Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, June 28, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

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    a — yaw n n A itjr i
■LZ^ m AISSSS^^ s A sag
after birth dm to gradual de-
LONDON
People maty not be
getting better as the world goes
on, but They are getting better
looking, artists and sclent ists
agreed In a symposium.,
"A darker and more composite
type has taken the place of the
clear Anglo*B«xon face,” said
Henry Pegram. R. A-. ^famous
sculptor. "Faces today are much
more alert and mobile than they
were fifty years ago. Not only are
both men and women better look­
ing, bnt alsft th e ff a c e s are much
more interesting.
“Particularly among womqA are
there to)any more classics) fea­
ture« — much more so than in
Greece itself, ancient or modern.
There are especially very fine
heads among the athletes of <hls
generation.”
*»
hrotsssor H. J.F lenre, aathro-.
pologist of the University of
Weiss, agreed on behalf of tha
scléntists.
. À
!»
f
“The contours Of the modern
faca.sre less smooth than those
of the past,” ho said, "due, per­
haps, to the effects o f fresh air
apd «thjetlc habits.
"There Is mtore character In
faces today, more development of
bone (and muscle in them. This
has nwdo tor mors handsome tes­
to n s.
"It 10 generally though that the
faces of this generation have a
mofo narrons and intense look.
Generally that tt not correct. They
express Increased l/telleotnal in­
terest and testify to the spread of
education."
Controlled Air Incubates
Babies In B ig Hospitals
Thousands of babies are liter­
ally incubated in modern hespp
tala bectfURe of recent advances
in the science of electrically con­
trolled air.
Within twelve hours after
birth, each baby Is taken through
four distinct climatic changes,
mechanically created, to "accli­
matize” It to the outside world
and properly etart it on a health­
ful career. It Is at least ten
honrs before the mother sees her
baby after birth. And the t Im­
portant thing Is that windows are
closed tight to protect baby from
the inclemencies of ontalde wea­
ther. Correct proportions of air,
scientifically heated and humidi­
fied, are brought in by powerful
ventilating fans to give baby
“made to order” weather.
Mortality of newly born babies
has been grfeatly reduced since
the hospitals have learned to
scientifically control the air and
other weather conditions within
the nurseries, according to Dr.
Ray C. King, baby expert of two
of Toledo’s largest hospitals and
nationally recognized as an auth­
ority on babies.
"Immendiately after birth the
baby Is placed In a bassinet or
rubber lined crib which is elect­
rically heated to a temperature
of 90 degrees,” Dr. King said.
"The baby remains in ’this crib
for an honr after which It is
washed with oil and clothed. It
is then wrapped in blankets and
placed on a beating table where
it remains to t eight to ten hours.
This table is heated to 90 de­
grees. The temperature of the
roonf’- or nursery Itself is main­
tained at 68 to 70 degrees at all
times. Humidity is important and
Is held at 45 to 50 degrees re-
lative
"Yon see, every baby loses
weight within three or four days
Two Pioneers Of The Air M eet
hydration q f juoiatnre loee. A
tan or eleven pound baby will
lobe Owe» a pound to a -pound
and a b*w bp tbla process. The
weight loss ot a f/v e pound baby
aaeounts usually to throe or tour
ounees. That’s why the sir In
the nursery cannot be too dry.
It Is important, too, that the
baby' receive plenty of clean air
without draughts or the dusts
that blow la from the- outside.
The air should be filtered or
washed. Air in the nurseries of
many hospitals is completely
changed, every five minutes.'*
Hospitals some time since
abandoned the small incubator
Idea for prematurely born babies.
These hospitals now have a good
slued nursery with double apd
triple se ts»of doors and triple
radiation tor uniform heating.
The temperature in these nurser­
ies is maintained at 95 to 98 de­
crees in spite of the larger air
space available.
Thus, these
babies hive a chance to grow
and develop as they should. Dr.
King compared them to certain
"types of plants and flowers which
require a specific climatic con-
dition to blossom at their heat.
- Both Dr. King and Dr. C. D.
Selby, formerly president ot the
Ohio Medical Association, de­
clared that the temperature and
other air conditions in the oper­
ating rooms of hospitals are vi­
tally Important.
“The best temperature for the
operating room is 80 degrees,”
Dr. King said. "The windows are
kept closed to prevent dtft and
dusts from blowing iu and tho
sir is changed mechanically.”
r Scout Rank Conferred
pon CoL Charles A. Lindbergh
Widow Killer
PORTLAND. Ju ss 17. —- No
clues have been found by Port­
land police after | | hours inveqti-
gatlon of the murder ot Mrs. Sell
B. Stebbins, pretty young widow,
found brutally murdered Satur­
day.
She wua found dead in the bed
of her apartment. She was bound
hand apd foot and a towell was
wrapped tightly about bar throat.
Jealousy Is behoved to have
been the motive tor the killing.
Several men guests visited her
aparement Friday night.
iw brow
Celomrfl Charles A. Lindbergh
has added the- title of Honorary
Scout. Bey Scouts of America, to
the long bat of honor« and decora­
tions glvept him since his return
from Par^s. Just as the great
New York parage given la honor
of the hero aviator was passing,
tha Executive Board, Boy Scouts
of America, 'meeting at the Univer­
sity Club in .New York City, made
Lindbergh an Honorary Scout,
file name goes on a list of men
whose achievements In outdoor
activity, exploration and worth­
while adventiye are of a very ex­
ceptional character, Commander
Byrd, L’ncoln Ellsworth and Or­
ville Wright - are three others
whose achievements in connection
with the flight of man ip tha air
are on the list with Lindbergh.
