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PAGE SIX Republicans, Royalty in Last Tribute to King Albert Heads of republics walked side by side in sorrow with representatives ro P t ‘ s reigning houses behind the casket of Albert, King of the Belgians, as the funeral cortege wound through the streets of Brussels, l-elt lo right above are; President Albert Leßrua (to* kat) cf Fiance; As Leopold 111 Entered His Capital ■aa ~ - : y Twenty-four hours after it had bid its final farewell to the departing King Albert i, Belgium echoed with cries of "Vive le Roi” for its new monarch, King leopold 111. Above, the new king is shown entering the city of Brussels to take up the sceptre laid down by his father. Mounted on a lively steed, he is pic tured enteiing the gates of the castle to be crowned ruler us the Belgians. (Central Press) ■'Men of Harlech” Hunger-March to London £ * p ___ jj jjjjj Book Written for Schools Upon Effects of Alcohol By LOGAN CLENDENINC., M. D. ALL BUT TWO of the stales- Arlzona and Wyoming—have laws requiring the teaching or the effects of alcohol and other narcotics upon the human sys- Dr. t'letldenlng tem In all schools supported wholly or In part by public funds. In order to supply teachers with In* fortTiatlon to car ry out this In • true Mon. Dr. Haven Emerson of New York has published a little book called “Al so ho I—lts Ef fects on Man." The book starts out with a defl nltlo. of alcohol, the Ingredient of •II Intoxicating beverages There are many alcohols, the one found In most beverages being ethyl alcohol. All the alcohols are poisonous, hut some to smaller degrees than others. Ethyl alcohol Is probably the least poison ous of the entire series, although there Is some question about UihL Alcohol In minute amounts Is said to occur as the result >f bacterial changes In Che carbohydrate foods la th« body. Very delicate testa of brain substance Os healthy per- sons who have not used alcohol and have been killed suddenly by acci dent, have shown that alcohol Is pres ent. The amount la approximately 0004 per cent tn the brain, .0025 per cent In the liver and .004 per cent in the blood. Is alcohol a food? To the extent thal It may serve as fuel to the body, it Is. It Is not a food In the sense that it can be stored and used after wards. hut It can be used immedi ately as a fuel food for the produc tion of energy, heat and work or the body. It Is not, however, either e necessary or an economical food. According to the well known phys iologist R. H. Starling, "alcohol l« not a good food for muscular work, and If taken this should be at such time and In such doses that it will have undergone practically complete oxidation before the time arrives for muscular exercise." EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlets by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending 10 centb In coin, for each, and a self-addressed envelop# stamped with a three-cent stamp, i to Dr Logan Clendening, In care of this paper. The pamphlets are: l "Indigestion and Constipation” “Re- I during and Gaining," “Infant Feed ' log," “Instructions for the Treatment f of Diabetes,” "Feminine Hygiene” . aad "The Care et the Hair and Skin.” HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, MONDAY, MARCH 5,1934 King Boris of Bulgaria. In the second row, Prince Henrv, consort ot Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands; Prince Olaf of Norway; the Prince of Wales, and Crown Prince Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden. Third row. Prince Charles of Sweden and Print* Nicholas of Rumania '(Central Press) Finest Gitt ' A v. ■ . Joan Bennett Markey It was the birthday of Joan Ben nett, screen actress, thus Dene Markey/ her writer-husband ana members of the Bennett fami y showered her with gifts. But jo Stork brought the “best ot ® » a baby girl. The daughter named Ueiioda, was born at a Los Ange - FtmU PENNSYLVANIA* RACE IN SPOTLIGHT • m mmmmM ,; JHn ‘ W ij n 1 -Amm iffOopop' ''' '''' W Mr WmS&m caH» *. jMwllil&llgSj ' I i MAfitßlfbUftC, ,-y^ Joseph j - --1— 1 - * \ “Roosevelt Republicanism,” one of the anomalies born of the New Deal, receives its first test in the Pennsylvania primary battle of Gov. Gifford Pinchot and U. S. Senator David A. Reed for the Republican nomination for the senate.". Senator Reed is a bitter opponent of the Roosevelt admin istration, while Pinchot is friendly to the policies of the president, and is expected in some political circles to receive the support of How Body Shows Remains Os Primitive Ancestors By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. IN CERTAIN snakes of the py thon family it is possible to find, on the under surface of the body, two 'lttle projecting points entirely dif < ferent from the Brest of the scales. If one were to dissect these out In a dead speci men. he would find that they were jointed to two bones and repres em the primitive hind of course, per fectly useless to the snake, and in most species of snakes limbs —_________ cannot b e found Dr Clendening a t all. They are. in fact, vestigial structures showing that snakes