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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1957)
J&l MA 22 V) 23-41 -47-491 62-49-74 IMftUt APII 21 MAY 21 4-14-14-7 ?4-3l-32 90l GfMMI Op. MAT 22 P.' j (line 22 133-34-38 CAMCll Vl 51-53-58-61 '65-67 80-82 uo AOO 23 V 36-37.39. VJ W) serr 22 mi7 18-19 33 M 46-87 STAR GAZERO By CLAY R POLLAN JH yuf Dojr Activity GuioV t According fo th Stan. To develop messoge for Saturday, reod wofds corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. 1 D'soom 31 From 61 N 2 Obtom 32 N 62 O 3 Moppy 33 Progres 6J And 4 You 34 tin t 64 Horvjl.rNg 5 0 35 You 65 Used 6 Advie 36 Don't 66 Go 7 Keep 37 Ruo 67 For 8 Property 38 D.crn.tl 68 No 9 From 39 Certoo 69 Nw 10 Plugging 40 Amb-ftorn 70 Yx 11 Puv. 4t Ooy 71 The 12 en 42 Urxtoubrerjfy 72 Jumo 13 Personal 43 W,der 73 Pioc 14 Moy 44 Day 74 Mfhodi 15 Though 45 Voo 75 Longer 16 Hove 46 Deierv 76 F.eld 17 Accept 47 To 77 O 18 Complmeni 48 F-rttertom 78 Your 19 CkockxtiIv 49 Cop.iodze 79 CM 20 ern 50 Peopt, 80 Honest 21 And 51 Penitence, 81 Woy 22 Urepec?ed 52 Improve 82 Proawt IjOOd !J I 24 Gams 54 Earning 25 F.pewnced 55 The 26 Can 56 Beter 27 Popeoj 57 Vwl 28 Prvn 58 F.n 29 (tetore 59 Wrong Mi Keep 60 On bO-71-72 scorno OCT 24 JOV 22 J 3-44-48-577-1 Good ()d verse 83 Funds 84 Endeavor 85 Making 86 Change 87 Them 88 Needed 89 Today 90 Source 720 Neutral U&KA iEPT 23 rt, OCT 23 fc20-26-30-4i i SACmADIUS DK 22 jgjl 11-13.40-430 OUMCOtN ok a IAN 20 V-J 1- 5- 8-2K3M AQUARIUS IJAN 21 2- 6- 9 25rl E8 29 85-86 M men FEB 20)v 152 54- 177-78-83 The Medical Roundup Emerltui Consultant In Medlclna, Mayo Clinic Emarltnt Professor of Medlclna. Mayo Foundation Hardening of the Arteries in Ihe tion will clear up with time. Legs, Wiih Cramps and Pain Many elderly persons get se ver pain in the legs if they try to walk fast. They have to stop and, after a few minutes, they can go on again. This is called inter mittent claudi cation, and is due to the nar rowing of an artery in the leg. With this narrowing on- if as men. . Dr Alvarez ly enough blood gets through for a resting muscle. When the muscle is active and needing more blood, not enough for it can corru through. Then comes pain. An expert can usually tell with tests whether it pays to try any of the drugs that are used to help this sort of thing. Ex perts tell me that in most cases the arteries are so stiff that even the best of the drugs will not do much good. In some cases, after tests show that the arteries can dilate with the help of drugs, a surgeon may go in in the back, and cut the sympathetic nerves that supply the arteries. After these nerves are cut, the arteries may remain more widely open ed, and then they may supply an adequate amount of blood. In other cases the arieries are so stiff that cutting the nerves will not help. Today, in bad cases, expert surgeons are cutting in, and re placing the narrowed bit of ar tery with a ' prepared piece of artery from an animal, or an artery made of nylon or some other material. Naturally, most of us physi cians do not see enough of this new type of work to know much about it, and hence usually the person will do well to go to some large clinic or university center where he can find the experts who know how to trans plant segments of arteries. It is a wonderful new advance in surgery. Encephalitis, or "Sleeping-Sickness" There are several forms of en cephalitis or brain fever or sleeping-sickness that are due to dis tinct viruses. With some of these infections the person recovers apparently completely, while in others, he or she is left mentally or nervously injured, perhaps for life. We now know that in some cases of severe measles and other diseases of childhood, including polio, the virus of the disease, or another virus present in the brain with it, produces an acute encephalitis. This may show itself at the time as a se vere headache, perhaps a stiff nek and apathy, toxicity and some somnolence. Some of the problem children, and children with a retarded mind owe their lifelong handicap to such a "brain fever." Whenever, after a bad attack of measles or whooping-cough or mumps, a previously healthy child becomes mentally retarded and perhaps difficult to handle at home and at school, it is well to have an electroencephalogram made. This may show that in some part of the brain, the tiny currents are abnormal, indicat ing that this part has been in jured. We doctors may not have a cure for the condition, but at least we'll know that the boy is ill, and not just "bad." Then we must be as patient as we can be