The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 16, 1937, Image 7

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    Shanghai in Ruins as Bombs Rain From Planes
View of the international section of Shanghai after a bombing from the sky by Chinese planes. Ruins of
the Cathay hotel are seen, as fires swept over the bombed area. With bombardments from Japanese war
Ihips in the Whangpoo river, untold damage was caused in the native sections of the city.
MARINE COMMANDER
Brigadier General John C. Beau
mont, commander of the second bri
gade fleet marine force, who em
barked from San Diego, Calif., for
the Sino-Japanese war area in
Shanghai to take conynand of all
United States marines in China. He
will be responsible for disposing his
troops most effectively to protect
America's nationals in the war zone.
They Don't Want to Wait 72 Hours
City Clerk Michael Cruise of New York shown putting up the sign an
nouncing that in the future marriage licenses are not valid for 72 hours
after their issuance. Prospective brides and grooms who sought to beat
the law are shown in line as they await their certificates and quick
ceremonies.
I
Cat Mothers Orphan Squirrels
Linden, pet cat of the street-car shops at Wilmette, 111., shown as she
temporarily deserted her own offspring to mother three nine-day-old squir
rels rescued from a tree nest by workers when they found the mother
squirrel dead. The yoifogsters are thriving nicely.
COPIES $60,000 STRAD
Yehudi Menuhin, famed violinist
(above), in co-operation with Emil
Francais, master French violin
maker, succeeded in making an ex
act copy of his $60,000 Stradivarius
which had been presented to him on
his twelfth birthday. Menuhin holds
the original Strad on the right, the
copy on the left.
President Roosevelt Visits a County Fair
President and Mrs Franklin D. Roosevelt pictured as they stopped on their drive through the grounds of j
the annual Rhinebeck-Duchess County fair at Rhinebeck, N. Y., to admire a prize-winning cow and her
i calf entered in the stock show.
\
ft
Scenes and Persons in the Current News
1—John L. Lewis, chief of the C. I. O., who attacked William Green, president of the American Federa
tion of Labor at the Milwaukee convention of the United Automobile Workers. 2—The American Dol
lar liner, S. S. President Hoover, bombed by Chinese planes in the Whangpoo river at Shanghai. 3—The
“Sawbwa of Hsipaw" and his sister, Sao Kya Nyun, shown as they sailed from New York for their far
eastern kingdom of Burma.
HANDY WITH BIKE
William C. Bailey, eighty-four,
who took up bicycling at seventy
nine, shown as he pedaled out of
Chicago on a return trip to his farm
in Vermont. The octogenarian made
the 1,028-mile trip by cycle to Chi
cago to visit relatives in 18 days. He
planned to make some stops en
route home but declared he would
pedal the entire distance to the
Green Mountain state himself.
Challenger’s Right Jolts the Champion
Tommy Farr, British con
tender, connects with a right
to Joe Louis’ jaw in their re
cent New York bout.
Doctor s Invention Saves Infants
A new type respirator device invented by Dr. Joseph Krciselman of
Washington. D. C., has proved itself effective in saving the lives of chil
dren dying of pneumonia, and malnutrition. When a baby born to a
Washington couple recently did not breathe at birth the respirator was
applied^in the same manner as Dr. Ted Mandy, a Gallinger hospital
physician is demonstrating in the above picture and in a few seconds the
youngster was crying lustily. 1
LEGLESS SWIMMER
Charles Zimmy, famous legless
swimmer, shown weighing himself
at Harlem hospital in New York
city following his six-day swim in
which he covered 145 miles between
Albany and New York city. Zimmy
completed the swim in 147 hours
and estimated he had lost 30 pounds
during the grind.
Work Speeded on $32.400 000 Bonneville Dam
Army engineers are speeding the construction of the $32,400,000 Bonneville dam in the state of Wash
ington. This interesting picture in which sky, water and steel meet shows workers erecting piers that will
span the Bonneville river. This PWA project is a huge power, navigation and flood-control undertaking.