once had limbs. Man has a number of nucb vesti gial structures In his body. a re minder of his ancestry. During the development of a human being, of course, stages in the development of animals from simple to complex are seen all throur’ the course. The process starts with the union of two animals—one an amoeba, the other a tailed, movable infusorium. Later, we have a fish stage and In some people gill clefts tn the neck can be found which degenerate Into cysts, known a* “branchial cyste”. m ~ *kM t , t earju working g»Ufc.ia imtiaa •*** **** hit * Sox motu»jJ| Leopold Show* Grief Mllljt jßi King Leopold 111 Displaying his grief over the death of his father, King Leopold 111, new monarch of the Belgians, is shown at Brussels in this re cent close-up photo. Leopold succeeded to the throne when hi 3 father, King Albert 1, fell to his death while r'-ovntnln climbing. the administration. If he does, political leaders anticipate a com plication in the event Pif.chot wins. Joseph Guffey, Democratic leader of Pennsylvania, is run ning for the senate on the Demo cratic ticket, and, like Pinchot, is a supporter of Roosevelt. Which way the administration will throw its support, in the event Pinchot and Guffey oppose each other in the election, is troubling some Democratic politicians, . and are a real source of trouble. In the amphibian stage there la i in the corner of the eyes a little Vestigial revuiins ! of third eyelid. , individuals they are quite highly de veloped. Remindful or the amphibian aJsc is the structure under the tongue and. In fact, when the little ducts at this place become clogged up and a cyst forms behind them it i s called “ranula” which means “frog”. Reminiscences of later stages in the development are the third molar teeth, which are practically useless to us and the canine teeth which look so much like wolf teeth. The ridges in the palate are remi niscences of the third and fourth plates of teeth as seen la fish. EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlet! by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending 10 cents InYioin. for each, and a self-addressed envelop* stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of this paper. The pamphlets are: "Indigestion and Constipation," “Re ducing and Gaining.” “Infant Feed ing,” “Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes,” "Feminine Hygiene” and “The Care jf the Hair and Skin.** All Dated Up—For Dunking the California n ■ ~..., ■ i-111 Canera Wears Down Loughron With Bulk ■ __ Mksmsr / m K I? B|| . membrane which co r r esponds to the n :c* t i tating membrane most highly developed in birds. In man i this Is called the “plica semiluna ris”, and in some The terrific weight advantage which • Prirno Camera held over Tommy fLoughran In the title match held at piami had its effect on the Phila Conference Indoor Track Stars lilti CAPtiCOLES- " 'f " : W WEIGHTS, VI R.GI Ml A .. I Here are some of the stars of the three track teams which fought it out for top honors in the South last year and whcih with Maryland will head the brilliant field at the fifth annual Southern Conference Indoor Games at the University of North Carolina next Saturday, March 10. Entiries were in from nine of the Conference institutions today with a chance that the tenth would send a small group of stars, making this the first of the indoor meets in which every team in the Conference has com peted. Prosper .re for a corres pondingly large . brilliant fi«*ld in the other divisions of Ihe big meet, the Non Conference, freshman and scholastic. Duke won the indoor and Carolina the outdoor championship of to - ference last year, with Virginia nos ing Carolina nut of second place at the former and Duke taking second place over the Cavaliers at the latter. Two of the feature events this year wil be the hurdle races between Grover Everett of Virginia, who tied the world record for the 50-yard low hurdles at the Catholic u. this winter, and Franklin Abernethv of North Carolina, who is tin- Con ference high hurdler champ outdoors and who split honors with Everett in their races last year. Captain Bob Coles of Virginia, who is remembered as a star tackle on the Cavalier eleven of last fall, came within a half-inch of equalling the shot put record at the 1933 meet. The duel between Coles and Luthei vVi! liams, Duke’s sophomore big shot, is thought certain to produce a new mark in this event. Bob Bird, who captains the Duke teac will run the two-mile against Hill Dona.j of Washington and Lee, who deposed him as Conference cross coun try champion this year in another feature event. Odell Childers is Carolina’s star sprinter-broad jumper. The 60-yard dash will beature Childers with seve ral other football sprinters, including Earl Widmyer of Maryland, the ree ord holder, who holds one victory over Metcalfe, the national intercollegiate champion, and Tarrall of Duke, -who finished second last year. delphia challenger. Above the ch al j‘ pion is shown in a clinch with ran in the second round, brinflioK tremendous bulk into play when 1 1 closed in with his lighter oppc r ‘ cr ‘