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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1960)
o O WEDKESDAY. OCTOBER 12. 1918 Easy TV Slippers MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. r f-y - .w in -turn & -'-j - jff r ts if : Whip up gay TV slippers of corduroy, cotton, velveteen with rickrack 'n' cross-stitch trim, Easy - two pieces plus sole for boot or ballet style. Pat tern 7292; cross-stitch trans fer; pattern pieces small, me dium, large, extra large in eluded. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins) for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Med ford Mail Tribune, Household Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS and PATTERN NUMBER. - JUST OUT! Our 1961 Nee dlecraf t Book. Over 125 de signs for home furnishings, for fashions - knit, crochet, la- iiT 76TH BIRTHDAY Holding a rose, Mrs. Franklin D. Roose velt, widow of the late president, flashes a big smile on her 76th birthday Tuesday at New York City. The photo was taken as Mrs. Roosevelt was attending an Israeli reception for United Nations delegates.'. . (UPI Telephoto) embroider, weave, sew, quilt -toys gifts, bazaar items. FREE-six designs for popular veil caps. Quick-send 25c today. Home building in Australia boomed in 1959 with a record 86,584 new houses and apart ments being completed. ! . of our expense . . . prove how EASY it is to clean and shine aluminum. B iljSTAMTCTlM6 I PrieM, Ettttj RttUrK 1 RlUiniliUl II AlmtoMPoteMlPaM R ni.An II without karo mbwni I m ii biddy, E Rett sm Satiny Lustra if AatmfeMi Pott mi Pats WITHOUT KARO MBWNI There'j never before) been an aluminum cleanser to match the almost magical way ALUMI-GLO'snew sci entific formula cuts right through grimy surface film , . . whisks away deep, stubborn, cooked in stains to make alumi num shine like new. It's safe, gentle on hands, too; Cash Refund on Purchase Price of Ycnrr First Can of A LU M I - G LO Alto Try COPPER GLO Nr CtoMinf Iff 1 Started Staet Here u all you do to get your firet cm FREE. Buy ALUMI-GLO at your jro oar. Remove the prica tag from tba top of the can and mail it, with the coupon be low, to P.O. Box 10027, Jeclceoo, Miaa. with your nam and addreai. Tha full pur cheee prica wilt ba mailad back to you. MAIL THIS COUPON for special rafond effarl Arsenic in Air, Smoke Blamed For Lung Cancer Boston - (Science Service) -Arsenic In both coal smoke and cigarette smoke as a cause of lung cancer gets new emphasis from Dr. Henry S. Satterlee of Newport, N.H., in the current New England Journal of Medicine. Going back to the arsenic poisoning epidemic Of 1900 that affected 6,000 beer drink ers in the. Manchester-Salf ord Liverpool district of England, Dr. Satterlee applies a back ground feature of the investi gation by the Royal Commis sion on Arsenical Poisoning to the flue-curing of tobacco to day. . . A time -' honored British practice, he says, was drying the malted barley - in the fumes of arsenic containing malting - fuels to impart a smoky flavor to English ales. Result of Gasworks Coke i This cause of arsenic poison ing was : further proved in 1902 when another epidemic of arsenic-beer poisoning in Halifax.. Nova. Scotia, was shown to be the result of using gasworks coke as a malting fuel high in arsenic content. Dr.' Satterlee traces con flicting reports that alternate ly place arsenic high and low among recognized causes of cancer. , : : He says there has been a tendency to remove arsenic from serious consideration as a cancer-causing influence in city environments because it appears to be a' negligible component of air pollution. Dr. Satterlee blames faulty methods of sampling for. this attitude, and says special , in vestigation is needed. Point ing out that the arsenic con centration in expired air is nearly three times the toler ance limit, he conjectures on the arsenic content oi tne con fined atmosphere in crowded vehicles, movie theaters and crowded sleeping quarters of low-class dwellings. Many Stars Near Sun Claimed Yet To Be Discovered London - (Science Service) - There are probably many stars "near" the sun still to be discovered, Dr. Olin J. Eggen of the Royal Green wich Observatory, Herstmon ceux Castle, Sussex, predicted here. The undiscovered stars be long to two stellar groups known as Hyades and Sirius, The Hyades group is about 130 light years from the sun, and contains about 350 stars, some 200 more than previous ly believed. (A light year is the distance light, traveling at 186,000 miles a second, covers in a year, or about six mil lion million miles. The closest star to the sun is Alpha Cen tauri, four and a third light years away.) New Members Found Just as the rails of a track seem to converge in the dis tance, so the parallel paths of stars in a stellar group are directed toward a point if the cluster is moving away from the sun. This perspective ef fect is particularly noticeable in the motions of stars of the Hyades cluster. , By analyzing the known motions of all stars, Dr. Eggen found 200 new members of the Hyades