Patent Of" ••• Yob KKOVV ' . • ' r. • \ <3ET the I :."'r ,nn; j HE KNCYV..T uWYlT: of EVERY c;::; r:"~,VAT ~r" ✓THERE WAS NO TRlTW IN TME REPORT T/W ROLPEN TITUS LOST MONEY /N A PATENT VENI/WO MACH/ME VENTURE COPYRIGHT. 19-10. KING FEATURES SYNDICATE WO"-1 COTT'S SCRAP BOOK , filtered U. S. Paten* <-><*«» By R. J, o •( < / 'fAMri&ftC ADVEN1l/ZE IN $rroHElf~ l£<HE Yep-m used io Describe -fe CATHEDRAL. OF SAlK< BASIL MOSCOW ivak *TT(£_ TERRIBLE HAd<i(e arcKme^t BLINDED £o •iKaT' tiE MI^Kf NEVER. PRODUCE MOUSE DEEP C MATURED) WEIGHT- 8 3 '4 Pounds 'iEA AMD ^OFr^ CON-fAlM -fREiAWL SflMLJLAMf-'Alii:: CAFFEINE BEv'Ali£l l<WAS DISCOVERS FIRST im CoF-FEE* A-' ?OUNP or dry Yea leayeg CON<A!NS ABOJ' -1VVICE Ai MU^ CAFFEINE Ai \ Pound of COFFEE BEAMS I'M CHEER-LEADED." ANYONE ELSE Ff20M THE" CLASS SEEN IN ? NOT LATCLV . - THEY SOON FOf2GErYA.!' THAT'S JOHNNY„ -» HONKlNG/BVE/'j feflarirrJ U % IT WAS SWELL OF YA TO DJZOpiN SEEIN'VOU DOES ME MOfSfcT GOOD THAN A WEEK IN THE COUNTRY..^ etta-you — BACK ? 7HOU6Hf ^lOU WEI2EGOIN' TO THE CLASS DANCE ? I CAMEBAC^ Ji, a<!? E«ENfi v*£c ~*-V THE GUMPS—I " JAINTANCE BE FORGOT? r-, -rr^SlI !) MAZiE, HONEY- £ § SEEK* THINKiNe THlN(bS | OVER-WERE MOT SQ £} VoiAMCa AS WE USED TO J g ® EE— iNE PROSPERED / A SkHCE KW-ER-tARLX / px days- and tou ,—/ IPk, have NOT-^/^'f. THAT'S RltjHT, HORTEHSE — all. \ HANETD show fer NW YEARS OF TDiL iS A SET OF OVER-Sl£ct ^ BUNIONS- ■ v. >
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 6, 1940, edition 1
6
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