That Body of Yours By JAMES W. BARTON, M. D. Psoriasis Cured by Fat Free Diet NE of the skin allments that dis courages both parents and physi clan is psoriasis—white scaly patches like mortar on the skin which, when the scales are peeled off leave a bleeding surface, Just what causes this allment Las never been discovered. By using arsenic internally (Fowlers solution) and ammoniated mercury on the scaly patches, most cases clear up in time, only to break out again perhaps In a few months, That “nervousness” may be a factor is admitted by many skin specialists, as also is the possibility of some gland disturbance in the body. {Thus the manner in which the body processes handle some foods may be at fault, as leaving out certain foods from the diet has cleared up a number of cases. tropics. Drs, O. Grutz and M, Burger, Ber lin, relate some of their studies which tend tc show that the anderlying cause of psoriasis is probably a dis turbance in the way in which the body uses the fat foods—cream, butter, fat meat, Psoriasis may be due to the blood vessels of the skin allowing too much fat to be poured out on the surface of the skin, or because the form In which the fat reaches the skin is so altered that irritation arises, In any case as it Is the fats that cause the trouble, cutting down on the fats should be good treatment. To prove this Doctors Grutz and Burger stopped all other forms of treatment In eleven cases, and simply omitted the fats In the diet. What was the result? other forms of treatment, leaving out the fats in the diet resulted in a com plete cure; In five cases considerable improvements were observed and two cases still being treated, likewise show improvement. High Blood Pressure PE HAS been carefully estimated that one In every 1,000 people die an- nualiy as a result of diseases asso ciated with high blood pressure, yet all physicians know that certalnp pa tients may live many years in good health, despite well marked high blood pressure. Why is It possible for some indi viduals with very high blood pressure to live to a good age whereas others live but a few years after the high blood pressure Is discovered? Dr. Edward J. Stieglitz, in [llinols Medical Journal, states that the cause of high blood pressure is anything which injures or irritates the muscle wall the blood and thus causes these muscular or elastic fibers to contract more than the normal amount. Now there are a number of things which will injure or irritate the blood vessel, therefore the treatment de pends upon just what Is causing the trouble in each particular case. As some of the causes can be removed or thelr effects lessened, and others can not, you can see thal some cases are likely to live for a long time and others live but a few years For instance something may be sim- ply irritating the blood vessels. and its muscular walls tighten in an effort to overcome it, just as waste material from the food In the intestine irritates or stimulates the muscniar walls of the intestine to tighten and thus push this waste outward and down ward. in this case there Is no real damage being done to the wall of the blood vessel and when the Irritating sub stance is removed, and no more, or at least very little is present, the blood pressure comes back to normal or near to the normal point, If however the blood vessel is so injured or damaged that the muscie or elastic tissue is replaced by hard fibrous tissue then the blood pressure will pe high and must continue to re main bigh. of vessel being Irritated causing a sort of spasm, then by removal of this irrita tion the blood pressure should be re duced and the life span be about nor: mal. Infection from teeth, tonsils, gall bladder or Intestine may be the cause, But when the infection has insted for some time and the elastic cont is damaged, nothing but careful living mental and physical--ls likely to pre serve life, (Copyright. Y= WN Bervice The Hubbard Medal The Hubbard medal 18 an award conferred by the National Geo graphie society “in recognition of the services to mankind of those who jabor to push back the horizons of geography.” The medal takes Its name from Gardiner Greene Hubbard, the founder and first president of the so clety. its exciusiveness Is probably what gives the medal its chief distine tion. It has been awarded only to Peary, Amundsen, Gilbert, Shackleton, Stefansson, Bartlett, Byrd, Lindbergh by National Geographic Soclety, Washington, D, C-—WNU Service OKK on the world's largest free balloon which will be used In the National Geo- graphic Soclety-United States well under way at the Goodyear-Zep- pelin corporation's plant at Akfon, Ohlo. The makers will use two-and-a-third acres of cotton fabric impregnated with rubber in construct. ing the bag, and it will have a capacity of 3,000,000 cubic feet of gas. When thé balloon from the earth, only partly inflated, it will be shaped like a gigantic exclamation point with the round gondola repre- senting the period. As the gondola leaves the ground, the top of the bag be 205 feet above [t—approxi- mately the height of a 27-story office building. When the bag becomes spherical in the thin air of the strato sphere, it will be large enough to en- close an 11-story building of normal balloon rises The assent, reach the in which It is hoped to highest point to which It for a balloon to lift a man, will be made in the United States, The purpose of the flight is to air that are still puzzling to science. It Is esti- mated that it will rise to a height of The first ascent will be made In June by Capt. Albert W, Stevens, noted aerial observer and photographer of the army air corps, who conceived the project, and Ma). William Kepner, balloon expert of the army air corps If this flight balloonists is successful the will make a in September, In order servations under simils itious. Scientists to Give Aid. in regard the and equipment, and to di- rect stu of the Gilbert Grosvenor, National Geographic tt oe to check ir cond ob To tific p advise to scien. ns dies data collected, president of society, has formed f Ameri a commi Of outstandir scientists, ts members Dr. Lyman J. Brigg States bureau of Dr. F. V. partment Westover, States irman ; Covi ited St of | ture ; an chief, Army Air corps: ( director, United survey: Dr ch f our 1low G:en United apt. RS Patton, States and geodetic Swann, Barto) Franklin institute, Dr, Floyd K. of physics, member W. F. wdation, Pa.: Rese: Swarthmore, lichtmyer, department Cornell university, and research council, American Association for the Advancement of Dr. Charles E. K. Mees, di- rector research laboratory, Eastman Kodak company; Dr. Charles F. Mar. vin, chief of United States weather bureau, and Dr. John Oliver La Goree, National Geographic society, The huge balloon to be used in the ascents will have a gas capacity five times that of the bag in which Com Sclence ; record last November: and nearly three-and-a-half times that of the Soviet balloon which in September rose near ly 12 miles above the earth. The exact point at which the bal. loon will take to the air has not been gelected, but it will probably be in the northern great plains region. Such a choice, it is pointed out, will give am- ple room for drift to the northeast, cast, or southeast and a landing In open country, so that the bag can be salvaged. The completed plans for the flights are due to the efforts of Captain tainable height ahove the earth In or der that conditions there ean be ob served. Stevens Has Experience, Captain Stevens has penetrated the has served as observer on a number of army balloon ascensions. During his high altitude fiying he has col lected much sclentifie data. In a flight over Dayton, Ohle, In October, 1028, he reached an altitude of 30.100 feet and obtained the only complete record of thermometer readings ever made In America, showing on the same day the “temperature gradient” in the reglon from the earth to the strato. sphere. Other such records of temper- atures, from the earth to an altitude of approximately 80,000 feet, 1s one of the objectives of the 1034 Such data will be extremely In weather studies, Another project of be the trapping of sphere alr at several specimens will be later In physical oratories, The preliminary tificaimta to valuable levels, analyzed and studied and chemical lab “agenda” be collected during from high level phot ascertainment tlon' of the air and ical condi- nr raph ¥ led ri various of the at levels, termine mysterious gzrone The upper concentration, layer of the air which some stlentists assert is all that saves on the earth from de- struction by ultra-short light rays, thought to lle far above the highest point that can be reached by a manned balloon. It is hoped, however, that evi ozone 3 life In order to house the many ments and automatic vices that will be taken loon will have at cal gondola of light metal, four Inches, In diameter, instru. recording de aloft, the bal- eight feet This diame that of the gondolas fessor Plecard an used by Pro d Commander Settle, than twice as great. The Instruments, signed and modified by Captain Stevens tude flights, will be largely automatic, leaving observer and pilot free to take up the many that will require tiny activities In the gone attention, A using wiion-g cture illy and number CAMETras, tirelessly clock at simul 1 freq nent Intervals, faces Kepner's Fine Record. William E. ner, pita he stratosphere balloon, # Kep who i8 one tig balloon pilots of the army. He served in the in the infantry and was the American and Ww exceptional services, ile holds four medals: Legion of Honor, Croix with Palm, Distinguished Service Cross, and Good Conduct Medal, United States Marine corps. He has been an officer of the gir corps since 1020, and holds the aerongutical ratings of airplane pllot, bserver, airship pilot and balloon pilot and observer. He was winner of both the national and the international balloon races in 1028, receiving the Litchfield trophy and the King Albert of Belgium trophy. He was a classmate of Commander United States World war dec by French armies f« orited both de