Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 167, Decatur, Adams County, 17 July 1957 — Page 11
\ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1057 •* a*" 1 "* ' r “‘" A ~ 1 , !■’ ~
' b&b* | I TRf '® > " K BBr M Stfow "»; 2 MAX FUELLING shows Eric Holm and the pig club members the four Chester Whites belonging to him and his brother, Donald. The pigs were numbered and each member got a chance to judge them. Junior Lanta, last year's county junior showmanship winner in the pl / P ro i B*ve some pointers in showing pigs. The second stop of the tour was at the Paul Fuelling farm in Root township. i —(Staff Photo)
Test Devised For Hepatites Virus Test Donated Blood For Lurking Virus By DELOS SMITH Unite* Press Science Editor NEW YORK (UP) —A practical 1 : 1. , WIRI MRS. DOROTHY KIMBALL tabove) won a divorce frojn Dan Kimball, Navy secretary under President Truman 194952, in Los Angeles. She gets , more than $150,000 in property plus 25 per cent of his gross income. Kimball, 61, and Mrs. Kimball, 55, wed in California in 1925. (International) -. , --r — - -r« .r ■ - -
Public Auction EIGHT ROOM HOUSE MONROE, INDIANA I will sell my house at Public Auction to the highest bidder,* located on Jackson Street in Monroe, Indiana, the first house West of Zurcher’s Mobilgas Station, on TUESDAY JULY 23 - 1957 EVENING SALE—SEVEN P. M.—EVENING SALE Two Story Tile Block Eight Room House. Five Rooms Downstairs and three rooms upstairs. Attached single garage. Good Drove Well. Small Shed. Lot 65 by 120. Nice Lawn, Shade trees, garden space. One room basement. House is in good state of repair and will make a nice home for a large family or could be changed into a multiple dwelling for a good income property. Inspection anytime, contact Mr. Rayl at Stucky Store in. Monroe or the Auctioneers. TERMS & CONDITIONS: One-third cash day of sale, one-third within six months and the balance within one year from the day of sale, or purchaser may pay all cash. Or mhy assume existing loan of $2,300.00 and pay the balance cash. Immediate Possession. Statements made on day of sale shall take precedence over any statements contained herein. Not Responsible for Accidents. NOTE—This property will probably sell within the reach of the purchaser with moderate means. Look it over before the sale and attend the sale on TUESDAY, JULY 23. FRANK RAYL, Owner Roy S. Johnsoft—AUCTIONEERS—Ned C. Johnson Phone 3-2623 Decatur, Ind. Phone 3-2796
■■l i~r r. ' ■■ '^l.—ll ~r 7i~hi ~ ■ ■ —■l<4i!^ta g g l r Amended^—t On *h — ... - ~ . " ie Central Soya Utility Valuation rs m API half y ear An report received by w Ay ■■BH was bitten the auditor's office shows that AJ| . mLJk It . J'A V B dog at the total assessment on wTI Bl K as she utilities in Adams county is ac- nMF ■ wWF fll 81-BR i . v //\Z B .er children were tually up $454,415, instead of ]J k \J\ s' daughter of Mr M 34.455 as was previously report- 1 BW/ ~ * >e dog at Worth- ed. ol r"““ a—- * ' -a- ' ' Casino, of 716 The state office made an error cj . Wlb ■" ■ r W'' ' i the little girl re- in tabulating the assessments for fJ- J ° u lIJ A ■ ■ ■ cut on the lip and the United Telephone Co. of Indi- cf W’ B ■ Tkl *!■ fl I ■ BT 41W1VY " • ' l/l ' k . M 1 e - Carl Mies - 1116 ana, 'lnc. The original report si W I Illi I" IA I Ik lI 11 ■■l*ll ’ ’ Dlltph OAa UlvWdllA Ddnvli MU LUI I DI CUU w ,o wnrth - £*Tv * > dog dx ALSO AT YOUR L ocal*g'rocery store
test has been devised which will indicate when hepatitis virus lurks in donated blood. It is not going to eliminate that unpleasant liver disease, you can be sure, but it could cut down sharply on the chances of getting it through a blood transfusion. You will appreciate this advance when you understand that “the possible development of serum hepatitis after transfusion of blood is the most important hazard that 1 is not preventable, even by care- _ ful attention to details in the history (of blood donors) and the application of proved laboratory techniques.” The words belong to Dr. E. R. Jennings, professor of clinical pathology, Wayne State University Medical College, Detroit, and four associates- They worked out the new testing method which involves putting donated blood into a chemical solution. If the solution reacts by becoming exceedingly clouded then the blood is considered to be highly suspect. Some Carry Virus What makes serum or transfusion hepatitis a big problem is that some people seem able to carry the virus around in their blood without it ever sickening them, and that the virus, like most viruses, is undetectable. Reporting to the technical journal of the American Society of Clinical Pathologists, the Detroit scientists recalled the failure of efforts to detect blood donor “carriers" of hepatitis virus through their medical histories. It has been proven that donors who never in their lives had shown the slightest symptom of liver disease, were “carriers” of hepatitis virus just the same. They began working out their test in 1954 in the Detroit Receiving Hospital. Eventually they subjected the blood of 14,755 donors to it. The, serum part of the blood of 567 of these 14,755 created a high degree of turbidity in the, chemical solution. The wholeblood of these 567 was transfused into 193 hospital patients. Ten of the 193 developed serum hepatitis. But whole blood from other don-
ors which caused little turbidity 1 Fas transfused into 603 patients. 1 And there were no positive eases ' of serum hepatitis among them. 1 Not AU Carriers Detected < If the high-turbidity blood had 1 been discarded, it would have 1 meant the loss of 330 units of whole blood in order to prevent 10 , positive cases of serum hepatitus and cases of “possible” serum 1 hepatitis- The scientists granted that some colleagues would argue that the seriousness of the disease in the particular patients wouldn't justify discarding so much blood. They also granted that the test would not detect all “carriers” of the virus. They had “knowledge,” they said, of 10 cases of serum hepatitis resulting from the transfusion of low - turbidity blood. These cases were not in their own study. Nevertheless, they asserted, “tiie hazard of serum hepatitis is greatly increased when blood is transfused from donors whose 1 ?
