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Subject: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Wes
[ Next Thread | Previous Thread | Next Message | Previous Message ]
Date Posted: 19:37:19 07/19/15 Sun

The next book from Spearfish Lake Tales, Forgotten Killer, is now available for preorder.

While this is a "Tale from Spearfish Lake," it's not one of the "Bird" stories involving Jack, Vixen and others involved in those stories. Except for a couple of short sections set in 2015, it's mostly set in 1955, and contains no spoilers for upcoming books. At least in part, it honors the sixtieth anniversary of the release of the Salk polio vaccine. There are getting to be fewer and fewer who remember the impact of that event, and I thought it ought to be memorialized.

Here's the summary:

It's all but forgotten now, but two things scared people in the first half of the 1950s more than anything else. The atomic bomb was one of them, and infantile paralysis - polio - was the other. While polio could strike people of any age, it mostly targeted children, often crippling them for life, and sometimes killing them despite the best possible efforts available to stem the disease. When polio came to Spearfish Lake in 1955, there were only two choices that everyone faced: run and hide, or stand and fight against unknown and seemingly impossible odds, doing what little they could, however they could, for sake of the lives of the town's children.

There are a total of twenty-one chapters.

You can preorder Forgotten Killer for as little as $19.99 through the Spearfish Lake Tales Store Forgotten Killer page. Preorders will be sent sometime on the afternoon of July 26, Eastern Daylight Time.

-- Wes

[ Next Thread | Previous Thread | Next Message | Previous Message ]

Replies:
[> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
wexwiz543
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 19:45:40 07/19/15 Sun

>The next book from Spearfish Lake Tales, Forgotten
>Killer
, is now available for preorder.
>
>While this is a "Tale from Spearfish Lake," it's not
>one of the "Bird" stories involving Jack, Vixen and
>others involved in those stories. Except for a couple
>of short sections set in 2015, it's mostly set in
>1955, and contains no spoilers for upcoming books. At
>least in part, it honors the sixtieth anniversary of
>the release of the Salk polio vaccine. There are
>getting to be fewer and fewer who remember the impact
>of that event, and I thought it ought to be
>memorialized.
>
>Here's the summary:
>
>It's all but forgotten now, but two things scared
>people in the first half of the 1950s more than
>anything else. The atomic bomb was one of them, and
>infantile paralysis - polio - was the other. While
>polio could strike people of any age, it mostly
>targeted children, often crippling them for life, and
>sometimes killing them despite the best possible
>efforts available to stem the disease. When polio came
>to Spearfish Lake in 1955, there were only two choices
>that everyone faced: run and hide, or stand and fight
>against unknown and seemingly impossible odds, doing
>what little they could, however they could, for sake
>of the lives of the town's children.

>
>There are a total of twenty-one chapters.
>
>You can preorder Forgotten Killer for as little
>as $19.99 through the Spearfish Lake Tales Store rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank
>href="http://www.spearfishlaketales.com/store/40fk.htm"
>>Forgotten Killer page. Preorders will be
>sent sometime on the afternoon of July 26, Eastern
>Daylight Time.
>
>-- Wes

My younger brother was one of the subjects the Salk vaccine was tested on. The test was conducted in 1954-5.
Before that it was unclear how polio was transmitted and was a great fear. One of the boys in my elementary class contracted polio while his twin sister did not. The Salk vaccine was a great blessing to many at that time.

Wex
[> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Wes
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 19:49:44 07/19/15 Sun

I was also a part of that field trial. I was pretty young at the time but we all took it very seriously.

-- Wes

>My younger brother was one of the subjects the Salk
>vaccine was tested on. The test was conducted in
>1954-5.
>Before that it was unclear how polio was transmitted
>and was a great fear. One of the boys in my
>elementary class contracted polio while his twin
>sister did not. The Salk vaccine was a great blessing
>to many at that time.
>
>Wex
[> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Leo Kerr
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 21:12:48 07/19/15 Sun

Ten years ago, we had an exhibit on Polio, the 50th of the Salk vaccine, and the related..

