Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / April 23, 1935, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX [TGYPSY GIRLT7® THE STORY OF AN IMPASSIONED ROJ^ANCEL Aft 1 Teauer 0 i&s CTTM’TKK f*» I STKWAKT suit! Donsuelo’s ‘hunk! of glass’’ ring was valuable, Couk. it be possible? Consuelo looked up, eyes wide. “Now you are kidding me! This fc no good. It is worth nothing—no more than $12.60!** site said. “If you paid that for it, you got it from someone who didn't know dia monos," Stewart said. "It’s a line stone.” “No, 1 didn’t pay that for *t." What would he say if he knew the price, she thought. So this is real It Is not the hunk of glass the man %>>»!■<i it. Oh. March, Marcu, how wrong l was! 1 wonder if you knew all the time it was real. It shouldn't have mattered —not lung should have mattered. What ha va you given your new bride? Does she love jewelry as 1 did? Ts she pretty? j Can she dance? Will ou be happ\ with her. Marou? Or maybe will you < think of me and remember that night so tong ago? , I am going to be a bride. Funny, isn’t it, not to be your bride? Mrs. Stewart Hlackmire. Gypsies don't ; have names like that. I will he a I gypsy no longer when I am married ( to him. i - She buried her face against the i ►blows. I will be a gypsy no longer when I mu • married to him. 1 will he a i rypsy— < She sat upright. She said to Stew- i %rt: i ‘‘l’m going to see the picture the : Dummy painted after the show to- i •light.** i ,r We are going to Bill’s for supppr and a couple of rubbers of bridge.” i “We can go there any time, and : besides I am going alone.” Why. of i course I am, site thought. T do not want him with me when I see this I picture. I “You can’t go to that man’s studio i lUone.” “But I wili.” “Yes? Damn that Willowby—hut .1 dislike him! Look here, Consuelo. can’t you see it’s only a pretext to get you alone. It’s —you can’t go, ; that's all! I’ve let you have your i OWm way in everything lately. I’ve tried to understand your moody •tie nces. t I’ve overlooked a dozen things, -f’ve done everything you wanted, but this is a bit too much There isn’t anything T wouldn't give you or do for you. hut you can’t go •. to this man's studio alone at night. We're engaged to be married, doesn’t ■ that mean anything tn you?*’ “You will never know how much It uk*«n« Vi .aw" *h« Mdd aloud. 'Jo JURY IN BREMER ABDUCTION CASE TAKES STROLL The .jury in* the Edward G. ( Bremer cu e, purring jurlginout i Hauptmann Graphologists at Schultz 1 rial JwH\ jf |: It I * M J| I Jj I p| || "-x f + i'C -f "-I' * .im., r -'.' IF w| "-' y itfrn— , • Are of the Hauptmann prosecution witnesses, Albert S. Osborne, Sr., handwriting expert, now ; federal prosecutors at Syracuse in trial of Dutch Schultz, gang leader, for income tax * V ® SI( L • * i fc ' terencc in court arc (I. to r.), Osborne; John 11. McEvers, Asst. U. S. Attorney General; S. M. Klein, District Attorney of New York; Dr. William Souder, handwriting expert who testified with Fleininaton: and Donald P. Gorman Asat. District Attorney of Syracuse. Glassy Eye to Eye Duel There’s drama in this photo of Cart e r Class (1.), Virginia, New Deal critic and father of Federal Re serve law, glar ing at M. S. Kc eles, whose eyes are lowered, as Senate commit tee questions latter on nomi nation as chair man of Federal Reserve- Board. Sen. Bulkley (c.) looks on. I herself sue added, it means that ; I will lie a slave —but tonight I will he ! free and do what 1 want! "Then, of course, my dear, you'll not go.” She did not answer. “And anothei thing. Consuelo, the way you came to the theater. I don't know what made you late, you haven’t told me, but you came with your hair hanging and no sloes and stockings and that shawl wrapped around you. You looked simply aw ful. I can't imagine what people who saw you thought. I've bought you the best clothes in New York and 1 expect you to wen them." He cleared his throat. "Who was with you that made you so late?" “I was alone." "I hope so, but it's hard to believe it.” “No? Well, then, maybe i wasn't alone! Maybe i was making love to somebody! Oh. you fool, why don't you trust me?” "How can I, after you say you *-e going to Willow In's without me?" "And furthermore l am!” She was furious no»v. "So you would do anything for me. give me anything. Liar! You have put a short leash on me, but not yet have you made me into a trained dog! A white dog to sit at your feet and beg when you snap your fingers is what vou want. I beg of mi man! I so where l please and when 1 please! There is only one man I will obey and that is the man 1 marry- and you are not my master, not yet! You under stand, white man, you are not niv master!” Site shook her doubled fist in his face. “Oil, cut it out! So you want’to do what you please. when you please, and yet you would base me believe that your funny gypsy code makes you obey your