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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (March 2, 1950)
4 The N)w-ltviw, KeMburf , Or. Thuri., Mar. 2, 1950 HAL IOYLI SAYS: People Are Beginning To Get Guilt Complexes If They're Called Normal Br HAL BOYLE NEW YORK, CiP) One upon Urn ther wai a nypocnron driac who fait sure thcrt was some- , thine wrong with bit arm. "W can't anything wrong with it," his friend said, but the man thought, "they just don't want In tell ma tha truth." He took his arm to a doctor. Tha doc said it looked to him like tha healthiest arm ha had seen all week. Still unconvinced tha man went noma. Ha beian to Dinch his arm to be sura the circulation wa all right He pinched to hard bruise developed. "Ah-hah" h said. Ha began ' probing the bruise with a safety pin. Three days later ha was in a hospital complaining indignant ly to a nurse: "They told ma nothing was wrong with my arm and her I am ball-dead from blood poison ing." The Beniedrlne Ana This mythical cent suffered from what is now tha major disuse of our aga tha Benzedrine age. And that disease is the compul sion to feel that thera must be something wrong with you, just be cause you're alive. It'a become a national epidem ic. People are beginning to develop guilt complexes whenever they're told they're normal. They suspect it's anti-social to be healthy, and they don't want to be accused o it publicly. Greet a man today with "how do you feel?" and he hands you his blood pressure chart and looks around for a couch ha can lie on and tell you all the mean things done to him in childhood. Tha bane of the medical world used to be Uie fellow who tried to treat his appendicitis at home by following the directions in a patent medicine almanac. Today it's tha guy who tries to bandage his men tal problema by reading the Psy chology books in the public library or the corner drugstore. Psychiatrists Worried People's mushrooming preoccu pation with their own mental jun gle has got even tha psychiatrists worried. "Tha net result must be to pro duce uncertainty, confusion and dis tress," Jules V. Colem-- ' of the mental Hygiene clinic at tha center, told a convention v. . specialists lsst week. And he added that all the cur rent jawing and scribbling about mental health "is of little value in reducing the Incidence of neuro sis." This is a bugle note of common sense. If a gent hss cancer, ha isn't going to cure it by reading medical text. And if he has inci pient schiozophrenia, he isn't go ing to get well Djr boning up on the grammar of psychiatry. Ordinary mental health, like or dinary body health, can best be retained by following the rules your grandmother knew. An old lady onca gave this poor man's philoso pher a simple prescription that so KITILL M.0JICT BIOUN PENDLETON, Msrch 2. (P) First work on tha Keteli FHA low cost housing project begin her Monday with grading. Edwards Bros, of Albany are the general contractors. They expect to start work on tha 100 houses sometime in March. ANOILL TO RUN AOAIN WASHINGTON, March l.-iJPt-Rcp Homer D. Aneell (R Ore.) an nounced Monday ha would run for enmuuu, usiing nis piaunrm as free enterprise, development of tha Columbia basin, and war on Communism. Anscll also ssid he would work lor adoption of the Hoover com mission report, for tax reductions ana lor civu rights. .Dtomtttafliis Eltxtronic ttirade Oil Do For Tot I P" !L r rJiH nh mm, aaaa hm km H ywn rawMmt This m m mmM ha. ?"T J"00 ' march Ivm St'i aapar caanfcmahW ''" cHaa a W" ba sbrilWd b the WMMtM kU T. otnrr sad power o ihu 1 umiltm 16 SMriMt Balmoa am auda htfortl Tfcaaa mav both Ha mar af mb saia. tenor aJi riw Mtaainm of aormi saaU, social and basioaas lift! el aWtlaai Stiawa as ffiaaka k lha H.lacaa PWaoaanaJ aa, amrlr traaaparaw, shausl amsihaa mw ruff too: trad nr NIW "HPS ROOK. aai aa iha a - ataaota. Cama I ar pheaa Bolton Clinic . Friday, March 3 Umpqua Hotel Mr. Mltckall. 71 Wn Iraaaway, Ill s'", Is a maiasar at Jamas N. Tatt m4 Assetleles at fartland wka hava 4ri"i bar1 at haaria) siace FrtsK. latter! for oil Aids wt?y rridev, March 1 far has worked unfailingly: "If your mind hurts, or your feet hurt, take off your shoes and go to bed. in any case just relax and get away from what causes you to feel bad. "If nine houra of sleep don't mska you feel better, go to a doc tor." And If everybody got nine hours sleep a night, the psychiatrists then wouldn't have to go so often to sea their own psychiatrists. . U. S. Challenges Soviet For Ail-Garman Election FRANKFURT, Germany, March 1 The United States has chal lenged Russia to agree to elections throughout all Germany, possibly Oct. IS, on tha basis of fre bal lotting. Oct. 15 ia the date the Russisns hsve set for an election in the Soviet sponsored East German peo ple's republic. The proposal was mad by the U.S. High Commissioner, John J. McCloy. But he indicated th Unit ed Stales would take no initiative in organizing aucb an election. McCloy's statements were inter preted here as a counter to Soviet propaganda