with him. Sometimes the condi- Tendency to Attack Brain At intervals a particular strain of the influenza virus, or one of the common viruses that go through the community, produc ing an epidemic of fever and sore throat, may have a special tendency to attack the brain. Then many of the victims will suffer from headache and great feelings of fatigue and toxicity. In the terrible influenza epi demic of 1918, I had only a very mild attack of the disease, but it appeared to have "an encephali tic component" because, for a year afterward, my brain felt tired, and I lacked my normal feeling of nervous comfort and good health. I had to push my self to work. Unfortunately, only a few of the so-called large viruses, the particles of which are large, are affected by antibiotics. (Released by The Register and Tribune Syndicate, 1957) LEGAL NOTICES Don't Say "Hello" Say - - - "FILTER-FLO" NOTICE OF SALE No. 10033 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE JsTATE or UHEliUN FOR JACK SON COUNTY. PROBATE DEPARTMENT In the Matter of the Estate of ELLEN McRAE. Deceased. Pursuant to that certain order of ale made and entered in the above court and cause on the 27th day of June 1957, the undersigned, A. M. Keolineer. administrator of the a hove estate, will sell at private sale, the following described real prop erty located in Jackson County. Ore gon, 10-wu: Beginning at a point on the west line of Lot One 41) in Block One U) Of NICKELL ADDITION to the City of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, according to the official plat thereof, now of rec ord, said point being 152.18 feet South of the Northwest corner of aid Lot. and being the point of intersection oi tne soutn line ot the Rogue River Valley Railroad right-of-way with the west line of aid Lot One (1): thence East along the said right-of-way line 330.0 feet to the est line of said Lot; thence South along said Lot line 177.82 feet; thence West 330.0 feet to the west line of said Lot; and thence North along said line 177.82 feet to the point of begin ning: being that portion of the North half of said Lot One (1) lying south of the rieht-of-way of the Rogue River Valley Railroad. AND ALSO The South 231 feet of the East 382 feet of Lot 2. Block 4 of NICKELL ADDITION to the City of Medford. Jackson Countv. Ore gon. EXCEPTING THEREFROM the land described as follows: Commencing at the Southeast corner of Lot 2, Block 4. NiCKELL ADDITION to the City of Med ford, Jackson County. Oregon, . thence Westerly along the South erly line of said Lot and Block 145 feet to the true point of be- f:inning; thence Northerly paral el with the Easterly line of said Lot and Block 216 feet: thence Westerly parallel with the South line of said Lot and Block 237 feet, thence Southerly parallel with the East line of said Lot and Block 216 feet to the South' line of said Lot and Block; thence Easterly along the South line of said Lot and Block 237 feet to the point of beginning. That said sale will be made on and after the 29th day of July, 1957. at the hour of 10:00 A.M., of said day, and bids will be received at the law office of Kenneth G. Denman, 128 East Main Street. Medford. Oregon; that the terms of said sale shall be for cash or for at least ten percent cash and the balance on contract terms to be arranged by the adminis trator Dated this 28th dav of June, 1957. A. M. KEPLINGER. Administrator Friday. July 19, 1957 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE Placebo Found To Often Have Same Effect as 'Happiness Pills1 By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Editor New York W A psychia trist of experimental bent has found that a majority of his over-anxious or over-tense pa tients respond quite well to a placebo as to "happy pills." A placebo is anything which is known positively to have no physical effect whatever when taken into the human body. If it does produce an effect, that effect is produced by the power of suggestion. To compare the effect of any chemical compound believed to be active within the human body with the effect of a place bo "given-for-real" is, therefore, to subject it to a tough test. Dr. Robert R. Schopach, psy chiatrist at the Henry Ford Hos pital, Detroit, used the test in obsessional, anxious and tense neurotic patients a placebo opposed to the "happy pill," meprobamate which is sold under the trade names "Mil- town and 'Equinol. Same Effects Produced In a majority of the patients, what effect one produced, the other produced. No one should understand this to mean that the pill's only power is