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PAGE SIX Why i’itvuniottia Is Different From ihat of 25 ) ears Ago ti, LIKiAN CLENDENING. M. D. E.VKL'N S!’!;i\(; parti, iilut l' rhe j.f io. 101 i "•('i: m 11 u \ miV.-iton.- It U'mfi f(' ii. tvori- so than n . - '■>* 4!\t I’ti ii?j ip v.up ril, v > R' < :/ U Lfc.- it WEgSWy* .<j^A: • * Dr. Clendenin& I i iif j ni, il t ll .1 II gll 111 Vs 1 people. I helic.", ■. .ret i but mrhiu ‘he lost tew y ir- ii). so-called old - aimer a a.- not he. it with .)£, ‘it. 11. '"'l . ttys wr hiiv. made greai impvov.- n*nt in our .no . m l . .u.i hen 11 It .mring the >•. i:.i r It i- obnMe that the higher > 11 .•: i<■ tn*t ..i eitmonin and respirator' mfe. ti.uis in the spring itS".i to " due to t .. fact that the food snppix m n the wintet time was liabx to he nionotoiion> and fresh foods and i'o. s with vita ■mins, sueli os \ 'aimn \. "hi. It ten to Increase resistan. . to mt'e.-rion. were lacking n« tl .ii.-i \t the en of a considei .If. sti.-uh of ihis, -! ■. body was in a poor . ondi on oi r. distance. and with the nit ■ vnt.i snows and thaw- of -prim*, ini'cti «nsii.\ invaded At any rate, tl o ioe deo. of :.n --inonia certainly is !■:>.«*; r. p ary and March t' it m\ >t;vu time. '1 lie eha i act. r ,n 1 1 . *ir.rti monia which we ee nowadays i> somewhat different than it we •;:> years ago Wimn u• •onia" then • >. • : Go to Court in Farm Fight ' jfcT ' J "*’s2s4 "■'■>* $ » ..< ** I l * < ■ v : JL*Bk ~il 2i :’; I j JI ■Mllliir * : " -vfe -a fflffiMHl lwraßi i %* vA vtt : * c*V > r 'v - •• lli»H v I lIM tim i ':•••' •;» KiiA f9X§tm Wf« : r w : « K l|mpj§ &S9g|[ M Br v : '4>:^y^' : • J» Wk.* : WW nK;3|K -^1 it roup ot farmer- who have gone to court at Harrisburg, Ark., to obtain injunction a•; a ,i ■_■ landowners from evicting them, in fight of newly tormed .riomhern i > t Farmers’ Union for recognition of demands for A •narccror.per-,. .I! «r* Ward H. Rodgers/left, FERA vvoyher ,<cOn tneu’d oi anarch'. ;.: \,i.rd Tree, Ark., for speaking in advocacy of the movement, am; il. J,. Mitchell, secretary of the union. Healthy Body, Good Habits | Aids to Adolescent Youth U> LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. •*.\h VUI I: IMG GROWS i;p". is artii lo I,y Or. Josephine H Ken yon in 'hr limitary issue of a nation al macur/ine, vhu h contains some \ ery sensible ad- ; Dr. Clendeulng it e can be ap pealed to through tiie highest ideal item and through his inclination to ■itc’-o worship. Tt is the lime when parents need to live at their best, for their children are watching thorn i»vith their insight and great capac ity for imitation. \s someone has wisely said, ‘Character is caught, not taught.' “Growing boys need to balance strenuous activity with rest. It often taxes the ingenuity of the physician anti the entire family to find the rig'llt psychological approach. Host. Is not necessarily complete quiet, it. often results from a change in body * position, in occupation, or in interest. .Vo one rule works for all. Watch your boy and see what refreshes him •The health hazards for this. • of rap!* growth arc accidents md communicable diseases. Rroic'-t bun frori* accidents as t'a, as you can |>y :caching him >o usi jink main aad • •mill ’urt .'-cure, b 11 <;o not hedge him about with a uon?o oi fear L’uqucstioaably this difficult period ••*••• •.' . a-, w hich ran a e Unite cotu’M #.