Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 20, 1939, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO It Has Started, Folks; Grid Experts Naming Their All- Americans By TOM SHEHAN. Nationwide News Sports Editor Chicago, Nov. 20. —Upon polling the various sports writers and ihc football correspondents <>t the Na tionwide News Service on the pros pective All-Americans we nave seen, we find Mane Kelly of /-.os Angeles shouting m praise ol Neil neth Washington of U. C. L. A., Har old Kaese of die Boston Evening Transcript naming Ronnie Cahill of Holy Cross as the best player in New England, and Charley DuFour of the New Orleans Item-Tribune naming die seven outstanding ball players ne nas seen in action. With football a major sport on every front and u Doing no 'otiger possible for one man to look over all die ootentiai All-Americans, we've anticipated the feverish pro duction of all-teams which a ill conclude the season by asking the outstanding men in cacti section to come forward with their views. For instance, in writing of Cahill, Kaese, who is one of the better young football writers m die East, writes, “As Toe Sheeketski says, Cahill is the Crusader's best passer, Lest blocker, oest tackier, best pun ter. and he is a fine runner in this, his senior year . He has die happy faculty of producing ,'n die pinches Bill Hutchinson is one of the best backs in the Fast, out he lacks Cahill’s versatility . . Raynie McLean of St. Anselm’s is cne of those mall college cocks i Henderson Meets Dunn Friday in Last Contest Dunn high school will present a heavy, powerful football eleven here Friday afternoon in the final game of the season for Henderson high Bulldogs. Bill Averette. former N. C. State College athlete and a native of Ox ford, tutors the Dunn boys, and has been a consistent winner during the season. Dunn presents a heavy line, and in its backfield there is Fullback Homes, who tips the scales at 177 pounds. Henderson took a 21 to 12 lacing here last Friday from Catholic Or phanage eleven of Raleigh, and the Bulldogs have just one win to their credit for the season, a good size mar gin over South Hill here several weeks ago. SOLVING PAINS THAT PUZZLE By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. Tooth Pain from Sweets What is the mechanism of pain in a tooth on the contact of sweets? This is a fact but it is without any very definite explanation. Os course, it means that there is a cavi ty in the tooth. Contact with sweets does not cause pain in the case of an intact tooth. We must assume that the nerve endings which are Dr. Clendening will answer questions of general interest only, and then only through his column. exposed in the dentine of a cavity are sensitive to the chemical stimu lus of sweets. The enamel overlying the dentine of the tooth acts as a protector, and if the tooth is ex posed close to the gum margin where the enamel stops, pain will be caused in this fashion. It is, of course, easy to explain the effect of temperature, hot li quids, or cold liquids, upon tooth pain. Under any circumstances, the pain is a protective device of nature and means: Go see your dentist. * * * Aching Corns When It Rains Why do corns hurt during damp or rainy weather? The relation of barometric pressure to pains of the joints and of calluses, such as corns and scars, is principally due to changes in the caliber of the blood vessels and to changes in blood pressure at this time. In a series of about 1,000 rheumatic patients, this symp tom was acknowledged in over 80 per cent. * * i Value of Bacon for Babies 7s bacon good or bad for babies, does it make any difference? Children’s doctors and are likely to advise the addition of a little bacon to the diet of babies and small children. HYGEIA, the official journal of the American Medical Association, recently asked who orooably would be All-Amer -1 ican at a large college, for he is last and tricky, as good as there is in the open .‘. . John McLaughry of Brown is a powerhouse, out with a weak team : s not as outstanding as ‘ast season. An injured hand, badly cut during the summer, has i Handicapped .aim . . . ” Dearth of Linemen. ; ; Good linemen are scarce :'n New ! England, according to Kaese, but ! George Sommers, Dartmouth tackle, iis one of the few wno stand out. i “This section seems vo lack : tar I players as well uriliiant teams diis i season, ' write Kaese. Loll “Jitterbug” Kellogg of Tu iar.e, Jimmy Hike, Ed Molinski and GeorgeCat'ego of Tennessee, Harley McCollum of Tulane, Banks ! McFadden of Clemson, and Doin, Trincipe of Fordham are the men I Dufour who covers the high-pow ered football of the south, pqt on , uis list. Refc T IcFadden he writes, “ rum lad is the best All- Around back in the