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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1960)
MAIL TRIBUNI, Medforrf, Or. Thursday, April 7, I960 Allergy Suspected As Contributing Dizziness Factor BY DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor NEW YORK (UPI)-In view of the general opinion that there are a lot of dizzy people in tho world, the results of rymm a ipecial I VL, 5 study of the dizzy and of . dizziness is bound to have a personal interest. rdPf Dr' JosePn SmSS IlC. Elia made l YJ: if 3 1 his study in tti2uJ Reno. Of 84 J hob smiiti in whom no physical cause for dizziness. could be found, 62 per cent ternal canals of the ears; ?. People twirling themselves around too rapidly; 3. Hot or cold water or air in the ear canals; 4. Excessive straining of the eye muscles; 5. Ear in fections; 6. Low or high blood pressure; 7. Anemia; 8. Systemic allergic reactions. But disorders in the mus cles or bones of the head and neck can cause dizziness. Al so any disease or injury to the central nervous system Chronic infection of the mas toid can be a cause. A com mon cause is a blockade of the ear tubes, on one side or the other. Locate Cause The thing to do about dlzzl- The Family Council Editor's Not: Th Pantile Counelj consist or a Judge, a. psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor a women's editor and two writ.. Kach article Is a summary uf an actual ,'ase history. The Council reports uu iiiuutriui mpi nave ummm uea.e w ojr responsiDI ageociee and Bruce M. - I don't want my son to make my mistake. Jane M. He's going to give the kid a complex. Bruce M. - I am a worried father with a whole family gainst him. My 18-year-old ion George has started going out with a girl and he sees or phones her every night. As far as I'm con cerned this is just plain crazy. George wants to be an engi neer. He has years of study ahead of him. An involve ment like this can spoil his whole future. The reason I'm so upset is that I ruined my own career because of a premature in volvement. I left college and went to work because I was in such a hurry to get mar ried. Then the girl walked out on me and by that time I was so disgusted with myself and everything else that I never went back to school. It's something I've regretted all my life. Jane M. - I feel that Bruce is taking this thing much too seriously. He goes crazy every time he sees George talking to this girl. I'm afraid he'll give the kid a complex. . As far as I'm concerned I'm rather happy that George has found a lovely girl to date. He has always been terribly shy, yet I know he wanted to go out with girls. I couldn't have asked for a finer, sweet er girl for him than Ann. He has really come out of his shell since he has know her. Ann is an ambitious girl as well. She's planning a nurs ing career and works hard at her studies. So far neither of them has fallen behind in schoolwork. The Council: This is quite a problem and we find our sym pathies split. Certainly, there is room for concern when teen-agers become so wrapped up in one another that they must be in contact every eve ning. Yet Jane undoubtedly has reason to be pleased with her son's sudden social and emotional growth. The best approach to this problem is the positive rather than the negative one. Bruce should not cast the shadow of his own unfortunate exper ience upon his son's friend ship. He should try to eval uate his friendship as objee-j tively as possible. When he cautions George against be coming too involved, he should remind him of his am bitions, the may years of study ahead and the unfair ness to both the girl and him self of creating a situation that can only lead to frustra tion of either emotions or am bitions. If George sees that his fam ily is entirely sympathetic and that both his parents appreci ate the fact that he has found a fine friendship, he may be more willing to accept guid ance and control from them. The fact that he has chosen highly acceptable girl merits a vote of confidence from his parents. We think the young girl's parents are probaly also in terested in keeping her from getting too involved before the time is ripe for marriage, so sympathy and gentle pres sure from DOin sines may uc enough to get this relationship on a sounder basis. George should definitely be encour aged to expand his social hor izons - go out with other girls and get involved In group ac tivities. This will help dis solve the concentration on one person. (Copyright, 1960, General Features Corp.) WHALE PRIZE San Francisco - Most valu. able of whale products is am bergis, used to make perfumes. YOAKLEY'S Community Grocery 1101 EAST JACKSON 8 21b. Con $1.29 were female. Elia, however, ness is to locate the cauno -sua said In advising phys icians in the technical jour nal, "Current Medical Di gest." But whether or not the cause can be located, the dizzy one can be relieved by infus ing a small amount of seven per cent solution of sodium bicarbonate into a vein. In 80 per cent of all his cases, this relieved the dizzi ness, and there were "no un toward reactions." He empha sized that this treatment was an adjunct to treating the cause, but where the cause could not be found thprp ujsi no reason why It couldn't be made no point of that. He made a point of the fact that 51 per cent of the 84 were al lergy subjects. This made him "highly sus picious of allergy as a factor in the cause of dizziness," he said. Most cases of dizziness occurred during the summer months when the allergic suf fer the most because of active vegetation, and this fortified his suspicion. Yet 57 per cent were heavy users of tobacco. On the