Guerre Commander Settle, Lakehurst, Major for three years at He served on the Los Angeles as as sistant navigator and received train. ing from the German Zeppelin crew, He commanded the RS semi-rigid airship in 1927-1928, and was the first to pilot an all metal airship In 1020, Captain Stevens has made Innumer of them, by the use of infra-red rays, showing mountain peaks more than 300 miles from the camera. his photographs, of extraordinary In. terest to geographers and astronomers, are unique. One taken from a plane 21,000 feet over central Argentina ls the first photograph ever made show. ing laterally the curvature of the of 20,000 feet over southern Maine, In August, 1932, is the only photograph which shows the advancing front of the moon's shadow on the earth dur ing an eclipse of the sun. Zuider Zee Now Yselmeer When the Dutch minister of public works recently inaugurated the dam across the Zulder Zee between North Holland and Friesland, the name Zul der Zee ceased officially to exist and Holland gained in reclaimed land an area equal to her largest provinee, Guelders, The dam transforms the old Dutch sen Into a lnke, It 1s 20 miles long. The dam beging at Wier ingen island, where the ex crown prince of Germany lived for some years In the blacksmith's house, The algo famous island of Marken les in the new lake, which is to be called “Yeelmeer.” The work begun in 1020 is finished, and plans are being made for a railway on the dam, All Over Nation Progress Noted in Breeding Carrots, Onions; Study Potato Yields. Vegetable growers will be Interested In some of the research work now go- Ing on In many parts of the country. More than fifty new tests with vege table erop plants were reported at a recent meeting of specialists In Boston, Work done in California on vine of the old belief the earlier the fruit Is harvested, of flowers and fruit received from the plant, California workers progress in breeding rots, and onions, Now they watermelon that resists wilt, other diseases, time keeps its quality, breeding for highly-colored, tender carrots. Potato ; lack of enough magnesium in the soil also reporied want a smooth, yellow as a result, scientist believes chemical analysis of the lower leaves of the plant will show whether nitrogen or magnesium causes in color of the that icement of ferti rather tha aces is and change He adds show that pl the may Inlure the seed, When cut tote seed pieces come soil surf po- and nrevent id prevenliedq, seed res: filer this Pasture Improvement Important for Farmers Pasture improvement is a Ohio are kept to util forage, D. . Dodd fin years of demonstrations the extra after several in fertilizing, From less than 5 per cent of k results plants cover ed. Fertilizers nol only the yield but also kind of vege Where capital Is limited, the largest return per dollar Invested may be ob tained from lime and superphosphate. greatly increase ually change the or fe prac liner. addition to phosphate worthwhile as a general nitrogen and phosph ate returns from additions of much greater, ix by far the me Potash in is not Where are used, the potash are Nitrogen of the creaging yield ever, are rather wus and potassiu {Milo Farmer, wt effec is ng from it, three common elemen unless in abundance, Ice Requirements annual require To compute the ice juir a dairy if the ice ments of farm in the no house fron irom states, good not me of ice cream and hold ture for deli week If suitable If whole and shrinkage melting Is swe than 30 per cent, per Ow cooling milk is to be cooled, and a half tons per Depart increased to one cow, says the United States ment of Agriculture, the average family on a general farm at lenst five tons of ice for the season and, because of melting losses, mum to be considered, even for a well insulated ice house, While the difference between a 10 foot team hitch and 100-foot hitch is considerable, It is not as great as peo- ple make out and it Is all bosh that a team cannot drag a Dd-pound bag of They can drag it easily, but it would thelr strength. —Wallaces' Farmer, Longer Ears of Corn For 80 years Jacob Sass an Jowa growédr of prize corn, has been trying to add to the length of ears. His ef. forts have rewarded him with ears of the grain 10 Inches in length, which is 8 Inches longer than normal. He even produced some measuring 15 Inches, and says the day Is not far off when he will be able to show 18 inch corn. For planting, Sass selects the kernels of his longest corn as seed, Sheep Industry Is Old The sheep Industry Is very, very old, Sacred history tells us the shep- herds and their flocks were ‘round about in the hills when Christ was born, The industry was very old even In those days and a most important one. As time progressed and elviliza. tion spread to the west across Europe, the sheep population expanded. In all of the great wars of history the poldiers wore wool and ate meat. As the civilized nations grew In impor tance their sheep Industry advanced, | From Left-Overs Among Others That Are Tasty Are Scrambled Vegetables. In the larder