Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 160, Decatur, Adams County, 9 July 1962 — Page 4
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DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Be. “~ , A°d d Sl£: John G Heller Vice President Chas. BoitbouM Secretary-Treasurer Snhscriptioa BctM By Man in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year. 310.00; Six months. 15.50; * months, 33.00. By Mall, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year. (UJS; 3 months, 36.00; 3 months, 33.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week, angle copiea, T cents. Decatur Represented Decatur will be well represented Tuesday when the first national park-land in Indiana is officially dedicated — the Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial in Spencer county. Gerald R. Durkin, president of the Adams county historical society, has been designated by Sen. R. Vance Hartke as official representative of the county at the meeting. He will be accompanied by a good-sized delegation from the county. Sen. Hartke will be master of ceremonies at the presentation and Interior Secretary Stewart Udall will be the main speaker. Winfield K. Denton, congressman from the eighth district, where the park will be located, and Conrad Wirth, national park service director, are among the other dignitaries who will be present. The memorial is on land where Lincoln lived from the time he was seven until he was 21, the formative years of his life. As it has been said “Kentucky gave Lincoln to the Nation, Indiana made Lincoln, and Lincoln made Illinois.” The park will ultimately include 200 acres. The bill creating the memorial calls for an expenditure of $1 million, with no more than $75,000 spent for acquiring land. The new memorial will place Indiana on the national park map, and will result in hundreds of thousands of tourist visits to the state, tourists who’ will spend millions of dollars here in their search for something different on their vacation. Indiana has much to offer, but it is only when properly presented that it makes its best showing. Sen. R. Vance Hartke has done a fine job of presenting Indiana to the nation. The new recreation sites on the Wa~ ' bash river will bring millions of dollars in revenue to the state, and to the businessmen of the state who are able to take advantage of the new sites. This new national memorial is part of Sen. Hartke’s dream of a better Indiana, visited and honored by the entire nation. Unlike some U. S. senators, who seem more interested in obstructing government than in making government better and of greater service to the people, Sen. Hartke has been a shining light during his first four years of office. Editorial Writer Today Dick D. Heller, Jr.
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Viral Strain May Be Ctiff . Merle Caiice
By DELOS SMITH DPI Science Editor NEW YORK (UPI) — Exciting news from virology is that a viral strain, long a candidate for inclusion among the ECHO viruses, is not only about to make the grade but may also turn but to be the long-sought stiff-neck virus. This Is the “Caldwell’’ virus strain first isolated in Kansas City in 1955 and associated with many minor ills of the central nervous system. So far no virologist has identified its family connections positively but the chances are it’s one of the large, tricky and troublesome ECHO group. Four virologists of the viral disease laboratory of the California Department of Health revealed that 16 virus strains isolated from persons with central-nervous-sys-tem disease since 1955 have turned out to be immunologically identical to the “Caldwell” strain. Neutralise California Strains By this they meant that antibodies produced Jn laboratory animals and in tissue cultures by “Caldwell” viruses neutralized all 16 of the California strains. The latter had characteristics of the ECHO group, of which there are 28 identified types, which made the presumption strong that the “Caldwell” and the California viruses are the same and are ECHO. Furthermore, their evidence indicates that this virus is a cause if npt the cause of aseptic meningitis, a usually benign disease whose prominent symptom is the stiff neck. Other things can put passing stiffness into necks, of course, but a virus stiffener has been long suspected. Indeed, the whole big family of enteroviruses have been suspects. The Echo viruses are among them, and so are the Coxsackie viruses which are of 29 types divided into two groups. And so are the polio viruses. Enteroviruses, so called because they multiply in the intestines, are the causes of a host of human ills. The California scientists were Drs. Edwin H. Lennette, Nathalie J. Schmidt, Robert L. Magoffin, and Anna Wiener and they reported their news to the New England Journal of Medicine. They got their 16 strains from as many individuals two of whom had no symptoms pt illness. Find Previous Infection The 14 Sick persons were clearly suffering from aseptic menin-