I don't recall for certain knowing anyone who had directly contracted polio or not, so the exhibit was a bit of an eye-opener for me. Not just about polio, but, to put a fancy name on it, disease pathology (if I'm not using the word wrong.) That it (and others!) was "a disease of sanitation" -- as modern plumbing and sanitation improved, we, as a people, began to lose the natural resistance passed from mother to infant, afforded to us by the constant low-level exposure to polio, and the antibody transference via mother's milk.

So, I realize as I type this, not just sanitation, but 'convenience,' as milk-formula wouldn't have it.

Interesting and curious as to how some of these "little things" that people didn't know about -- because it was back so far in the cultural history -- came around to bite us through "the Wonders of Modern Science"!

Hopefully, it does make people wonder: if I fix X, what Y will I break? I know there was a guy who wrote a series of columns called "Connections" that tried to do grand, full-circle sorts of connect the dots.. sometimes discredited, or at least some imitators were discredited. But still..

Polio. And I have to admit that when I saw the title "Forgotten Killer" I wondered how Cody was being connected like that!
[> [> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Andrew
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 14:09:39 07/24/15 Fri

>
>Polio. And I have to admit that when I saw the title
>"Forgotten Killer" I wondered how Cody was being
>connected like that!

My first thought as well, but it has to be about Herman Luce.
[> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Wes
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 19:54:15 07/19/15 Sun

I was also a part of that field trial. I was pretty young at the time but we all took it very seriously.

-- Wes

>My younger brother was one of the subjects the Salk
>vaccine was tested on. The test was conducted in
>1954-5.
>Before that it was unclear how polio was transmitted
>and was a great fear. One of the boys in my
>elementary class contracted polio while his twin
>sister did not. The Salk vaccine was a great blessing
>to many at that time.
>
>Wex
[> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Peter Sausins
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 19:50:37 07/19/15 Sun

Hi Wes,
You've got the new book down as being Book Three of the "Full Sails" Series which can't be correct as "Distant Shores" fills that slot.
Peter
>The next book from Spearfish Lake Tales, Forgotten
>Killer
, is now available for preorder.
>
>While this is a "Tale from Spearfish Lake," it's not
>one of the "Bird" stories involving Jack, Vixen and
>others involved in those stories. Except for a couple
>of short sections set in 2015, it's mostly set in
>1955, and contains no spoilers for upcoming books. At
>least in part, it honors the sixtieth anniversary of
>the release of the Salk polio vaccine. There are
>getting to be fewer and fewer who remember the impact
>of that event, and I thought it ought to be
>memorialized.
>
>Here's the summary:
>
>It's all but forgotten now, but two things scared
>people in the first half of the 1950s more than
>anything else. The atomic bomb was one of them, and
>infantile paralysis - polio - was the other. While
>polio could strike people of any age, it mostly
>targeted children, often crippling them for life, and
>sometimes killing them despite the best possible
>efforts available to stem the disease. When polio came
>to Spearfish Lake in 1955, there were only two choices
>that everyone faced: run and hide, or stand and fight
>against unknown and seemingly impossible odds, doing
>what little they could, however they could, for sake
>of the lives of the town's children.

>
>There are a total of twenty-one chapters.
>
>You can preorder Forgotten Killer for as little
>as $19.99 through the Spearfish Lake Tales Store rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank
>href="http://www.spearfishlaketales.com/store/40fk.htm"
>>Forgotten Killer page. Preorders will be
>sent sometime on the afternoon of July 26, Eastern
>Daylight Time.
>
>-- Wes
[> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Wes
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 19:58:52 07/19/15 Sun

OK, fixed. Thanks!

