INDIANS 10 AGREE 10 PARKWAY ROAD Construction in Cherokee Reservation May Soon Be Possible llnronn. In flic Sir Wnlter Hotel, lit .1 ' . II \ Sli lilt VI liliFJ. I Oct. 22 The Cherokee In ‘;-vV.|in county, who refused . r s. Bureau of Public 10 f>! , ! the National Park Service n< wpark-to-park high ’ to. I out' the” wanted and ’ :i ' , |,, i,i up th* building of the ilH i t ,r ;lu' TUirkwav. are now v ' , Ito . i'-‘ to a different loea* ‘ x,!< t)t ed hv t'he State High . ,1 put t'c Works Commission l, ;,|| from an authoritative ~ ~ today. As a result it is . ' , r( i Hu : construction work on 1 f, || ,ml of the new parkway .p. iulin i-astward toward Way i’ll , ! A Iteville. can he started % ,.|y mil future. The con '‘,j„ n ,it i.rdy 12 miles of highway , ~A n ,. ,h-,l to connect with an he hwa.V .at Magftip and , , ,|, , direct •onto into th° In .jvition and the Great Smoky Vi ■<: .•■ National l 'ark from the ‘,. jciiiati'! objected to the route two Federal bureau? , two p i ons, it has been learned. (Vt w .. h c-oi'c the Government i lilt'd foot right-of-way for | : v v iv rich* down the Oconn v.ilkv in which lies their best f ,. i.j’iii And since the valley is j ism'll inoie than 1 O'K) feet wide \ j htocr the Tribal Council. . o~' ■! is unable to drive a car, whe lp' h.'s had only one drink or 15 Stanback Scores Again! l i t .'1 Af,BACK gave you quicker ''h"t from headache. Next, it gave i "Balanced Prescription.” STAN tk'd’K It ids again, by being the first ! I'c.-ii'Hption of its type to come to -a lalid in a moisture-proof, dust I'l'uf cellophane jacket, always fresh ■ ’i' l pure. One more reason why you "ill always want to use STANBACK hn headache, neuralgia, and other • ■ ' "•'Hi!; inorganic pains. 10c and 25c. —Adv. DIONNE QUINTUPLETS needed the Best—AND GOT IT! PURETEST COD LIVER OIL PLAYED VITAL PART Scrupulous care had to be exercised to guard the strength of the Dionne Quintuplets dur ing their first critical year. J| - l That’s why Purdtcat Cod Liver Oil was the first and only f/ f \\ addition to their regular milk fl 1 ■ diet. 111 | <¥£ Puretest extra-rich vitamin gjj ' ‘ content fitted exactly the prime ' fi/Lr t(> * }one t s ’ |j| tE&*' feU mm develop resistance against com Sold only at Store* Parker’s Drug Store Life for Zenge v o v .-y m Mandeville Zenge Prison walls closed on Mandeville Zenge for life after this picture was taken. The Missouri car penter-farmer was adjudged guil ty in Chicago of the mutilation slaying of Dr. Walter J. Bauer, allegedly because of jealousy over Dr. Bauer’s marriage to Zenge’» former sweetheart, Louise Shaffer Bauer. drinks, he should be arrested and removed from his car and from the roads or streets. ‘‘lt very often happens that the shock of being stopped and an usltd will sober up a driver, especially if he has had only a few drinks. As a result, by the time they are taken to i police station or jail, they are often ■'Miite sober, even though they were quite drunk when stopped and ar rested. I have arrested drivers my self who when arrested were so drunk that their driving was endang ering every car on the road, but when taken to the police station were comparatively sober. Yet we feel 'ustified in making these arrests so long as their driving was danger •ut and erratic, and we shall con tinue to make them on this same basis.” Drunken drivers figured in 82 non fa,al accidents and several fatal ac cidents in September. Farm Credit Drop Seen As Proof Os Better Business (Continued from Page One.) had the?e reports before him recently when he told presidents of the Fed eral land banks that a "brighter out look” was reflected in Federal farm loan activities. "The land banks and other units of the FCA are revamping their activi ties,” he said, “so as to operate ef ficiently with the reduced volume of new loans and to service best the yerau great number of loans placed on their boks in the last two and a half years.” Hundreds of employees in The field have been dropped from the rolls as new business declined, officials said. Ruth Nichols Seriously 111 From Crash (Continued from Page One.) those suffered by Miss NTchols. Dr. Emmitt Howd said today that Mi.siv Nichols had passed a night. If she continues to keep her strength for the next two days, Dr. Howd said, he thinks she may re cover. , F,ouj of her employees —two men ind,'two women—were treated for less .tivere hurts and last night carried out a double wedding originally plan ned as a sky wedding over New York City. Captain Hublitz was the controls of the plane, owned by Clarence Chamberlin, trans-Atlantic flier, when it took off for New York. HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1935 -» SPECIAL NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS Advertisers desiring space in Thursday’s issue of the Daily Dispatch, which will have