The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, January 29, 1959, Page 6, Image 6

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    March of Dimes Will
Step-Up Virus Studies
•—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE THURSDAY,
THURSDAY. JANI
JANUARY
ARY 29. 1959
Order Your Printing From The
MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
Regular Servicing
of your car will save costly repair bills.
Let US service your car REGULARLY.
Our dependable service will make your
car or truck last longer.
Our Station is Open 24 Hours a Day
We Give S & H Green Stamps
DRAPER'S FLYING A SERVICE
WE GIVE 8 St H GREEN STAMPS
Phone 7442
Highway 22
8t
38K
HR
4.1
• A 7
i
'i'
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
GATES COMMUNITY CHURCH
North Mill City
OF CHRIST
Rea. Gene E. Davidsoa. Paster
Donald L. Hobson. Minister
Sunday school at 9:45 a m
Sunday School **•'*' <_ tn.
Morning worship 11 a.m.
Morning Worship, ax.uU a. m.
Evening service 7:30 p m
Young People’s Claes 5:00 p. m.
and Choir Practice. Mrs. Btano Hob­ Young Peoples Services every Sun-
iaj at (L30.
son.
Wednesday prayer meeting 7:30 pm
Adult Bible Class 5:00 p. m.
v • • v
9
•
•
ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
• ILL CITY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Mrs. Helen Davia, Pastor
Full Gospel
Sunday school 10 a. m.
Rev. D. B. Arnu»troug, Pa*tor
Morning worship 11 a.m
Prayer Meeting. Friday, 7:45 o. m
Evangelistic Hour, 7:45.
Sunday Scnool, 9:45 a. m.
Wednesday. Cottage Prayer Meet-
Morning Worship 11 a. m.
N
ing,
8:00 p. m-
Evangelistic Service 7:45 p. aa.
see
OSS
LYONS METHODIST CHURCH
IDANHA COMMUNITY CHURCH
Rev. Cotton. Pastor
Morning service 11 a.m.
Sunday school at 9:4* a. m.
Evening service 7:00 p.m.
Worship service, 11 a. m.
Wednesday prayer meeting at < 80
Womens Society of Christian Ser­
p. m.
vice meets 1st and 3rd Tuesday of
Sunday school 10 a.m.
•
•
•
each month with Mrs. Wilson Stevens
as president.
DETROIT CHURCH OF CHRIST
e e •
Glen Lyda, Minister
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sunday school at 10:45.
Beotamin A. lawreacr, Minister
Morning Worship at 11.
• • • •
Sunday school 9:45 a. m.
ST. PATRICK'S PARISH
Morning worship 10:55.
Lyons, Oregon
Evening Service, 8:00.
Mass: 1st, 2nd, and 5th Sunday at
Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, 8 P-
10:80 a.m.
Maas: 3rd and 4th Sunday 8:80 a.m.
•
•
Rev. Bernard Neuman, SDS,Pastor FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Mill City
COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN
Rev. Robert Roach, Pastor
CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Mehama
Morning worship 11:00 a m.
Rev. James Hardy, Pastor
Music by choir.
Bible School, 10:00 a. m.
Midweek services Wed. 7:30 p.m.
Worship Hour, 11:00 a. m.
A friendly welcome to all.
ST. CATHERINE CATHOLIC
• • •
CHURCH. MILL CITY
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Father Hugh Gearia
S. W. Second Street, Mill City
Mas« at 9'15 a.m. every Sunday
Sabbath School, 9:80 a. m. Satur-
Confessions heard before Mass.
day.
Morning service, 10:45 Saturday
• •
Visitors welcome.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
Devers Real Estate Building, Gates
SANTIAM CHAPEL AT LYONS
Sunday, 11 a. m.
Jay Beebe. Pastor
Wednesday meeting. 4th Wednes­
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
day at 8 p. m.
Church Services 11:00 a. m.
Evening service at 7:30 p. m.
