Lose 20 Per Cent Os Body Water And Death May Result At Most Life Can Go on Only Few Days With er out Water The importance tof water in nutri tion is a subject frequently overlooked or minimized by most nutritionists. However, water has a greatest import ance to life than any food. In fact, it is second only to oxygen in import ance. Life can go on for weeks without i food but at the most only a few days without water. When a person fasts, 100 per cent of body fat is lost and approximately one half of the protein before death qpcurs, but loss of only 10 per cent of the body’s water results in serious physiological damage. Twenty per cent loss results in death. Importance of Water Why is water so important to living things, Aa early as 1855 Claude .Bernard, the great French biologist and physi ologist said, “All living things live in water.” Each cell in the body is •“not only filled with fluid but is sur rounded by fluid. Each cell acquires its food by absorbing it through the (*cell wall from this surrounding fluid. It returns to the fluid the waste pro ducts it produces during its growth. ' If sufficient water is not provided, the concentration of foodstuffs in the fluid changes. Absorption of the food through the cell walls in exchange for #aste products then becomes impos sible, and the cell dies. Consider that every cell in the body is dependent on this process for life and the true im port of water can be seen. The requirement for water is often increased in disease by reason of ex cessive wastage through increased kidney, bowel, and sweat activity, and often times hemorrhage. Lactating women require more water ingested to make up the loss through milk. No Water Stored The body does not store water even *■— - H I If You Need Money To Finance or Re-Finance Your Farm at Low Interest Rates... SEE T. W. JONES * Edenton, North Carolina Representative of One of the Nation’s Largest Insurance Companies TAKE UP TO TWENTY YEARS TO REPAY LOANS 11 j SOOS «■« 'whiskey* pint jilßßEk A BLEND f 4/SQT. $3.2 I 'yukmph m I c H M SCHEHtCV PI STILLW. INC. # H I 4* PROOF • TORS GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRIT*' -* (lefmHRY DISTILLERS. INCORPORATED • LOUISVILLE. KINTU9IV VmMMBL-limS.T^fctfESLJfiCSiSii-- 1 *-• * ~ J " J ~ 1 ‘ 1 though excess quantities are consum ed. Since this is true, it becomes necessary to assure a daily intake equal to the day’s losses. When you consider that 2 to 3 pints of water are excreted from the kidney of normal persons each day and a similar amount through respiration, the vol ume needed for replacement begins to assume sizable proportions. Water enters the body in three main forms; water in potable form by it self; water contained in soups, coffee, tea, milk, gravy and other foods; and that which is chemically produced in the body in the process of assimilation and utilization of foods. As the normal body loses from 6 to 8 pints of water each day, it is necessary that at least this amount be ingested from the three sources about to maintain the proper fluid balance and thus help to keep in good , health. | HEALTH FOR ALL DRUGS AGAINST TB, Ever since the discovery in 1882 j of the germ which causes tuberculosis, | an intensive search has gone on for, a drug which would effectively com-1 bat TB, a disease which kills more , young adults between 15 and 35 than any other disease, though no drug which will cure tuberculosis has yet i been found. Certain drugs in recent years, how , ever, have proved of great help in treating certain types of tubercu , losis. Outstanding among these drugs , is streptomycin. Streptomycin is neither a specific [ TB cure nor a substitute for the bed • rest which is basic in the treatment ■ of tuberculosis. Instead, it serves as ; a support to nature, impeding the i growth of TB germs so that the body ■ can cencentrate its forces on fight ing the disease. i One major difficulty in the use of ■ streptomycin is that fact that some l TB germs develop a resistance to the I drug. To counteract this, streptomy f cin is usually used today with another 1 drug. The drug of choice is usually FAS, or para-aminosalicylic acid, which appears to delay the develop i ment of resistant germs. PAS, of it- - THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, N. C. THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1952. Here’s the Dope • * C (SMOOTWgSW l?OAt) ) \ WE’Vfi HIT TODAY) l I NATIONAL SAKTV CC j 18l |, I self, has some power against the mul tiplication of TB germs, but at pres ent its main value seems to be in combination with strentomycin. The doctor is the one to decide whether or not drugs should be used j in the treatment of each patient. How ever, there are two severe forms of j the disease for which the use of streptomycin is almost invariably in dicated: tuberculosis meningitis and military tuberculosis. Both forms of the disease were practically 100 per cent fatal before the discovery and use of streptomycin. So far, there is no “sure cure” or “magic cure” for tuberculosis, in the form of a drug or otherwise. The dis covery of a drug which will kill TB germs swiftly and surely, once they attack a patient, lies in the future. At the same time, progress made in that direction within the past decade holds out every hope that such a drug may be found. Chivalry He neglected to hold her arm while they were crossing a busy street, so she asked, “Where’s your chivalry?” • “Oh!” he replied, “the dealer has it. I’m trading it in on a Buick.” !