Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / May 22, 1942, edition 1 / Page 2
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I< Di rl t-nt •• .! ,•: • >,ti •;„.t in Die 50 . • 1: • ,.VL‘i U;.Tr p- : Mjtl In. rn lit* 1 U(i.-HH) [juund : ! I I.i-f ••'•n-ii'M-.l d ruiK ■ . . .410 |.. .Iind. .ii cord !:,i• * ~' nn.11*.' 4B80BU_ l ! I V vul I K All. It \IA I C lu»# \\ on Lu I 1*. ( .\ Ht-udt:.- . I • ; kO Rest 2 1 bo * S Hct.dc. 1 2 2. 2. Bm hi ui 0 .1 uO 1 l it i>MON : I I \(• i i (III!) \\ oil 1 «»• l I'll li cell V ■ i ! ‘r J v * 11.11 -a '» ./! j I. a hi. .' A i .(j , > .\\■ i tu 1 k !; *i . f-.’ A^hevt.lu* !•) i:: Durham In 1 i II. \\ m- h -S.t it • 1 • Ji.a N \ I ION \l II \< . ( I ( lul> \\ on i osl IN '. 1»«>>*i •: i 1!) !.) S: i,< i Ik l.» !' i 11• I * u lI: ' ♦. jo N iv Y«n L" I’hilack..hat i i 2 * . • V Nl I Kit \ N l A \(.{ \ ( luh \\ mi I osl IV ?. New Y 22 H V:i Cle\ eland 22 i 1 Oh. Bust, n hi it .)•*(> Deti Mil 2(i r; . : i Ph 1 ladeip:.... . i ■ 2.7. a | St. Lull.. Chicago 12 2! AC* ; 27 U. S. Ships Are Launched In 24 Hours {Cont.!: .ed fr :n face Or t ) Y !tw-a-d..y rate <>| i MiMrne! mi ! . duetiMn m! three a day a m rol.-Yii h be i e.a-i: ed :. the 'ah. I • ■ . • t ! appr.'\::;.atel\ 22.(100.0(J0 dead •A c-.u-h! I >n. : y til i :.d • h 1 Hi" < Y these. 8.00(h000 cfeariw e eht * ».re scheduled i »r de; wry tins year, and then 1 0 ext 20.000.u00 Nat ion May Take Autos (Continued ! ig( One) * at a a.a:. * . a ■ i ' -'a • * • i ■ - . ■ "d : h :e.t . :V.' W P -da ’ ’ B a ad ’Chair • an 1)■ m, M N* . --a Dehn.se TransiM h.‘ ■ ■ D vet B. Ka-lm.n. and Pare Ae.m.n: ‘a .dm* Le.-n Hea der NAT! KA! C\n S\|.!N I I' i laCat Grading Election Near Os. .t v h. tu Ill'll 1 %.»It .h .*I.t v *-» . k[yj.. ..iin.ttdy lUu UUU Ihic-ctu t-tl l-iOilCi ’ pluti.ut'. : ul .hi..i C..Ii>..U.t ... , .i:. . . ; . . n . .. . . .1: i\ v. .tit e n it.'. - \ * . t i it \ i a til. ill .t tiVe-it.i!' t .t .tvl *i.i ' ii lilt ..III! 111.llllt.ttul v v ilia. hi i''i t.uii of .ill tuOviCCo , .' * * * . .iviv I.s.il :.tit'i flOOl;. 1 N lw >d • Kltf t'XtflltiU .t'. uii h'U.iX Pollitlllg ULit tii.i' •« Itli-i t i dun i *tu dftei ml. '. .'...chit-. i-u t w .i ; tiu- lift- ■ ..it.ii ■ .o»d m.ir :.l . Ill'V. ' • fix let- p. lit 1 a.id. I tin ; I'.tt'ei' .inspect ,uil : • I’ ’> d .: ‘.cd : .. .::e: . in '1 tu ci In ■ ielc. t lldv.lll XX 1111 .1 \< a * Ilia, kellllp qa h .- 11•: tobacc**> * Gr-fvei pat: • 1 • ■ g n.arkt t A la. • c* hie in 'pec' • I \ a e is I el*, ect haxe their 1* • * *' • graded • > i : •.. i * n.'pec* ■ d :; . . t . •' "e - v. da.lv mark'*. : eports show '*.»■ aX erage : . by grades i.hi- ds them . ul'iicial guide e .:i accepting • reject.ng b:d :\ hie.: tobacco. B- h. hhese serx ices t lice. he dee!, .ed All gicwtrs wh. id tobacco -t .. . hu:: on tile m.;. .et.- cox t*red by h.e .ff ienduni la.'*, yea: are eligible a- s te m the referendum which wili oi- held l oin May ha through May h. Hi..-ting will no by mail, and txv-.-th.rd> ol the growers voting a.-1 approx e be: t uarkets will i tit -.g..ated lo; hie iederal in >,)es ....:i mt\ ice. 1 K:U‘i . 1 ate.s in a . a. y; Asa - \\.. . u- -ii the i> in e South i'i.n.i. Georgn.. . : i .Old Virgo... Tin rcleien '.' ill be eondm 'ed by the Agri . ib.ii'.il Marketing AdmmAtratioii. B.dlots have been mailed to jir-i.W l- . ii Floyd ii.red any eligible y er -a ho has : ’ reel- ed a bal : v M ,y 25 tu . ::taet 111.- local AAA . : t a e. DEFENDANT KILLED DURING COURT TRIAL H.Ky . Mas 22.