Tangerines, the zipper fruit, are an j
Young People’s service, Thursday
evening 7:80 p. m. Jacquie Walker, excellent source of Vitamin C, and fun
president.
for children to eat.
Prayer meeting and Bible study
To prevent mildew in a closet that
Friday evenings 7:30 p. m.
is poorly ventilated, burn a small light
OUR LADY OF LOURDES PARISH bulb to help dry the air.
Jordan. Oregon
Rev. Bernard Neuman. SDS, Pastor
Oil or grease spots on resin treated
'ass 1st, 2nd, and 5th Sunday at fabics should be removed with a sol­
vent immediately. Then wash as us­
1 9:30 a.m
I Mass: 3d and 4sh Sunday 10:80 a.m. ual.
Let The Enterprise
DO YOUR PRINTING
have your PRINTING done.
here at home.
The Enterprise can do it right
The Enterprise is well equipped to handle all
YOUR PRINTING NEEDS
T«r US FIRST AND BE CONVINCED
•
• Statements
• Direct Mail Pieces
• Letterheads
• Business Cards
Ruled Forms
• Advertising Brochures
• Wedding Announcements
Try The Home Merchants First For All Of Your Needs
In fact, the virus research
program of the National Foun­
dation already is the largest of
its kind in existence.
Scientists under National
Foundation grants have made
some of the most creative med­
ical advances of our time. They
have blazed new trails not only
In the fields of polio and polio
prevention but also in the whole
realm of medical knowledge.
Among these scientific mile­
stones are: important break­
throughs in knowledge of en­
cephalitis (sleeping sickness);
important data on how insects
transmit disease to man; the
first successful method of grow­
ing polio virus in nonnervous
tissue, without which the Salk
vaccine could not have been
created: discovery of a whole
group of heretofore unknown
Viruses, called ECHO viruses,
some of which are harmful to
man; basic facts about the na­
ture of viru. es, normal and ab­
normal ceils and nucleic ac:d,
which r.as been called the ‘ auto­
matic pilot of life ’’
Some of those discoveries have
an importsnee to medical science
comparable to atomic energy’s
importance to physics. National
Foundation research grantees
have received world recognition
with Nobel prizes. Their explor­
ations have pushed medical sci­
ence ahead with giint strides.
Over $34.000,000 has been au-
*----- ■------------------ —--------- 7-7------
thorized by the National Foun­
dation for research since 1938
Current virus projects include
exploring the damage inflicted
on the unborn children of moth­
ers attacked by newly discov­
ered viruses; the possibility of
viruses as a cause of arthritis,
and effects of epidemics of the
new viral agents that swept two
states in 1957.
The theme for this January's
March of Dimes is “Toward
Greater Victories." The organ­
ization that made prevention of
paralytic polio possible now is
ready to begin attacks on other
crippling diseases. Initial new
goals are arthritis and birth de­
fects. In these and other areas
the role of the virus will be
explored At the same time sci­
entists will attempt to find out
about latent viruses that may
be responsible for illness and
disability many years after they
first enter the body.
The National Foundation has
reached a stac.e in virology
where the chemical composition
and structure of the virus is
well enough known for the virus
to be taken apart and for viruses
to be used as tools to discover
how cells act. grow and repro­
duce. Much of what science can
do todav in a virus laboratory is
the resu t of research sponsored
in the past by the March of
Dimes.
age more than a few minutes even
i »ini
gar ge d< or <_pen.
2. Don’t leave the engine running
when sitting in a narked car for more
than a few minutes, unless the win­
dows are well open.
3. Inspect automobile exhaust sys­
tems regularly, particularly for loose
mar if
, blown-out gaskets, leaking
exhaust pipe connections and holes in
mufflers,
4. Keep air-intakes of car closed
in slow-moving, closely spaced traffic
or while traveling through tunnels.
5. Don’t operate furnaces, fire­
places, -nace heaters or fuel-type
•>ater hea'ers without providing some
dependable means of supplying fresh
air continuously tn make up for the
supply exhausted by burring.
fi. Make sure a’l heating equip-
ment is connected to the otside air by
proper-sized flue p >es to chimneys
or other approved outlets.
