While in Shelby and about over Cleveland county many cases of mumps are reported, measles and whooping cough seem to be more plentiful than usual over other sections of North Carolina.
A dispatch from Raleigh states that Measles and whooping cough are on the increase rather than decreasing in the State, according to the report for the week ending May 15 made public by the Board of Health, in which 340 cases of measles and 305 cases of whooping cough are reported. The figures for the same week last year show but 29 cases of measles and only 110 cases of whooping cough; while the expectancy figures, estimated on the average number of cases of those diseases in the same week taken over a period of 15 years, show that according to this average there should not be more than 240 cases of measles and no more than 240 cases of whooping cough. Both of these expectancy figures are exceeded in this week’s report.
The measles epidemic seems to be largely centered in the following counties: Forsyth, with 44 cases; Pitt, 40 cases; Robeson, 34 cases; Guilford, 16, and in the two cities, where Greensboro leads with 35 cases, while Asheville, New Bern, Durham and Winston-Salem have 10 cases each.
The whooping cough epidemic is centered almost entirely in Carteret county, where there are 97 cases, of which 53 are on Harker’s island, while 44 are in the county at large. There are 19 cases in Davidson county. Among the cities, Durham has the most whooping cough cases with 17, while Asheville and Raleigh each have 14 and Winston-Salem 12.
From the front page of The Cleveland Star, Shelby, N.C., Wednesday, May 19, 1926
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn97064509/1926-05-19/ed-1/seq-1/