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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1956)
V They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo Dames is cuckoo. 4S FCf? wwy does MRS.TCEMBLECHlrJ SHOOT "THE BRE4D MOMEYOM 4 SWZZy IMPORTED SLIP? "Then sue M4S 4 conniption! if THE LEAST FR4CTIONI OF IT SHOWS WE REPEATS, 4LL D4MES IS CUCKOO.' i riTE,M4D3ME--Vf HENRy VvVVxv DlDNl'T YOU TELL ME -f-Ti I BOT REMEMBER r. WILLJUST BE fYSiXvSN MVSLP W4S I'ji. this slip has a FURiouswuEH -LJ ITtH e;uowiMG?.agEyou J i t fJM IMPORTED H HE SEES TME BILL, r1 Wfafaftjt DELIBEF?4TELy TRV- I HAKDKMDc LACS- BUT I OJMT "& Emgtt i"BB IM5 TO HUM!Ll4TE '' The Medical Roundup Emeritus Consultant In Medicine, Mayo CUnic Emrrltui (nleur ul Medlilne. Mvn Foundation A. 4-"a J ENLARGED LYMPH NODES IN THE NECK Any person whose lymph nodes in the neck enlarge great ly should know enoufih -to go quickly to a physician to see what is wrong. Often times when the glands en large a little bit, p e r h a ps with an attack of what looks like a siege of ur Ahim mil uenza, it. doesn't mean much. There are many persons whose lymph nodes tend to enlarge whenever they run a fever. Some young people get gland ular fever or infectious mon onucleosis. This is an influenza like disease which can make the person uncomfortable for six months or more. The disease can be identified by laboratory tests. In the old days, many young people in tuberculous families got enlarged lymph nodes in the neck, and later these broke down and discharged for years. Tociy, we seldom see this. No body but an old physician knows what a wonderful boon to chil dren certified and pastcurizd milks have been. In the old days, when children drank raw milk, they took in large num bers of tubercle bacilli from the often infected cows. As a result, hundreds of thousands got tuberculosis of lymph nodes, joints, bones, bowels and the meninges (coverings of. the brain), or the kidneys. In middle-aged persons great enlargement of the lymph nodes can be due to Hodgkin s disease, which is a cancer-like disease due apparently to a virus. It can be cleared up often with x-ray. 1 have seen cases in which it dis appeared for seven or eight years. In older persons the physician has to think of cancer which has spread down from the region of the mouth or up from the lungs or the stomach. Often the best thing the physician can do is to remove a gland and examine it under the microscope to see what It is. Sis Of The Breast Many woman keep asking me if they should send for one of the quack remedies that, according to advertisements, will cause a much-desired enlargement of the breasts. My answer is that the Better Business Bureaus tell me Suit t foy can help Build Kick, ted Blood ... Sore You from being TIRED. NERVOUS . . . EASY PRtY TO MINOR ILLS Nutritional experts reveal vitamin losses in cooled foods plus faulty diet may he seriously undermining your energy, strength, and resistance, making you feel on edge affecting your appetite spoiling your sleep because your body ti vitamin and iron starved. Now Yov Can Stop Chronic Vitamin I Iron Starvation TODAY . . Feel Like a New Person ! Supplement your diet every day with just one High-Potency Bexel Capsule, just one of these wonderfully strength ening capsules gtve you the full vita min and iron content nature provided in the following groups of foods before cooking: 1 qwarf of aMitfeuriied milk 'j lb. of ham 4 ei. frh orotic; juice 1 lb. of bt j lb. of loon bocoa ' 4 tb. of bwttor I lb. of Imm poHi 1', tb of vmI chop. ! 2 lb, of green atriftg boons Penny for Penny . . . You Get More Voue in High-Potency BiXiL SMCIll FOIMUIA VITAMIN C'PSUki: fMl fttf.p... took ... Work imttmr r roue Montr sacki A HdlUMN PHOOUCT ASK ABOUT BEXEL VITAMIN PAYMENT PLAN Central Drug Main & Central that the herb in these medicines is of absolutely no value. It has no effect whatsoever on the breasts. Unfortunately, many women are so unhappy with their small breasts that they will hand their money over to any crook who will promise them results. A few years ago, some sur geons advocated pushing small breasts forward by stuffing in behind them a certain amount of sponge-like plastic. I doubted very much if this was wise be cause experiments have shown that almost any plastic, when put in contact with the tissues of the body, will produce cancer. Accordingly, I advised the wo men who asked me about(the op eration not to have it. However, many went ahead and were op erated on, and recently some have been writing to tell me that they not only failed to get the results they desired, but they got themselves into a mess. Their breasts felt so hard and lumpy and uncomfortable that they had to go to another surgeon and ask him to take the material out again. Every so often I see a woman with