The Independent-News, Volume 94, Number 8, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 18 July 1968 — Page 2
THE INDEPENDENT-NEWS — JU IA 18, 1968
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:]<ScIENCeIW fc&sa HIMEIA MISS REVEALS ALL TAM’ is one lady you can see right throught. She's 5 foot 8, weights 100 pounds and mea-snr-s 36-24-37. You can meet het at the I’mvcisity of Michigan’s Museums Building. TAM stands lot Ttanspatent Anotomkai Manikin and "she'' is made of crystal-vleai plastic w her bones, muscles and nerves all are apparent. Her central interim lighted section is cl oss-bat t led so each organ is visible, even behind a bone or layer of muscle. PSYCHOANALYSIS is not as popular as it was 10 years ago. Moreover, it is no longer prestigious to go to a psychoanalyst. Psychoanalysis reached the peak of its influence in the field psychiatry in the 1950'5, but today its piestige and populaiity are on the decline, says a University of Wisconsin psychiatrist. "Psychoanalysis is no longer the golden key to professional and academic success in the field of psychiatry.’’ he explains. "This trend may be due to the recent rise in popularity of community i sychiatry and other innovations in Hie field." A COUPLE of ordinarily very f lint stars that have suddenly become much brighter, so bright that they are visible to the unaided eye. are being closely watched by a University of Texas astt>nomer. He has been observing the stars, called novae, with the aid of the university's 82-inch telescope. He says naked-(ye-novae are not common. One chtwye T’ri. and Sat., July 19 and 20 CHILDREN 50c ADULTS 90e PAUL NEWMAN just bugs the Establishment as Cool Hand Luke In Technicolor Shows 7:00 4 8:50
| Sunday Is Triple Dip Day | I a t JACOB | drugs | 1 5 c ♦ • Then, there’s that once a month when a girl could use a good old-fashioned medicine. r Maybe you feel just plain bad then. Or maybe a little lonely and sad, like you could use a pair of arms around you. Well, we have just the thing for this once a month time. 1 ydia E. Pinkham Tablets They’re made with gentle, natural ingredients, including one that works to help relax tightened muscles that give you cramps. Plus a little । iron that a girl could use at a tune like this. .And, you don’t run any cl ance of the kind of unpleasant side effects you could get from some of the newer drugs. With an old-fashioned problem like thu, i , couldn’t you take an old-fashioned medicine. ? Lydia E. Pinkham w *s Tablets and Liquid Compound I * • • U. — — ♦
usually app us about every five yan- ant fades after about thiee months. But it is a rare event for two t > be visible at the same time. One of the stars, in the <•< nst» 11. ’i n Delphinus, has now iemairo I bright t ( r eight months. The other, in the constellation Viilp ula (Little Foxi, has been bn :ht tor about foui weeks. T’FEK-A-BOO' assemblies are enabling industrial users to keep an "eye" on materials being processed in mixing tanks, cooking kettles, absorpion columns and other pressure vessels, reports Tube Turns. I^ouisville. The sight glasses consist of a -\-in< hthuk bus mounted between two metal flanges; they can withstand temperatures as high as 500 degrees F. ITALIAN RE N A TSS A N CE painters apparently did not work the way the art-history tex’-bo-'ks say they did. reports Mrs. Meryl Johnson, an art conservator and chemistry researcher. She found that the artists built up the paint in the pictures in thin layers, sometimes as many as 10. sometimes alternating tempera and oil pigments. Neither the great number of layers nor the combination of tempera and oils had been known before. She also says that oil paints were used before the time art textbooks credit their invention by the Van Eyck brothers in the early 15th century. FATHER-SON T.ALK MAY BE BIRDS, BEES, COMPI TERS A LIVING' BACTERIUM CELL that eats, grows and reproduces itself - - all by mathematical formulae - - has been created by a computer scientist at the University of Michigan. During its "life” in the computer the cell thrives on milk, sugar and kindness. If maltreated, it gets sick and dies. The researcher said he created the cell model by taking detailed facts-of-life processes and integrating them in a computer to see if they could function as a whole. They did. He says the result shows that the laws of physics and chemistry can be applied to life processes to produce greater understanding of life itself. EARLY RADIOLOGIC treatment can apparently lead to complete cures for some victims of Hodgkins disease, a cancer-like ailment that will kill as many as 3.500 Americans this year, say medical researchers at the University of Chicago. They say past success with radiologic treatment has led to a potential new treatment of a form of
Hodgkin’s disease affecting the skin. They are using superficial radiation of skin lesions, combined with high-energy radiation from electbeam scanning, to tout the disease. ARC WELDING applications in tanks and railroad cars requiring continuous electrodes can be easily performed with new semiautomatic equipment that is s< pa rated into two connected units, reports National Cylinder Gas. Chicago. The portable wiredrive unit weighs only 40 pounds and can be carried to difficult-to-position weldments. It is separated from the control unit by 25 feet of cables and hoses. The welding ladius is extended to 40 feet when standard 15-foi<t cables are connected to the gun. AZO COMPOUNDS, once thought to be producible only in a laboratory, have been found by Rutgei s Univeisity scientists to be created naturally as the result of microbial action in soil treated with pesticide. Some azo compounds (the neme comes from the French word for nitrogen! are known to cause cancer and others are suspect. THROUGHOUT tne world, rivers carry an estimated 4 billion tons of dissolved salts annually to the ocean, reports the U.S. Department of Interior. About the same tonnage of salt from ocean water is probably precipitated on the ocean bottom or otherwise extracted from it. Thus yearly gains may offset yearly losses, and the oceans probably have a balanced salt input and output. IT'S A MAN’S WORLD when it comes to flying airplanes. Sixty-five years after the Wright brothers developed the airplane, women are still a definite minority group sh aviation. Latest Federal Avaiation Administration figures show only 23.659 active women pilots in the U.S. less than five per cent of the national total. WHO KNOWS? 