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Show S?enes and Persons in the Current Cloisters to Be Built With Rockefeller Gift Lst Jut jas jT? Dental Hygiene ft con' vt an 88 general h The Road to Health and jorre-p- GRIFFITH By DR. R. ALLEN third Je PUMPING SIM ,.t othe has snv BACTERIA ps Danilin l A t 5 ? , v !v' In l-- Jf C 3, rltirrHi i It. It Is l.uiwlTi 1 f f -. & U&mM Building WilhHouse Art Objects Going Exploring on Old Ruin Ship gift of $2,500,000 by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., to the Metropolitan Museum of Art has made possible the building of the structure pictured here. The Cloisters and surrounding grounds will occupy four acres In Fort Tryon paik overlooking the Hudson. The site was reserved for the building and gardens when Sir. Rockefeller presented the paik to New York city In 1030. It is hoped the new buildings will be ready for public Inspection in 1033. The project will supplant the present Cloisters built by George Grey Barnard, noted sculptor, to house the statuary and art objects He sold his art he has acquired. collection to the Metropolitan museum in 1023, and lent Its trustees the property and building that the collection might not be moved. With the construction of the RockeHere are John Hays Hammond, Jr, and the Diamantlna, conveited feller building, the original buildrum runner which ho has reflitted and on which he proposes to sail around ing will revert to Mr. Rarnard. The building pictured above will the world. Ilammoud will try to discover the locality and cause of certain dead spots at sea where rudlo waves ure inactive, and also will promote be one of the most beautiful In the development of faster and more eiluient sailing craft to compete Ameiica, and will rank favorably with power vessels. with notable European museums. A Good Military Students Get Medals Iluey Stages Style Show If pyorrhea has progressed long to produce pockets around the teeth of only one eighth of an inch (a very shallow pocket) we thus have an ulcerating surface of three and one quarter square Inches. If pyorrhea has progressed long enough to produce pockets around the teeth of an average depth of one quarter of an Inch we have an ulcerating surface of seven and square Inches. The enamel of all teeth Is naturenough - 3 r.lJ - J X & s ? , vft 4 w8 t"1- - . fc Secretary of W'ar Dern presented Tershlng gold medals to eighteen young men from the C. M. T. C. and It. O. T. C. of the nine corps areas for excellence of attainment In military education. In the photograph Mr. Dern Is seen giving his medal to Alexander E. Lawson of Mt. Olive, 111. Stalin Addresses rws MN N H, Ci Session b tr When I. V. Stalin, Soviet dictator, speaks, Russians listen. lie Is shown In a characteristic pose as he addiessed the session of tho.y commission for studying the project of the model constitution for agricultural artels during the sec- A t. ond all union congress of collective farm shock workers. Stalins original program, which called for complete control of all agricultural activities on a hand, a tan tropical suit, lavender basis, Is reported to have fchlrt with checks, red and green undergone drastic revision and tie and tan and white sports shoes. ninny provisions relaxed. V f Father Neptune Opens West Coast Bathing Season Ah f M J I V Nv ( V I , 4 Siam When tlio weather seemed propitious and the water warm enough at Santa Cruz, Cnltf, Father Neptune tame ashore to open the bathing season for that region, Including San I'raucisco .and was greeted ty a Levy f lovely aw lmmlng girls. piind a the di ;i uly vv witsro Nwppr Cnton. mow droppl T s rev inlv if" H 1 loves des. 1 Supply oler r m anotl pull sen s j suh gh write who IN THE NEWS: 1 Mrs. er M. Johnson of Irvington-o- n son, N. Y., who was selected Ty pical Mother of 1035 for celebration of Fleteh Hud- as the the Golden BOSS OF THE CrxEW Rule Mothers (jay, May 12, with one 2 Strikers of her grandchildren. picketing the plant of the Chevrolet Motor company in Toledo which was closed because of the strike. 3 Some of the large party of Minnesota farmers who have left to make new homes In Alaska under s BIRDS FRIE1ND Debt to w. sugar IS required wwsjirjsw is v produce lequftes being dui beets. ot the auspices of the FERA, board train at St. Taut for San Francisco. clean Ing a an pleaaant tela and a Saying 1,400 Leave siy salt s right. for Alaska seven eJ noping to find new opportunities, two groups of American faun people are leaving for Alaska as a part of a FERA colonization project. About 200 families will make the V journey, together with approximately 400 CCC workers who have volunteered for this project. V One group left May 1, and anVV other is scheduled to start about V May 15 on the journey. These modern pioneers will make the journey Tretty Caroline Neill of Manches- from San Francisco by government ter, Conn, who is this years cap- transport In Alaska they will build tain of Wellesley college varsity