such large breasts that she wishes something could be done to cut down on their weight. and to lessen the deformity. Many a time in the past, when I have asked an excellent breast or plastic surgeon if he cared to help such an unhappy wontin with her problem, he said that he did not dare attempt it. He knew the technic of the several operations that have been designed to do what the woman wanted, but, in his ex perience, the results had so often been unsatisfactory that he did not care to attempt this type of work. He said that if he did any thing at all he would amputate the breasts. But this would not satisfy the woman because she wanted to retain her nipples. It is this retaining of the nipple, or its transplantation, that causes all the trouble. Persons Tireld All The Time Mrs. Lucile Felin, of Antioch. Calif., writes that nearly 60 years ago her little sister, aged 5, spoke a piece at a church social. This is what she said: "There was an old woman who always was tired. She lived in a house where help was not hired. Her last words on earth were, 'Dear Friends, I am going Where washing ain't done or cooking or sewing, And everything there will be exact to my wishes. For where they don't eat, there's no washing of dishes. Don't cry for me now, don't cry for me ever, I'm going to do nothing for ever and ever!" I am sure that this will strike a most responsive chord in the hearts of thousands of very tired women! Dr. Alvarez hopes his readers will understand that it would be impossible for him to answer requests for information or to attempt to diagnose by mail. (Released by The Register and Tribune Syndicate, 1956) Campus Barbers Return To 5-Day Week After War Corvallis U.P. Corvallis barbers have ended their price war that was being waged on the issue of a six-day vs. a five day work week. Barbers in the vicinity of the Oregon State College campus had gone on a six - day week, the school went on a six-day week. The resulting battle with downtown barbers resulted in SI haircuts for a time. Campus barbers returned to a five-dav week. le Mail Tribune Want Ads The Low Cost Way to SelJ POISON OAK? Try : Bottle of ZEMACOL Yon must be satisfied or yout nones cheerfully refunded. Get bottle to dij it WESTERN THRIFT. Large Corn Crop Reported in County Jackson county had such an abundant corn crop this year that some mechanical harvest ing equipment was not able to handle it, according to W. B. (Ben) Tucker, county agriculture agent. Tucker said ensilage corn yields varied between 30 and 40 tons per acre. More than 1,000 acres of corn were planted this year. "We had unusually good weather for this growing sea son," he said, "But there is no question that we will have ,-imi-iar record corn yields every year from now on." Tucker said major factors in the good crop include use of commercial fertilizer and plant ing of improved hybrid vari eties. Proper spacing of rows in planting corn and use of spray to control weed,-; were also con tributing factors. He said the Southern Oregon Experiment station has devel oped three types of hybrid corn that are particularly adaptable for this area. They include Il linois Hybrid 200, Illinois Hy brid 1570 and Oregon Hybrid 150. They are still working on the project, and have set a goal of 28,000 stalks per acre for Jack son county. During the past five years the station has been col lecting data on yields for use in the experiment,:. Potato Harvest Gets Into Full Swing Next Week Malin, Ore. U.P.) Some 600 persons were at the Malin labor camp today ready to take part in the potato harvest which will get into full swing next week. Henry Wagner, manager of the camp, said 122 of the 130 units were rented with occupan cy averaging about five persons per unit. Salem U.R) The Oregon Traffic Safety Commission will meet next Monday at 9:30 a.m. in -oom 321 of the state capitol. Quotes From the News By UNITED PRESS Hollywood Attorney Saul Ross on Nora Eddington Haymes' claim that former husband singer Dick Haymes was in arrears on alimony payments: "Haymes says it cost him 5100,000 to marry Rita Hayworth. We want to get to him before it costs any more." Brooklyn President Eisenhower, congratulating Dodger Pres ident Walter O'Malley on Brooklyn's World Series victory: "I wish you would tell Sal Maglie that I thought he pitched one hell of a ball game. Washington Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, scorning the Communists leaders' denial of God and their preaching of class hatred: "... We can be confident that in the long run those material istic godless concepts will not prevail." Washington Emil Jonsson, acting foreign minister of Iceland, on the problem posed by the presence of American troops in his country: "Let us make clear the difference between being anti-military, or perhaps rather non-military