-- Wes

>Hi Wes,
>You've got the new book down as being Book Three of
>the "Full Sails" Series which can't be correct as
>"Distant Shores" fills that slot.
>Peter
>>The next book from Spearfish Lake Tales, Forgotten
>>Killer
, is now available for preorder.
>>
>>While this is a "Tale from Spearfish Lake," it's not
>>one of the "Bird" stories involving Jack, Vixen and
>>others involved in those stories. Except for a couple
>>of short sections set in 2015, it's mostly set in
>>1955, and contains no spoilers for upcoming books. At
>>least in part, it honors the sixtieth anniversary of
>>the release of the Salk polio vaccine. There are
>>getting to be fewer and fewer who remember the impact
>>of that event, and I thought it ought to be
>>memorialized.
>>
>>Here's the summary:
>>
>>It's all but forgotten now, but two things scared
>>people in the first half of the 1950s more than
>>anything else. The atomic bomb was one of them, and
>>infantile paralysis - polio - was the other. While
>>polio could strike people of any age, it mostly
>>targeted children, often crippling them for life, and
>>sometimes killing them despite the best possible
>>efforts available to stem the disease. When polio came
>>to Spearfish Lake in 1955, there were only two choices
>>that everyone faced: run and hide, or stand and fight
>>against unknown and seemingly impossible odds, doing
>>what little they could, however they could, for sake
>>of the lives of the town's children.

>>
>>There are a total of twenty-one chapters.
>>
>>You can preorder Forgotten Killer for as little
>>as $19.99 through the Spearfish Lake Tales Store rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank
>>href="http://www.spearfishlaketales.com/store/40fk.htm
>"
>>>Forgotten Killer page. Preorders will be
>>sent sometime on the afternoon of July 26, Eastern
>>Daylight Time.
>>
>>-- Wes
[> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
IanS
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 02:10:05 07/20/15 Mon

Half fixed.
Click on Forgotten Killer on the main page and the page it takes you too still has Distant Shores at the top but with Forgotten Killer details below
[> [> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Wes
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 09:05:55 07/20/15 Mon

>Half fixed.
>Click on Forgotten Killer on the main page and the
>page it takes you too still has Distant Shores at the
>top but with Forgotten Killer details below


OK, thanks. I had a couple different versions of the file at home and I must have fixed the wrong one.

-- Wes
[> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Boyd Percy
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 18:17:36 07/25/15 Sat

>The next book from Spearfish Lake Tales, Forgotten
>Killer
, is now available for preorder.
>
>While this is a "Tale from Spearfish Lake," it's not
>one of the "Bird" stories involving Jack, Vixen and
>others involved in those stories. Except for a couple
>of short sections set in 2015, it's mostly set in
>1955, and contains no spoilers for upcoming books. At
>least in part, it honors the sixtieth anniversary of
>the release of the Salk polio vaccine. There are
>getting to be fewer and fewer who remember the impact
>of that event, and I thought it ought to be
>memorialized.
>
>Here's the summary:
>
>It's all but forgotten now, but two things scared
>people in the first half of the 1950s more than
>anything else. The atomic bomb was one of them, and
>infantile paralysis - polio - was the other. While
>polio could strike people of any age, it mostly
>targeted children, often crippling them for life, and
>sometimes killing them despite the best possible
>efforts available to stem the disease. When polio came
>to Spearfish Lake in 1955, there were only two choices
>that everyone faced: run and hide, or stand and fight
>against unknown and seemingly impossible odds, doing
>what little they could, however they could, for sake
>of the lives of the town's children.

>
>There are a total of twenty-one chapters.
>
>You can preorder Forgotten Killer for as little
>as $19.99 through the Spearfish Lake Tales Store rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank
>href="http://www.spearfishlaketales.com/store/40fk.htm"
>>Forgotten Killer page. Preorders will be
>sent sometime on the afternoon of July 26, Eastern
>Daylight Time.
>
>-- Wes


I'm looking forward to the new book, "Forgotten Killer".

