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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1958)
SA MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford", Oregon, Thursday, August 21, 1958 Theyll Do It Every Nor LIKE YOU 4ND ME, QUIMCY Remembers every anniversary ahd then some Iff HO! IT ISM'T VOUP BIRTHD4Y Hl DID YOU P4Y THE HT AMD IT ISMT OUR ANNIVERSARY. W" ELECTRIC BILL? THEY Wm- 1 & BUT DON'T VOU REMEMBER V 5410 THEY'D TURN i AUGUST 21, 1943? THE RRST V IT OFF ELECTRIC mA TIME WE WENT OUT IN A TT u-rW BlLL?UHNO Document Tells Of Levittown, N.J. (CPff First came Machiavelli's "The Prince," a document related to grown-up cunning in pol itics. And now comes Olivia T. Mellan's "How to Persuade Your Parents," a document that could be subtitled, "Par ents are Pushovers." Youngsters who use Miss Mellan's five basic rules are told they will reduce mom and dad to mere putty in their bands. The rules: Nagging "The best time to nag," writes Olivia, "is during a quiet meal, when your fath fe' ; f (if , LEATXNG LEBANON, Marines in truck board landing Uwifehlp off Beirut. Young Lebanese line shore watching YlruiE mm if " beefsteak , apple Did you pick steak? Most people do. But the right answer is Bumble Bee Tuna. It 'contains Vitamin A for good eyesight. Vitamin Bu needed for healthy nerves.' Bumble Bee Tuna also contains blood conditioning iron all in addition to its rich protein value. These nutrient elements in tuna are painstakingly protected by Bumble Bee. The care in selecting fresh. prime tuna and the high standard of processing guarantee you full food values from Bumble Bee. lMH. PAY ON OR NON Parent Control er has come back from work." Screeching This is a by product of crying and is only a matter of getting the proper pitch. Olivia suggests the dog howl after you first turn pale and open your mouth wide. Begging This is effective if it included falling to the floor and going into a choking fit "Recover slowly," Olivia cautions. Silent treatment For vari ety, a change of pace. Olivia says parents like your silence at first but eventually realize that it s better to have you jabbering , away, iney sur x Columbia River Time i f m ' egg 3 By Jimmy Hatlo ANYTHING PRACTICAL LIKE BEFORE'' HE'S STRICTLY COMPOSETIC render to your demand in due time. Parent psychology This one, Olivia admits, is hard. You must keep a straight face and insist that you don't really want to go to the movies Mother soon will get tough and order you to the movies, Olivia's document was car ried in the sixth-grade class newspaper at the East Broad way school here. No, Olivia isn't the school principal She's only a sixth grader Give her a little more time. An American patent con veys to an inventor and his heirs the exclusive right to make, use or sell his inven tion for 17 years. craft for transport to waiting departure of 1,800 contingent cheese tima Hp Always buy Bumble Bee Tuna. It's the tuna with full nutritional riches, fine in taste, fine for body needs. An Oregon Product Packers Assn., In&, Astoria, Ore, The Family Council Editor'! note: Th FaraUv Council consists of m Indie, a nsycbtatrlst. three clergymen, m newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers Eacb article s a summary ot an actual report The Family Conncil does not jive advice; it merely reports on problems that have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. Syhria T. I can't deal with my husband's sons. Malihtw T. She must use a firm hand. ' . Sylvia T. I am trying my best to do the right thing in a situation I find very hard to handle. My husband has two boys 8 and 10 by a previous mar riage. He told me when we were married that he feels they do not have the right home environment with their mother and he wants me to help him provide them with something better when they visit us. We see them every week end and for a month every summer. The boys are very undis ciplined and do not seem to know table manners, how to dress themselves decently or how to act nicely. I tell them things, but they resent it very much and al ways tell me I'm not their mother. It is very hard for me when they come, and my husband makes it worse by criticizing everything I do. Malthtw T. I have told the boys that when they visit us they must recognize that Sylvia is the boss and they are expected to obey her and behave themselves. . 1 1 know they would do this if she would assert herself and use a firm hand with them. I've told her to smack them if they misbehave. It's the only way I know of dealing with wild kids their age. Unfortunately, my first wife Farm Near Rome Follows American Type for Stock Rome (UPD Cows are sup plied with soothing swing mu sic on a modern farm near Rome and feed is brought to them on a special conveyor belt in their centrally heated stalls. This American-like farm is in the middle of the Agro Romano, an arid and' rocky plain which half circles the Italian capital. The farm is situated about 30 miles out on the Via Aurelia behind Vatican City and is called Torre in Pietra. Few Romans know much about Torre in Pietra farm, yet for 33 years they have bought its rich creamy milk, its big and pulpy Romano artichokes, its limp?d muscat wines, its many fruits and vegetables and, especially, its beautiful flowers. Even in the United States this farm would be something exceptional. In Italy it is like an oasis in the desert. Every thing is mechanical, system ized, hygienic by the most modern means,' and at the same time highly efficient. A far different story with most farm in the district where farmers still use hand ploughs and cows are made to work. Plenty of Water Torre in Pietra farm was begun in 1925 by Sen. Luigi Albertini, one-time director of the Corriere Delia Sera, daily newspaper of Milan, in col laboration with the well known politician and indus trialist, Count Nicolo Caran dini. Every morning at 5 o'clock the cows at Torre In Pietra are awakened by the sound of slow swing music played to them on carillon bells. The cows are washed before being milked and during this proc ess they can get a ration of salt by licking at a salted paper which comes to them on a special conveyor belt. The feed for the cows is weighed and rationed accord ing to the weight and milk production of each animal. Perhaps the greatest achieve ment at Torre in Pietra is irrigation. Water can be seen everywhere in huge tanks, in wide, deep -canals, and in big pipes that criss-cross the farm. And every few square yards there is a spray shower ing the dry, rocky ground with water. Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Calvin Hudson Hightower, 5?0 North Front" St., violation of city licensing ordinance, S25 and 2 days confinement. James Franklin Sanders. Palm Springs, Calif, drunk in public. S10. June Cecilia Sanders. Palm Springs, Calif., drunk in public, $10. Joe Davis Henderson, transient, arunx in public, DISTRICT COURT Fred Taylor, overheieht. $15. Stanley Lavern Rich, improper leu turn. 57.ou. Earle B. Warne, improper lights. Harry G. Hayes, no muffler, $13. CIRCUIT COURT Ethel M. Serbanlc vs. Paul J. serbamc. divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Donald Dru Rohwer and Loreta iay Lowe, both of Medford. John Wesley Snow, Ventura, iaui.. and Wunnnn, pr. Mnnrp was never much of a home maker. She'd rather see the place busted up than to take control of things. Naturally, the boys have no respect for nice things and don't know how to behave in - a decent home. I just want them to have some manners. Sylvia . seems to be afraid my former wife will put up a squawk if she says too much to the boys, but I'm not wor ried. I can handle her. : Th Council: Matthew has imposed a very heavy and un fair burden upon Sylvia. It is natural for him to want his sons to get some of the advantages he feels they lack with their mother, but he is simply not in a position to supply these to any great extent. The best he and Sylvia can do is to present an example of good behavior. If the boys do not feel they are being criticized and disliked at LARGE NO. 2 . ' H PPI Hffld R femV '"HO RUSSET fAlJB ' Fresh Pan-Ready ' GOOD LARGE SIZE WiW I RYERS KP4S BEER STEW f ' ft ' JUMBO JUICY ; : ,; . ; . fS Z W ' III ' '.T"iaHiffl- ? Irr ft 1 L. 1 1 : ZlSSrz ssmmE5BS&. o ihe o o c riA IIMIT Arl .mms& II - p--H aeaae- MM lUO. 111! Llltll I UIJ . 1 f 11 . . ! ' 'SUWi fc.f'0-ti0 For , TVCn m&ZJ - V . MARKET CL ,J? ARhnHMr I I Home of SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS V I II II, h isisiiir V 7 HAYS A WEEK I fS ! , K V . EASY PARKING . AW ni miia wneaaar P S fin l X i . 'AnnrPPiP u h 0l U3 V X shopping . i vautaia9 U - SS A II I -D CiOJ IU. I III mmm SILVER UULLMK JIAJrj , IW. IITISIUC I"' ' ' - ' ' - II every step, they may begin to try to fit into the general tone of their father's home. Sylvia is in no position to exercise an overly firm hand with these boys. If they dis like her, her position becomes virtually helpless. It is not at all her business to "smack them if they mis behave." This would only cre ate endless trouble, involving her relationship with them and their mother for a long time to come. If Matthew wishes to main tain his relationship with his sons, he should decide to put up with a good deal. He should establish some mini mum rules of his household and he should act as the arm of the law when necessary. Then it will be his respon sibility if the boys suddenly decide they want to skip their visits, or if there is some kick back from their mother. Sylvia can do . little more than play the gracious and thoughtful hostess. If the boys learn to like her, they may eventually try to please her by behaving in the . manner they sense she would like. (Copyright 1958. General Features Corp.) Maker of Dice Doesn't Have Any Providence, R.I. (UPD The wife of the man who's the nation's largest manufacturer of galloping dominoes says she doesn't have a pair of dice in the house. "But I think I could use them if need be," says Mrs. Morris Baruch. "I really do." Mrs. Baruch, whose husband is president of the Elkloid Co. a 35-year-old plastic spec ialties concern says that the rolling bones are "strictly a business with . us we - don't play with them at all " Elkloid sold around eight million of the dancing cubes last year. The firms' biggest " A fB0YD$BIG OUTDOOR SNAPSHOT CONTEST ftf P-Uj $1,500 SEASWIRL BOAT & TRAILER ZdT4it $1,200 ALIO HOUSE TRAILER 34 7i $250 KODAK MOVIE OUTFIT THREE $I7.S KODAK CAMERAS EVERY WEEK ; -: Cempltte teatast rules yur grecers. Moil snapshots tK BOYD COFFEE CO., P.O. BOX 1333, PORTLAND 7, ORE. W. A. Resell -' - Mrs. E. C. Niles . Mr. and Mrs. Tacoma 7, Washington Klamath Falls, Oregon Carl H. Sahm Portland 15, Oregon " If you didn't win this week.-enter again ALL ENTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR GRAND PRIZESI u , nif enr iii ni ci tivi 1 15 157157157 V ffllUHIWrll I III buyers are game manufactur ing companies. The dice sold to these firms are made of plastic and are' true cubes within about ten ten-thousand ths of an inch.- "We don't make perfect dice," Mrs. Baruch says, "not the trued-up dice a gambler would use. These would have to be hand-tooled to within one ten-thousandth of an inch. Of course the dice we make could be used for gambing purposes. I'd say they'd be appropriate for the 'back of the barn' type of crap shoot ing." Mrs. Baruch says the Chi- nfln krs Ainl via ortuiHLo. y .,mmn:.n fh West Coast M hio vmvprs nf dice with inlaid colored spots while other .. . Tl groups want dice max run seven and eleven all tne xima . . for advertising purpura MP ivannoe, cant.