husband. Bosh! It looks to me as if it'd lie a mistake to marry you. But I’ll keep my promise on one condition that you don't go to Wiilowhy's tonight. Do you understand me?” “Perfectly, white man!” She laughed at him. "Oh, now you are the funny one! You would keep your promise, ih? You would make me a good woman, eh? You will not let me go out alone at night, eh” "Stop talking like that and get into your costume! You haven’t any time.” "Time?” she sneered. “Time? t have all the time in the world. Now get out of here and leave me alone!” Nevertheless she was pulling on the costume. He held up the black curls while she fastened the hooks. He tied her slippers while she twined roses in on men and women in the Karpis- Barkr-r gang, charged with ab ■ r ' •> ■" : V' ' v m SEI- -c Jf ws?t lUMsk Jf§ m*. |JH|' JS ffiV. ■P^SraHnx HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1935. " f or hair He hr-night her tte* basket of artificial dowers. "You are lovely made up as a street gamin." He cleared his throat.. ‘Consuelo, let's not tight. I’m dog gone tired of it.” "So am I. my friend! 1 will go tonight and we will not light about it, see?" She was out the door no l'ore he could answer. I'll teach her a lesson, he thought. He scribbled a notp and laid It an the dressing table. It read: "i im going to the club It you love me, you will not go to Wiilowhy’s. Caii me when you want to see me again.” He left the room. Backstage he paused. There she was out in the spotlight. She's more beautiful when she's angry than any other time, be mused. He watched until she wa» ready to come off. then he left. As lie walked down the alley he won dered if lie was silly to go away and leave her like this She’ll call in the morning, he told himself Doggone that temper of hers. I wonder if she will calm down as she says when we are married? Two weeks yet. I'll make it this Wednesday. I'll call her in the mornint* and ask her. I can't do that. Now pride will make me wait until she calls and asks to he forgiven. Maybe she won’t call in the morning. Damn that gypsy! Gosh, but she’s a sweet kid, gypsy part and ail! He was whistling as he got into his car. '*• Applause ringing in her ears. Up the stairs again. Stewart gone.- His note on the table. She tore it up and stamped on the pieces. He would make me a dog without a will of my own. she thought. She stared at herself in the mirror. That ie what you have already become. For months now you have done what he said. When you marry him you will always do what he says. I have bought you the best clothes in New York and I expect you to wear them! You'll never be able to wear a gypsy skirt and blouse again! You’ll be a goigio. Well, now, that’s what you wanted, isn't it? She was down on the stage again now. Her thoughts were still run ning. angry jumbled thoughts, but they only seemed to make her danc ing the finer, the more assured. Never had the house applauded so, not even on her opening night. They were going wild. The sound of their clapping was good in her ears. It washed away her anger. She forgot about Stewart and all the things that were nagging at her consciousness. She sang to them, and beneath the words was buried fire. il'O RE CONTINUE* l ducting the hawker, goes nut for ' lunch at St. Paul. What Effect Tobacco Has Upon the Folk Who Smoke fly LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. TOBACCO STILL Is popularly called a “weed", and this is typical of the many popular inaccuracies which cluster around it. Tt may have been a “weed” when Sir Walter Raleigh found it in the New World, but it certainly is a sedulously cul tivated and ex pensive plant to day. The people who decry tobac co steadily are getting in the minority. A phy sician who called up 1,000 men in five towns, se lected in se quence from the Dr, Clendening telephone directory, found that 82 per cent of them were smokers. He probably would have had almost the same figures if he had included women. The objections which have been made to tobacco are several, w-hicb I will discuss under separate para graphs helow. In discussing them I will give the result of objective ob servation and experiment, the..an swers of science, and steer '» aw’ay from opinion as much as the facts permit? f -” -v’ Smoking. Shorten* Wind?,.. - One criticism of tobacco is Ahat* It shortens the wind* of athletes. /This question was examined very .. care-' fully by Doctors' Turley and Harri son of Nashville, Tenn., who reported in the American Journal of Medical Science in 1932 that “smoking, even to excess, of 20 or more cigdrets a day, produces no significant decrease in the respiratory efficiency in‘-re sponse to such exertion as- is neces sitated by the ordinary duties "of life.” . > ". 