1. On what date did Germany attack the Soviet Union in World War II? 2. What is the nickname for the state of Maine ? 3. Where is the highest water fall in the world? 4. What is the last line in all four verses of the "The StarSpangled Banner?" 5. Name the four states that experienced the massive blackout June 5, 1967? 6. What President of the U.S. coined the phrase, "rugged individualism ?” 7. Locate the O'Shaughnessy Dam. 8. Name the three sons of Noah. 9. What is an erg? 10. Name the author of "Os Mice?" ANSWERS TO WHO KNOWS 1. June 22. 1941. 2. The Pine Tree State. 3. Angel Falls (3.212 ft.l, in Venezuela. South America. 4. O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave. 5. Pennsylvania. New Jersey, Maryland and Delaware. 6. Herbert Hoover, who first used the phrase in a campaign speech on October 22, 1928. 7. California. 8. Shem, Ham and Japhet. 9. A unit of electrical energy. 10. John Steinberg. Ed: “Oh, those musical horns scare me to death!" Ned’ "Why’s that?" Ed: "Well, the man who ran off with my wife had one on his car and every time I hear one I think he’s bringing her back." WomenPast2l WITH MAKER IMITATION Suffer Many Trouble* After 21, common Kidney * Bladder Irriiatiaa> affect twice a* many women aa men and may make you tense and nervous from loofrequent, burning or itching urination both day and night. Secondarily, you may lose atoep and suffer from Headaches, Backache and feel old. tired, depressed. In such irritation, O 87 EX usually brings fast, relaxing comfort by curbing irritating germ* in Mrong. acid urine and by analgexu pam relief. Get CYS7 EX al druggists. See how last it can help you.
*7^ - 'Hewt Robert E. Urlun. Editor PUBLISHER The Independent-News Co., Inc. 601-03 Roosevelt Road, Walkerton, Indiana 46574 Telephone 586-3189 PUBLICATION TIME: Thursday of, Each Week Second Class Postage Paid At Walketon, Indiana SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $3.00 Per Year -50 c Additional If Mailed Out Os State Member Os The Hoosior State Press Association Second Class Postage Paid At Walkerton, Indiana
NOTICE TO BIDDERS FOR GARBAGE AND RUBBISH CONTRACT COLLECTIONS Public Notice is herewith given that the Bo«rd of Trustees of the Town of Walkerton. Indiana, will accepted sealed bids for the collections of garbage and rubbish within the corporate limits of the Town of Walkerton fyr a one year period, commencing August 1, 1968 under the terms and provisions of Town Ordinance governing said collections. Sealed bids will be accepted at the Clerk-Treasurer’s Office until Tuesday Evening July 23rd 1968, at the hour of 7:30 p.m., nt which time said bids will be opened for consideration by the Board of Trustees convened in session. The Board of Trustees further reserve the right to accept or reject any or all bids. Wayne L. Cover Clerk-Treasurer Walkerton, Ind. 2tjlß NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice is hereby given that the Board of School Trustees of Polk-Lincoln-Johnson School Corporation. St. Joseph - Marshall - LaPorte Counties, Indiana, at a regular meeting. July 23, 1968 at 7:00 p.m. in their meeting place in the office of the superintendent, 506 Roosevelt Road, Walkerton, Indiana will open bids for the following: 1. Gasoline for the school owned buses, mowers, and the Driver Training cars. 2. Fuel oil to be delivered to the John Glenn High School and the elementary school building in Walkerton, Indiana. 3. Stoker coal to be delivered and stored in bins as the Tvnei school building. !Bid specifications are available in the office of the superintendent of schools.) The bids must be received by mail or in person at the office of the superintendent of schools, or delivered to the meeting place before the hour of 7:00 p.m. on the date given above. The Board reserves the right to reject any and/or all bids. BOARD OF SCHOOL TRI mTli'V^ POLK LINCOLN JOHNSON SCHOOL CORPORATION William D. Carter M.D. Carroll E. Zartman Elburt F. Place Denslow W. Doll Earl D. Smith A pay-as-you-go—policy is all right, but for the family budget it might not go far.
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NOTICE TO BIDDERS FOR GARBAGE AND RUBBISH CONTRACT COLLECTIONS Public Notice is herewith given that the Board of Trustees of the Town of Walkerton, Indiana, will accept sealed bids for the collections of garbage and rubbish within the corporate limits of the Town of Walkerton for a one year period, commencing August 1, 1968, under terms and provisions of Town Ordinance governing .said collections. Sealed bids will be accepted at the Clerk-Treasurer's Office until Tuesday Evening, July 23rd. 1968, at the hour of 7:30 p.m., at which time said bids will be opened for consideration by the Board of Trustees convened in special session. The Board of Trustees further reserve the right to accept or reject any or all bids. Wayne L. Cover Clerk-Treasurer Walkerton, Indiana 2tjlß Double Exposure "Pa." askeo Willie, "ft man’s wife is his better half, isn’t she?" “Well, so we are told, my son." said father noncommittally. "Well, then?' continued Willie, "if a man marries twice, there isn’t anything left nf him. tn there?” Seat Belts Do Save Lives e Wed., Thum., Fri. A Sat. July 17 - 20 Valley Os Doll* One Million Yean BC Fri. 4 Sat. Bonus Quiller Memorandum Sun., Mon. 4 Turn. July 21-22-23 Two Horror Picture* The Conqueror Worm Tales Os Terror