South, most ci dies agree. He is a swell runner, passer, and kicker, especially quick kicker, is a 61) minute performer Saturday after Saturday and his competitive spirit is outstanding Washington Seen Best. Kelly, who has written the scen- I arios for several of the outstanding ! football movies produced in Holly | wood, names Kenneth Washington A total of weights of the individual players gi\»es Dunn an average of 15 pounds per man over Henderson. ! Coaches Bing Miller and Fred Kil- I patric will take the next few days lining up some sort of a defense against the powerful plays of the visitors, and Henderson will enter the game a decided underdog. The eleven came through the j Catholic Orphanage game in fair condition, and a week’s practice will aid Leo Byrum in perfecting his running in the Henderson backfield. The youth joined the squad two days before the game last Friday, and saw some action in that contest. He looked good on several plays and I with a little more blocking, he could have gotten somewhere. He is shifty and fast, and has plenty of drive for | a light back. several children’s doctors whether this was a good practice. Their re plies were as follows: “There is no adequate explana tion for the common practice of adding bacon to the diet of babies.” “If it is done, as is commonly saws, to give the baby something to chew on, other articles of diet could be used to better advantage, such as toasted bread crusts or zweibach.” “The use of bacon in the diets of babies and small children was for many years a fairly common practice among doctors, but I think it has pretty well died out. It is a little difficult to tell why it had so long a popularity.” “Bacon contains no nutritional factor besides the fat and protein.” “The old-fashioned bacon rind that some babies got in a certain strata of society is fortunately no longer encountered and I believe had no real standing with physi cians.” QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Mrs. J. M.: “Is it all right to give beer to a baby from six months until he is several years old? My baby is nine months old, and I have refused to let him have any. My mother-in-law says that it will not hurt him, as it will only make him sleep.” Answer—Good heavens, no! It is not all right to give a baby, six months old, beer; nor six years old. It is very bad. A baby, nine months old, will sleep all right, and beer will just make it sleep an unnatural, profound sleep. I think a good, old fashioned mother-in-law fight, so that she would stay away for a year, would do your household good. M. H.: “What is the average or normal blood pressure of a person at the age of 21 ?” Answer—The systolic pressure— that is, when the heart is in contrac tion—should be from 100 to 120. The diastolic—when the heart is opening or in relaxation—should be 70 to 80. The figures refer to milli meters of mercury pressure. There is no definite normal; the blood pres sure, like every functioning thing in the body, changes. EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. Clendening nu seven pamphlets which can be obtained by readers. Each pamphlet sells for 10 cents. For any one pamphlet desired, send 10 cents in coin, and a self-addressed envelops stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening. in care of this paper. The pamphlets are: "Three Weeks' Reduc ing Diet". "Indigestion and Constipation”, "Reducing and Gaining”. “Infant Feed ing". "Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes”, "Feminine Hygiene” end “The Care of the Hair and fikin”. HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1939 NORTH CAROLINA GAINS— DUKE WINS, 13-3 Here's the end of a 10-yard North Carolina gain against Duke at Durham, but when the game ended North Carolina had been toppled from the ranks of the unbeaten by a 13 3 score. George Stirnweiss (light jersey, in pile), Tar Heel back, is shown as he was brought down by Smith (GO), Duke Blue Devil center. On his back is Duke’s tackle Tony Rufi'a (52). Others identified are Johnson (52) of Duke and Dunkle (97, light jersey), Tar Heel fullback. of the University of California at Washington, Granny Lunsdell of University of Southern California, Gray Beal of the University of Ore gon and Harry Smith of Southern California on his list. Os Granny Lansdell, Trojan quar terback, Kelly writes, “Does every thing better than everybody else,” but he ranks Washington, the negro back on the U. C. A. team, as the best in the West. Nine Wolves Play Final Tilt Saturday By EDWIN PERRY. Raleigh, Nov. 20.