Captain Bob Bartlett. Roy Chap­
man Andrews, Stewart Elward
White and Kermit Roosevelt arc
Qtberr who share this distinction.
Scout Carries Message WRR
Promptly that the Executive
Board acted. Eagle Seoul». James
Campbell of Floral Park, Naaeau
Cotonty, N. Yf, took the certiflcate
of appointment, boarded a Long
Island railroad train, and left tor
Harbor Hill, the home ot Clarence
Mackey a t Roslyn, Long Island.
There the letter, signed by Walter
W. Head, President of the Boy
Scouts of America, and James B.
West, Chief Scout Executive, was
handed to Col. Theodore Roose­
velt, who is a member of the Na­
tional Executive. Board.
V. i ».»»jta.
T O M AVA.
T C .N Y
U N IT E D STATES TIRES ARE GOOD TIR ES
bniMrtut .l.m .nt I i H .
n
of b a ite d State. Tire.. This W eb
Cord for Royal Cord Balloon, with
psnw ro M « r fotojr Latex ia tbe
Klamath Man CoVictcd
George Frank Way, Prineville “
ter for the killing of Timothy
Murphy by a Jury which strug­
gled 15 hours will serve from
one to seven years in the state
penitentiary. Way will be taken
to Salem early this week by the
Klamath county sheriff.
Are You In Prime!
NO! NOT PEELING JUST RIGHT
Annual Camp
GAMP CLATSOP.’ June 28. —
(IP) — Oregon National Guards­
men ended their annual encamp­
ment today with the departure of
troops to home stations.
Bight special trains left at 16
mlnnte intervals taking the
guardslnen to Portland from
where they will leave for their
homes.
,
Due to the delay la tha pro­
gram of the great celebration
which Jiew York had arranged for
Lindbergh/ the hero arrived more
than an honr late at the palatial
Mackay estate. When Colonel
Theodore Rooeevelt presented
him - with tha Boy Scouts’ letter,-
althongh It was only a few min­
utes after ha arrived. Colonel
Lindbergh left the guests wait­
ing and stood on the steps of tha
Mackay 'mansion to chat cheerily
with the Eagle Scout.
Lindbergh Accepts Honor
"I’m certainly glad to know that
I’m an Honorary Scout now,"
quietly commented the noted flier.
"Once, a long time ago, I had
hoped to become a Boy Scout. It
was while I lived In Washington.
We moved away then, and I never
again had' the opportunity. I’m
-glad though, that the Scouts want
me in the ranks ot their fine or­
ganisation. ”
Then, after shaking hands with
Eagle Scout Campbell, and bid­
ding him a cheery "Good night,”
Colonel Lindberg!^ entered the
home of Clarence-H. Mackay, to
greet his other friends.
Then the aunghine and hot mineral baths of
Richardson Springs
I f you’d succeed us a daacer, he a
lowbrow, advises Margaret H ar­
ney of B. St, Louis, IU.. dance in­
structor and member of tha Na­
tional Institute ot Social Dancing.
Highbrow
conversation -borgp
ddnee partners, she says.
Near Chico, Butte County, California can do
.Wonders For You.
W R IT E US
LEE RICHARDSON, Manager
“It was a happy day
for me when I be­
cam e a cq u a in ted
with Lucky Strikes,
for I enjoy smoking
but must be careful.
I find Lucky Strikes
n ever o ffe n d my
throat in the slight-
The first man to fly an airplane successfully, Orville Wright (left)
and first man to fly fronf New York to Paris, Colonel Charles Lind­
bergh, met when Lindbergh arrived in Dayton on his way togWash-
lngton.
Fame Finds Him: in Black Hills
W e have invented Sprayed Rnbbar— tbe <Mt»
standing process fo r producing rubber. Sprayed
Rubber is the strongest and most uniform rab>
bar known. I t i i made without the use o f smoke
or adds.
W a have invented W e b Cord, the moot modem
w ay of com bining rubber and cords.
T h e policy o f “Plenty o f Rubber” plus tbe
a b ility to get tbe rubber and the sbitf to put the
rig h t JUnd o f rubber in tbe r ig h t place, shows
itself in the quality o f Royal Cord Balloom <m
PLENTY OF RUBBER
U.S. ROYAL CORDS
United Stetes ^^RubbirCompsity
FbrSaUhy
William Collier,
veteran actor and
favorite comedian
You, too, w ill find that Lucky
Strikes are mild and mellow—the
Ml7??
finest cigarettes
you ever smoked,
made o f the finest Turkish and do­
mestic tobaccos, properly aged and
blended with great skill, and there
is an extra process—‘I t ’s toasted"-
no harshness, not a bit of bite.
PER LOAD
For Short Time Only
To Make Room
Rolf Llum had no thonghf'of fams When hs sccsptsd A <5Q
summer pastorate at Hermoaa» 8.* D. But the
old theological student preachedj-in-hle new charge was heard.-
other than President hnd Mrs/ Coolidge. He is pictured hervin
*>
pttWh
ASHLAND LI MBER CO