minded, and our having animosity toward any nation. The Icelanders have no such feeling." Brooklyn Dodger pitcher Don Newcombe complaining the ex tra day's rest caused by the World Series postponment may hamper his style: "I like to stay in a steady pitching routine and with an extra day's rest I might lose that pinpoint control." Chicago Mrs. Lois Bucher reporting a woman she had be friended had kidnaped her month-old son: "I felt sorry for her, so I told her I'd take her home with me and give her something to eat." !s That So? One of the most appalling wastes in the woods is that of deerskins. Experts tell me that more than 75 per cent of all deerskins either spoil or are thrown away by the hunter. And of the 25 percent which reach the tannery, fully 15 per cent have been pretty well ruined by the hunter. More's the pity. A deer's hide is one of the most beautiful in the world some say, it is the most beautiful. And I'm among 'em. The better-soft skin is said to be the nearest approach any skin makes to pliable cloth. 1 Despite this, it is tough stand ing up to the hardest wear. It's durable lasting a lifetime, real ly. It is washable lukewarm water and soap does it. It's light and warm. And because it dric soft and natural after getting wet, it's a favorite with know ing outdoorsmen. Besides the deer hide's own merits, the man who himself shot the deer, skinned it out prop erly and preserved the hide cor rectly, takes an honest pride in anything made out of it. A deer hide's uses are many. For the hunter, hip-length jackets, pullover shirts (from light-weight, thin hides such as we get along the west coast range), vests with leather or brass buttons, "chinks" and "chaps" out of the heavy Rocky Mountain muledeer; moccasins, gloves for working, driving, and By EUGENE BURNS Ranger-Naturalist roping; mittens, caps, reel pouches for the angler; straps for the duck hunter; or a strap Vr a pair of binoculars a fine t'juch; lacings, barbecue aprons, auto seat covers, and an old fashioned draw-string coin purse yup, a few silver-dollar toting westerners still have 'em. Apparel for Women Or a smart hunter may wish to give his wife an irresistible deerskin surprise matched bags with gloves, or go plumb fancy and give her a smartly-tailored jacket, full-length coat, vest, or skirt. (Yep, a gal in San Francis co custom makes them up.) And in dyed colors red, brown, black, golden (many people wrongly believe this is natural, it isn't), and there's pearly-grey hide's true natural color when tanned. And for on-coming future hunt ing members of the family, there are jackets, gloves, moccasins. If a hunter's own deerskin won't stretch to accomodate all these uses it takes three hides to make a jacket he can al ways purchase matching hides at a tannery for a reasonable price. Don't Drag Animal And now for some common sense does and don'ts. Do skin out the deer as soon as possible when still warm, it is easier. Don't drag the animal it will ruin the grain of the hide. After you slit open the hide, do use your fist to pound loose the hide. Don't slash the hide off. Even though you are careful and can't see any marks, the hide may be ruined. Do rub in thoroughly, plenty of common table salt say two pounds. Don't use rock salt. Do not place the skin in the sun it's just as tender as your own skin and will sunburn. After you salt it, roll the hide into a square. In two days, resalt. That's it! And the pleasure the articles made from your deer hide will ,l Catalog Sales fcr x Save sl.50 per Tire ALLSTATE Tube-Type Companions FULL 15-MONTH NATIONWIDE GUARANTEE BIACKWALL PRICC TUBE-TYPf INCL. SI2t ftp. TX 6.70-15 $14.19 7.1 0-1 S $16.05 7.60-15 $17.65 ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICE 02: 45 70-15 toth, rloi $1.74 fed. Tax Save $1.50 per Tire ALLSTATE Silent Cushions $nL?ii5i7r ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICE $1.74 B' 1111 Plus " f t '(f-'iffli'' tiv&&ZB BIACKWALL PRICf Famous ALLSTATE Silent Tread TUBE-TTPI SIZI INCl. HP. TAX Banded 4.ply royon card body 6-7-1s W.9 Prices cut en alt sizes, black or whtrewali 7-1"-1 7.60-15 $21.45 Many Tires On Hand tor Immediate Delivery oi aoaz, none? 6ac&" jLHil-) 40 South Central Phone 2-6255 OPEN WEDNESDAY NIGHTS Friday, October 5, 1958 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIVE Nicaragua Seeking Smuggler of Gun Managua, Nicaragua (U.PJ The Nicaraguan national guard has posted a "dead or alive" re ward for the man suspected of smuggling in the American-made pistol with which President Ana stasio Somoza was assassinated. The suspect was identified as Edwin Castro Rodriguez, the son of a deceased Nicaraguan army general. A $7,000 reward was offered for information leading to his apprehension. President Luis Somoza said Wednesday night investigation showed the murder