—When North Carolina State’s Wolfpack plays host to Duke’s Blue Devils here next Saturday afternoon in Riddick Sta dium there will be ten of the Wolves singing their swan song on the home turf. Last year the Wolfpack, paced by those ten seniors, played its best game of the season against Duke, holding the Boys in Blue to a 7-0 score. Coach Doc Newton’s ooys have shown market improvement : ; n s tneir last few games and hope to again carry the uattle to Duke, v/nich has had a successful season. The boys who will be playing their last home game are Ty Coon, brilliant tackle who :s slated for an ail-America berth, Little Rooney, Slate’s triple-threat halfback, Co- Captains Andy Pavlovsky and Bill (Babe) Retter, halfback and cen ter. Mickey Sullivan, end who snag ged the pass that gave State a triumph over Davidson in the sea son’s opener; John Savini, stellar guard; Bobby Sabolyk, who shares a halfback’s post, and Tony DiYeso, the compact little fellow who has clone a bang-up ;iob of signal call ing Cor the Wolfpack this reason. Here’s an angle for die Duke- State tussle. Pittsburgh’s nighty Panthers defeated Duke 14-13 in the Smokey City early in the reason. Then along came Ouquesne’s Night Riders to upset Pitt 20-13. To top things off, State played a whale of a game just die week before last, dropping ihe hard fought battle to Duquesne 7-0. From these scores it seems that the Wolfpack holds a six-point advantage over Duke. With the amatur hunters out in full force there are a lot of farmers who wish they were in some nice safe spok like the Maginot line. GIANT KILLER - - By Jack Sords \ \a<E ~ SEA So,\J S&dSA TiofiJ OF n'F£ Udn/FFS/r/ of //4 'aJo/s i\e sTrfakfd &% yards through -tab whole. ‘-'WJiscomsiaJ T£Am For a 710 o victory - ___ Tar Babies Tackle Duke In Fayetteville Tuesday Chapel Hill, Nov. 20.—North Carolina’s freshman football squad will wind up preparations Monday afternoon for its final game of the season with Duke at Fayetteville Tuesday afternoon. The game, which will get under way at 2-30 o’clock on the high school field, is one of the Highlights of Fayetteville’s Historical Celebra tion. The Tar Babies will be striving for an encore of Carolina’s 1937 performance when the 'avored Blue Imps were upset 6 to 0. The 1937 Tar Babies were sparked by Sweet Lalanne, sensational passer of the current varsity team, who com pleted 10 of 11 passes in a thrill producing second half aerial snow. Even iteven for four games, a victory over Duke would give the Tar Babies a winning percentage of .600. Victories this season have come at the expense of Virginia Tech 19 to 6 and N. C. State 16 to C. Carolina lost to Wake Forest 25 to 0 and to Virginia 14 to 7. Duke’s 1939 -ecord is superior to Carolina’s. The Blue Imps held the powerful Wake Forest eleven to a 7-0 score and romped over David son and Clemson. Duke also beat N. C. State 13 to 0, a few points less toan the Tar Baby win over the Tcchlets. Bothered by injuries all season, Carolina will be without the ser vices of three regulars Tuesday. A1 Marshall and Joe Wolf, guards, and A1 Remy. quarterback, all sustained injuries in the Virginia game and have responding slowly to treat nent. Jack Ginsberg, star guard on Greensboro’s High School’s 1938 co- State champions, is slated to take over Wolfs left guard post. Sid Heimovitch, capable reserve, will move into Marshall’s right guard slot and Steve O’Hedy, 164-pound speedster, will start at quarterback in Remy’" stead. Other probable starters will in clude A1 Rothey and Howard Hod ges, ends; Bob Heymann and Ed Michaels, tackles; Bob Whitten, cen ter; Dave Barksdale and Lem Gib bons, halfbacks; and Bill Sigler, rollback. Bill Sigler is the leading punter at the Carolina freshman football team which faces Duke’s strong yearlings at Fayetteville Tuesday afternoon. Sigler has averaged 43 yards on his punts tUis season. The Duke game closes the Tar Babies’ 1939 season. Bill Sigler, 200-pound fullback, is high scorer of Carolina’s freshman football team which winds up its 1939 season against Duke at Fay etteville Tuesday afternoon in one feature of the Historical Celebra tion. Sigler has scored 16 points in the four games this season. He has tallied two touchdown and four ex „ra points. North Carolina’s freshman foot boll team has netted 366 yards in rushing compared to 359 for its op ponents in four games this season. The Tar Babies will conclude their 1939 schedule against Duke at Fay etteville Tuesday afternoon. North Carolina’s freshman foot ball team will be gunning for its third victory this fall in its final game of the season with Duke at Durham Tuesday afternoon. The Tar Babies beat Virginia Tech 19 to 6 and N. C. State 16 to 0 but lost to Wake Forest 25 to 0 and to Vir ginia 14 to 7. North Carolina’s freshmen have completed 32 percent of their passes in four games this season. They have connected 14 times in 43 at tempts for a total gain of 261 yards. The Tar Babies meet Duke at Fay etteville Tuesday afternoon in their final game of the season. AUTHORITY ON SOILS TO SPEAK WEDNESDAY Durham, Nov. 20.