PAGE TWO Use Os N. C. State Parks Up Shanty 49.52 Per Cent More Use Parks Than Dur ing 1949 More people used North Carolina’s State Parks in 1960 than ever betfore. The total was 1,116,'M1, an increase of 369,874 or 49.62 percent aver 1949, according to State Parks Superinten dent Thomas W, Morse. Picnicking, swimming and boating continued to be .popular sports, but greatest gains were made by campers and hikers. There were 21,632 campers in the parks in 1950 as compared with only 3,436 the year before, and 28,606 hikers as compared with 6,384 in 1949. Os the 13 parks maintained by the N. C. Department of Conservation and Development, the moat widely used were Morrow Mountain in the thickly populated Piedmont section, 295,244 visitors; Mount Mitchell, atop the loftiest mountain in Eastern America, 193,311 visitors, and Fort Macon, near Atlantic Beach, 193,364 visitors. The sharp increase in hiking was due to accent on that sport at Hang ing Rock Park, north of Winston- Salem, where 16,161 engaged in it, and at Crabtree Creek Park, betwe?n Ra leigh and Durham, where 8,649 hikers took to the trails last year. Crabtree Creek, with 12,149 campers, accounted for most of the increase in this field, although 554 hardy souls camped atop Mt. Mitchell and 1,849 others roughed it overnight at Hiwassee Lake, near the Great Smokies. Attendance at other state parks for 1950 follows: Cape Hatteras (unde veloped) no report; Hanging Rock, 138,416; Hiwassee Lake, 80,499; Jones Lake (exclusively for Negroes) 12,- 839; Pettigrew (off Highway 64 near] Plymouth), 10,793; Rendezvous, unde veloped, near North Wrlkesboro, no report; Singletary Lake (in South eastern N. C., near Elizabethtown), and Town Creek Indian Mound, near Troy, no report. HEALTH FOR ALL | SURGERY AND TB The lung ’is normally one of the active organs of the human body, Ibuti when damaged by a serious di sesbe like needs all' RUGGED fw rvn»d w M. wU plvgi “• tar grip (Iblf comfataM* I Mt atip TytKiif' 1 AT Alt LEAPING SHQB RESUtIDERS W. M. RHOADES SHOE REPAIR SHOP EDEN TON, N. C 429 S. Broad St. Phone 378 *v^A^^v>aa^^a/vwvwvww>/^a/wwvw Nothing Better Than Good Food, Says Ohio Man If a man isn’t able to eat the foods he likes he’s in mighty sorry shape imagine going through life without being able to enjoy a fine big platter of bacon and eggs. That is the way Joseph N. Da millot. 3414 E. h sth Street, Day ton, Ohio, used to be, but since tMffe he has been ■ S taking HADA COL, he says l> he feels just ||gg Wjm fine and is able to enjoy lots IMfefP Mmsk and lots of fine JBbSk foods. Mr. Da millot found that taking HADACOL helped his system overcome a deficiency of Vitamins Bi, 8,, Niacin and Iron. Here is Mr. Damillot’s state ment: “My first bottle of HAD ACOL convinced me that HAD ACOL was what I needed for the gas on my stomach at nights. I could not keep food on my stom ache, but after the first bottle I was going great. Now I eat bacon and egg*, and other foods that never would stay with me. I also can sleep well at nights, thanks to HADACOL. I will never be without it, and can recommend it to alt who suffer with the above ailments that I had. I know because 1 have suffered for quite some time.” . n t»SO. The Laßlanc Corpora!)* tile rest it con get to heal. That is why patients with tubercu losis are put on complete bed met in a tuberculosis hospital. When the I patient is physically and mentally re. f taxed, the norma! work of the lungs is cut dawn. With the constant mo tion o!f the lung lessened, the organ has a better chance to heal. Sometimes, bed rest alone is not enough for the sick lung. When this is the case, the doctor advises “col lapse therapy,” or some other type 9 of suigery to give the lung the ad ditional rest it needs. * There are several forms of hing > surgery. One Off the simplest is the ■ temporary collapse off the lung known * as pneumothorax. With this opera * tion, air is inserted between the cov > ering off the sick lung and the lining ■ off the chert wail, causing the lung to ! shrink into a smaller space. The air ’ compressing the lung is gradually ab sorbed, and the operation is repeated to keep the lung collapsed for as long '■ as it is necessary. In a second form of temporary col lapse, known as pneumoperitoneum, ! air is injected into the abdominal 1 cavity to push up the diaphragm un der the damaged lung and thus com press the diseased area. The lung re -1 expands as the air is Slowly absorbed, and the diaphragm returns to its nor.? mad position. Phrenic nerve paralysis is a simple operation which temporarily paralyzes the diaphragm on the side under the sick lung and compresses it for about six months. The moving of the lung in breathing is cut down considerably during that time. "When permanent paralysis