* :iho in T to 1 1 days, and terminated ahnipl l\ This v*s ti e so-called p.UMI tMOTI !M . N.iv.ida.'s We so* a somewhat dif ler.'Ui '> i>e A l.icl, docs not riineirner as short or as definite a coarse. II has ilu dinraotcristu s of a somewhat prolonv '.! Level', with local signs ir. tin tunas mj bronchial mhes i.t is generally c a lied “hmneho-puiip nti'iiiti" "r "bronchial pneumonia". While the *>],! n. nmor ;a was alwav* due to a dejinitr serin, rhe pneu mococcus, broncho-pneumonia tuay he due to a great many different kinds of germs. One of the gnat dangers of pneu monia is I lie likelihood flint it will he neglectc.l in the beginning Espe cially is ihi:- true with busy men w irh considerable re -port'■abilities who. in am .an just ■ 1 '.ho prii • of lift Noihing is mor< important in preventing' the morions developments of pii.uiinoma rlitui that rli* patient liotild go io he , 1 uniiie.liatcly on Mi* ons. t. The fellow who says he just has a deep cold and will go down to work just the same, or who fails to appreeiati- iJir- s eniticance of a chill, or who thinks beci usi he has coughed up tl 1 tile bloody snu.uii) that t doesn't amount to anything, and keeps on about his business, is tin* oiu who is in real danger, \n> cough accompanied by fever or chill should h. treated with the most wholesome Aspect from the very beginning, and ■a .olc.-onie i. spcit means going to :. -1 >■ i*h it. KPI’I'I Mi’S N< TTJi: Si\ pamphlets Or inrtening can now be ob ey eu ling 10 cents in coin. • i ''ficli. mid :i self-addressed en i.o!'** -tamp-d with a three-cent tturtf'. to Logan Clendening. in • e o, this paper. The pamphlets •'liiu: rest ton and Constipation.’* "I'cdii in- and Training." "Infant .'■ .'•• -"lnstructions for the Treat • cC-’T ■ f Diabetes.” “Feminine Hy* ' The Care of the Hair prevalent, ! ho lie \", atl d less severe, i h;i n if no e w :. s. ;.l thougli n -.till is a serious menaee. Whether the de cline in its inci dence is due io Ihe fact that we ■io noi ha\ .as -o \ er . winteis IS we use.) IO cannot he s :t i d . erttiinly There are t host n Ii o wmtei.s un .auy of life will be met with more or less I success, depending upon the manage j ment which the child has had previ j on.sly. a boy who has been nagged I with all sorts of petty unreasonable commands will naturally have h j greater feeling of inferiority at thjs j time than lie needs and. as anyone | who can remember back knows, he I has plenty of inferiority already. Os course, the best gift that he can | bring to adolescence is a healthy | body and good habits in regard to eating and sleeping. It has heen Ir. t minted to me recently by several parents that children have discov ered the quotation I took from Or. Tom Williams of Washington, to the effect that eight hours of sleep are ) not necessary 1 would like to cal) | s he attention of these parents and j childten to the fact that this was | published in a hook called “The Care and Feeding of Adults", and I was especially careful to point out that it had nothing to do with children. What, an adult does with his sleep ing time is his own business, and most of us, 1 am afraid, make a mess of it; but every child, at least up to the age of lf> or 1 tt, should have formed the habit of sleeping eight hours a night. I realize that this Is diflicult, when there are so many in teresting things in the world, and so ' 1 many interesting books to read that 1 ;it is hard 1.0 turn off ihe light, but if 1 tiie habit is formed, it will serve the : individual in good stead in Inter E years EDITOR'S NOTE: Six pamphlet* • by Dr. (Mentioning can now be oh -1 J tainofl by sending JO cents in coin, for j each, and a self-addressed envelop# 5 1 stamped with a three-rent stamp. ‘ ;to I»i Logan ('leadening, in care of 1 tins paper The pamphlets aret • j “Indigestion and Constipation," “Re -1 duciii , 111 <l Gaining," “Infant Feed -1 ing. “In. ir uctions for the Treatment lot Dtahotos.'' “Feminine Hygiene" J und "The ‘dare of the Hair and Skin." vice. This article says: “Between * the ages of 12 and 11 the outlook of a boy changes. He is given to self ana iys i s and self- criticism. Not satisfied with half per form a nees, he longs to perfect himself and he roines easily dis couraged at his failures. This is the time when HENDERSON, fN. C.V DATT.Y DISPATCH. THURSDAY, JANUARY 31.1933 In Biggest Gem Robbery in Y ears HP |8 j ■ s y". 