Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 21, 1958, Image 20

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    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
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II - p--H aeaae- MM lUO. 111! Llltll I UIJ . 1 f 11
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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
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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.