an extra circulation of 8.300 copies are asked to make their copy available by 4 p. m. Wednesday, as no advertising matter can be accepted after that hour with a guarantee that it will be published on Thursday. The above extra circulation is in addition to the regular circu lation of the Daily Dispatch and will be available every Thurs day, up to and including Thursday, December 5, at no extra cost to advertisers. This extra circulation is made possible to advertisers of this newspaper through cooperation with the 25 and 15 Club to feature Henderson as the marketing and trad ir.g center of this territory. Kindly notify us at once if you desire space in Thursday’s is sue. \ our cooperation will be appreciated. Henderson Daily Dispatch Stevenson—Wednesday BSff ill ' | i'i' ""J t IHM sM mmm f |HU jgp .;V, - Ann Sothern anc/ Roger Pryor in "The Girl Friend" A Columbia Picture What Chemical Process Makes Muscle Function By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. WE SEE an insect like a dragon fly poised in mid-air. Its wings beat 10 rapidly that they are invisible— mere blurs. It must take a lot of Dr. Clenacning oxygen. If a muscle, even a human muscle, has plenty of oxygen supply, it can work indefinitely. The insect’s muscles are so much "lore efficient comparatively than human muscles because air is ear ned directly from the surface of the insect body to the internal organs by a set of little tubes. Each muscle fiber has its own little pipeline bring ing It all the oxygen it needs. The higher animals. Including our selves. have the same thing, but by a much more complex and less effi cient arrangement. Like the insect, we get our oxygen from the air. But the oxygen is not carried to the mus cle fiber direct. True, it goes there, as does the insect’s. In little tubes; hut in the case of the human body they are blood vessels, and the oxy gen is carried to the muscle by the red blood cells But. as in the case of the irisei t. each human muscle has a tiny individual pipeline or capil lary running beside it; its walls are so thin that the oxvsen in the blood Milk a Utility? Sjßa&||P ■ ||| 3gty isL ;j.i. ’ ’ i ' ' W;J; •'*•; I Dr. W. H. Hamilton Believing that the milk business “has become a gigantic monop oly”, Dr. Walton Hale Hamilton, above, special advisor to President Roosevelt on consumer problems, goon is expected to urge the presi dent to make milk a public utility. Dr. Hamilton i 3 a former Yale university economist and sociolo gist.- can readily pass over to the muscle. Tills oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood is one of the most Inter esting chemical functions of the body, It was known to one of the earliest investigators in physiology, Mayow, that dark blood from a vein, when exposed to air and whipped, will turn bright red. And his contemporary, Richard Lower, showed that exactly the same change takes place In the dark blood from the right side of the heart when it passes through the lungs. Because in the lungs it passes through such thin-walled vessels that it is practically exposed to the air and picks up oxygen. The chemical substance In the blood which does this Is called “hem-, oglobin”, and Is a part of the red blood cell. When exposed to oxygen at atmospheric pressure, hemoglobin will take up oxygen, forming a loose chemical combination called "oxy hemoglobin”. When this is put teta a vacuum, it again gives up its oxy gen. More or less, that is the woy in which the interchange occurs la the body. In the lungs, hemoglobin is exposed to air at atmospheric pres sure, and while there is nowhere exactly a vacuum In the body, condi tions In the muscle approximate a partial vacuum. The essential nature of the chemi cal changes in this vital function of oxygen carriage revolve around the properties of iron, which is a con stituent of hemoglobin. Iron, which is thus so necessary to animal life, is carefully conserved in the body. Every infant has a goot, supply of body iron at birth. But as there is little, or none, In milk, tt has to be supplied beginning at about the age of six months. Hence the impor tance of the pigment foods in infancy —yolk of egg, spinach, etc. The deeper significance of this mechanism will be seen when we dis cuss later in the week the acid base balance of the body. sugar and oxy gen to allow muscles to function that rapidly without fatigue. The in sect’s muscle Is just like the human muscle, at least in this, that unless it is supplied with materials, fa tigue accumu lates until it has to stop. And largely this me an s Seized byMex Bandits wmr Joseph H. Durrell, vice president of New York’s National City Bank, had some anxious hours while the cap tive of bandits in Sonora, Mexico. He and four other Americans, there on a hunting expedition, were re leased after their equipment had been confiscated. XCtmtrat PrwX H L f\ om W; ce W \=j» W BLIZARP-iC 7ft CHAPTER CAROL WAS much more aus picious of the policeman than he of bei. She was well up on her detec tive stories and before she dared, trust herself to answer her phone, she retraced her steps and quietly opened the door. The hall was empty. She ran to the window. The police car was g-one. Now she was safe. “Hello . . . Aunt Harriet . . . are you still there? . . .good . . . no I just had a visitor and I wanted to say good-by . . . I’ve been a little worried about you . . . are you completely recovered and in good health? . . And you’re quite comfortable? . . you haven’t had any company? . yes, I m listening ... I remember. 