I read in the newspaper today that Nigeria was celebrating a year without any new reported cases of polio. Twenty years ago they averaged 1000 new cases a year. In addition to the virus, the health care workers who travel around the country providing the vaccinations have suffered violence to prevent them doing their work. Terrorists have claimed the polio vaccine is an attempt to sterilize individuals.

You can read more about this subject on the website polioeradication.org

So far this year Pakistan has reported 28 new cases of the wild polio virus (compared to 94 during the same period last year) while Afghanistan had 5 new cases this year.
[> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Greg B.
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 15:39:14 07/27/15 Mon

Boyd, it's interesting to see that Polio still exists in the 3rd world. I went to high school with a guy who'd contracted polio in Egypt (his father was diplomatic corps and they weren't able to get the vaccine for some reason). He's now a noted artist who was featured on CNN recently, so he's more than overcome any disability he has. But at the time, i wouldn't have traded places with him for anything in the world.


>>The next book from Spearfish Lake Tales, Forgotten
>>Killer
, is now available for preorder.
>>
>>While this is a "Tale from Spearfish Lake," it's not
>>one of the "Bird" stories involving Jack, Vixen and
>>others involved in those stories. Except for a couple
>>of short sections set in 2015, it's mostly set in
>>1955, and contains no spoilers for upcoming books. At
>>least in part, it honors the sixtieth anniversary of
>>the release of the Salk polio vaccine. There are
>>getting to be fewer and fewer who remember the impact
>>of that event, and I thought it ought to be
>>memorialized.
>>
>>Here's the summary:
>>
>>It's all but forgotten now, but two things scared
>>people in the first half of the 1950s more than
>>anything else. The atomic bomb was one of them, and
>>infantile paralysis - polio - was the other. While
>>polio could strike people of any age, it mostly
>>targeted children, often crippling them for life, and
>>sometimes killing them despite the best possible
>>efforts available to stem the disease. When polio came
>>to Spearfish Lake in 1955, there were only two choices
>>that everyone faced: run and hide, or stand and fight
>>against unknown and seemingly impossible odds, doing
>>what little they could, however they could, for sake
>>of the lives of the town's children.

>>
>>There are a total of twenty-one chapters.
>>
>>You can preorder Forgotten Killer for as little
>>as $19.99 through the Spearfish Lake Tales Store rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank
>>href="http://www.spearfishlaketales.com/store/40fk.htm
>"
>>>Forgotten Killer page. Preorders will be
>>sent sometime on the afternoon of July 26, Eastern
>>Daylight Time.
>>
>>-- Wes
>
>
>I'm looking forward to the new book, "Forgotten
>Killer".
>
>I read in the newspaper today that Nigeria was
>celebrating a year without any new reported cases of
>polio. Twenty years ago they averaged 1000 new cases a
>year. In addition to the virus, the health care
>workers who travel around the country providing the
>vaccinations have suffered violence to prevent them
>doing their work. Terrorists have claimed the polio
>vaccine is an attempt to sterilize individuals.
>
>You can read more about this subject on the website
>polioeradication.org
>
>So far this year Pakistan has reported 28 new cases of
>the wild polio virus (compared to 94 during the same
>period last year) while Afghanistan had 5 new cases
>this year.
[> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Boyd Percy
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 22:28:29 07/27/15 Mon

>Boyd, it's interesting to see that Polio still exists
>in the 3rd world. I went to high school with a guy
>who'd contracted polio in Egypt (his father was
>diplomatic corps and they weren't able to get the
>vaccine for some reason). He's now a noted artist who
>was featured on CNN recently, so he's more than
>overcome any disability he has. But at the time, i
>wouldn't have traded places with him for anything in
>the world.
>
>
Greg, the website, polioeradication.org says that 90% of people infected have either no symptoms or relatively mild ones that don't result in paralysis. Your high school classmate may eventually suffer from 'post-polio syndrome' like Gail Gleason. The website says that 40% of paralytic patients may suffer additional symptoms 15 to 40 years after the original onset of polio.
[> [> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Boyd Percy
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 22:21:14 08/10/15 Mon