weapon was purchased in New Orleans, La., by a former Nicaraguan army officer now living in El Salvador. Four Men Arrested, Charged With Fraud Portland U.R) Four men have been arrested in Salem and Seattle, accused by postal au thorities of mail fraud in con nection with promotion of a ply wood cooperative in Clackamas county in Salem. Jailed in Portland on the Fed eral charges were Glenn Munk ers, 65; 'Archie Bones, 69, and Charles W. Williamson, 70, all of Salem. Edgar Robert Errion, 60, was arrested in Seattle and jailed there under $30,000 bail on charges of violating the secur ities and exchange act and for mail fraud, according to C. E. Luckey, U.S. district attorney. Katmai national monument, 2,697,590 acres of virgin wilder ness in Alaska, is largest of the national monuments. increase with the passing years. (Copyright, 1956. by Eugene Burns) (Released by McClure Newspaper Syndicate) Court Records LeRoy Winifred Bedinfffield, four In front seat. $2.50. Bob Peter Ownby, disobeyed traffic signal, $5. Rawley Peter Roger, violation of basic rule. S10. Earl Franklin Ha nicy, failure to yield right of way to pedestrian, $10. Perry Houston Sneed, drag racing. $25. John David Chogston, excessive noise (pipes). 510. Ira Devon Zimmerman, violation of basic rule, $10. Herbert Wilson Gifford. failure to yield right of way to vehicle. $10. Wallace Robert Henderson, violation Of basic rule. $5. Bertha iose Eisenberg. failure to leave information at scene of acci dent. $25. Charles Russell Moore, violation of basic rule. 510. Harris Holsapple .drag racing, $25. Allan Roger Seaman, excessive noise (pipes), $10. DISTRICT COURT Margaret Yvonne McGonade. de fective brakes. $6. Dwight Lee Edwards, overheight, $10. Harvey Daniel Fllpse. overload. $83. Jesse D. Suttle, failure to provide fire fiphting equipment. $30. Harry James Palmer, truck soeed ing, $15. overheight. $10. Delores Ericka McCall, violation of basic rule, $12.50. Frank Curry Williams, inadequate brakes, $6. Charles LeRoy Heavilin, violation of basic rule. $15. Ted Melvin Adams, overheight, $10. MARRIAGE LICENSE ' APPLICATIONS Theodore Roosevelt Worth Jr., route 2. box 625. Central Point, and Vazel Jane Shroll, Salem. Daryl Troy Curran, New Mexico, and Naomi Kay Campbell, 504 Keene way drive. Medford. Harlod Jackson Howard, post office box 741. Ashland, and Lyda Elizabeth Koenig. route 1. box 500A. Ashland. IVAN TO COACH HAWKS St. Catharines, Ont. (U.PJ General Manager Tommy Ivan will double as coach of the Chi cago Black Hawks fr the 1956 1957 National Hockey league sea son. Ivan named himself to suc ceed 64-year-old Dick Irvin, who resigned from the post last Satur day because of pressure and ill health. Ivan said he will coach the club until he can find a suit able replacement. Ousted Inmate Slays Owner of Rest Home Los Angeles (U.PJ A form er rest home patient lured the proprietress outside and then hacked her to death with a sickle Thursday because she forced him to leave the home, police report ed. Mrs. Mary Morris, 55, died of slashes on the face, neck, arms and abdomen as an ambulance crew administered first aid. Gabriel Di Bella, 50, who was a patient at the home in the Highland Park District until a few weeks ago, was arrested on suspicion of murder. Police said Di Bella, a cripple, summoned Mrs. Morris outside by pressing a signal buzzer from a nearby cottage. As the woman hurried along a path Di Bella jumped from behind a bush and attacked her with the sickle. Her screams awoke the 105 patients of the home and police were called. Di Bella, who was found hid ing in the bushes, told police he was "mad at her because she made me leave the home." Daily's U-Drive Medford Airport Free: By special arrangement with the editors of the Ency-; clopedia Americana, my panel of judges will award each week ' to the reader who sends me the i best question on nature and wildlife a complete 30-volume set of this world-famous ref erence work in a handsome Sealcraft binding. Each week, new questions will be consider ed. Sorry, I simply can't answer your many friendly letters. Please address your questions to. Is That So! co Medford Mail Tribune, Box 575, Sausalito, Calif. 6-bottle carton Double-Cola for only It with purchase of 6-bottle carton at regular price (plus deposit en bottles) This Week-end at Your Favorite Grocery Bottled by 7-Up Bottling Co., Medford For Your HOME IMPROVEMENT NEEDS See SEARS, 40 So. Central or Call 2-6255 ASK ABOUT Sears Modernization Credit Plan No Money Down 36 Months to Pay PLUS- A f ield Representative TO ASSIST YOU In Figuring Your Needs in O PLUMBING HEATINO O WIRING FLOOR COVERINGS DRAPERIES end KITCHEN CABINETS Satisfaction Guaranteed! I Modernize We Will Help You SAVH! 'SaSaUZt&e f C RHC 40 South Central ' Phone 2-6255 az aowt, maiutf JLHlW OPfhl uednesday nights