Speedway Flyer, Volume 33, Number 23, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1964 — Page 4

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. ANNUALS . PERENNIALS . POTTED ROSES * FERTILIZER . GRASS SEED BLOOM FLOWERS SPENCER and EDWARDS W. 10th & TIBBS AVE. ME. 6-5556 "WE GROW OUR OWN" "Plenty of Free Parkins"

llHllf Y "Get a Reinforced Concrete NUW I Incinerator to Protect Your Yard" Clean, Safe Disposal of Paper— Trash—Garbage

PRE-FABRICATED CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION . . . EASILY ASSEMBLED OR MOVED, YET LASTS A LIFETIME. • This is the original and only “Burn-All” incinerator designed and engineered for maximum efficiency, safety, and appearance. Proven by laboratory tests and use in the field, it combines safety with tremendous burning power. $39.95 INSTALLED Completely Safe . • . The "Burn-All" has been designed io solve efficiently and inexpensively your disposal problems. It eliminates the old fashioned wire basset which is not only unsightly but aiso a proven fire hazard that is dangerous to surrounding buildings. Children can play safely near the "BurnAll" incinerator.

SPECIFICATIONS Height 54 inches Width 20 inches Base 25 inches sq. Fire Door 13 inches wide Fire Grate 20 x 20 inches Reinforced with steel throughout

SPEEDWAY HARDWARE & GARDEN CENTER

5242 Crawfordsville Road

ATTEND CHURCH NEXT SUNDAY

fate/

Just request "Kodak Processing" when you bring in your Kodacolor or Kodachrome Films. We ll send them to an Eastman Kodak Laboratory.

★ HOURS ★ Monday thru Saturday 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Open Every Sunday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

"We Pick-Up and Deliver Prescriptions" - FREE DELIVERY SERVICE - “In Business Since 1915"

your store

1564 Main St. CH. 4-0241 SPEEDWAY CITY 2835 Lafayette Rd. WA. 5-8937 * TWO BIG LOCATIONS ★

(tarabua)

For emergency prescription service from Rosner's Drug Store-Call CH. 1-5894 or check the other emergency phone numbers listed on our front door anytime during the night or on Sundays when the store is CIOSeCL

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Check these “Bum-All” Features ... • Any part replaceable • Bums in any weather • Eliminates fire danger • Superior combustion • Easily dismantled and moved • Lifetime use • No black spots in yard

CH. 4-5811

"We Stock a Complete Line of Photographic Equipment”

PICNIC The Marion County Fish and Game Association (located on Highway 136 at Eagle Creek, one mile west of Speedway) will hold a picnic on June 7 at 12:30 p.m. There will be soft drinks for the kiddies and coffee for adults. Bring your own “chow” and table service. There will be Archery, Shooting and Games. Come out and have a lot of fun. Dr. Griffith (Continued from Page 1) playing a small role in the tremendous effort to maintain the life of the old soldier. Dr. Richard S. Griffith, Class of 1938, was called to Walter Reed Army Hospital to discuss Keflin with the physicians taking care of General MacArthur. With the use of Keflin, penumonia ceased to be one of their problems. Dr. Griffith, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Griffith of this city, was bom and reared in Greenfield.

/NTHESTATE tpß® *** TAKE UP TO 36 MONTHS TO REPAY-INSURANCE CAN ALSO BE ARRANGED AT LOW, COMPETITIVE RATES

MAIN OFFICEBRANCH OFFICES: Windsor Village

zCw/et; funeral Gp/p*? HOMES NOW . . . 2 Chapels 1604 W. Morris Street ME. 8-2388 2950 N. HIGH SCHOOL ROAD (1500 ft. North of Howard Johnson) AX. 1-1193

Floyd F. Farley Speedway Chapel .. Pro P rieter

FOR RENT -

FOOD HOME

★ "THEY WILL SAVE YOU MONEY" ★

Rent a Locker Today and Become a Member of Our Wholesale Food Purchasing Club saves you. ..ms

•Beef *Pork * Poultry •Frozen Food at WHOLESALE PRICES ★ HAVE YOUR OWN FREEZER? ... LET US HU IT "A Headquarters for Freezing and Packaging Materials