—Dr. Sterling B. Hendricks, physical chemist of the United States department of agriculture, and a leading authority on the chemical and physical chai'- acteristics of clay, will speak on Wednesday evening before a meet ing of the North Carolina section of the American Chemical society, to be held at Duke university. “The Nature of Clays and Soils” will be the subject of Dr. Hendricks illustrated lecture. Dr. E. C. Mark ham, of Chapel Hill, section chair man, will preside over the meeting. Prior to the lecture the speaker will be honor guest at a dinner. Dr. Hendricks is winner of the Hillebrand prize of the Chemical Society of Washington. His specialty is the X-ray study of materials. Monday Quarterbacks An Replaying Great Game The day after Sunday is Monday, and Monday brings wash day, the blues, and the inevitable Monday morning quarterback, who can play the previous Saturday s football game over in such a manner that victory is assured for his team. This Monday, there are plenty of quarterbacks calling plays ol the “Great Game”, meaning the Duke- Carolina clash in Durham Saturday that the Blue Devils took by a 13 to 3 score. The quarterbacks are divided over the ineffectiveness of Carolina’s great aerial attack, this pitching of aerials carrying them to victory over N. Y. U. and Pennsylvania and a 14- 14 deadlock with the Tulane Green Wave. Some say Duke’s secondary covered the pass receivers too well, while others give Duke’s line credit for hurring the passer, forcing him to toss long before his receivers maneuvered into position. Duke used the air with a decided advantage, Clean-Up On Beer Pushed Daily Dispatch Hurean. In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Nov. 20.—There appear no signs of a letup in the “Clean up or close up” campaign of the Brew ers and North Carolina Beer Dis tributors committee. As the committee today petitioned commissioners of four counties to re voke retail beer licenses it sent agents into three others to investi gate conditions surrounding the sale of beer. The quartet of counties in which revocation was sought today includes Buncombe, Catawba, Guilford and Wake, while the trio to be studied are Craven. Beaufort and Pitt. Colonel Edgar H. Bain, head of the committee, has announced that the campaign will be carried into every county of North Carolina. “During the past three months, re presentatives of our committee have visited more than a fourth of the counties of North Carolina,’ he said. “It is our intention to check the beer outlets in all the counties to make sure that they are being operated in the interest of public decency.” Reciting achievements of the com mittee, Col. Bain said that 28 re vocations have already been secured in eight counties; petitions have been filed in nine (only one included in the eight where there have been re vocations, and outlets warned in seven counties to clean up or face more drastic action. Petitions will be filed this month or early in December in two counties as soon as some of the crim inal cases now before their courts are disposed of. Answers to Your Health Problems By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. Acetanilid Poisoning THE UNITED States Depart ment of Agriculture writes to ask me: “Do you consider the daily ad ministration of nine grains of acetanilid and 20 grains of bromide, or either separately, over an un limited period of time, dangerous ?” In my opinion the dosage of nine grains of acetanilid daily results in a definite form of poisoning. I do not believe the administration of that amount of bromide is danger Dr. Clendening will answer questions of general interest only, and then only through his column. ous, nor do I believe that the bro mide steps up or increases the toxic effects of the acetanilid. Acetanilid poisoning usually ap pears in individuals who do not know that they are taking acetani lid. They get into the habit of tak ing a pick-me-up in the morning. The symptoms of acetanilid poi soning consist in a change in the complexion, constipation and men tal depression. The complexion assumes a peculiar muddy appear ance, the lips get blue. The color of the skin is hard to describe, but friends usually say something to the effect that “John doesn’t look very well; he must have anemia.” Or more frequently they tell him, “You look constipated,” which makes him take some more of a cathartic, usually the very mixture that has the acetanilid in it. The muddy complexion is due to the formation of a new and unnatural compound in the blood—a sulphur compound, so the syndrome is called “sulphanemia.” The condition clears up rapidly upon withdrawal of the use of the drug. * * • Causes of Pain in Neck What ave the causes of pain •w the muscles of the neck? This may be due to spasm. Such a cause can be spotted be cause the pain disappears when the patient relaxes or goes to sleep. It may be due to necrosis of the vertebrae of the neck, but most likely of all it is a simple and also turned a into a touchdown, n. in eight plays. Harry Dunkle put p . front 3 to 0 early in | ter with a 32 yard p.