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MAX TO WED GERMAN FILM BEAUTY ; ■* yss- v• -• ■; '•••' * • /■ \. / \ j|| Though he has repeatedly said he planned never to marry, Max Schmeling is reported by a Ber lin, Germany, newspaper, engaged to wed Anna Ondry. German film THEIR TIFFS MARK MORGAN PROBE Bickerings between Ferdinand Pecora, chief counsel for the sen ate currency and banking com mittee, and Senator Carter Glass, of Virginia, a member, have en livened sessions devoted to nrob .SETS 6,000 MILES AS HIS GOAL 1 Y~g if '$ s& —• VBh|§ B *** Mil These are the latest photos of General Francesco De Pinedo, Italian air hero, and the plane in which he hopes to _ break-.the Good Gardening!^ Celery Blight By DEAN HALLIDAY Central Press Garden Expert AMATEUR VEGETABLE garden ers who want the pleasure and profit o? growing their own celery, must be warned that It Is frequently affected with blight when grown in the home garden. Weather conditions play an important part in the initiation of either early or late blight, both of which are favored by high humid ities and rainy periods. Early blight is usually more preva lent in the warm weather of mid summer. but seldom destroys the crop a« does late blight which be comes most serious with the advent Anna Ondry star, in July. The former heavy weight champion ie now in train ing at Lake Swannanoa, N. J. ( for his fight in New York, Julv 8. with Max Baer. j ing the transactions of the House 1 of Morgan. Questions were pop i ping thick and fast when this in i teresting study of Pecora was | made; inset is Virginia’s Senator i Glass. world’s distance flight record. Top, the ship in the air; below, De Pinedo at the controls, in New York. Asia is his goal. of cooler nights in late summer and early fall. These diseases are most easily con« trolled by prevention. For this ns» son one should start treating the nlants in the seed-bed and continue treating in the field at weekly or 10- day intervals until the crop is nearlj ready for harvesting. A 5-5-40 Bordeaux spray usuallj gives the most efficient control, but a 20-80 copper-lime dust will serv« nearly as well if properly prepared and applied. . This dust mixture is made up dj thoroughly mixing 20 parts of mono hydrated copper sulphate wl * h ! parts of a good Trade of fl j® sh ’ . drated lime. A fresh lot should * ; made up for each application. ' HENDERSON, (H.C.7 DATLY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1533 1 Dead End Street t iE? '< itlh' vv t jnHBHBB' I:. • MH AII fl " BOSV i ¥ '*■ > S A ; -- vr ffflWßlw ”'' ■*'■/■ :?'■'■ • M I H 'fHI H. HiV ?t Mi .* f .'. 'IM-.;i \ V -> a WMBMBMaM - #■■ 8110 t -iBBw OOpWEOffii r |- '%W • ■ \ -- wife* ' *=>t, 5 ■ |B§%|§,. •. ™fe|j " ><HWh ; .i&MWSMBMKmIIm r mjl / M|W?" L ii ' y Wf IWwK i?'ft ?k ,f feh?- wlllKS S^^Hj. ■ gl' ~.MUI -*' ! 7 /.uMmHM9Bi n lsl» O »*§& -.■ r 6v.w t BIwHB wSwwß h '■ ■ Bl v ' If r■ kHH ¥’ 9EQM@MaHH » ilwßlr--; t?. /-fe SBH i \ '-H Hl ?W- ■ ""• &-4 v * Iwgsßß / \ MlWMMMWWM|ft3ißKife^>c-. ■• &■’Hii< ! • Bi-vHWIwf \M i 'A'• feM -’ ■■ U>?4i /;-'--^a<Mß KMBM 4fM ji? ■ -‘■■EitstggjK ■■■ t'i- ~ ~y^ ? '■•*‘ e ''r; l '-<- - r * • ''' J ' ' - ■ ■ I- -~' 1 Cars Being Built at Worlds Fair |BF z WplS b; .^F*-’ . v’ ’ bW /. - lllji :p ' : ' 4 j^ x VjyyMO KiwSP • IfiiilF S'-"'I ■ ‘^<T r I fj»® ' "“J 4®B X I 'PI *3lih 1 1 W m' 1 ' W>, 'Ww-I tffe L«j wrlW nrnf Ms 3||k "•' <wßoas|sr ’- " iffifip Illi I •i z% wliwt x rHH «»|X'2 ./ / SHsIHi ' ’ if §ttwe«R«^Rßs*ss3ssassss22sSfisssaeaficti&feswß»sasa223»®r23K , Millions of people will have their first opportunity to see an automobile being built, when they visit this mammoth room where the Chevrolet Motor Company will assemble “Master Six” coaches and coupes in the special Genera! Motors Building at “A Century of Progress” exposition. On the left, Fisher bodies are being fabricated on a “J” MARLENE’S ATTIRE SHOCKS PARIS jdlplr* Jm jp ~ |Wlß|ir ** ■ ' ■’* nnfs ■' mm . |i| d iliillii'n'i'ifi 111liiiiiViiiIWIHI i^j_j_ J.I / These trousers are attracting a lot of attention to Marlene Dietrich in France but, it is expressed in hisses, rather than handclaps. The French prefer to have Marlene s beautiful legs concealed by mod ish gowns rather than trousers and. on her arrival at tbe Gare St. Lazare, Paris, above, they hissed and booed until there was no mistaking the fact that they didn’t approve of the mannish at tire affected by the film star. She is on an European holiday before returning to Hollywood to make another film.- ' \ *■?* ’ '• f -4*;.