I noticed the following on the NPR website. I was amazed that Catholic Bishops of Kenya were suggesting a boycott of the polio vaccine.


http://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2015/08/09/430347033/catholic-bishops-in-kenya-call-for-a-boycott-of-polio-vaccines
[> [> [> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
K Pelle
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 11:38:17 08/11/15 Tue

>I noticed the following on the NPR website. I was
>amazed that Catholic Bishops of Kenya were suggesting
>a boycott of the polio vaccine.
>
Oh come on! Idiots come in all shapes, sizes, colours, creeds and religions. Stupidity knows no barriers.

kp
[> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Dana Carson
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 22:02:54 08/13/15 Thu

Used an inflation calculator. The gamma globulin shots would be $700 each in current dollars.

Those Bishops are probably going to get a talking to. The current Pope has the equivalent of a 2 year degree in chemistry and seems to be solid on the side of evidence.
[> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Wes
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 10:44:21 08/14/15 Fri

>Used an inflation calculator. The gamma globulin shots
>would be $700 each in current dollars.

The costs of meds don't make sense -- period. The last time I was in the hospital the ripoff artists charged my insurance $50 for a bottle of saline.

-- Wes
[> [> [> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
carlton
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 00:48:08 08/16/15 Sun

Over half of that $50 is to pay for the people that are needed to fill out the paperwork for insurance and medicaid claims per my dr. He said he would about be better off to stop taking any insurance and just charging about $25 to $30 per vist.
[> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Martin
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 12:18:03 08/19/15 Wed

>The next book from Spearfish Lake Tales, Forgotten
>Killer
, is now available for preorder.
>
>While this is a "Tale from Spearfish Lake," it's not
>one of the "Bird" stories involving Jack, Vixen and
>others involved in those stories. Except for a couple
>of short sections set in 2015, it's mostly set in
>1955, and contains no spoilers for upcoming books. At
>least in part, it honors the sixtieth anniversary of
>the release of the Salk polio vaccine. There are
>getting to be fewer and fewer who remember the impact
>of that event, and I thought it ought to be
>memorialized.
>
>Here's the summary:
>
>It's all but forgotten now, but two things scared
>people in the first half of the 1950s more than
>anything else. The atomic bomb was one of them, and
>infantile paralysis - polio - was the other. While
>polio could strike people of any age, it mostly
>targeted children, often crippling them for life, and
>sometimes killing them despite the best possible
>efforts available to stem the disease. When polio came
>to Spearfish Lake in 1955, there were only two choices
>that everyone faced: run and hide, or stand and fight
>against unknown and seemingly impossible odds, doing
>what little they could, however they could, for sake
>of the lives of the town's children.

>
>There are a total of twenty-one chapters.
>
>You can preorder Forgotten Killer for as little
>as $19.99 through the Spearfish Lake Tales Store rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank
>href="http://www.spearfishlaketales.com/store/40fk.htm"
>>Forgotten Killer page. Preorders will be
>sent sometime on the afternoon of July 26, Eastern
>Daylight Time.
>
>-- Wes

This book is bringing back a lot of half memories here in the UK. as a kid summers came in two varieties. A good summer weather-wise , when the swimming pool might well be closed and a bad summer when it would stay open. The other thing that we haven't seen in a long time are the metal leg callipers.
[> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
GB34
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 20:38:20 08/23/15 Sun

Chapter 13: Garth is looking for article about building and artificial lung. I found these two links. First one references Marquette in 1940.

ww4.mgh.org/respiratory/Shared%20Documents/woodenL...

The second link the Popular Mechanics article in 1952.

http://panvent.blogspot.com/2008/01/everything-old-is-new-again.html

We pray that these things are never needed again.
[> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
GB34
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 20:59:25 08/23/15 Sun

>Chapter 13: Garth is looking for article about
>building and artificial lung. I found these two links.
> First one references Marquette in 1940.
>
EDIT:

For some reason the link to the Marquette article won't work. Here is a copy of the PDF article.