'V’ A group of medical studentsi. who had'participated in'college athletics a few years befoie. and had'been Spring Is Love Time at Zoo, Too IttV * ■/. u * >^ wn * ° riiMi ac in Spring a young animal’s fancy also turns lightly to thoughts of love, as you see. The animal and bird photos were made by R. Biedenstrucke? at Berlin Zoo; the fish snapshot at New York Aquarium. smoking regularly since, showed quite as good “wind" as most mem bers of the football squad. Is tobacco bad for the heart? There is no question that tobaec® will cause palpitation, consciousness of the heart’s action and irregularity of the pulse. These are functional troubles which indicate no organic change in the heart, arid pass awaj when the tobacco is discontinued. No Difference in Blood Pressure Dr. Wingate Johnson, from his otar servations, failed to note any differ ence in the blood pressure of smok ers and abstainers. The use of to bacco unquestionably induces at tacks of angina pectories. hut it does not cause them. In other words, it is not responsible for the organic changes which cause angina. When those changes are present in the heart, the use of tobacco will bring on attacks more frequently Smok ers who begin to have angina usu ally give up tobacco. It also pro duces attacks of pain in the heart in young people which are probably due to spasm of the arteries of th# heart. This is pseudo-angina. Does tobacco cause any digestive dusturbance? Is it an aid to diges tion? There is some discussion about this. Dickson, in the Journal of the Canada -Medical Association, says that smoking, may cause increased acid in the stomach.' Others believe that it may be a predisposing-; cause of ulcer !of ' the sfomch. 'There- Is much opposition to such a view.' how ever. On the contrary, we cannot say that tobacco is any aid to gestion. . ' . EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlet* by Div-Clendening can now be ob tained by serjding 10 cents in coin" for each, and a self-addressed envelop* stamped • with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care’ of this - paper.' The pamphlets g are: “Indigestion a.nd Constipation,” "Re ducing and Gaining," “Infant Feed ing," “Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes." “Feminine Hygiene” and “The Care of the Hair and Skin.” Wife Preservers ' When you cook corn next sum mer try this method: Let the water come to a boil, put in one tablespoon sugar, then add the corn. When -it comes to a boil co.ok no more and no less than five minutes, in this tray all the have* reiftaiae fa* the qua. READY TO TEST BIRD WINGS f ' gfc \ , Veteran of 355 parachute jumps, Capt. Floyd McKonnon, of Dallas, Tex., planned to test the wings he.is shown wearing above in a lean from a plane flying a mik What Body Changes Occur From the Use of Tobacco By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. WHAT IS the physiologic action of tobacco? What changes occur in the body to make smokers get so much comfort out of it? In answer ing these ques- H™- tions from the scientific point of view we meet a paradox at the very beginning. Nicotine, which is the chief ingredient of tobacco, is an extremely vigor ous poison. Two drops of nico tine placed on the tongue ar rubbed into the gums of a dog or • -> cat will produce Dr. Clendenlng death in one or two minutes. In man, death has followed the use of nicotine as a poultice, and even from the plugging of a wound with a quid of tobacco to stop bleeding. The in jection of nicotine into the intestine for the relief of worms has been followed by death. A tobacco smoker, however, gets very little nicotine into his system. The best grades of tobacco are by no means those which have the highest amount of nicotine. IT is probable that the nicotine is volati lized or destroyed largely by the heat, and that the smoke which is taken into (he system contains only a very small percentage of the drug. This must he so or there would he many deaths, even when tolerance is established, from the amount of smoking that we do Not Settled Habit Another 1 fact about tobacco as a drug is that it is far from a settled habit. The most complete example of a drug habit is that of the mor phine addict. A morphine addict cannot stop the use of the drug whether tie is s.ii |; m well trridet anv How Coffee Affects Folk And //-s i u!ite in the Diet sis LOGAN D. k THE ANCTENT RyiTrians. dissipated Aud dissolute as they are popularly pictured to be, had. at any rate, no tuch variety of drug addicts as we have in our modern civiliza tion. Their one habit along these lines was wine. And it wasn'i very strong wine at that. They had no cocaine and very prob ably no opium, or only a very crude and inef fectual form of it. They cer tainly had no such problem as our national problem of seri- US/ jjfpfo’; ' kg Dr. Clendenlng ous drug addic tlon with morphine and eofcaine. Nor did they have any: „f the mild, what I have chosen to call "the do mestie addictions” of tobacco, coffee and t a. Coffee was introduced into Europe by