* r " '[V * 1 shaped line and on ihe right, Chevrolets are being assembled from the bare frame to the completed car, ready to be driven out of the building under their own power. Note, in the center of the photograph, the body being swung from the end of the Fisher line over to its place on a Chevrolet chassis. Visitors may purchase cars built here and drive them home. Wife Preservers la An angel food or sponge cake should be pulled into pieces with two forks or broken with the hands so that the tjne texture may not be Injured. If you do not like the ragged effect of this method of sep arating the pieces for serving, saw gently through the cake. ANNOUNCES SURPRISE TRANSATLANTIC HOP ATTEMPT Jimmy Mattern, noted flyer, has announced a surprise cransatlan- ■JLwmy Surgeon Experiments On Man’s Digestive Organ By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. JUST A HUNDRED years ago there was published at Plattsburg, N. a little book which is the greatest American medical classic. | Its title is, "Ex , pertinents, and author was W'll surgeon of the United States gun on the 6th of Dr. Clendening June. 11 years before, when a young French-Canadian, named Alexis St. Martin, was shot in the abdomen by the accidental discharge of a shotgun. The accident occurred in the pioneer community of Fort Mackinac in northern Michigan. Di Beaumont, a young army surgeon, was the only physician available to attend the injured man. In those days before aseptic sur gery, and before anaesthetics, it was predicted that St. Martin would die. It was hardly believable that the out come could be otherwise. But to everyone’s surprise he recovered, bearing, however, the result of his experience in the form of an open ing into his stomach. The edges of the stomach had grown to the edges of the abdominal wall, and tlie inside of his stomach could be seen and felt when his upper abdomen was ex posed. He was known to the end of his life, which occurred 68 yearn Brothers Plan Hop to D oland * ' ’ ? t * j|j| { IP * ' The latest of the current crop of would-be trans-Atlantic fliers, the brothers Benjamin (left) and Joseph Adamowicz, of Brooklyn, N. Y., are pictured beside the Bellanca plane in which they will attempt a Bight from New York to Warsaw, Poland. They are now tuning up their machine and are confident of attaining their goal. Envoy to Argentina Bf - - gzfe |||l|||g|l Mpßpl| MjMffim ffl atSggsaE Alexander W. Weddell, of Rich mond, Va., who has been appointed U. S. Ambassador to Argenti*tjrtf>y President Roosevelt. The newyen voy served in the consular service in Great Britain, and for years was consul-sreneral in Mexico. I tic solo flight attempt to Europe I 1 from Floyd Bennett airport, New 1 PAGE SEVEN later, in 1880, as “the man with the 1 lid on his stomach.” Many young doctors then and now would have missed the opportunity which presented Itself to Dr. Beau mont Instead, however, ot consider ing St. Martin a nuisance, he was In spired to use him as en experimental animal to study the action of the di gestive juices of the stomach. For years he carried on experiments such as tying a piece of string to a piece of meat, inserting it into the hole In St Martin’s stomach, and pulling it out afterwards at varied intervals to see how far digestion had proceeded. He proved by these experiments that tlie stomach secretes a definite digestive juice. That it digests prac tically nothing but proteins—meal, eggs, eta That tiie reaction of the stomach contents is acid. Ur. Beau mont. with the aid of Dr. Dungti son. of the University of Virginia, and Professor Killiman. of Vale (both chemists) proved that the acidity was due to the presence ot hydrochloric acid. He proved that the gastric juice is secreted in re sponse to the appetite—to ths smell and taste of food, and to the pres ence of food in iHe stomach. Familiar as these statements are to us, they were fresh ami particular at the time they were reported. Up to a hundred years ago no one physician, physiologist, anatomist or specialist—had any idea exactly what was tlie cause of tlie many sen sations in and associated with the stomach, of which patients com. plained. Considering the Immense relief that has resulted to the mil lions of sufferers from dyspepsia over the entire world, they should observe tiiis year and this month In some fitting way. That St. Martin lived to the ad vanced age of 83 is an indication that people get along very well even with I a damaged stomach. U. S. Senator at 79 William il. Thompson William H. Thompson of Grajpd Island, a former Nebraska s!u* ‘ preme court judge, goes to Wash ington to fill the unexpired term .'’ of the late Senator R. B. Howell, s He is severttv-nine years old. York. Mattern is shown above inset, with the plane poised. j