11l i SSf~ -:c B r W«\ SRSBm :M :§ ; 4 plMi j^Pa| lilS / t.' & : l \ ' • 2$ - 5 4 # ..• 1 j|y. *h"T' . ¥ v# 1 ; - ’al j tf||'; ifT Undercover agents have been called in by insurance companies who issued policies on $250,000 in gems stolen from Mrs. Margaret Bell of Xew York, by robbers who trussed her up in Miami Billmore Hotel, Miami, Fla., while she was in company of Harry Content, New York broker. The two victims and the hotel are shown. Enmeshed, But Still Smiling r • • ”■ i; : x- ■ ' ■. • • Vx:-: : :-:-.. . : VxV.-.-iv? ; rs. V, *V*’*C*>XV Ay*y»yvsvs W. V. v.v.v.v.. ' X-Xvivv' ; | : \ I , .■.,,-dlhsiP*B w. s® is ■ a|ppisp|p»lii»^^ I : M * w vfv i I i * g ® : ifm,'/ rJKmm <wWm - -v >x gj ('vess fyiaminatinn of Bruno Hauptmann based on dmrie and accour/ bunk ioimd In >1 ir- am! brought into court by jirosecinf.rr. runieruic-r l.im .n Ih*t. but l.c wti.- still <nii!in« as ordeal drew *... an tui. .mj.ho.c •bows. I« are the bonks ( i\xiy:s . .'?Z3i I -OUR YESTERDAYS II - ben the Mona Lisa ” Was Stolen, 1 Sensation That Rocked the World If ' ? ' y ' •i ! " H 4 ■ I it w***> 2 .i lir liMiWlMi M a Wf M % # % fy ■ < T A 9 mm ■^kT^BP-i jm flpp t r XXifetK. . - J&mmh. Mmi ’ll % tx iMfeMB Mm: ■. . ,Wmm. \ .v • |BSBWWfc l '\VW'v mmmß' d . . j aa a • Leonardo da Vinci • THE WORLD was rocked hack j In August, rail, by tft.- sensational i theft of the firmed masterpiece, the “Mona Lisa”, from the Louvre, in I‘iiris For months the ;wmld',s most tenuous detectives sought to locate the picture and its tliiel, and two years later it was discovered iii Florence. Italy, in the possession of Vincenzo t’erugia. Attempting to justify 1 his action, Perugia y-jjeged that. patriotic motives^ I prompted the theft of the master* I piece and its removal to Italy. The | picture, often regarded as the most celebrated portrait in the world, was the work of Leonardo da Vinci, Florentine painter who lived t'riom unlii 151ic The ".Mona Lijsa" was painted between 1503 and 150fi, amt its subject was the third wife of the Florentine Francesco del Giocondo, In France the i»ortrait - .“La Giocondo".. Q UR YESTERDAYS When His Baggy Trousers and Funny Mustache Won Charlie Chaplin Fame as Movie Comedian THE COMEDIAN who brought more laughs than any other ru-ior in the early days of the movies was Charley Chardin, the little nan with the funny mustache, the baggy trousers, the over-sirred shoes ?nd can.. A master of pan- PROTECTING LOUISIANA STATE CAPITOL FROM ‘ENEMY f, *' <1 *" 1 ’ S 1 ».!"■'■ > . ■■■■■M.DIWHl mim.l.l nil IIM I : ; : jj W j | Louisiana national guardsmen, lounging in 'front of the state cap How Fresh Air j\oiv Is Used Aiii n g juroi Treatment ofPneumonia Jjrlunterdon county officials are guarding health of Hauptmann jury closely in endeavor to prevent mis trial by illness of one of the 12. Heart pains of Juror Liscom C. Case, caused by overexertion in climbing stairs, are causing worry. Meanwhile, he’s being saved from mounting stairs. / (Central Prete) Chaplin vs he appeared in scene of "The Rink” lomime, Charley'.--, name soon be- j ! came c l.y-wor 1 in Anierk-an fami- ' I lies as an e.