or refrigerator of practically every home there will be found left-over vegetables after din- ner, and frequently after lunch or a hearty supper. The housewife ean gauge appetites to a remarkable, or she i8 so close a ca- terer that some one goes without the extra serving that would be en- Joyed. What to do with these odds and ends of vegetables Is a problem, too often solved by a salad, It well to know of many other dishes, some hot, cold, which can use the bite. One excellent dish is scram- bled vegetables, some | i ! of assorted kinds, son the cooked vegetables, eges enough to have well mixed, Pour into a frying pan or omelet pan, the eggs begin diced vegetables, until the eggs are don a platter and qurlol A trim of radi dresses up the Good getable siring beans iy the some o {ise one eee. Sea na eat the buttered in the cook stir Continue to cook, Remove with pat roses and olives attractis vi way, f the the cauliflower with the 1 Hn you boil the head whole, Put green s pleces cul the boiling flowers, OWers, 1 inch long witer he require a then EWeel tlk salted fore as the cooking Carrots, corn and make another fine nation. But the housewife to use what she has, go but suggestions, the stalks to make tender pepper, combi will have these are This can be a tasty dish to set be- fore the family, if butter is used for the and the especially fat, vegeta. Put the vegetables through the food chop- per, using the con knife, or chop the vegetables, Add one-quarter tea spoonful of , and a dash of each two cupfuls of the veg- Brown ght. ree thyme the vegeta and gide ea ibhles 1 OCeaRic mally, BO more browned, edible If a poached egg is put serving, the dish makes a and may served as the for supper or luncheon. egetables to combine, and than one n be with garnish of deli tops. cate each he main one do forget These onion, or chives cel. ery. give zest, B81, WNL Ber Dogs Trained for Blind nnel is operated near Morris. as traflic The Gog by taking this advice! Can constipation safely be reliev ed? “Nes!” say medical men, “Yes!” say the many thousands who have followed their advice and know. You are not likely to cure your constipation with salts, pills, tabl ais or any of the habit-forming catha tics. But you can safely relieve this condition by gentle regulation with a suitable liquid laxative. THE LIQUID TEST: First: select a properly prepared liquid laxative. Second: take the dose you find suited to your system. Third: gradually reduce the dose until bowels are moving of their own accord. Sir isn't it? And it works! The right liquid laxative brin thorough bowel action withot using force. An approved ah laxative (one which is most widely used for both adults and children) is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It is a doctor's prescription, and perfectly Its laxative aclion is based on senna, a natural laxative; the dose can be measured, and the R eo 124 mple, safe. action thus regulated to suil your individual need. i$ there are children in your household, don't give them any fad forn “of 1 laxative, but use a health ful, helpl il preparation like Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Its very taste will tell vou it is wholesome, and agreeable to the stomach. De- lightful taste, and delightful action; there is no discomfort at the time, or after. Ask your druggist for Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin, all ready to take. A Frank Statement Concerning Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin We believe the and tablets mineral drugs is rapidly giv- ing way to gentle regulation of the bowels with a liquid use of pills containing And we en ow it preparation for chi expectant mothers it does not cause 1 or irritate the Fadnose. bo cations of Cm should be without it. Why Suffer with Skin Troubles When Cuticura Ointment So effectively soothes and heals. Red, rough skin, sore, itching, burning feet, chafings, rashes, irritations, cuts and id * SINCE SHE LOST 39 POUNDS OF FAT Kruschen and weighed 201 lbs. Today after starting my dth jar I've lost 3 Ibe. and am in perfect condition ~ really 1 Raver > el. ” re. erry, Tampa, Fla. Don’t stay fat and unattractive not when it's so and safe to get rid of dou- ble, chins, ugly hip-fat and un b ecoming plumpness on upper arms—at the same time build up strength and increase vi tality —feel anger and k free from hetdaches, tion, acidity, fatigue — brea nt take a half teaspoonful of Krus chen Salte first thing every morning in a of hot water. If not joyfully atid with results of one 85 cent jar woske) money back from any A Ba Bl, sure get e way to tn PIMPLY SKIN and blotches cleared — by daily treatment with Resinol HEADQUARTERS for SOUTHERNERS IN NEW YORK Many folks from below the Mason-Dixon line make The Martinique their headquare ters in New York, Owe block from Empire State Build. ing, Fifth Avenue, and the largest department stores. Single. $2 to $5.50. Double, $3 to §3. © Nose higher Direction. American Hotels Corporation GEORGE H. WARTMAN, Manager Masini Broadway at 320d Street New York