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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1936)
PAGE FIVE HEART AFTER planted) do not beat together In the same rhythm, as no nerve connec NERVE New Flower Piscovered PORT ANGELES, Wash. (UP) A Washington, and the Tarlety Is un derstood to be native to this area. licensed airplane pilot and who uses his plane In visiting parishioners Father Couture, 60, won his license here recently. . Weather Northern California: Fsir weather and normal temperature tonight and Friday; overcast on coast; gentle changeable wind off the coast. northwest: little change In tempera tura; moderate changeable wind ofi the coast, becoming southely. tion has yet been established between the host and the transplanted heart," Dr. Jenkins said. new flower, discovered on the slopes of Mount Angeles, has been labeled Print Qualifies as Filer TORONTO. Ont. (UP) Father J. M. Couture. 8. J., U one of the only priests on the continent who la a Oregon: Generally fair tonight and Friday, but considerable clouds or fog west portion, hiomin unsettled Be correctly corseted In an Artist Model by Ethelwvn B Hoffmann IS REMEDY FOR Penstemon Nelsonac. It Is the only yellow Penirmon ever found In MEDFORD MAIL TRTBTTNTE. MEDFOKD. OREGOX, TnrRSDAY. MARCH .", 1936 F Achievement Result of Three Years Effort Hope Next to Transfer Eyes May Aid Humans, Is Belief WASHINGTON. March 5. (P) The ucc8ful transfer of a living hent from one fish's body Into another was described today at George Washing ton university by Professor B&ln Jen kins. He told of keeping transplanted hearts living In embryos of sea min nows for from eight to ten days. "The hearts slow down a, little at first, but after an hour they usually resume their normal speed." he said. The achievement resulted from three years of effort by Dr. Jenkins and Professor P. J. Brlnley of -he North Dakota Agricultural college. Attending surgeons at the Oeorge Washington university alumni clinic aid the feat was the first of Its kind and opened wide medical possibili ties. i .ie two scientists, having proved to their personal satisfaction that one type of organ can be transferred, hope next to conduct experiments on the transfer of fish eyes. "We have started far down In the animal kingdom," said Dr. Jenkins, "and the road ahead of us la long. but we hope ultimately to achieve something of clinical Importance fur man. These experiments, we hope. will open potentialities with regard to repairing and regenerating human organs. They chose sea minnows because of the plentlfulness and cheapness of the supply, and also because the embryo of fish,, being transparent permits observers to watch develop ments under a microscope. Their first step was to remove a hell oorering the embryo and to take out the tiny heart with a sharpened needle. All work had to be done un der a microscope and the transfer too more than an hour to complete. T'r.e heart was transferred to an other embryo without removing that em :::os original heart. "The two heart In the hose (the em rryo to which the organ was trans PORTLAND. March . (JT) Su'- geons operated unexpectedly on 10-year-old Lou Ann Markle, who was rushed her from Anchorage, Alaska, for treatment of an infected leg. The child, in an anemic condition, had received two blood transfusions preparatory to the operation. Two surgeons, Drs. Richard B. Dillehunt and Leo B. Lucas, in drain ing the Infection, found a part of th thigh bone dead and decided to operate without further delay. , "The operation was quite success ful," said Dr. Dillehunt. "In five to six months the-little girl will be walking. He said the only effect of the op eration will be a "slight limp" caused by the enforced removal of a part of the bone. Another operation will have to be performed in two months upon a sec tion of the shin bone, and several more blood transfusions probably w 11 be necessary. E F.R. SAYS ROBINSON WASHINGTON. March 6. (API Senator Robinson (D.. Ark.) told the senate today that if the country pre ferred conditions of three years ago t othose of todaoy. It meant not the election of some new Republican prospect, but "the re-election of Hoo ver." His assertion was made during a heated exchange with Senator Dick inson R., Iowa) over New Deal poli cies. Robinson asked Dickinson pointedly if he preferred the "prosperity" of March 4. 1933, to present conditions, an dwhen Dickinson replied- that he considered the present cond itlon "dangerous." the Arkansan asked: "That, I call to the attention of hearers, means that he prefers the conditions that prevailed under Hoo ver to the ones now. -That Is the issue T desired to make." ANN ARBOR, Mich., March B. OP) A remedy for advanced cases of high blood pressure by surgical removal of nerve parts which serve the body cavities was advocated today before the American College of Physicians, Dr. Max Minor Peet of the Uni versity of Michigan department ot medicine, told a general session of the college that it was now believed that high blood pressure was essen tially a nervous disorder, often hered itary, whioh responds to this treat ment. The operation, successful In a large number of cases at the University of MUhlgan, he declared, Involves the removal of the small and large nerves of the body cavities. The object of this procedure, he added, Is to elim inate constriction or drawing to gether of the blood vessels which sup ply the kidneys. It has been used on 130 patients with advanced high blood pressure, who did not have hardening of the arteries as a complication. 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