new homes, and attempt to start crew. life over again. V 5 Heres an Odd Way to Make a Living Jack Miner, whose hi, sanctuary near Kingston, (1 internationally known, hisi brated his seventieth birthd is here seen placing a sp'irt i i injured leg of a wild constant alterable goose & '? fit "V W h It FARM ECONOMIST " '&! " 5 snj P aevg 'j Id by d.th command In the Nazi Guard MMlam E. Chimibeilaln, left, secretary of the i troops and, according to humors, receiving from Charles F. Connors, chairman of the will ho given the rank of ambassa- sion, the first hore ta o license ever Issued by the slate dor at large. It was to be used at the Enoelaud tiack at FramR'C111111, jJiSp 1 onl cleanse of ue . the formation of gas which distends the stomnch and Intestines, causing them to press upward against the diaphragm, thus embarrassing the lungs, 'lhe bowels become constipated and the secretion of the urine is altered In quantity. Hip mouth at this stage is the only organ of the body that will act ns an indicator, ihere may he a cavity or two filled with decavlrig food. The X ray miv show a dead tooth or two, or It may he the gums are siUitly swollui or intlunpd, or careful exploration may show a few pyorrhea pot he's. If UOgletted, tills condition is bound to change for a worse condition until one or more cylinders are missing or the entire engine Is Uid Up for repairs. J tfuhef putrefaction during mastication? It is surely, and Just as thoroughly, loaded with poisons as If It has been allowed to spoil before eating. In normal, healthy mouths are found many disease producing germs such ns those of tuberculosis, diphtheria, Influenza, pneumonia and several varieties of the streptococcus and staphylococcus (the germs). To the first named of the series are due many of the diseases of school children, while to the latter are due many of the tils of middle life. Many times the first symptoms are hard to define. It may be that the heart action Is slightly altered so that the extremities, being deprived of their full blood supply, become cold or bathed In perspiration. Digestion becomes slow and difficult, and may be accompanied I were HITTING? all your cylinders hitting, are you limping along on a few of them? Dr. Irving Tisher of Yale has stated that there are at all times over 3,500 000 people in this country who are seriously 111. If three out of each hundred have the entire engine laid up for repairs, how many more are missing on one or more cylinders? Many of our great authorities say that there Is not any one thing that 13 more Important than the hygiene of the mouth. Many pure food laws have wisely been passed In the Interest of the general public. The most Important matter, however, oral hygiene, has been completely neglected. What Is the use of Insuring pure food If It Is mixed with millions of the germs of P j gHbt ARE ,4.a v Hiring gaib. The King flab said: I fcal to come back to show these people how to diess. His costume consisted of a straw hat with gay fis ARE ALL CYLINDERS sj ''WC Mr lf Mucous ally more or less rough. plaques stick to It affording lodgment for masses of living bacteria. By being pumped directly Into the blood stiearn they are always poisGet Into your oning the system. mind this simple Idea that bacteria around a tooth are not in a stagnant pocket but In a high pressure Then you will pumping system. comprehend their danger. Here is Senator Huey P. Long of Louisiana as lie appeared in Washington in all the gloiy of his new th ao I lts as tars prec ire hef micro-organism- one-ha- vv x Is a disease of the PYORRHEA us see what causes It, and how it Infects other parts of the system. When a new tooth erupts or comes In In childhood, it bursts through the mucous membrane from The union of which It originated. the mucous membrane to tooth structure Is always, after the eruption of the tooth, Imperfect and capable of admitting Infection. This union of tooth and gum Is therefore of vital Interest and is called the gingival crevice or gum marginal crevice. It Is much like the junction of the finger nail and skin and has a similar free margin. Its total length is about thirty Inches around all the teeth. It will therefore be seen that microorganisms growing on the tooths surface may readily pass Into the delicate openings in the bottom of the crevice, thus gaining direct access to venules and perivascular lymph spaces In these structures, with nothing to hinder their transfer to deeper tissues by the lymph and blood streams. The total of masticatory pressure amounts to about one ton per day, expended by the average Individual. This great force depresses the tooth into Its socket about of an Inch on an average and the elasticity of the tissues causes a rebound. The tooth therefore acts as a piston during mastis cation, and where the lodge under the tartar and gold crowns, they are pumped directly Into the unprotected blood vessels at the bottom of the crevice. poiso used over. |