i MS' _ J “THANKS CHIEF’’ — These words were expressed by Elias McDonald (left), chief aviation boatswain’s mate, hydraulics, brother of Glenn McDonald of 315 Oak St., on the hangar deck of the Pacific Fleet attack carrier USS Midway <CVA-41>, after receiving his chief’s hat from Chief R. G. Goodman. McDonald, a native or Decatur, advanced to chief May 16, while the giant carrier was enroute to Sasebo, Japan. - [WHTpAY MORE '* LAplEy LADIES Plain Dresses Plain Skirts, Suits & Coats Blouses & Sweaters MEN’S MEN’S Suits, Topcoats Trousers, Sweaters & Overcoats & Sport Shirts CL z° |;(W c “r W PRESSEDPRESSED ■ o T Men’s Hats - Cleaned & Blocked -69 c Shirts Laundered —2O c Each CASH and CARRY ' MYERS CLEAMERS Corner Madison & Second Sts.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECAfUR, flttttAWA ~
gitis. Os the 14, 12 were children. The two well persons who harbored the viruses were family contacts of the sick. The scientists also found evidence of a previous infection with the virus in four other contacts. The scientists had, sought the ‘ Caldwell” viruses in the body excretions of many persons but fomad it only in persons with aseptic menigitis or their parents or brothers and sisters. Always there was a close relationship in time to the presence of the virus and of the disease. This strongly pointed to cause and effect. Their woifc focused more light into the murky field of which en-tero-viruses cause what illnesses among people. The symptoms of aseptic meningitis are sometimes diagnosed as “non-paralytic polio,” indicating a polio virus is the cause. The California work promised to shift all responsibility to a member of the ECHO family. Berne-French Teacher To Conference At I. U. Mrs. Beth Blue, a teacher at Berne-French high school, Berne, will attend the sixth annual conference on English language arts in the secondary school to be held July 12-13 at Indiana University. •Two hundred teachers of English from Indiana and adjoining states will be on the I.U. campus for the meeting, wheih will study the scope and sequence in the English language arts. Richard A. Meade of the University of Virginia, and Floyd Rinker, executive director of the commission on English of the' college entrance examination, will be the principal speakers for the conference. Three Are Enrolled In Summer Quarter MUNCIE, Ind. — Among the new freshmen at Ball State Teachers College who are enrolled for the summer quarters are three Adams county people. They are David D. Biery, son of Frances M. Biery of W. Line, Geneva; James D. Nelson of 217 S. 7th St.. Decatur, and Raul L. Moser, son of Richard Moser of 410 N. Washington, Geneva.
NEWPORT, B. I, (FHTNO— Es. Charles L. Heare, Jr., USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Ivan Heare of route 2, Decatur, Ind., was graduated recently from the Navy’s officer candidate school at the Naval Base, Newport, R. I. He was presented his diploma by Vice Amdiral William R. Smedberg, 111, chief of Naval personnel. The 16-week’s school trains officer candidates, college graduates and outstanding naval personnel in naval sciences and leadership. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results. ”
Jjr r X A Rpßßk f ™ Z AM rib , I . W Hr » iiki k v. » z 1 v Uro a" i yf ‘ W IX j 5:"/ •*<’ < , K ;-> W MMMr - } ■ ■ ,WtfW w ~ FORMER ACTOR DIES— Lt. Gov. Rex Bell of Nevada feeds ice cream to his grandniece, Stacy Perry, just a few hours before the former movie actor and husband of "It” girl Clara Bow died in Las Vegas.
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20 Yean Ago Today July 9, 1942 — Repairs are being made to the building, machinery and electrical equipment at the municipal light and power plant, of damage caused by the turbine blowup of June 22. Richard Rlngan, principal of the Jerreson township high school for the past two years, has resigned to become principal at Monmouth. Workmen for the state highway department marked off vehicle parking areas and crosswalks on federal highways through Decatur today. Light frost was reported during the night in Lowlands south of Berne. — The Nazi submarine base at Wilhelmshaven was heavily bombed by British planes. Modern Etiquette I Q. Will you please comment on the art of correct handshaking in general? A. In addition to the much-frowned-upon limp, flabby handshake, try to avoid the bone-crush-ing type, which is painful if the other person is wearing a ring; the pumple-handle technique; and the refusal-to-let-go manner, which is usually reserved for women and is supposed to indicate great ardor. A good handshake is at elbow
level, and U firm, but brief. j^aaia^nn^— si-— Q. I have just received an to* ■■■gaAiflA vitation to a bridal shower on some UR C()|l|r girl whom I scarcely know. Would IWIWBVBV I be justified in ignoring this invitation? Regular Stated A. This would be a little on the Mooting rude side. You are, however, just- TUESDAY ified in saying you are sorry, but ■ **■•«» that you have another engagement * :JU r> for that particular date. L AuKUlt Q. What does one use for putting ay. butter into one’s baked potato or « ww.ieo. other item of food on one’s plate? A. The fork is best for this. WBaaaaa"""" 1-
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