other hand, dizziness was com paratively rare in the young and old. Most of the dizzy were between 38 and 60 years old. Diy One Way Jfilia found that the dizzy were dizzy in one or the other of two ways. In one way, the dizzy person was stationary ana trie objects of the room or the out-of-doors revolved around him. In the other way, the objects were stationary, and the dizzy one himself re volved. Of physical causes of dizz iness, he found the following to be most common: 1. Wax or something else in the ex- used once or twice a month. In his troublesome cases in which diligent search failed to produce a cause, he also prescribed an anti-histamine against allergy even when tests gave no indication of al lergy. He did this to combat any latent allergic activity, and to promote "a mild dehy drating effect." This was accompanied by advice not to Increase the in take of alcohol or other fluids This Intake he sought to keep "at a practical minimum." he aid. Unclaimed Money in Oregon Banks Goes To State Land Board Salem-WPD-l! you put some I nronertv net nrinni. tmn money In an Oregon bank and reenacted in 1957, orders seven years ago and haven't every bank in Oregon to hand touched It since, it's not there over to the State Land Board any more. The state' got it. (the personal propertv of anv iiuw mo i Depositor wno Hasn't been vpvp,wu 4(1 u'li-tcimieu near nia npnns r in .ei,n years time. Afler that, as far private funds taken from banks. The Oregon unclaimed 50C Women's Dean Attends Conference , Ashland - Mrs. Mabel W. Winston, dean of women at Southern Oregon college, left this week for the 1960 con vention of the National Asso ciation of Women Deans and Counselor! in Philadelphia. The convention will run through Sunday, April 10, with the theme "Directions: Intellectual, Professional, Personal." Among the guest speakers scheduled for the meeting are Bruce Catton, editor of the "American Heritage," Frank Bowles, president of the Col- 1 e g e Entrance Examination Board, and Douglas M. Knight, president of Lawrence col lege. The program will Include symposiums, panel discussions and group meetings. Tours of Philadelphia and Valley Forge, plus a special concert by the Philadelphia Sym phony orchestra, will also be available for the delegates. White House Group Mapping Ike's Trip Washington HOT W h 1 1 e House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty has left with a group of other U. S. officials on I 26,000-mile jet flight to make, arrangements for Presi dent Elsenhower's visits to Russia and Japan In June, Hagerty announced earlier the party, which will include White House Appointments Secretary Thomas E. Stephens and State Department offi cials, would stop first at Co penhagen, Denmark. . They will arrive in Rusula Wednesday and spend six dHys. The advance group will fly from Moscow over a polar ! , i . " route to Tokyo and touch v,Blll"blM wlllc" . w down at Iceland and Alaska en route home. ', The President Is scheduled to be In the Soviet Union from June 10 to June 19 and arrive In Tokyo on June 19. EDUCATOR DIES White Plains, N.Y. - PB -Msgr. Edwin Ryn, 76, Roman Catholic author and educator whose Latin translation of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address is in the Vatlcun Library, died here Tuesday. as the slate is concerned, the money or whatever it is has been abandoned. Deposit Boxes Opened This also means that safe deposit boxes are opened and the contents emptied after an effort has been made to find the owner. Anything over $50 is advertised in a newspaper in the county where the de positor last lived, A notifica tion by mail also goes to the last address. All unclaimed articles are taken by the board and the money actually is held in trust in case the owner shows up. Some of them do. Meanwhile, the state puts the money' to good use. E. T. Pierce, board clerk, says the funds are invested in mortgages and bonds and the Interest returns help sup port the state's schools. Earn ings on the money so In vested are not refundable to the owner. Forget About It Pierce cites one case where a fellow put $5,000 In a Port land bank and moved away. It's hard to believe, but he forgot all about it. The fel low was In Los Angeles but no one knew It." The money was transferred to the state afler the prescribed time. "Finally, he remembered about the $5,000, put In a claim here and we paid him. Of course, we had the earn ings off the money all those years before he did come around." Pierce says that each week a few clalms-mostly small ones-come dribbling in. The total fund doesn't deplete be cause the stale keeps taking In more money from unclaim ed accounts. Act Covers Checks The act alto covers certi fied cheeks, traveler's checks, Insurance proceeds, utility de posits and corporation divi dends. Under the act, the slate has confiscated watches and oilier tin-1 claimed in deposit boxes. Of this, thai which can be sold at auction is disposed of and the rest is collecting dust in ine ooarrj vault. A penny turned over to the stale went to a rare coin col lector for $31. Pierce said banks at the oulset were perturbed about the law, since It deprives them of investing tho money themselves. "But they have grown accustomed to it by now," he said. mpomitr sames m every department I I fTW?i jW jSs. II Bill I -CITE D A K. Rjtt? BROWN HI-TiNACITY COVER rZ, FULL SEPARATING TALON ZIPPER P, BUILT-IN WEATHER STRIP Er PROTECTIVE TENT FLAP rVtaW WATER REPELLENT 5 WIND RESISTANT T lHl8a3 u u - LOW EASY TERMS His Mwrfy, reiiliset sslaclsud filling li nen-allergic and J j mileew rniilont. 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