•’OR SALE “THE KING OF SWINE” PIGS BOARS GILTS Member OIC Swine Breeders Association 35 Years Selby R. Minton MERRY HILL, N. C. Go bjf these Plain Hold Rids 1 PfllfTJ I They show why a Chevrolet Truck flllfl \UIf P I costs you less to own and operate • **uiiu mu ii * " ppy|iFg| > . : Ljg| " V 111 Jl in tSSIT'J ■on amour nuns n usi nun Mir oma muni m«nt Slid trim llluriroltd It 0f w pmmdtmt on wrallablllty of motmrlol.l m mm m m ‘ . Just about two and a half million users of Chevrolet truck* i Fact No. 1 . . . Saves you money on purchase are proving you can’t buy-a better truck to save your money. . m \ m M _ _ ; --. You save when you buy. You save on operation and Fact NO# 2 • o o CUtS operating costs upkeep. You save on getting the job done fast and right. _ u , .in if ,i You save when you trade. i rocr no. 3 ... me right truck tor your job Come on in and let’s talk over your hauling or delivery 1 - . u . # li ■ ... needs, and then take a look at the kind of truck you want Fact No. 4. •. Saves by lower depredation on your job. B. B. H. MOTOR COMPANY "YOUR FRIENDLY CHEVROLET DEALER" N. Broad and Oakum Streets , Edenton, N. C SNUB 1 Aim! By 7W XMy i.mmmiiiddiiimME) “Deerproof,” “foxproof,” “rabbit proof,” are all familiar expressions with hound fancier and when a hound consistently proves he can live up to one or more of them his value grows and grows. Nothing is more exasperating to the fox or coon hunter than to have his hounds run rabbits, unless it is for them to go off on a futile chase of deer. To break a fox or coon hound of running the wrong game is •sometimes a difficult task. But it is not impossible in the vast majority of cases. The use of game scents, or musks, . in the “proofing” of trail hounds . against undesired game is growing. [ It is painless, easy to administer and generally quickly effective. To get , the dope on the use of these scents j Henry P. Davis, one of our top dog writers, went right to the man who • probably knows most about them, i That man is Pete Rickard of iCoble ’ skill, New York. Through years of I experience he has found that the sim , plest way of using scents is the best. He makes scents for the proofing of ~ dogs against deer, coon, fox, rabbit I NOTICE TO ADMINISTRATORS, EXECDTORS AND GUARDIANS The law requires an ANNUAL ACCOUNT I to be made each year and an Inventory to be I filed within 90 days after qualifying. If your 1 Annual Account, Inventory or Final Account 1 are past due, .we respectfully urge that you I file same at once, as we are required to report I all such cases to the Grand Jury, which will be I convened at the April Term of Chowan County I Superior Court March 31. I YOUR COOPERATION WILL BE VERY MUCH APPRECIATED I Sincerely yours, | E. W. SPIRES, Clerk Superior Court j and porcupine. 1 Davis asked Richard about the use i of steel traps with the scent (the jaws I wrapped with scent-impregnated < cloth) and the system of applying the scent to a sack over the dog’s : head for several hours. They also ] discussed other methods of forcefully ' breaking the dog of running tabooed trails. “I don’t recommend the use of force in any form,” said Rickard. “There is no necessity for it at all when the scent is properly applied, and whip ping the dog for running the wrong trail may make him afraid of any kind of trail. “All that is necessary is to apply i a little scent each day around the ears ' and head of the dog. The scent is i quite powerful and soon becomes so i obnoxious to the dog that he wants i no part of it, either at the home ken ' nel or in the field. “A great many of the dogs so treat-1 , ed respond quite quickly, requiring i only about four day’s treatment. But , we recommend an occasional supple- I mental application for a while, partic ; ularly during the hunting season.” i : 17,482 Permitted To Drive In February : Driver license examiners of the De • partment of Motor Vehicles issued . 17,482 operator’s permits in February. : Os the total 2,838 were duplicate op-, t erator’s licenses; 842 original chauf- PAGE ELEVEN feur’s licenses; and 1,755 renewal chauffeur’s licenses. They issued 11,- 849 original operator’s permits and collected $63,893.81 in fees. During the month the examinens reported 416 suspensions and 1,160 revocations. Attention, Farmers WE HAVE USED FISH SALT FOR SALE! Buy from us and save one-half on your salt bill. EDENTON BAY PACKING CO. Phone 223 j EDENTON, N. C. DEreN^&jUTT OO.YTON.tEG •«, • UP on the roof of the world, where but short exposure to the arctic blast means death, the igloo, made of blocks of snow and ice, can be de pended on to provide warm, | wind-tight shelter. Distinctive appointments, and painstaking fidelity to details provide a ceremony of thoughtful dignity. Our de pendability is a reassuring comfort in time of need. i ! time or Vem v/nt I liiisl - * i IWILLIPOPDI I £?a*u I S PMONt 231 *LDEMTON H.(,| S THE HOME or THE 61BE*ARLE B B M'JTUfIL BURIAL ASSOCIATIQS J TRY A HERALD CLASSIFIED