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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1955)
Thursday, July 21, 195S MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUKE SEVElf If You're Not Trading At The Groceteria You're Paying Too Much! BIG FREE PARKING LOTS (KMXEIE EIMI& At The For the Cabin-Outing or Lunch Box Wilson's Mor 12-oz. can, 3 $1 All Pork Hickory Smoked Wilson's Vienna Sausage, 7 tw $1.00 Wilson's Chopped Beef, 12-oz. can 29 -CeM-o Plastic A SIZE FOR EVERY NEED 49' 59' and 79 You've never cleaned a sink or bathtub so quickly 'and easily as with an O-Cell-o Plastic Sponge . m Large Med. Size Rg"l"" ftfiJSU Regular Kffl 30' IS 30 Pers. Size t Bath Size Ipj 2j IbSs! 25 ComplexiorTSiie Reg. Size an fc j Allowance t Giant L J Giant 73' 73' t Giant Regular 73' P 31' Spic Re9Si2e S3 27' 3 3 Lbs. 85' White House Coffee 1 pound can 85 Delrich Margarine pound 29' Sunshine Vanilla Waters 10 oz. box 35' White King Granulated large box 30', giant 59' Sierra Pine Toilet Soap - 3 bars 25' White King Cleanser I boxes 25' White King Liquid Detergent can 39' Allsweet Margarine pound 29' EXTRA FANCY No. 1 FRESH DRESSED- COLORED - PAM-READY PLUMP, MEATY FRY ch ORDER EARLY At This Low Price SWIFT'S BROOKFIELD BRAND CHEESE pound loaf if U.S. GRADED "CHOICE" STEER BEEF LIVER Sliced SWIFT'S PREMIUM BRAND-SEALED, CELLO WRAPPED SPICED LUHGE3 C1EAT U.S. GRADED "CHOICE" STEER CHUCK BOAST 41 HORMEL'S MINNESOTA BRAND-CELLO WRAPPED SLICED IB fiGOLJ KLAMATH CREAMERY CRATER LAKE BRAND -MEDIUM GHEDQM CHEESE II it u 0 c lb. FRESH Troll Caught Genuine iiniu rvn i 11 El SAL G30tt HEAD OFF Family Size SORRY WE RAN OUT LAST WEEK ORDER EARLY At This Low Price Prices Good Through Saturday, or Until Supply Exhausted lb. Incidence of Polio Seen Higher In Areas of Better Standards Washington (U.R) One of the strangest things about polio is that it seems to strike hardest among people who have the highest living standards and best sanitary facilities. Whether it actually does has not been proved. Some polio authorities reject the idea. But U.S. Public Health Ser vice officials said today that most students of polio believe the theory valid. Underprivi leged children, they said, seem to develop greater immunity to the disease than do youngsters in better circumstances. Dr. Albert B. Sabin, noted biologist of the University of Cincinnati, is a firm believer in the theory. So is Dr. Thomas Francis Jr., of the University of Michigan who wrote the report on Salk vaccine, and Dr. John R. Paul of Yale. "In general," Sabing has written, "the poorer the popula tion and the standard of living and sanitation, the more exten sively is polio virus dissemi nated among children and the lower is the incidence of para lytic polio when virulent strains of virus appear." Two other polio researchers re ported in the American Journal of Hygiene that immunity to polio develops and increases "to a significantly higher degree in the lower economic groups." The United States, with a high standard of living, has one of the highest reported polio rates in the world. The same is true of Canada, Britain, the Scandina vian countries and other so railed advanced nations. In less advanced areas, the reported in cidence is much lower. In 1952, for example, there were 56.5 cases per 100,000 population in Denmark and 36.9 in the United States.- But the re ported statistical rate in Colom bia was only four-tenths of one case per 100,000. And in the Mideast and Asia the number of reported cases was negligible. Authorities said many of these variations may not be real. In some countries, the system for reporting diseases is better than others. Even so, experts like Sabin j believe there are scientific rea sons for believing the polio inci dence really is highest among children in good circumstances. They argue that underprivileged children come in contact with polio earlier and more often and so develop better immunity. By Freak Mishap Kills South Umpqua Logger Roseburg U.R) Elby Glenn Mitchell, 27, of Chehalis, Wash., was fatally injured yesterday in an unusual logging accident on the South Umpqua river. Mitchell, a bucker for the Smalley Logging Company of Tiller, Ore., for the past 20 days, was working on a tract 10 miles east of Tiller when the accident occurred. The victim was struck in the back by pieces of a tree which was broken up and tossed 150 feet by the impact of a tree he had just felled. Bishop Expelled Peron Presides At Rio Congress Rio De Janeiro (U.R) Ar gentine Bishop Msgr. Manuel Tato, expelled by Argentine President Juan D. Peron, will preside at the second session of the 36th International Euchar istic congress, it was announced today. Jaime de Barros Cardinal Ca- mara of Rio De Janeiro said Bishop Tato will replace An tonio Cardinal Caggiano, of Ro sario, Argentina, who was to have presided at tonight s ses sion in Congress square. Neither Cardinal Caggiano nor Santiago Cardinal Copello of Buenos Aires was able to at-1 tend the congress. Tato arrived here from Rome j Saturday with Benedetto A. ! Cardinal Masella, personal rep-j resentative of Pope Pius XII. j Heading a large Argentine dele gation, Tato has been cheered on every public appearance he has made at the congress. Tato was one of two Roman Catholic leaders expelled by Per on at the height of the church- state controversy in Argentina. Later Peron said they could return. Teodoro Cardinal Gouveia, of Lourenco Marques, Mozambique, presided at Wednesday night's opening session attended by more than 100,000 pilgrims in vast Congress Square. Louren co Marques, an Indian ocean i port 300 miles east of Johannes- i burg in South Africa, is consid ered a likely choice for the site of the next congress. Cardinal Camara read a mes- sage sent to the congress by j President Eisenhower express- j ing the hope it will inspire all men of all creeds to "work with ; renewed devotion for a just j peace on earth." The President said "those who 1 exercise spiritual leadership among free nations constitute a ' great force that can do a great deal to carry forward that . cause." Cardinal Camara sent a reply that the President's request for peace was being answered by the 20 cardinals, 300 bishops, thousands of priests and a mil lion pilgrims from the world over attending the congress. These experts say underprivi leged children generally live in bigger families and thus are likely to experience more con tacts early in life. These chil dren also live in crowded areas where they are in constant con tact with other children. Poor sanitary conditions also might make underprivileged children more likely ot be ex posed early. But among children of fami lies enjoying better living con ditions, early contacts with the disease are few. As a result, some authorities theorize, when the disease does strike such children, it hits harder because they have few if any defenses built up in the body to combat it Apparently supporting this theory is the fact that in Texas, the reported polio attack rate among Mexican immigrants, seems to be somewhat lower than among Anglo-Americans. There also are more adult cases among the Anglo-Americans, in dicating less early exosure. 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