Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 113, Decatur, Adams County, 12 May 1927 — Page 4

PAGE 4

GOOD NATURE Good Nature And Good Health Go Hand In Hand By Joseph 8. Wastiey (UP. Stuff Correspondent) Washington, l>. C. May 12—(United Press)—Good nature and good health go hand in bund, according to Dr. Hugh 8. Conimtng. Surgeon General of the U. S. Public Health Service. "It has long been recognized thut various ethotions are accompanied by special facial expressions," he said. “It is known that certain kinds of feeling, especially the happy kind, help the proper functioning of the organs while others have an unfavorable action. “Studies have shown that the conditions favorable to proper digestion are upset when we experience vexation, worry and anxiety or when emotions such as anger and (ear are allowed to prevail. "By strong excitement, particularly of the unpleasant kind, the secretions of the glands of the mouth, stomach and the intestines and the flow ot bile may be checked for some time. In such conditions the food lying heavy in the stomach is an irritant rather than a benefit. "The moral is that if we have experienced an outburst of passiAn or strong excitement it is well not to take nourishment until we are calmed down and are willing to look at things good naturedly or with a courageous poise. "This applies to man woman and child and if the rule were followed there would be fewer nervous disorders.” Ur. Cumming pointed out that in digesting, assimilating and rearranging the ingredients of our diet, the body works with a precise and admirable harmony in which all the organs and cells interplay. “A good nature, especially at meal ( time and just preceding it, or better than a good nature, a cheerful, courageous poise, gives digestion and as- ’ similation a boost and allows the inner harmony of the system to go on ( pleasantly and efficiently. "Starting the day or the meal with a 1 cross fretful or angry feeling tends to check digestion in the ordinary individual and to throw a greater stress on the inner harmony that is neces- : sary for our customary vocations." o —

White Ants Causing Damage To Buildings In Kansas, Nebraska Lincoln, Neb, (United Press) —Termites, destructive anrf dreaded insects have laid seige to many buildings in ■ scattered sections of eastern Nebraska during the past six months, and the depai nt of entomology. University of Nebraska, has had its attention called to the ravages of the insects, commonly referred to as “white ants." Greatest damage in Nebraska was - done at Julien, where a school house - and *here cyanide gas was resorted to in an effort to exterminate them. A second visitation has been reported, but is believed to be due to eggs already laid in the lumber, and not a serious outbreak. - Termites work on untreated lumber in frame buildings, and bore entirely from within, hollowing out timbers until they are mere shells, frequently, ‘ before discovered. If discovered in time, the entomology department at Nebraska university believes the insects can easily be exterminated. In Kansas, according to government reports, the insects have laid waste * entile fields, and infest the Atlantic seaboard from Richmond, Va., to Flo- - rida, although the species there differ ** somewhat from that in the North. Creosote and cyanide gas are usual- ~ ly employed in combatting them, although the best precaution against them is use of treated lumber in build- «• lug. The Termites are destructive only * when found in great numbers, and this £ is the first time within the memory of old inhabitants of this state, when they * have been present in such quantity. * o— X New Movie Screens Invented In Russia Leningrad (United Press)—A metal Z aloy for moving picture screens which ~ shows pictures clearly with half the •» usual electric current, has been in- ~ vented and successfully applied in three workmen's clubs in Leningrad, - ’ according to motion picture authorit- “ ies. A special shape in the serenes is •• also said to increase the effect of per- «, spective in the pictures, making figures seem to stand out in sharp re- - lief against the background. G. T. Burk and Sim Burk are in Ter- * re Haute attending the dedication of the new Shrine temple.

PNENOMENOM LIKE “W ING FLUTTER’’ HELI) CAUSE OF MANY PLANE CRASHES

London (United Press) —Alarmed by the mounting toll of fatal accidents In the Royal Air Force which exceeded 80 in 1926. British aviation experts are developing a new theory ot the cause of ulr accidents on fighting airplanes. This Is that many of the unexplained accidents are caused by what is known as "wing flutter.” a mysterious phenomenon that was noted in the early ilays of aviation when airplanes were fitted with flexible wing tips, for controling the lateral stability of the machines. The phenomenon disappeared with substitution of movable “ailerons” for the flexable wing tips; but now has suddenly reappeared in some types of high speed fighting and racing machines. England's star entry in the

l'J25 Schneider Cup race was put out of the running and eventually crashed into the sea as a result of the unexplained development of "wing flutter", in numerous instances in the past year eye witnesses of airplane crashes said in effect "the machine was flying afong normally when suddenly the pilot seemed to lose control and the machine went into a spin and crushed”. Many theories were developed! Some experts believed that in these, cases the pilot had fainted and fallen forward on the controls. Others believed that the pilot had failed to fast-! en his safety belt before leaving the ground and somehow had slipped forward from his seat and jammed the wntiois. In all these cases the pilots' had been instantly killed, and even the closest examination of the wreckage failed to give the slightest hint as to the cause of the disaster. But under the new theory that is being examined it is believed that in speeds in excess of 150 or 160 miles an hour, the pressure on the ailerons becomes so great that they exert a bending effect on the rear part of the wings, and an alternately up-and-down flexing motion is set in operation that Large Goitre Removed Without Operation. Letter Received By Local Druggist Tells How. The Holtbouse Drug Co., has received a letter from Jeanetta Williams, New Ross, Ind., telling how she removed her goitre by externa! applications. How she was relieved of severe symptoms and prevented an operation. This letter is open for inspection and you are asked to call and read it. The Holthouse Drug Co. '

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. MAY 12, 192/.

d | corresponds to the “flutter" noticed s In the early-day machlpes with flexible (I whig tips. This vibration Is communis cated to the controls in the pilots seat t> and is probably powerful enough to shake the control stick from the pilot’s hands. The result is that the pii. lot suddenly finds himeslf engaged in s a llte-and death struggle to recover s his grip on the controls, although to ? an half-a-mlle or more dis- , taut there would be no evidence of r this. j In consequence ot the wing flutter . theory aircraft designers are now seek- . ing a means of control that does away t with the present practice of using > movable ailerons attached to the rear . edge of the airplane's wings. “The Forty Thieves’’ i In Modern Version Esseg, Jugoslavia (United Press)—A gypscy flute-player ot this village lured a number of his band into the arms of the j>o—e here after being caught in a bag by a young girl, it was reveal-

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ed when the gypsies were brought up for trial on a charge ot thieving. As dusk was approaching one evening an old gypsy woman knocked at the door of a peasant’s farm-house near the village and requested permission to leave there over night a heavy bug which she was carrying on her back. The peasant’s daughter, who answered the door, allowed her to place the bag In the kitchen. latter, after the gypsy woman had departed, the girl noticed something move Inside the bag. Since many I wolves had appeared near her home I during the winter her first notion was,l the woman had used some magic I charm to catch a wolf and then had J placed the wolf in the bag. She seized j| her hunting rifle and fired into the I bag. A shriek from the bag Informed II her that she had a man. I She rushed into the village and I alarmed the local gendarme. They I returned to the house and opened the I bag. A frightened gypsey man, glad to I escape from such an unfortunate bag, I confessed that he and his friends had I planned to rob the house. He told of I how he was to give a signal that the I coast was clear by playing on his flute. 1 1

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