—(AP)— Site; hol'd, hi. \ m trial ! >.r i : ti.o khan, . C a tax a a n i ■ t ti -a atn In tht Har . • n- il lra u vosterdny. Si. ■' Chut Ba -ad ’nek Hea t - : ... , „ ai HI.r,t :■ .1!. Liiueilon .. iepl • w of • e man Sheph trd '. .. charged with k lfins .surrendered " ‘ i ■:,:: i eci .atel\ after till1 • rig and was placed m jail. Eight-Point Platform Is Adopted (Cor:t nut i fiom Page One) ,r i .i.ca cU. ay new taxes Will ijC ev ied. u '■ ' ,■ • • t -rial Stall >e. \ c, will 4. ; ■. i , . 11 ai it. i ext ran! dinary ■ \ a,.:i in - t;u■ St ‘* s !"ianal ac t 1 a ..I la • .oxtail nr! nn .v.txe in the State app: ■ ' - a. f> Till' St.he . . 11 I . ■.1. .,e b |.l'e - lr.ete agriculture II Tin" e , II ; n- I n( at the expeilst .a tne ip.alitv ni the educatien wiueh the Slate p: ■ - cities ter its i hildren 7 The Stale guvernn ' w II cm tinue le ceoperate with the lederal government "in every activity that wall c. litre . ( t ■ ;• • successl ill conduct ef the war." 8 "We accept the dut es < I the Slate ad 111 illlsti a! aai .11 no -pint 111 ear. i\t partisans! ip The esponsi | hility "i le.ricr, hap .- ours l\v the Mandate u| the people and vv e can not sb.:! t : - a >a. that : espi ms lb I lity But we :i;v te :! patriotic eoopera j turn i a ti.e :i:e" : t rv i a all partus in , meeting and •: asha ;ifg tne problems that spring ut . I the nat ■ ■ iT dan gers Pi a a 11 tiie I. invent am. twelve district cut . ent a a a vv 11 held for the selecti :a a e --a::,.t!b . s. The ci mm:’tees !■ blow First disti let; State exeaat 1 • e, •; :: .ttoc Kliza b; th Warren. ■ • Bea h i": K. A. Dan iel ef Boa if.II t. S K Barg.«— of Camden. Mis Dudley W. Bagiev of Currituck. A. B Kthendge nt Dare, Miss Ethel Parker et Gate.-. |> ('. Barnes et Hertferd. Hugh G Hor ton ia Ma: till. Charles Wbed: re of Perquimans. K G Flanagan -a Pitt, Mrs W. 1. B. -sett : Pitt, i A ; li.,;! y i•; Washington. Cong: o-siona! ir :: a U'.eo: If. C ('.aii" ot Beau 1 or!. Mr> () 1 > Rey nolds o| Camden. R. 1’ M'duett "| t'u: rltuek. Hoy Davis ot' Dare, W. L. Daniels ol Hertlorri. M. A Matthews of Hyde. I. C Hand o: Oates. A K. James o! Martin, John Graham of Chowan. Jerome Flora ot Past| a. tank. J Km a. tt W a. 1 w , : Per quimans. \V [ Ri-sett ol Pitt. C K Coh.o n : > Tvm 1!. \V R Hampton < ■! Washington. J .ai aaa i exec ;ti\e c 'lima t tee: S M. Blount oj Beaatort. I. S Leary ol Camden. M K Langston of Gates. C. R Mori a.- of Curntuek, John Wliite ol Chowan. John H. Hall ol Pasquot.m-:. J. C Smith of Martin, W R. Gayliird ■ ' Washington, O. L Williams oi Hyde. Alooin Dunn ol Pitt. 'Martin Kellogg, Jr. of Dare. Charles K Johnson • i Perquimans. J S. Cherry oi Horllord, Paul Liver n an ot Tyri ell. So.a a aa 1 ■ xoeiit.ro mittee K. A W illiaii ot Hydo. Martin Kellogg u Gate-. T B Slade ol Martin, W. C Daw on i I Pasquotank. B.C Berry "I Peri) means. John P Hotiker iif Pitt. W J. White of Tvrrell, J. K. Daeeupor; ol Wa.-heHarold W.'iitm y, ol Beauloit. D Hay Javob i'l Camden. \V I). Pruden ol I’iu.uan. \V. W Jarvis ol Currit.ick. Clartino Midgett o! Dare and Clmrge T l'n di>r\V”od ol Herlfuid. ( III OKIM 1st KI'.STKICTF.D ! 1 chlorine, .mp. riant to 'he war effort. has been restricted w la. ndr\ operations, .swinging puui. doim stii cleansers and • dai items' Some Minor Lip Diseases It Neglected May End in Cancer ny UJU V.> V 1, V.J, .U. V. WE ALL SEE our Lps every day—at least I presume we all do. 1 have heard that thousands of people in the United States don’t u.