of the diaphragm is neces sary, the phrenic nerve is cut instead 1 of merely crushed. Thoracoplasty, an operation per- j BETTER j CRYSTAL BALT * , i i ' We know when one of our customers needs fuel (1 ’> oil. And we don’t take a chance on using a crys tal ball. t We have a system of keeping a daily temperature record. It tells us when you need a fresh supply of oil and then our trucks are Johnny-on-the-Spot 1 with the oil you need. Saves you trouble —keeps plenty of oil in your tank, automatically. Phone us for... KEEP-FILL DELIVERY SERVICE EXTRA VALUE EXTRA COST SINCLAIR|g| FUEL Oil Edenton Oil Co. W. J. YATES, Manager Phone 158 , Edenton, N. C. fr, - A Mi SEMA Straight Kentucky , fc Bourbon -f v Whiskey . FULL UKI 4 5553 YEARS OLD KHK SO4O SOIO BHR W 4/S QT. M* PINT LEE PifOOf. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON. WHISKEY. THE STAGG DISTILLING CO.. FRAIfcFORT, KENTUCKY. * •• t <■ • t THE CHOWAN HERALD EDENTON, N. G, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1,1961. formed jto ‘collapse the diseased area -of the lung permanently, means the i removal off ribs, or sections off ribs, s over the damaged area of the lung. . Ibis permits the soft covering off the s rib to fall* in and collapse the di seased portion off the lung. New ribs i will grow hack in about three months in such a position that they will keep t the diseased part off the lung perman , ently collapsed. Other surgical procedures include • lobectomy, the removal of a diseased ■ lobe of the lung, and pneumonectomy, an operation in which the entire <£- . seased lung is removed. Surger/ never takes the place of i bed rest in treating tuberculosis but rather supplements it, iff and when the ■ doctor thinks surgical procedures are required. Want Beds Need Good Management ’’ ■■ & An extension tobacco specialist at State College this week urged Tar Heel tobacco growers to follow proper plant bed management and thus help prevent the occurrence of a possible shortage of plant bed canvas during the season. The specialist, Roy R. Bennett, says ► growers in many areas of the State are having difficulty obtaining plant bed cloth. A check wflth manufactur ers and dealers indicates they are mak ing and distributing at least as much ; canvas as was made last year. A • 9 per cent increase in tobacco acreage allotments for 1951, however, will call for some increase, in plant bed yard age and will require the use Os more [ old canvas than was used last sea son. Many dealers say they are making : an effort to supply ti\eir customers and deliver canvas to growers within , their ares. Bennett says this will help equalise distribution off the can vas that is available. Otherwise, he adds, growers in the earlier seeding regions would tend to buy up the doth in the Oder areas and accentuate the shortage in local sections. (Bennett urges growers to buy what-.; ever canvas they need «s early as possible, so that some redistribution : of the supply can take place when > local shortages show dp. Mill offfi cials have stated that they will con tinue to make canvas for distribution ' up into March. I The State College tobacco specialist . says good management will enable tobacco growers to transplant this year’s larger crop from mubh less plant bed yardage than was shown last season. He urges all growers to provide plenty off water for their plants, take measures to control in sects, and aptpfly materials for blue mold control. Bennett also advises growers to take dare of whatever old plant bed cloth they may have on hand. 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IB 1 PAPER NAPKINS Medford : *?r !7c II |A [ BOBBY PINS black or bronze....3os ***■ ie9B fl ■ DISH CLOTH Flex-O-Knit 3 for 25c li mf* SHEARS Permedge, forged steel.. 79c I fflOff LETTERS lm 1 8" HAIL FILE “8480” Reg. 19c T3c ™?r.’ borde ' ecf »heetsami l» : | MILK OF MA6NESIA Rexall Pint 39c | CeHo.mg^d_ Wpes ; //c fl' LEGGETT & DAVIS y . • - v/b •, Druggist PHONE 67 • EMJNTON, N. C. ■ - ■■ "t'.v. , ,iv. t 1 ’ *; - V”, •- ‘f ** Jt.*. * ' J's/ • «. ♦' BIR-ra ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. C. D. White announce the birht of a son, born January 11 a* Chowan Hospital. The baby weigh ed 7 pounds and 1$ ounces. S Probably “Bn Baa” \ - - “What’s the idea off the Greens hav ing French lessons?” “They have adopted a French baby, and wont to understand what she says when she begins to talk.” Two classes off ,peo(ile believe in voluntary control: the naive and tKedtikay. ■ I l If You Need Money Ta Finance or Re-Finance Your Farm at Low Interest Rate*:.. SEE T. W. JONES Edenton, North Carolina Representative of One of the Nation’s Largest Insurance Companies TAKE UP TO 30 YEARS TO REPAY LOANS I I - .I.H I fnm C—— Colds That nun on CREOMypSmN i