7. Don’t close the fireplace dam­
per until the fire is completely extin­
guished and all embers are cold.
Keep al] fuel-burning equip­
ment, flue pipes, and chimneys clean
and in go >d condition.
9. Don’t substitute one type of gas
for another in any gas-burning appli­
ance unless a qualified serviceman
has made the necessary changes in the
parts involv'd.
10. Don't ati 'n-; t to change or in-
tei ie with the manner in which an
ap iar ■ wa* designed tu be used
Keep an vents open; don’t block or
cover verts of range ovens, water
het t t . or s; ace heaters. Don’t try to
pwteh ga- p.pes or tubing with tape,
gum or other weak and temporary
materials.
The state board of health warned
II Wednesday that more carbon nionox-
|| ide poisonings, such as those which
11 caused at least two Oregon deaths and
I several near-fatalities during recent
I weeks, can be expected this winter
l| unless precautionary measures are
| followed closeily.
I Dr. Harold M. Erickson, state health
II officer, said monoxide poisonings "are
11 almost always preventable” even
11 though the deadly gas gives no warn-
11 mg of its presence He sa d the danger
ls greatest during
old weathei
months when home- and cars are kept
tightly closed.
I
Monoxide is produced by the tncom-
I plete burning of solid, liquid or ga*
I fuels. When taken into the lungs, the
11 monoxide displaces the vital oxygen
I supply sent through the body by the
I blood stream Because monoxide com-
11 bine* with red blood cells 200 time*
1 1 more easily than oxygen, p • on ng
I can occur quickly in poorly venti'ated
l places. Dr. Erickson said.
I
The health officer emphasized that
11 length of exposure, age. size, activ-
I ity, humidity, temperature, move-
II ment of air and even altitude may de-
I termine individual reaction to the ga*.
|| Persons slightly effe ted by iaonox-
I ide may recover without serious con-
11 sequences. but prolonged unconscious-
SUBSCRIBE TO THE MILL CITY
I mu m poiaoned air cm cause perm­
it anent brain damage or death, he said. ENTERPRISE TODAY! 83.0« a Ysar
11 Symptom* of mild poisoning were
I listed a* headache accompanied by diz­
ziness and vision trouble. Victims feel
extremely tired and sleepy and find
NEW and USED
difficulty in focusing attention on the
task at hand. Late symptons include
shortness of breath, nausea, vomiting,
fluttering and throbbing of the heart
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
followed by unconsciousness and pos­
sibly death.
CARPETING and
“A combination of improper burn­
ing of fuel and insuffi*ient ventila­
LINOLEUM
tion is necessary to br ng about mon-
I oxide poisoning,* Dr. Erickson cm-
phaized. "Although a person may get
¡by when oni> ui.e oexurs, he can't
escape poisoning when both occur at
I the same time.”
He recommended these precautions
We Give and Redeem
be foil wul to av ':J mono aide poi son-
i mg:
Penny Saver Stamps
1. Don't close garage
an automobile is running, and don't
367 3rd St. Stayton
a.u w the engiro to run .n .he gar-
I
• Envelopes
March of Dimes funds in 1959 will be used for breaking
new medical scientific ground in the history-making virus
research program of the National Foundation.
Watch Out for
Monoxide Gas
[ Poisoning Now
I
There is no need to spend your time going out of Mill City to
PROBING FOR BREAK-THROUGH in virus research. Ore. Helen Von
Vunakis, loft, and Jame» I. Barlow work in the Albany, N. Y., labora­
tories of the New York State Department of Health. The doctors are
separating a basic nucleic substance from the protein of the virus,
working under a March of Dime» grant from the National Foundation
Expansion of virus studies is a major part of 19S9 March of Dimes
aimed Toward Greater Victories in polio, arthritis, birth defects
Furniture
THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
The Home of Good Printing
Phone 6651 or 7605
Mill
City, Oregon