Save Enamel
of Teeth
By
DR. JAMES W. BARTON
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
An advertisement of
L a paint manufacturer is
“Save the Surface and You
Save All.” And this is true re
garding the surface of wood,
iron and other materials.
Similarly there was a tendency a
few years ago to apply this slogan
Dr. Barton
to the care of the
teeth—save the sur
face (enamel) and
you save the whole
tooth.
However, when
dental research
workers found that
it was possible for
teeth to decay not
withstanding that
the enamel covering
was apparently not
broken, other cause*
for dental decay
were sought, with the result that
now dentists and physicians reconrv
mend the use of more leafy vege
tables and fruits and less of starch
foods and meatg.
So popular has this idea of pre
venting decay of teeth by the use
of leafy vegetables and fruits be
come that many adults—teachers
and parents—are not so insistent up
on having the children brush their
teeth as they formerly were.
Brushing Still Important.
Now what ubout brushing the
teeth and saving the enamel? Is
brushing the teeth still an important
point in preventing decay?
Dr. N. Kobrin in a radio address
under the auspices of the Oral Hy
giene Committee of Greater New
York, said:
“The toothbrush must be classed
as one of the valuable aids in the
prevention of tooth decay. At the
Dental college of the University of
Pennsylvania Professor Appleton
has done some fine research on the
question of the number of bacteria
(organisms) in the mouth following
the brushing of the teeth. His study
included several hundred cases. The
greatest number of bacteria were
found in the mouth in the morning
immediately on arising. After the
teeth had been cleaned the number
of bacteria dropped 50 per cent; by
the noontime meal, bacteria had
increased 20 per cent and dropped
that much after brushing, increas
ing again before dinner to 75 per
cent, after which the count fell a
per cent when the teeth were
cleaned.” ,
This doesn't mean that brushing
the teeth will prevent all decay bid
it does mean that the chances of de
cay through the surface of the tooth
will be just half as many if the
teeth are brushed regularly.
• * •
IMet for Middle Age.
Many men and women as they
approach middle age begin to put o»
considerable weight. They have
peached a stage in their lives when
they do not have to do any hard
physical work and can choose just
about what they like to eat. It is
only natural that with no exercise
and eating plenty of the foods they
like, fat will accumulate.
Now, at middle age, excess fat is
always a liability and if, as it often
happens, the individual has any
weakness, hereditary or acquired,
in the heart, blood vessels or kid
neys then the excess weight can be
a menace to health and to life itself.
The unfortunate point about this
is that while the foods that increase
weight can be cut down with safety
in these cases, the foods that must
be eaten to preserve strength and
maintain body tissue, the proteids—
meat, eggs, fish—cannot be eaten
as freely as when there is no heart,
kidney or blood vessel condition t*
consider.
Some of the suggestions offered tn
these overweight middle-aged indi
viduals with the tendency to heart
blood vessel and kidney complica
tions are:
1. Eat the “lean” meats such as
steaks, roast beef, white meat of
turkey or chicken, lamb chops with
out any fat.
2. Avoid the fat meats such at
pork, bacon, sausage, goose, duck,
spiced and canned meats.
3. Avoid salmon, herring, sar
dines, mackerel, all shell-fish except
raw oysters. Avoid fried fish or
fish with rich sauces.
4 Eat eggs—soft boiled, omelette,
poached, or scrambled.
5. Avoid pastries, pies, candies,
ice cream.
6. Avoid cheese, except cottage
cheese.
7. Avoid mustard, catsup, horse
radish.
8. Salads should be eaten without
oil.
9. Drink water, buttermilk, weak
tea or coffee.
10. Avoid chocolate, sweet drinkv
alcoholic and malt drinks.
11. Avoid turnips, corn, beets, on
ions, garlic, cabbage, cucumbers^
raw vegetables, and sprpe of the raw
fruits that cause gas.
12. Eat fresh and stewed fruits no*
sweetened.
13. Eat all light cooked vegetable*
—peas, string beans, spinach, car
rots, asparagus, tomatoes and cel
ery.
14. Drink a half glass of water an.
hour before meals.