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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1959)
3 Big Y's-SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS 3 Big Y's-SllVER DOLLAR STAMPS -3 Big Y's-SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS -3 Bi Y' MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Thursday, 1959 mm IDEAL FOR: BARBECUES, PICNICS CARD PARTIES . FAMILY GATHERINGS Serve ell your guest quickly, easily with this gient-size Aluminum Perk. Sturdily built for years of carefree service. - k it 3) (GdDdDLTD A'TT' POCKET BIG 'Yi SPORTING GOODS DEPT. YOUR SWIMWEAR HEADQUARTERS ' MASKS HHS SNORKELS SKI ROPES 98e to 4.95 11.88 to 8.95 J 98c to 1.95 L 59g 3.99 LEVEL WIND REEL BOTH CASTING ROD ran U LnJiyJliMia REPEAT CflMVflJ COAST GUARD APPROVED C?T r n REG. 12.88 - SIZE 24"x60" g T S l j coca? table ;sj) DONT TAKE SMALL 54.19 MEDIUM 3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU BETTER! Big Y's SILVER AST M6 0) JUST IN TIME FOR THE -4th OF JULY! TOP QUALITY do m RADIOS REG. $2.98 NO TUBES BATTERIES or ELECTRICITY, Listen Indoors or Outdoors $ 177 O MEN'S 6 WOMEN'S O CHILDREN'S OF A SELL OUT A CHANCE! GET A UFE JACKET- LARGE $5.79 BIG Y PHARMACY ) DOLLAR STAMPS O Pramat Vs .F- my o Courteous 1- ' o Efficient rui ill $ A IL L YOU'LL FIND MANY USES FOR THIS STURDY BASKET! Reg. 98c 3 1)1 SKI BELTS $3.95 VITAMIN 0 4 McKasaon'i loo's . . . Per Prlxe Winning Heme Canning A Freezing FREE, BOOKLET $1.73 -3 Big Y's SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS -3 Big Y's- 1 PR Jl IU IU A REGULAR 3.49 VALUE! GOOD IB IKK MEXICAN BUSHEL BASKETS (o),(o)y (0) (0) "' 50 FEET ' iiCiMN'' 2?. AHCIIOR iA x GAS J ; IN5UUTED , ' , MAY! V.lu.stal.98 Wpll'Sr COMPLETE SET J Screw Drivers - badminton 3 Sw.';: SETS SPARKLERS . . . REASONABLY LADIES BEACH JACKETS White Terry Sizes 10-16 98.98 mi AT ALL 3 BIG Y's F IMI BIG T' THRIFT DEPARTMENT CHECK THESE PRICE DYNAMITERS! 1G 'Y' MEZZANINE GIRLS PEDAL PUSHERS Assorted Colors Sizes 7-14 H03TH II CC3 EAST II 110 AND P63WAYOUAiaSTCET CAXCALE A M IS IE IT'S BARBECUE GRILL BUY BOYS BERMUDA SHORTS Sizes 3.7 Top Quality M 1 D4i SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS -3 Big 'ACTION 2 Cr I m 50 Sturdily Constructed For Yeers of StrvictI NOW AND SAVE! O r- I CO 03 H PP I m m ?3 D O r- H I C3 - I F m o PRICED! 2 LADIES JAMAICA SHORTS Sizes t to 18 I I Y's Obese Patients Admit To Being High-Strung F2iUfl Bote: following If tat third of four dispatchei on over weight.) By PATRICIA McCORMICK (UPI Correspondent) New York-(UPD-More than half the obese patients in a study from Endocrine Clinic of Boston City Hospital ad mitted that they were "in wardly" nervous nr r- m TO U strung. They said that food relieved them Of tension and nv Vitvi D w pleasure. One homemalrer H tymf 73 2 husband's activities kept him from home frequently. She filled in some of the time by going to movies-alone. But When she ntiirn home she felt so lonelv that she usually ate "even though I was not really hungry," she said. i ."It v allayed some of BIT I nervousness and gave me something to do." Felt Sorry As her weieht went felt alT the more sorry for her self and ate more. Eventually, she was a eood. round whisht -300 pounds. Another patient, an over weight tjen-ager, sorry about being unpopular, became a people -hater She secluded herself at every opportunity and treated herself to her sole remaining pleasure; eating. lae more she ate, the less chance she had of becoming " popular. She became fatter and fatter. The tension-tvoe eaten ara just one of several types of obese. There are the social tvnee. the night-raiders, and the ear. bage-pail personalities. To tension eaters, food is a tension chaser and source of pleasure. When thev are bored, food symbolizes the love and affection they need, desire and cannot find. Social eaters eat to be so ciable. They won't turn down a morsel at a cocktail party, a bridge game, dinner or week-end gatherings. The night-raider becomes gluttonous nocturnally. Dur ing the day, he or she eats like a bird. But after the last meal of the day, the night raider's hidden personality comes out. Trips to the kitch en are frequently for a piece of pie, a half-dozen cookies, a scrambled egg, and toast. A true night-raider con sumes more than one-fourth of his total calories after the last meal. Can't Leave Scrap t The crarbase-nail tvue can't leave a scrap on the plate. Usually, she is the lady of the house. ' She eats the left-overs that aren't suitable for stashine away in the refrigerator. Day after day, this is the way with the garbage-pail type. She pays no attention to the calorie cost of living. Neither do the other "types" who sud denly find themselves with more padding than will fit into their clothes. (Next: Even the "lean" have troubles.) Crabgrass Control Methods Given Beltsville, Md. (Science Service) There is still time to wage war against crab grass, one of the lawn owner's worst enemies. Crabgras germinates in May and must be controlled now if you want to get rid of it. Dr. Layton L. Klingman said He is studying lawn weed con trol at the U. S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Center here. The home owner can tell if he has the troublesome weed by simply looking at thin spots on his lawn to see if broad leaved seedlings are showing. If crabgrass is found, two or three treatments of various herbicides, given at seven-to-ten-day intervals are usually required to kill it. Chemicals suggested.by Dr. Klingman as effective in fighting crabgrass are dis odium monomethyl ar sonate (DMA), and its closely related compounds, and phe nyl mercuric acetate (PMA). Treatment should be start ed as soon as possible, the USDA researcher said. Follow carefully the instructions re ceived with the herbicide, he urged. Dandelion, buckhorn and other weeds in the plantain family can be controlled with 2,4-D or 2,4-4 plus Silvex. Sil vex is particularly useful in controlling chickweed, Dr. Klingman said. Mowing and watering can also control crabgrass and other weeds. Since close mow ing means more light gets down into the turf to help ger minating crabgrass seeds grow, never mow your lawn shorter than one and one-half inches, Dr. Klingman warned.