111 do it today .. . I’ll stop by and bring you the books you wanted to night ... I wouldn’t go out if I were you. . . . Good-by, Aunt Harriet.” Carol put the receiver back on the book. She hurried into street clothes. She had little time for all that there was to be done. In the taxi speeding west she consulted the list in her hand. The bank first, then the shops, then the railroad station. The visit to the second-hand store could be made at night. At the bank, she presented the bankbooks containing the note from Miss Van Clove, signed Margaret Baker. “Mrs. Baker is going to live in the south and she will deposit it in a bank she will select there.” she said to the bank officer. **Tt Is very dangerous to give you : this large sum in cash. It is most Irregular.” “I thought this was definitely de cked when Mrs. Baker was here with me the other day?” Carol said coldly. “Mrs. Baker is, I admit, a trifle eccentric but you and I have our orders.” Carol left the bank with $50,000 In SIOO and SSOO notes concealed in a box made to look like a book. “I am a professional shopper,” she Informed the salesgirl at her next stop. “I wish to buy a complete out fit for a lady about 50. Let me see suits first, please.” And when she had made her selec tions and paid for them, saying she would take the things with her, Carol had selected the loveliest things that fine Fifth avenue shop had to offer. There was a rough sports tweed (she was careful not to select things that would have to be altered to fit) with an immense fur collar and turban to match, four or five black gowns of velvet, exquisitely fine crepe and sheers, a blue lace dinner gown, a silvery gray one with bands of deep brown fur. There were slippers and shoes for every costume. There were hats and lingerie and twm stun ning negligees. The boxes filled the back of the taxi and Carol had to squeeze in between them. She made short %vork of packing the lovely things and a few clothes she had bought for herself into the other trunk which had been empty. Then she went over to First avenue ®nd engaged a neighborhood iceman to drive the trunk to Grand Central •tation and check it there in the name of Mrs. Margaret Baker. There was one more errand she had to do that night; she had to find a shabby suitcase In a second hand store. “My theatrical experience is actually doing me good,” she said to herself as she surveyed herself In the mirror. Sh j wore a red crepe de chine frock to which she had added a lace Collar. On her feet she wore red sandals. She looked at those regret fully. for they belonged with a good evening dress. She had combed her hair out and it hung almost to her shoulders In quite a horrible fuzz, Carol thought delightedly. Over It, she pulled on a black velvet hat to which she had tacked a nose veil. Now, for the polo coat and a bit of chewing gum. When she was dressed in her as- England Working to Reach Accord Before Too Late (Continued from rage One.) strengthened his bargaining positions. A peaceful settlement of the Italo- Ethiopian conflict appeared depend ent on further Italian victories to bring Emperor Haile Selassie to pos„ sible acceptance of whatever terms might be agreed on in European dip lomatic negotiations. Rairnsoaked Italian troops hauled guns had ammunition forward thro ugh the mud of the southern front preparatory to a drive on the stra tegic Ethiopian post of Gorrahei. Italian press dispatches from As mara, Eritrea, tgld of Italian rifle men and machine gunners pursuing fleeing tribesmen after the Fascist forces blasted their way into Dag nerrei, Sciavele and Burdoli. The Italians control the approach to Gorahi, the next objective, before the strategic city of Harar, where they would be in a position to cut the Addis Ababa-Djibouti railway. Mussolini calmly continued his pre parations for “any eventuality.” and waited for the British to show cause why he should withdraw his power ful army from Italy’s North African possession of Libya, confronting Egypt. I; SPECIALS I 1 25 oz. bottle vinegar 10c I Choice Timothy Hay, jj t per 100 lbs $1.15 ■ 100 lbs, table corn meal $2.35 ■ Blue Belle Flour Is