„ iTony Ruffa blockt 1 Iweiss’ quick kick early jperiod, with Bill in the end zone io: 1 Ruffa kicked the poim p, t ' period, Barnett intern?) pass from kick formation 'ston Siegfried headed iL ■ I took tiie ball oven iThe kick was wide. | Duke gained twice a as Carolina rushing, twice as much ground, 82 through the air. It was a great game, v •> -,o g on fans jamming every aw ~ , iiit The “quarterbacks” , ling the game for many , a . '7;' jthey can’t change tb< , i )u! . ’ and the Canny Wadi .., , ( 'much for the Tar Heel Negro Employe Os Job Office Draws Time; 2 Are Ifeld Raleigh, Nov. 20. u'arrwi E. ,\l - len, Negro junior claim- interviewer in the colored Wilmington tv tlf the employment service division of the Unemployment Compensation Commission, was sentenced to five to eight years, two to three years on the county roads and three to five years in the State Prison thereafter • for forgery and embezzlement in three cases of cashing and using un -1 employment benefit checks made to colored unemployed workers in the Wilmington section, in New Han over Superior Court last week. Judge Henry Stevens, presiding, warned savings bank and building and loan officials that they had al most become parties to the actions by cashing or crediting numbers of these benefit checks made to others for Allen. While only seven indict ments were brought against him. and sentences in the other four were to run concurrently, many checks and several hundred dollars were involv ed in other cases that might have been prosecuted. Solicitor David Sinclair prosecuted the cases, on evidence produced by Adrian J. Newton, general counsel for the commission. Allen submitted to all of the indictments. A Wilfred Bynum, negro, formerly with Allen in the Wilmington Em ployment office, more recently in the * Kinston office, and Aramathia Reid, ■ negro, also with Allen in the Wil mington office, were indicted Fri day for forgery jind will be tried or, 1 the charge in New Hanover count;, recorders court Tuesday. They were ; implicated in the charges by Allen, after his sentence. muscular inflammation from diseased teeth or tonsils, * * * Gas Masks for Migraine What is the value of the use •; oxygen tanks and gas masks in the treatment of migraine? This treatment is somewhat new and has become popular lately largely because the means to ad minister oxygen economically, ef ficiently and comfortably have greatly increased. Migraine headaches are of sev eral types and the use of oxygen will not relieve all of them, but re ports from large clinics indicate that this treatment has a definite • place. A beneficial effect is most fre quently obtained when the patient | has a definite prodromal period or ’ aura, when he knows that the mi graine attack is going to come on. When oxygen is administered dur ing this prodromal period, the attack is often side-tracked, ior this reason it is practical to have an oxygen apparatus placed in the home for the migraine sufferer for immediate use when the symptoms indicate it. In some patients the use oi oxy gen combined with the use of ergo tamine tartrate has been very beneficial. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Mrs. B.: “Will a teaspoonful of table salt, taken upon arising -' ry morning, cause any change m f me quality of the blood? What about lemon juice taken at the same time?” Answer— The body needs a cer tain amount of salt every day. t J not nearly as much as a teaspoimtu . However, it does no harm. f,f ‘ caU! \ as soon as the blood and tis .u .- ha\ all they need, it is passed of kidneys. Lemon juice is a one v >- talizer and alkalizer. It harm, but good. EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. ClcnHcn ] r % seven pamphlets which can be ■ • t§ readers. Each pamphlet se.ls u ■ " n / jo For any one pamphlet desire; . L "' j ‘, npt cents in coin, and a self-addressee « ■ stamped with a tbree-cent «tanv " r _ Logan Clendening, in care of ||JC . The pamphlets are: 'Three ec .. in » ing Diet”. “Indigestion and Lj' n ; | ,ed “ Reducing and Gaining . , n t of ing”, “Instructions for the Ir . ‘ r d • j'fts Diabetes”, “Feminine Hygiene Care of tie Hair and BWin
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Nov. 20, 1939, edition 1
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