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‘SUPER CABINET MEETS WITH PRESIDENT ON PLANS ’* F?:’ - l - w ■ ■■! ■■■-,. M.. ill . -11. .1.1.1-- - - - "Y■!;iiia;wj. Ifr* - **. \ k ”■ c- w! ; *’* f I® A?* v- ? i W®* ’WiJ y-WWa < L&- $ W’L- ' ' > JMI ; ; shKe! f iwrßH g > fa a feHrl Jvii : y . > <>* j K i O : 7 j i HIL j io I ; tMHko p P > ' I ' ,?; w IrSl F » f : . feMaß - . ImHI I f ■ W ? w ISi ■ SK - Jif® H v <'-■^^WBaMSw. ’ I? ..Wjfei \ ■ „ >..i J ‘ | > l,ll ■'■■*»«,"■ ■>liwiii.'' 'iwii u' i*ii><S^r^^^^y^~-~’~ ;?xt ' ; ' H '* t «&’.:..,ii.,.,jff, i ’ ■'.'. ;«aiv,j;itf^g£ :: ;t -Y?^:'.- y.\is---- Secretary lekes Jones vl embers of President Roosevelt’s | aew “super-cabinet”—heads of all the federal organizations i formed to bring about economic betterment in the United States i —now n»«.:i with the president and the cabinet at the White m ' ' r* » jfc -~*<— Cyprus Temple, of Albany, N. Y., of which President Roosevelt is a member, is seen marching with th# 15.UUU Xobles of the Mystic Shrine at the annual convocation of delegates from every part of North America, on the boardwalk nt. Atlantic City. N. J. WHERE PATTERN’S FLIGHT ENDED ‘ - " ‘ ' . . .... ... .... : . Htn- is a \iew of Anadyr, remote •failing post in the Chukotka pen ,nsula of Siberia, where Jimmy Pattern crashed on his attempted DIRECT SEARCH FOR KIDNAPED KIN Daniel O’Connell IJan i‘ 1 O’Connell, left, and Ed- O’Connell, Democratic ° SBes of upstate New York, are :° Wn in Albany as they directed ‘e search for their nephew, John 0 Connell, Jr„ 24, victim ©f Secretary Swanson j House once a week. Here are j some important members of the I combined cabinet and recovery J organizations leaving the execu ■ tive offices. Left to right, Secre tary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes. who also is nublic works flight around Cue world. The town is situated on the Anadyr river near the Bering sea. Mat tern was renorted unhurt. Edward O’Connell kidnapers. The two brothers, though reputedly wealthy, experi enced difficulty in raising the ran som of $250,000 demanded by the youth’s abductors on threat of death- - - gENDERSON, r TN.C J. DAILY DISPATCH, FRIDAY, JULY 14 1933 1 Peek Secretary Wallace administrator; Jesse H. Jones, chairman of the Reconstruction Finance corporation; Secretary of the Navy Swanson; George N. Reek, head of the agricultural ad justment bureau, and Secretary o f Aericulture Henrv A. Wallace. (Central Press) Up in the Air '(i' ' Eg Jama* M. Cox James M. Cox, chairman of the monetary commission at the world economic and monetary confer ence in London, has a committee on his hands that will get no where. C_ The Americans have ta booed currency stablization plans for the present. The sketch above of the former governor of Ohio was made in London exclusively for Centra) Press by Major, noted caricaturist. Champ Life Saver •'I Kjf JSf ' ?•!••■§? Saving lives is the hobby of John Connelley. He drives a truck at night, acts as a volunteer life guard days in New York and in 25 years has saved more than 100 persons from drowning. He is shown just after hi 3 110th rescue, for which it ia expected he will receive aa other paedal, his 48th. Ziegfeld Associate Picks the Most Beautiful of All the Follies Legs j* Bomwmw KMnrcre 5 isu Bo**i HuPti;* Bernard Sobel, the college professor who became press agent of the Pollies and was an associate of Florenz Ziegfeld for ten years, picks these girls as the possessors of the most beautiful of all the lees that Two Divorces m Week ■nt ■ Bfr Hf IIP Mrs. Mary Stromberg In the span of one week Mrs. Mary Stromberg of Chicago lost her husband, got him back and then lost him again. She ap peared before a Chicago judge to request that a recent divorce granted . her husband, Arndt Stromberg, be set aside on the grounds she had not been in formed of a cruelty charge. The judge complied and they became man and wife again. The follow ing day Mrs. Stromberg was granted the divorce on the grounds Os desertion. prisoners. She Sought Adventure, Found It ci . " ELIZABETH -cXACOBSOTT Tireo of her prosaic job as typist in Brooklyn, IN. Y., Elizabeth Jacobsen, J 9, got her parents’ permission to see the world alone, went adventuring. She bad read a book about the annual grain “race” ol the last of the windjammers from Australia to England, went there and shipped as' the lone feminine apprentice on a Finnish bark, the first U. S. girl ever to participate in the race, which is not a sports event, out an «-ffort cf captains to beat each other to market. She did a regular .