The Wooden Lung

In 1940, Marquette General Health System (then known as St. Luke’s Hospital) bore the brunt of a
severe polio epidemic. A high percentage of the affected patients had respiratory involvement
requiring mechanical ventilation. Only one iron lung was located in the entire Upper Peninsula at
the start of the 1940 epidemic. St. Luke’s solution to the crisis ultimately provided help for hospitals
and polio patients throughout the United States.

Polio in Michigan’s UP first appeared in 1938, and by the summer of 1940 a major outbreak was
underway. Records show that the UP had the highest incidence of respiratory involvement, for its’
population, in the United States that year. Children arrived by car, airplane, and train. Even freight
trucks, hearses, and Coast Guard boats were used to transport patients in this remote region of few
roads. More than 81 cases were admitted between August 21 and September 24 of 1940, and at least
23 cases of respiratory paralysis were seen that year. A minimum of 320 cases developed in the
region that summer.

Despite the purchase of an iron lung and the later rental of two others, there were not enough
ventilators to treat the high volume of respiratory cases. Patients in respiratory failure would be
transported by ambulance to the Straits of Mackinac, loaded onto the car ferry, and delivered to the
Lower Peninsula to continue their journey. Many patients died during the 10 to 14 hour trip. A
solution needed to be found, and the answer came through an unusual combination of events.

Maxwell K. Reynolds was a prominent Marquette citizen and trustee of the hospital. Lowell
Reynolds (no relation to Max) worked at St. Luke’s as the hospital engineer. Together, they
designed the first “wooden lung” which saved numerous children throughout the UP and United
States. On August 29 of 1940 Max received a call from St. Luke’s. Two children with respiratory
involvement were deteriorating rapidly, and the iron lung was already in use. Was there any way the
lung could accommodate another patient? Maxwell could see no easy and quick way to do so,
especially while the iron lung was in use. However, Max did have a large machine and wood
working shop, and a dedicated crew of skilled workmen. Lowell, the hospital engineer, came up
with several articles on iron lungs, one of which proposed using a vacuum cleaner as the source of
negative pressure. A plan was quickly worked out. One of the workmen built a wood cabinet large
enough to hold two children. A removable panel was fitted to one side and, except for the two neck
holes, the entire cabinet was sealed air tight. A blacksmith and machinist designed and installed a
hand operated flapper valve to cycle the wooden lung between inspiration and expiration. Finally,
the vacuum cleaner was fitted to provide the negative pressure. Less than four hours after starting
work, the team sent their finished lung to St. Luke’s. One child had died by then, but another patient
was now showing signs of breathing problems. The two remaining children were fitted into the
wooden lung, the vacuum cleaner was turned on, and a nurse operated the flapper valve by hand.
“Does it work? Are they breathing?” The answer to both questions was yes! Volunteers operated
the valve by hand for almost 48 hours before an automatic mechanism, using a store window display
turntable, was developed. Flush with their success, the workmen labored around the clock building
respirators. Several designs were tried - some from wood, others from steel gasoline drums. Some
were powered by vacuum cleaners, others operated as “satellites” with the large Drinker iron lung
providing the negative pressure through attached hoses. They all worked, and eventually St. Luke’s
had a fleet of eight homemade lungs with a capacity of 10 patients. The Children’s Hospital of Boston, Massachusetts was the only hospital with more iron lungs at the time. Power failures were a
common occurrence then, and people from town would line up outside the hospital, day or night, to
run the ventilators by hand until electricity was restored. Funds were raised to pay Max’s workmen
for their ‘round the clock labor. They indignantly refused, saying that they were only doing their
part to help.

