Page:The Saturday Evening Post vol. 183.pdf/406

 THE

SHTURDJIY EVENING

POST

“Does the Senator from Maine yield to

the Senator from North Carolina?" asks the Vice-President. “With pleasure."

157'0/l/'

Speaking slowly, the Senator from North Carolina begins: “Mr. President, I have ‘ listened to the announcement of the Sena tor from Maine, who is chairman of the Appropriations Committee, that there are

xfords

no appropriation bills ready to be acted

upon. In that case, Mr. President, it seems to me that it would be well for the Senate to adjourn for a few days, in order that this work may be brought to a satis factory condition. As for the other Sena tors, Mr. President, there are many affairs which engross their attention, and these few days could well be devoted to the consideration of personal and senatorial matters, sir, that I am sure are pressing. There are committee meetings to be held, and I am quite sure the Senate could proﬁtably recess, especially as conditions as regard appropriation bills are as the Senator from Maine says they are."

do not slip at the heel HE style which always characterizes remains-it’s

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Meantime Senator Heyburn, interested in his books, has no idea of what is going on; and all the time Ovennan has been

speaking Senator Hale has been standing listening to the remarks of the Senator from North Carolina with rapt attention. Murray Crane is in the rear of the chamber, apparently not at all interested. “Very well, Mr. President," says Sena tor Hale. “As suggested by the Senator from North Carolina, I move that when the Senate adjourns today it shall adjourn to

meet on Monday next." The Vice-President pulls his most mo notonous, calmest, evenest voice. Senator Heyburn is still engrossed in his books. “The Senator from Maine moves that

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when the Senate adjourns today it shall

adjoum to meet on Monday next. Is there objection? The chair hears none. It is so ordered." He gets that oﬁ in an incredibly short time. Then Senator Crane moves out to the cloakroom, Senator Hale sits down, Sena tor Overman smiles brightly; and pres ! ently, when Senator Heyburn comes up out of his books, he wonders vaguely what

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1 happened, how it happened and where he

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i was when they were adjouming the Senate from Thursday until Monday!

the dust.

.H@md¢mmﬂ%mha SYCHOLOGISTS today hold the opin

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ion that the human brain is taught

through the use of the hand. In other words, it is through the development of manual dexterity that the faculty of word making—upon which all else depends—is gained. The choice made in childhood be tween right hand and left hand determines which of the two cerebral hemispheres, the

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If the right hand be preferred, as is

usually the case, the left brain-which controls that member—will acquire the

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wordmaking power and all the associated

faculties that go to make up what we call intellect; but if the left hand be chosen the right brain will enjoy these advantages exclusively. Dr. W. H. Thomson, in his book on

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Brain and Personality, says that if the

speech-center in the left brain of a right handed man be destroyed or seriously injured he will never thereafter be able to utter a word, notwithstanding the fact that he has another speech-center, still intact and structurally perfect, in his right brain. It exists, but he cannot make it talk. Either brain is equally good for speech if trained for that purpose. It is the child's choice of the hand that decides which cerebral hemisphere in after life shall know speech and which shall be wordless forever.

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In discussing the connection between

speech and the hand, it is interesting to observe that in the brain the “motor areas” governing the hands are close by

the area that controls the tongue and

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injured and speechlessness results. In many instances persons have been

struck with word-blindness—that is to say, though still able to see, to speak and to understand what was said to them, they

, could not find any meaning in the words on a printed page. Equally interesting are cases of word-deafness, where people can not understand what is said, though they are able to read and write as well as ever.

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