that of suggestion, since there is no question of it being chemically active inside the human body. However, the doctor's point was that suggestion plays a part in how people respond to any tning they take into themselves. For instance, he found that with promazine which is a "tranquil izer" much more powerful chemically, than meprobamate, seven out of 22 neurotic patients "felt just as well on a placebo." He was reporting in the hospi tal's technical bulletin on the many new medicines which are intended to reduce anxiety. "None of these drugs are cures but may.be useful crutches " he said. "The patient should always be evaluated to determine if psychotherapy might not be more helpful in a curative direc tion." Addiction Feared In another report on "tran quilizers," which is a red-hot subject in medical science these days. Drs. John A. Ewing and R. E. Fullilove psychiatrists of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, urged phy sicians not to use meprobamate for any length of time in pa tients addicted either to alcohol or drugs. "It appears that this drug may quite easily become a substitute for alcohol or barbiturate intake and that habituation may oc- England Journal of Medicine. Dr. Ewing said he had seen two patients who said meprobamate "feels just like taking a drink" and two others "who had lost control over the amount they were consunming." They were reporting the case of 32-year-old man who had be come so habituated to the drug he required . hospitalization to cur,". they reported to the New i break the habit. LARGEST HIDE ! Chicago W A 95-foot-square cowhide the world's largest j was displayed at a home fur-j nishings show here. A spokes- j man for the Upholstery Leather i Group who showed the giant j skin, said the hide came from a cow that probably weighed more j than 3,000 pounds. Weight of a : large cow is nonrmally about j half that amount. I LEGAL NOTICES CAM. FOR BIDS School District No. 6C. Jackson County, Oregon, will receive bids until 8 P.M. August 12th. 1957, for items as listed herewith at the office of the School Superintendent at the Crater High School, at which time bids will be received and opened. De tailed specifications may be obtained from the school clerk. The right is reserved- to reject any or all bids. 1. INSURANCE Comprehensive lia bility insurance covering .school directors, employees, and school buses. 2. GASOLINE Approximately 30, 000 gallons, regular grade. 3. STOVE OIL Approximately 10. 000 gallons stove oil. Pacific Coast Spec. 100. 4. FUEL O I L Approximately 40, oon 'gallons Pacific Coast Spec. 300. 3. FUEL OIL Approximately 1.000 fallons Pacific Coast Spec. 200. AWDUST Approximately 1,000 units. (Signed) Merle Obenchain, Clerk School Dist. No. 6C Jackson County, Oregon NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Jackson County. In the matter of the Estate of ALFRED LESLIE BAILEY, de ceased. Notice is herebv given that Dr. C. D. Lemley, D.O. has been appointed Administrator of the estate of AL FRED LESLIE BAILEY, deceased, by order of the Honorable H. K. Hanna, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Jackson County, sitting in probate, which said order is dated the 22nd day of May, A.D., 1957; and all persons having claims against said estate are notified to present the same, duly verified, to the undersigned Administrator or to his attorney, V. A. C. Ahlf. Southern Oregon State Bank Building, P. O. Box 292. Grants Pass. Oregon, on or before six months from the date of first publication, being July 5th, 1957. Dr. C. D. Lemley, D. O.. Admin istrator, 41 Hawthorne Avenue, Med ford. Oregon. r only ' 33 Roseburg $Z51 Plus Tax jlSrC0ffST f untunes jjr He read the Courtesy Used Car Ad on page 6 est U iyj w la lyjir SALE STARTS 8 A.M. SATURDAY Fromm MDINluCIL We Have Purchased from the 1st National Bank the Remaining TV Stock from Minkler's The entire stock of Packard-Bell and Hoffman TVs go on Sale Tomorrow Morning at 8 A.M. at Terrific Savings. These are AH Brand New 1957 TVs . and the Full Manufacturer's Guarantees Will Apply. Home Appli ance Company and the Bargain Store Will Be Here to Back Up These Guarantees with Dependable Service. This Is Not a Large Stock ... So Hurry ... Because There Are Really Some Tremendous Bargains. You can Always Look for Real Worthwhile Savings from the "B" Store. Tomorrow Morning at 8 A.M. ... Terms and Immediate Delivery . . Don't Miss This One! There Will Be Some Used TV Sets in Sale! First Come... First Served ... No Phone Orders HOME APPLIANCE COMPANY mm STORE 303 SOUTH FRONT STREET