Plans for building the wooden lung were written up in medical journals and used throughout the
country. No one patented the design, and no profit was made by anyone involved in the project.
The development was truly a community effort, and one that benefited the entire country.
[> [> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Wes
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 00:40:56 08/24/15 Mon

I came across both of these articles in my research, and you will see that they contributed considerably to the story!

-- Wes
[> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Boyd Percy
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 01:59:15 08/26/15 Wed

>The next book from Spearfish Lake Tales, Forgotten
>Killer
, is now available for preorder.
>
>While this is a "Tale from Spearfish Lake," it's not
>one of the "Bird" stories involving Jack, Vixen and
>others involved in those stories. Except for a couple
>of short sections set in 2015, it's mostly set in
>1955, and contains no spoilers for upcoming books. At
>least in part, it honors the sixtieth anniversary of
>the release of the Salk polio vaccine. There are
>getting to be fewer and fewer who remember the impact
>of that event, and I thought it ought to be
>memorialized.
>
>Here's the summary:
>
>It's all but forgotten now, but two things scared
>people in the first half of the 1950s more than
>anything else. The atomic bomb was one of them, and
>infantile paralysis - polio - was the other. While
>polio could strike people of any age, it mostly
>targeted children, often crippling them for life, and
>sometimes killing them despite the best possible
>efforts available to stem the disease. When polio came
>to Spearfish Lake in 1955, there were only two choices
>that everyone faced: run and hide, or stand and fight
>against unknown and seemingly impossible odds, doing
>what little they could, however they could, for sake
>of the lives of the town's children.

>
>There are a total of twenty-one chapters.
>
>You can preorder Forgotten Killer for as little
>as $19.99 through the Spearfish Lake Tales Store rel=nofollow target=_blank >rel=nofollow target=_blank
>href="http://www.spearfishlaketales.com/store/40fk.htm"
>>Forgotten Killer page. Preorders will be
>sent sometime on the afternoon of July 26, Eastern
>Daylight Time.
>
>-- Wes


I like the idea of including Basil O'Connor, a real life person, as part of your story. I also like that you included characters that had played relatively minor roles in previous stories. It helps explain why later characters acted the way they did.
[> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Jakub Narębski
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 22:50:08 08/30/15 Sun

I have just read chapter 16... who knew that artificial aspiration by mechanical manipulation, instead of mouth-to-mouth, was a thing. Though probably actual finding which is better wasn't done then... or perhaps it is different for assisting people with communicable disease than for e.g. rescuing after drowning.
[> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
Wes
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 23:22:00 08/30/15 Sun

>I have just read chapter 16... who knew that
>artificial aspiration by mechanical manipulation,
>instead of mouth-to-mouth, was a thing. Though
>probably actual finding which is better wasn't done
>then... or perhaps it is different for assisting
>people with communicable disease than for e.g.
>rescuing after drowning.

It's an old thing, and pretty much discredited today except for special situations like that. I remembered learning it in Boy Scouts, which was a long, long time ago. We had never heard of mouth-to-mouth in those days. I guess it shows how far we've come.

-- Wes
[> [> [> Subject: Re: "Forgotten Killer," new book from Spearfish Lake Tales, now available for preorder


Author:
GaryDan
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 08:09:50 08/31/15 Mon

>>I have just read chapter 16... who knew that
>>artificial aspiration by mechanical manipulation,
>>instead of mouth-to-mouth, was a thing. Though
>>probably actual finding which is better wasn't done
>>then... or perhaps it is different for assisting
>>people with communicable disease than for e.g.
>>rescuing after drowning.
>
>It's an old thing, and pretty much discredited today
>except for special situations like that. I remembered
>learning it in Boy Scouts, which was a long, long time
>ago. We had never heard of mouth-to-mouth in those
>days. I guess it shows how far we've come.
>
>-- Wes


1956 Peter Safar and James Elam invented mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. 1957 The United States military adopted the mouth-to-mouth resuscitation method to revive unresponsive victims. 1960 Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was developed.Sep 3, 2014

GaryDan


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