\; •■;' r * of fun and ; I comedy. Chariry, born- Charles j Sperct-r Chaplin in London, came ! to the United State.: in a stage ' production, ir.d : is. remained hero itol at Baton Rouge, have a quiet time after quieting “rebellion” of i fly LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. I AMD yesterday that the most i important, element in the treatment , i.f pneumonia is to go to bed as soon ‘ as there are any intimations that iT . has taken hold. 1 K|llllll "‘ L Ii Dr. Oendeulnf thinks he can also bluff Nature, ai)d who often does it to his cost. Perhaps the most important Im provement in our treatment of pneu monia over the method used by our grandfathers is that of the use of fresh air. It took a long time for man to learn that fresh air was a tonic to the lungs and net a detri ment. .Even if the air is cold, even if the day is snowy and rainy, It is better to have plenty of fresh air than to be shut up tight in a warm room. In fact, I am inclined to be lieve that the lowering of the inci dence of pneumonia is due to the i act that we ventilate our rooms bet ter chan we used to, and to the new science of air conditioning. It was an English practitioner George Bodington, who shocked all of his neighbors and patients and his , colleagues by suggesting that people with lung disease should get out in the open air. So great was the op position to his ideas that he was com [ pelled to desist treating such patients [ and take up institutional work. But about the turn of the century his , doctrines were revived by Dr. North rup, children’s specialist, in New i York, who put his babies with pnbu ~paont»-out-oa-th# root a# matter ever since. He made his scree i debut in 1014. and now, after more than 20 years, he still is regarded as one of America’s best comedians. Vvnor.g his early successes were c .n.-»» \nns” and “The Kid " ‘‘Square Dealers”, who rose ut against Huey Long rule. what the weather. “Why compel a person to take five “breaths when three breaths will do?" 1 was tbe-question he asked all critics | of his method. We find t'tktay that pneumonia pa tients certainly get'eiiojtgh.-fresh air. The sick room of the pneumonia'pa tient, instead of being the stuffy, air tight apartment that it, used to be. i today discloses the patient with * , sweater on, the nurse with a sweater and coat and gloves and a woolen cap. Sometimes T think we rather overdo it, and that, with sick and feeble patients it is not necessary to be quite so strenuous. Certainly when the patient’s body must be ex posed in order to change the bed clothes and for other purposes, th# room should he warmed up to th* point of comfort. But under any cir cumstances, fresh air is a great im provement over the old suffocation .treatment. A modification, and perhaps an im provement on the use of fresh air, i* the oxygen tent which Increases th* number of atmospheres of oxygen which the patient is Where an oxygen room or an oxygen tent Is available, It should be put in use before the patient Is in extrem* danger. In the matter of drugs we have nothing that can be called extremely effective. The heart and circulatory system Is the most vulnerable point in pneumonia, and when the time comes it must he supported. Every physician has his favorite drug m pneumonia, and the fact that he be lieves in it so implicitly is probably good medicine, as his confidence l* communicated to the patient and th* family. EDITOR'S NOTE: Six pamphlet# by Dr. Clendenir.g can now be ob tained by sending 10 cents in coin, 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/' "R« ducing and Gaining,” “Infant Feed ing,” “Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes,” “Feminine Hygiene, . and “The Care of the Hair and Skin- There is nothing that is so likely to break down resistance in the face of an infec-j tlon in the lungs t as the attempt some people make to walk It off or wear it out by working. It is particularly the successful type of business man, who has al ways been able to Impose his will on an entire or ganization, who,