statements thst the Communists are the only ones who can reunite Germany. The higher commissioner said he probably will discuss his proposal with th U.S. Stat department when he returns to Washington this weekend to testify before a con gressional committe on appropria tions for Germany. McCloy opened his news con ference with a statement repeat ing U.S. desires to achieve Ger man unity. He said the scheduled election In tha Soviet Zona Oct. IS would b a one-sided Communist affair. "Unity and freedom can be at tained in Germany only if thera be full and equal onoortunitv for all parties throughout Germany to propose csndidstes, advance pro grama and compete for the elec torate's favor." Prices For Wool Fabrics In Women's, Men's Wear Beginning To Stabilize Bv SAM DAWSOM NEW YORK. CP) Prices for wool fabrics for both men's and women's wesr are beginning to jell. Some, especially woolens, will b up this fall. Other fsbrics, particu larly worateds. will he ii'wi'a.nged from the spring price lists. After wek ol jitters ami inde cision, watching the climbing quo tations on Austrslisn fine wool, th American mills are finally bring ing out their new lines, snd new prices. Tha policy, at this time, seems to be: On fsbrics woven from wool bought before the Aus tralian prices jumped around 25 ... ,h I . .. .n r- ... wis iuic nui wv iui- changed in the main; en fabrics which muat be woven from wool bought at the new price, higher tags by from 2'a cents to 20 cents a yard. Customers resctions to tha new price appear mixed Spokesmen for tha American Woolen Co., larg est of th mills, says sales to the men's wesr trad, which juat open ed, already hava been very good. But the wool associstes of the New York Cotton Exchange, Inc., a group that deals in wool tops futures, ssys thst soma makers of men's clothing hava to raise oricea on suits, and that th first advance may come in sports coats, and by this summer. The associates ssy that retailer buying of women'a apparel for tha Easter season hss been very slow. Americsn woolens new ore lines show all worsted fabrica for women's wesr unchsnged for fell. Quotations went up on IT woolen fabrics, however, soma as much ss 20 cents -a yard. The company is bringing out 93 new fsbrics, the largest number of innovations in ita history. And it ia offering for the first time a chcVe of any cloth in regular widths of 56 and 58 inches, or in new extra wide, at 60 to 62 inches. The wider widths, garment cutters say, per mit them to cut mora garments from the cloth, at a lower cost fer unit, which might make up for igher cloth costs. Members of the International As sociation of Garment Manufactur ers, meeting here, are told that the demand for all-wool gabardines hss been strong, and worsted sheen ara picking up is popularity. Carpet wool prices hava ba rising, too. Th Department of Commerce reports th avaraga price of carpet wool Imports jump ed 21 percent in the last seven months of 1949. Americsn rug mak ers have been boosting prices re cently, and blaming the higher wool prirea. About 65 percent of tha carpet wool that Americana us cornea from Argentina. Demand for carpeta haa atayed high. In the back of the minds of v. eryone in the wool business, whetb er making carpeta or making i,a suits, is th specter of rising com fMition with th synthetic fsbrics. he higher th price of raw wool goes, th greater the pressure ta use rsyon, nylon snd other syn thetics. NEW DURKEE AA SEAL OFFERS PUBLIC A GUIDE TO MARGARINE GOODNESS ft Rtadllf Idintifitt The Margarine of Ixctllent flavor, Uxture and Purity Durkee Famous Foods announces an important forward step for margarine users: A way to judge margarine qual ity without hit or miss methods. This is the introduction oF Durkee's Own Grade AA Margarine. Be sure each pound of margarine you buy bears the red Durkee A A Seal of Superiority. This assures your family of the finest it is possible for us to produce. Margarine bearing this seal contains only prime vegetable oil;. Purityof fat free milk used, and potency of vitamins employed also are of unquestioned quality. These, and other safeguards in the new Durkee CoJe of Production offer you a dependable guide to quality. If? I .r ,.- M Ste m. a. GRADE AA FLAVOR First .re quirement under the new Durkee Code is that only prime domestic vegetable oils be used. 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THIS OFFER POSITIVELY ENDS MARCH 25, 1950 Ourktt'i Grado AA Margarino it olio available in th Color East pack with th color captulo in tho bag. . uDiitee's own MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Read th remarkabls story about Durkee's Own Grade AA Margarine at th left, then try this delicious spread ia your own bom. If you don't agree that Durkee's is the finest margarine you have ever tasted, writ us a tetter stating your opinion and enclosing the Durkee Guarante Panel from side ol carton. Mail to Durkee Famous Foods 2900 Fifth Street, Berkeley 2, California. Upon receipt, your full pure haa price will b cheerfully refunded.