C.fpEEDWA FROZEN FOOD Cetifev X ,OC 8 M AI N 24, Indane \

THE SPEEDWAY FLYER

He obtained his B.S. degree in Zoo-Chemistry from Butler University in June, 1942, and completed the requirements for his degree in medicine in two years at Indiana University School of Medicine. In 1943, Dr. Griffith married his high school sweetheart, Miss Narvella Bussell, Class of 1940. During his junior and senior years at medical school, he was appointed assistant in pharmacology. Dr. Griffith fulfilled his internship and residency in internal medicine at Marion County General Hospital in Indianapolis. During two years of his assignment with the UJS. Army, he was attached to the Climatic Research Laboratories in Lawrence, Mass. Dr. Griffith was surprised to find that the knowledge of electricity gained under the guidance of Mr., C. A. Sink in Greenfield’s physics class stood him in good stead during this time. He was soon made pfficer in charge

5300 Crawfordsville Road 15 W. Main St., Clermont 1532 Main St., Speedway 515 Main St., Beech Grove

LOCKERS AND FREEZERS

of the Climatic Research Unit’s physics lab, supervising instrumentation of their cold weather studies. The last year.of his sojourn in the army Dr. Griffith’s lab and personnel moved to Ft. Churchill, Manitoba, Canada, to prove the effectiveness of their work. Eli Lilly & Company were apparently waiting for Dr. Griffith’s discharge from the military. He started to work in the Lilly Laboratory for Clincial Research at Marion County General Hospital in the Cardiovascular Renal Disease section and, then, in 1953 was assigned to the study of infectious diseases. Dr. Griffith is following in his father’s footsteps as a teacher. He is an Associate Professor of Medicine, University School of Medicine, where he teaches infectious diseases to medical students. As head of the section of Clinical Microbiology at the Lilly Laboratory for Clinical Research,

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Dr. Griffith was the first to use Lilly’s newer antibiotics, V-Cillin, Ilosone, Vancocin, and now is using Keflin in the treatment of infectious diseases. His clinical experiences made Dr. Griffith the local authority for consultation regarding the possible usefulness of Keflin at Walter Reed Hospital. At the time Dr. Griffith was struggling through English composition and mathematics in school, he was certain he would never have use for them. This proves how much more his teachers knew than he about his future. In his research work, he has published 34 scientific papers relating to the absorption and distribution of medicine through the body tissues, clinical effectiveness of antibiotics, and the side effects of drugs. On three different occasions he has been invited to present various aspects of his work in infectious diseases at universities and symposia in Europe. This past year, Dr. Griffith has

I GIFTS $ when you move JpS B ...when a new baby arrives I YWWelwmeWagon Hostess will K call with a basket of gifts... and ■ friendly greetings from our reli|g gious, civic and business leaden. IB Just let us know ... PHONE WA. 6-2796

MEMBER F. D. I. C.

Dr. Benjamin Schuss, Optometrist Eyes Examined Contact Lenses 10 A.M. to 9 AAA.—Monday—Wednesday—Friday 10 AAA. to 6 PAA.—Tuesday—Thursday—Saturday SPEEDWAY SHOPPING CBiTER 5910 CRAWFORDSVILLE RD. CH. 1-9315

S & W FLOORING CO. CARPET-LINOLEUM-TILE MARBLE SHIS-CERAMIC-PAINT FREE ESTIMATES OPEN MONDAY & FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 6:30 PAA. 1556 Main St. CH. 1-8246 Speedway

IN SPEEDWAY-IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 5949 BUICK DRIVE MODEL HOAAE OPEN DAILY PRICE $17,990 3 Bedroom, Brick, Hardwood Floors, 2 Baths, Living Room, Kitchen, Family Room with Built-ins, Finished Garage, Con* Crete Drive. ALSO Available in Parkview Estates Entrance at Moller Road and Beauport Road TO BE BUILT OUR PLANS OR YOURS PRICE RANGE $22,500 TO $27,500 CHEMCO BUILDERS—SEE US FOR INFORMATION PHONE SALES * AT. 3-3072 ★ JOHN L McINTIRE