*,«> or’s work on the 100-day voyage. She’s back home, filling up ot. ice cram and chocolate, the things she missed most. iCoiiiral Fiissl Blaming Each Other A. C. Tawse (top), deposed warden of the District of Columbia peni tentiary at Lorton, Va., whose re moval started trouble among the prisoners. He was accused of be ing too lenient with them by his superiors, one of whom, W. W. Bar nard (below), Tawse blames for the tense situation among the danced and paraded in the most famous of all the Broadway revues ia its last decade. They were, chosen from among more than 1,000 pairs oi !! that were selected by Ziegfeld from among thousands of others. (Central Press) Modern Methods of Operating Shown in Medical Exhibition By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. TWO THINGS which struck me at the medical exhibit of the Cen tury of Progress were, first, the com p I e t e frankness with which the -■■■ Impossible at the has an exhibit Dr. Clendening showing the methods of diagnosis and treatment ©f diseases of the kidney and bladder. One chart was labeled “Blood in the Urine”, and a specimen of urine with blood in it was on view. A wax model showed the interior of the bladder, represented as containing a tumor which might produce blood, and attached to it were the kidneys showing stones in one and the lesions of tuberculosis in the other. Next to it was a similar chart showing the v causes of pus in the urine. Before the “transparent man”, a guide lec turing to a mixed audience, aged from 6 to 60. pointed out the rectum and its functions. Forty years ago such discussion would have been im possible. Even today the list of words which the movies tabu include most of the words in this paragraph and also the word “virtuous”. That the phenomena ol nature can be dis cussed frankly and openly before the general public seems a wholesome and progressive attitude. Evidence of the interest in medical history is everywhere abundant. 1 have space to (mention only a few of the exhibits. In the exhibit of the American College of Surgeons are wax models representing the great Orphan Takes Son’s Place jjjjjjji JgKj! IpL .■JHf • MM————■ »■■■■■■ i—. ■ M I n... Peter Chrjjstopoulis, 14, inmate of an orphanage in Omaha, Neb., has taken the place in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jean Strongs, of Paterson, N. J., left vacant when their 16-yeai’-old boy was drowned while'trying to save another. The Strengs saw Peter’s picture in a magazine, wege struck by his resemblance to their dead son, arranged to adopt bird. They are shown greeting him on his arrival. (Central Preset f PAGE SEVEN achievements of American surgery. The method of operating in colonial days is explained by a mode! show ing’Dr. Physick of Philadelphia am putating a leg without anaesthesia and without asepsis. The first suc cessful abdominal operation was done by Dr. Ephraim McDowell, a country practitioner of Danville, Ky. The administration of ether for surgical purposes was first publicly demon strated in Boston in 1846. Both these historic scenes are shown in this exhibit. Next is the clinic of the late Dr. John B. Murphy of Chi cago. I remember those clinics well. The wax model is startlingly life-like in its representation of the great sur geon. Last is the scene of Dr. Marion Sims, the American surgeon who put the surgery of the disease* of women on a scientific basis. Other notable achievements of th# century are shown in the American Medical association's exhibit. The American physician, Beaumont, es tablishing the physiology’ of diges tion. The discovery of germs by Pasteur, the French chemist, and their role in the causation of disease: the discovery of the X-ray by the German physicist. Roentgen: the dis covery of the insect method of trans mission of disease by the American. Theobald Smith; the use of radium in cancer and the introduction of In sulin for the treatment of diabetes. The English contributions to med ical progress are best seen in the ex hibit of file Wellcome laboratories of London. These include models of the house where Jenner first did vaccination against -smallpox, Joseph' Lister using tne carbolic spray for the fifst operations with antiseptic surgery. Sir James Y. Simpson and his associates experimenting with the inhalation of chloroform. Sir Patrick Manson overcoming tropical diseases. Ttalv iias a magnificent exhibit of her proud record. Probably the greatest contributions to modern medicine and surgery have come’ from Italians.