-e a toothbrush daily, but I have yet to hear of a single inhabitant Dr. Clendening will ar.sw, r | questions of general interest on.y, and then only through 1 his column. of the North American continent ■ who doesn’t look into a mirror pretty regularly. In spite of this, a great many diseased conditions i of the lips—ulcers and fissures— are allowed to drag on and no at- I tention is paid to them. Sometimes they result in quite serious con- i d i t i o r i s. Fever Blisters The commonest change that cc- ! curs in the iips is the fever blister. 1 So far as 1 know, the world is 1 divided into two classes of people —the ones who want to know how to cure a fever blister and the ones who have a perfectly certain cure. The only suspicious thing about the perfectly certain cures is that no two of them are alike, so I have always hesitated to recommend anything to my readers. oiiice lever ousters pass away in 1 nearly every instance, the medical ' profession doesn’t pay much at- ! tention to them. The only danger | is that a more serious condition 1 will be shrugged off by saying, "Oh, it's only a fever blister.” L say the fever blister almost always passes away. Very infre quently there is left a chronic ulcer or a little, hard horn of skin at the site of the fever blister. These may drag on for years and should not be allowed to do so because they are potential cancers. In fact, any change in the skin of the lips which is at all chronic is potentially cancerous. There is a condition known as keratosis that occurs in people whose occu pations expose them to the wind and sun. There is a thickening of the skin of the lip, which in itself does no harm, and may last for years before finally it turns into a cancer. There is nothing to be done for the keratosis, but when it be gins to break down and form a weeping ulcer or sore or a fissure that doesn’t heal, it should be removed. Leukoplakia Another condition of the lips is known as leukoplakia. This occurs mostly after middle age and shows up as a white, silvery patch which looks Uu if could be rubbed off, but is extremely deceptive in this respect. «Mi« the keratosis, it may Kl■ i lur uuuig nu Harm, ana then begin to turn into cancer. Of course, the Up is one of the most frequent sites of superficial cancer. Besides the cancers that are secondary to the precancerous conditions we have described above, ,-ueh as indolent ulcer, horn kera tosis and leukoplakia, a cancer may appear on the lip spontaneously. There are two kinds: one in the ■f irm of a wart and one in the form of an ulcer. They are more fre quent in rniddle-aged persons and hardly ever occur before the age of sixty. l.ip Cancer Neglected It is an astonishing thing, in view of the campaign against can cer which stresses the fact that any lump or ulceration of the skin shoulti be examined by a physician and also stresses the fact that in ternal examination should be made regularly after the age of forty, that cancer of the lip should be so frequently neglected and should show one of the highest death rates of any form of cancer. There, as I said at the beginning, we have a part of the body that we look at every day and should know what changes are occurring, and still so many people neglect and put off these things until it is too late. The lesson is that the Hds are particularly subject to serious de generative changes and anything in the form of a lump or an ulcera tion or a break in the skin should have the benefit of medical advice. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS S. M. B.:—Is it possible to dis solve a large gall stone? Answer: It is not possible to dis solve either a large or a small gall stone. K. S.:—What are shingles? Are they dangerous? Are they con tagious? What is the treatment? Can you completely get rid of them? What are they caused from? Answer: Shingles are due to an infection of the ganglia of the nerves and cause an eruption on the skin in the area which the nerve involved supplies. They are very painful. They occur mostly in elderly people. They are not dangerous or contagious. The best treatment is by X-ray over the ganglion involved. One attack pro tects from recurrence for life. EDITOR S NOTE: Dr. Clendening hee seven pamphlet* which can be obtained bp reader*. Each pamphlet telle for 10 centa. For any one pamphlet deeired. tend to cent* in coin, and a a elf-ad dree*ed envelope stamped with e three cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of this paper. The pamphlets are: Three Weeks’ Reduc ing Diet", "Indigeetion and Constipation". • Reducing and Gaining*’. "Infant Feed log". ''Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes , Feminine Hygiene" and ‘The Cam at the Hail and akin". Sanitary Market it'/-/ /)/•;/.j\ /•:/. Phones 32 and 32 Saturday Specials f t~l sh I h t • • i BARKKD IBM K ' FRYERS lb. 29c / ' ■ •' FAT LB YOUNG HENS . HY.s-,t, r,i >■■■' I'iKHCK ROl'i> ROAST lb. 3|c \Yi .<;< ru Slit • CHUCK ROAST ib. 97c .»•» 4 T' nd. r \ ’■ SHOl'LDKk LB. VEAL CHOPS i-v/ ii.H. ■ H, ROLLED RIB ROAST lb. 27c /■••• h i VOi N(, ROASTER G CHICKENS ib. |Gc /■’/■< h ll AMBL R< ;ER STEAK lb. 9CJc groceries eri it.-. VEGETABLES ! i Hi DRESSED l‘«)l RTR'i Salute to Health Pasteurized t.: ■'>k~iti• • Milk is in the army the backbone of Milk lonitlitul eat iiiK- Have you | bid your (]iiota today'.’ Taste q i1' -•reainy flavor. Drink it Buttermilk regularly for health, strenyta and energy. and _ ktml UrinkiiHi BrooksUle Ice Cream . , , (irailr A Milk I mlaii Brookside Dairy Farm PHONE 430-J -—__ . - n ■ Officers ai UNC h'rc-tlighi School lit:,- five ' • p-1-.inking off.cers in the Navy's Pro- KSe'n- I which is tube formally conui;,-- .,ned at exercises m Kenan Stadium Saturday afternoon 1: ■ <i I'd. Tiny ere. top row. lelt |,. Com . -,.li '' i' Kossing , mounding officei "i the i , and Lieut Comdi George Clark, director of ,,!..i i,n.. n -a L.ciit W.ilii.n C Clark: Lieut. .I"!.". P C.r ::. ixu.it.vi officer, mid L: Ci.nidr John P. Soon j Take your cue from the sensational sales increases made by Century Club—over 6 times in three years—a champion in any man's game— “FIRST in Enjoyment, FIRST in Taste and Flavor." CENTURY This 90 Proof Whiskey is $ Years Old 1 Century Distilling Co., Peoria, III, . MIL!) AMKRICAN CHEESE Lb. 29c .-.NX PACK SPAGHETTI ()!! | MACARONI 5c Marvel Bread 11c i( > \ A STANDARD Dl’ALIT V TOMATOES ; c 10c I( >XA STANDARD OUAI.1'1 V CORN 10c WHITE HOUSE EVAPORATED MILK 6 45c FLAKES bkX 5c | • Produce String Beans \ i ' lv 3 UB 25c SQUASH VI1AJ,,A 2 ms 13c NR E DUALITY | r* L VITAMINS n ir Cucumbers \ u . < ». L lbs. li>c SPINACH Xn;r.'-?« 2 lbs. 15c CORN .3 LABS 17c CABBAGE b't,a;'I!ns 4 ,.„s.l0c NEW RED BLISS POTATOES Xn?'"NS 4 lbs 20c ----—-•---T-*- | Meats SUNNY FIELD BACON SUCED LB. 37c PICNICS .K1'ES-\ LB. 31c SIRLOIN STEAK lb. 45c PURE PORK J *!f SAUSAGE . lb 29c SUPER-RITE I Ground Beef lb. 25c Stew Beef u,“ “r mtlSKET lb. 15c NICE SELECTION OF CHOICE COLD CFTS |j .17' ATTRACTIVE TRICES |
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 22, 1942, edition 1
2
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