vv/i.v of Turkey only in the sev enteenth century. In England it made an instantaneous success. Pos sibly its popularity was because the beverage was non-intoxicating, and people were tired of the boisterous in taverns Macaulay’s description of the cof fee houses when they were first set up is worth re-reading It is in the third chapter of his History of Eng larfd. There were political coffee houses, where crowds gathered to sip the popular drink and discuss the state of the nation. “There were toffee houses where the first medical rfien might be consulted. Doctor J»hn Radcliffe, who in the. year 1685 n&se to the largest practice In Lon don, came daily to Garraway’s and was to be found surrounded by sur geons and apothecaries, at a par ticular table.” OftflCaa, however, bee greatly ioy Captain Floyd McKennon high. Floyd Davis, of Flint, Mich., met death recently in g similar experiment when his para chute failed to open. McKenno* said he would carrv two ’chute* circumstances, without help or with out great suffering. No such events occur to tobacco users. Everyone is familiar with the fact that if he has a slight illness, such as a cold, be stops the use of tobacco without any discomfort whatever. I, myself, in London once began to get an irregu larity of the pulse from those mur derous English cigars and stopped smoking for six months. I cannot remember to have had a single min ute's discomfort or the slightest de sire to resume the habit. This U also borne out by the experience of many people for whom smoking ag gravates attacks of angina, and who give it up abruptly without any de sire to return to it. All of this leads to the supposition that a great deal of the pleasure of smoking is sensuous and psychic. In other words, it comes from the stim ulation of smell and taste, and the habit of having something to do with the hands and lips. Some Reaction Noted Tobacco, however, even as ordi narily used, does have certain physi ologic reactions. Some of these wera described in the article yesterday. There is no question that it has an elective effect on the small arteries of the heart and the limbs, causing them to go into spasm, indeed, one of the few diseases that is ascribed to tobacco is that of spasm of the ar teries of the leg, resulting in poor circulation and even gangrene. Another had result of tobacco is in tobacco amblyopia, or blindness. These cases usually clear up after the tobacco has been stopped. Summarizing, we feel that tobacco does little harm except in a few cases, but the habit is easy to stop, if necessary, and its effects are al most entirely functional. It is gen erally agreed that adolescents should not smoke, as it has more deleetert ous effects on the young man than on the old, and that the proper time to begin to smoke is the time whan one casts Ihe fir st vote. . its vogue in England. The annual I BVitiSb^ 1 consumption of coffee, 1* about 7/10 pound per capita. Whili , the consumption In* the Unites! ( States is about 11 pounds per capita For tea, the figures are almost re versed Great Britain consumini . 9% pounds per capita, while th* United States uses 8/10 pound per capita. 1 am inclined to believe that th* principal pleasure of coffee is in W»* taste, the smell and the comfort de , rived fw>rn a hbt drink. Its physio<- logicai effects are; not very marked, or at least they are not such as can be noticed very: markedly by th* average person. Coffee Easy to Give Up Cert a 1 ply It is an easy habit to give up. There is no strong '‘crav ing’’ for coffee with most people. Everyone must have had the experl ence.of having left his cup of coffee on the table and gone off forgetting to drink it and yet feeling no urge. There is no doubt that caffeine, the active ingredient. Is a mental stimu lant. Many experiments prove it. Testing typewriting, small doses in creased speed. Doses over three grains (about the amount in a cup of coffee) decreased speed; but even with the larger doses the quality of the work done was better. It is a valuable stimulant to the heart, particularly that of middle age The deeaffeinJzed varieties, as I know from personal experience, are hard to tell from the natural coffee, and certainly tend to overcome la somnla. EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlets by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending 10 cents in coin, for each, and a self-addressed envelop* stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of this paper. The pamphlets are: "Indigestion and Constipation." “R** duckJg and Gaining.” "Infant Feed tng,” "Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes,” “Feminine Hygiene” «Ad ‘"SEfca Qura 9X Ut« ¥*ir «u»4 *WA-"
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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April 23, 1935, edition 1
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