B. F. ROSNER CONSTRUCTION CH. 4-4160

★ REMODELING ★ COMMERCIAL •k CEMENT PORCHES ★ GARAGES

'MOW RESTAURANTand LOUNGE

“DINING AND DANCING” Restaurant and Cocktail IMenge "FEATURING THE BILL DUNN TRIO FOR YOUR DANCING PLEASURE" Six Mgkts A Week • BANQUET ROOM AVAILABLE • Dinners from $2.00 NOON LUNCHEON SERVED DAILY 4561 W. 16th (500 Shopping Center) CH. 1-5447

been appointed to the School Board of Speedway, Ind., a position he eagerly accepted because of his realization of the importance of a good high -school education taught by well-informed and dedicated teachers. Dr. Griffith concluded that he has always believed that the sound basic and practical education gained at Greenfield schools more than adequately prepared him for the stimulating and interesting life he has had as a student, teacher, and research physician. As published in the Rileyan, the Greenfield H.S. Newspaper Expanding Research Bend, stretch, touch fingers to toes. Some people exercise to lose weight; others to chart the road back to a normal life. In Atlanta, Ga., patients with lung diseases exercise as a part of a research project at the Emory University Medical School. The idea of the project is to explore possible programs of physical rehabilitation and job training for patients with lung diseases. Chest specialists say such tests are needed to help them find out what their patients can and can’t do. Basic to the problem is the serious disabling effect that lung diseases have on the patients’ breathing. Many get extremely short of breath the moment they seart putting forth any marked physical effort. It can be a tricky matter to determine useful work standards for such patients. A wrong guess about the job an individual can handle could mean tragic failure, with serious medical, economic or emotional aftereffects. Yet, difficult or not, it’s a job that urgently needs doing—an exploratory effort that, if carried out successfully, can result in the rescue of many thousands from enforced idleness. It’s one of the 37 research projects on lung dis-

★ ROOM ADDITION ★ RESIDENTIAL ★ DRIVE WAYS •k ALUMINUM SIDING

Thursday, June 4, 1964

eases financed this year in whole or in part by the National Tuberculosis Association and its related state or local groups. The effort is to be expanded according to association officials, until it has become a two-million-dollar annual program to find better ways and means of dealing with problems relating to tuberculosis and other respiratory diseases. BALL STATE COMMENCEMENT MUNCIE, IND.—Dr. William S. Carlson, president of the University of Toledo, will give the commencement address at Ball State Teachers College on Sunday, June 7. The ceremony will be at 5 pan. on the south terrace of the Arts Building. A second commencement will be held August 21. SENIOR CLASS PRESENTS PLAY The Senior Class at Indiana Central College will present “You Can’t Take It With You,” a celebrated comedy by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman, Friday and Saturday nights, June’ 5 and 6 at 8:30 p.m. in Ransburg Auditorium. ROSE SHOW The Holiday Inn Downtown, 500 W. Washington St., will be the scene of the fifteenth annual rose show sponsored by the Indianapolis Rose Society to be held Sunday, June 7. This event, always a highlight of early summer for rose and garden lovers, will this year offer even more for participants and spectators crowding in to view in the hundreds of cultural specimens in their slim vases and the dozens of imaginative floral arrangements featuring roses. On show day, exhibits will be received between 7 and 10 am. Judging will begin at 10:45 a.m. The show will be open to the public from 3 to 8 pjn., free admission.

Look, Mom, No Bacilli! “What I want to know is this. If TB’s an adult disease, why do they want us to have our children tested once a year?” The speaker was Mrs. Ella Rogers, a Pennsylvania mother. She asked her question during a local telephone-interview radio show. The announcer, a parent himself, didn’t know the answer. It’s a safe guess that the majority of American parents were in the same boat. In such a situation, why not seek an answer from the horse’s mouth—or, in this case, from the Christmas Seal Association that has fought TB on a national battlefront for 60 years? That’s exactly what’s been done; and here is the authoritative answer to Mrs. Rogers given by a spokesman for the National Tuberculosis Association; “Your question is a sound and timely one. Tuberculin tests are important in childhood because, for one thing, the TB germ can be thoroughly active in young children who have caught the germ from an infected person. This is what can happen when a TB control program breaks down, and in children up to the age of three, it can result in tuberculosis meningitis, a frequent and rapid killer. “On the other hand—and particularly in somewhat older children—the germ may remain inactive in the body until many years later and then become active. A person found to have active TB in his forties or later may well have been harboring the germ since teenage or pre-teen-days. In that case, a tuberculin test, taken at an early age, normally would have revealed the presence of the inactive germ and warned against the possibility of a later breakdown into active disease.”

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Itjcould happen to you I Brod Speedway Hardware 1«12 N. Lyndhwrst CHapel 4-3188