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HU DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
serums have significantly abnormal values for thymol turbidity.” The principal reactive chemical in their solution la thymol which is derived from thyme, a member of the mint family and a seasoner of soups and sauces. Many New Colors In Hosiery For Fall Stocking Industry Seeks Sales Boost By GAY PAULEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK (UP)— The stocking industry plans to give itself a shot in the leg this fall. The National Assn, of Hosiery Manufacturers said sales in recent years have been a little on the seamy side, mostly because the
industry insists on giving women beige, beige, beige, instead of a whole color range. An official of DuPont, a major producer of nylon yarn, said there is another reason: Decline in the “sexual significance” of freminine gams. Association President William F. Williamson reported manufacturers’ shipments of full-length hosiery fell to 713 million pairs last year, down from 721 million in i 1950. “The slight drop has been showing for 10 years,” Williamson said., "But it is not a trend. It is more of an irritation." Color Choice Narrow “Some people aay It is because t of the increase in bare - legged- - ness,” Williamson said. “I doubt 11 it, although our worst sales months are June and July. ) “I just think women aren’t buyt ing as many hose because we oft fer them too narrow a choice of : color and construction. The accent
has been yn the neutral shades to go with everything “No manufacturer can expect a woman to wear stockings all the time. But when she does, we should give her a wardrobe of hosiery.” Williamson said another reason for the sales sag should be cured as our population changes. The depression birth rate was low, so there are fewer women in the 18 to 25 year age group—the indusrty’s best customer. But Williamson predicted that in the next five , years, there would be five million potential customers in this bracket. The DuPont Co. nas released a consumer study it sponsored, showing that a high'percentage of women now are content to go bare-legged on occasion, when at one time stockings would have been a must. “.. .There is clear evidence that the social necessity of wearing ; hosiery.. has lost some of its
i compelling strength In the face of modern living and the changed social position of women,” said the i report. “Women seem to feel that the ' sexual significance of their legs is declining,” said M. Colyer, coni sumer research supervisor at DuPont. He said the emphasis has ■ shifted since the hey-day of Mar- » lene Dietrich and Betty Grable.' I What Do Men Notice Even so, two-thirds of the worn- ■ en 20 and over in the study said > they believe legs are the first i thing a man notices about woman. ■ Only half the teenagers, 15 to 19, felt such was true. i Whatever the cause for the de- , crease, the industry hopes for a I run on hosiery counters because > of the dozens of new colors for t fall.. -and because of fashion’s : new accent on hemline interest in both daytime and evening clothes. t "We’ll costume the legs too,” ; said the association. s Say a woman has purchased a
PAGE THREE-A
fire red suit for fall With ft, she can wear hosiery wit* a subtle, pinkish cast If het costume is brown, there is a wide rahm of shades to complement it. To go with the hish fabrics featured in evening wear, the hosiery industry is out with a whole range of “gem tones” — ruby, sapphire, gold, amethyst, garnet and toper. And since this fall fur abounds as trimming, fur colors also move i ihto hosiery. They carry such names as golden sable, honey sable, red fox, black mink, and irridescent leopard. , • ii du ii uidrtiui Minima ' J ' .« '' > ■' »■ Rest Room BLOOMFIELD, Conn. (UP) — The new home office of Oto Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. includes a drab, soundproofed room, furnished only with plain chairs, for those employes wishing to escape from tensions and anxieties of work.