Delicious ■ DICKSON & CO. I Horner Street Phone 059 * BeaiMfui water paint ®ONE COAT OVER THE t OLD WALLPAPER , irM m:ii|gni SOLDAT- incorporated “Ju»t walk out calmly.” sembled costume, she packed the new tweed suit, its turban, smart shoes, tailored underwear and acces sories into the battered suitcase she had picked up. “Will you see If Miss Josephine Delacourt is in?” she asked the clerk in the 49tH street hotel. “I wanta return a bag I borrowed from her.” She looked at the suitcase she carried and smiled at the clerk. “Go right up. I guess she’s in— -408. Been out on the road, girlie?" "YcP-” Carol answered, shifting her gum. “And back! At this time of the year! it’s the breaks!” She was going on the road -ill right, she reflected in the dingy ele vator that bore her above. Carol found a new Miss Van Cleve waiting for her. Here was no trembling old lady. She was firm of step and bright of eye and when Carol dressed her in the smart new clothes, applied a bit of makeup skillfully and put the pearl earrings on. she declared her charge the pic ture of What the Well-Dressed Woman of the World Wears. “Only the night clerk would re member you” she said in parting, “and I found out that he comes on at nine, so you had better leave very shortly. I’ll take these other things along with me. Just walk out calm ly. Leave what you owe In an enve lope addressed to the manager. Here’s your ticket.” Carol had discarded the chewing gum and pinned her hair up in the taxi but she wore her oddly assem bled costume and presented a strange sight when she arrived at her own place to find Gary Crandall arriving at the exact moment she stepped from her taxi. “For the love of . . .** Gary ran his eye over the reds and blacks. “What does this mean?” “I’ll . . . I’ll explain," she laughed nervously. “Come up." “You’re up to mischief," he ac cused, “No, I’m not” What could she say to him! Then the Idea came to her. “I . . . I’ve been having my picture taken. Yes, Mannle Morris has a new part for me and I thought I might ... I might give It a try. You know Dr. Harding’s regular office nurse is back and I ... I haven’t anything to do and this part is . . ." “Carol, my sweet, you don’t lie at $5.00 CASH Will be presented to the person guessing nearest to the number of prescriptions displayed in our window. We specialize in compounding your doctor’s prescriptions. Kerner Drug Co. Prescription Druggists. Ph/>ne 112. PROTECT YOUR HEALTH BY DRINKING I BUCKHORN WATER I ■ in Sterilized Bottles. A Mineral Product of Nature A Light Pleasant Tasting Water I Has Given Satisfaction for Over 25 Years ■ Delivered anywhere in Henderson, Fresh every Saturday R 20c per gallon in half gallon bottles and 5 gallon demijohns ■ Analyzed Every Thirty Days ■ Order Direct from Page-Hocutt Drug Company 5 W. L. NEWBY, Salesman Bullock, N. 0. ~ Pw PAGE THREE all convincingly. I don’t believe a word of it. Come clean.” “Yes, I have been telling an un truth." Carol tried a new line. “It’s . . . it’s a lark and I can’t tell you about it now. Some girls are planning . . . but there I was not going to tell you.” “All right, we’ll hear it later. I brought some pictures to show you. Jimmie Duncan sent them to me to day and I d like you to see them. We took them on that fishing trip in the fall.” “I would like to see them,” she said hastily after glancing at the clock, ‘but they’ll have to wait, Gary. I ... I have a date and I’ve got to dress. You’ll excuse me. won’t you?” “Certainly, go right ahead.” Gary took out his pipe leisurely. “Oh. but you can’t stay." she said. “How many rooms do you need to dress in?” he asked. “Six." she said, “and I’ve only two so be a good boy and run along.” **T suspect a rival.” Gary assumed a fierce expression. “No, you haven’t any rival but . . . oh. please go,” she implored, looking at the clock desperately. She had many things to do and little time in which to do them. “Very well, but when am I to say good-by to you properly?” “Good-by?” she asked, startled. She had forgotten that note. “Oh, yes, good-by. Why .. . we .. . Jane and I are leaving Saturday, I think. Call me Friday and I’ll tell you all about It.” She fairly pushed him out of the door and began packing madly. Then 1 there was her next costume to get into. The mouse-colored ill-fitting tweed suit, the coarse brogans, the dowdy hat. She had to take off all make-up and hide her pretty eyes behind huge horn-rimmed glasses and pull her hair severely back Into a hard tight roll. She was breathless when she boarded the Montreal express. "Porter,” she said, "there’s been a mistake. This is my drawing room and It Is occupied." "Suppose we share it then?” the smartly-gowned lady said to the dowdy girl and when the porter had turned his back, the lady winked broadly at her still-grumbling travel ing companion! 1 (TO P,E CONTINUED *