group. "There are probably many undiscovered members" of this group and of the Sirius group, near the sun, Dr. Eggen reports in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, publish ed here. Dr. Eggen found that stars of the Sirius group are young er than those of the Hyades Educator Stresses National Goals Salem-(UPD-The principal of Bend High school told the Oregon Association of Sec ondary School Principals here Tuesday that if youngsters are not taught what America stands for, educators will have to answer for it some day. William Edwards said that during three years in Europe working with schools there he formed some doubts as to whether American youth could explain what the U.S. stands for. He said he heard discus sions in Germany between East German Communists and American youngsters and that many times the young Ameri cans were unable to explain U.S. national goals. An unofficial poll conduct ed by the principal of North Salem high school, E. A. Car leton, showed that 82.5 per cent of the principals attend ing the convention favor es tablishment of junior colleges and regional vocational schools. At present there are about 2,300 foreign interns and 6, 000 foreign resident physi cians in United States hospi tals, most of them in this coun try on temporary visas. Production of motor vehi cles in the United States dur ing 1 9 5 9 totaled 7,732,505 units, an increase of 31.3 per cent over 1958. group. Members of the Sirius group In the past were assign ed to the Ursa Major stream, which contains the bright stars of the Big Dipper. Prenatal X-Ray Can Help Blood Problem Babies Atlantic City, N.J.-(Science Service) - Pregnant women whose blood is RH negative were advised to have x-ray examinations during the last two months before confine ment by Dr. Paul A. Bishop of Philadelphia, who spoke here to the American Roent gen Ray society. The child born of an RH negative mother and an RH positive father may have fetal hydrops, a blood condition in severest form. It occurs once in 2,000 deliveries, and with out replacement of blood by transfusion can be fatal. Not Hopeless Condition The condition is no longer a hopeless one. Dr. Bishop said. Modern methods in the care of premature infants and the spectacular results of re placement transfusion tech niques make early diagnosis of fetal hydrops of great practical importance, He il lustrated with a case not sus pected until x-ray diagnosis stimulated prompt action. "Caesarian section followed by immediate and repeated re placement transfusions result ed in a vigorous baby that continues to thrive," Dr. Bishop said. X-ray studies are advisable whenever there is a suspicion of an abnormal amount of fluid in the sac that holds the baby in the mother's uterus. Dr. Bishop said high speed films and intensifying screens are used in an effort to re duce the radiation dose to both mother and child to a safe minimum. Court Records AStM. AM) MUNICIPAL COURT Paul A. Ferguson, violation of basic rule, $20. Vernon N. Reh, disobeyed traf fic siriuttl, $5. Sidney B. DeBoer, violation of basic rule, S20. Marjorie J. Gilliam, violation of basic rule, $15. Jack Chandler, Utcsal parking, Shirley A. Enblom, illegal park ing. $5. Bobby D. Thomas, disobeyed traffic signal. So. John S. Morrill, violation of ba sic rule, $20. Anzel C. Conley, violation of basic rule. $20. Steven R. Bennett, violation of basic rule. $20. Jerry W. Anthous, disobeyed traffic signal, $5. Howard W. Winger, disobeyed stop sign. $5. Jack E. Crawford, violation of basic rule, $15. Vernon E. Wirth, disobeyed stop sign, $9. Leonard R. Silva, disobeyed stop sign. $3. Mary L. Tischhauser, no vehicle license, $3. Brooks Express Service Reduced Salem -(UNI- Public Utility Commissioner Joncl C. Hill today authorized Railway Ex press Agency; Inc., to operate its office at Brooks on a sea sonal basis, and denied a pe tition to close the branch com pletely. The order allows Railway Express to shut down its Brooks office from April 1 through September each year, when commerce is slow. Last month Hill authorized Southern Pacific Co. to put its Brooks office on a seasonal basis and he said it would be "logical" for the express agen cy to operate on a similar schedule. The two are in the same depot and, as in the past, can be represented by one agent, Hill said. Astoria May Appeal Decision of Court Astoria - lUPD - The Astoria city council Tuesday said it may appeal to the Oregon Su preme court from last Friday decision by Circuit Judge Avery Combs that charter amendments sought by some 800 petitioners must be put to the voters in one ballot propo sition, as petitioned. Judge Combs ruled last Fri day against the city govern ment's contention that the two subjects of union recog nition and the city-wide civil service covered by the peti tion are not . germaine and should be two separate propo sitions. A decision on whether to appeal will be made at a meeting Monday night. B 3 PEPPERMINT OIL UP Jefferson, Ore. -IUPII- The price of local peppermint oil has jumped from $4 to $5.50 a pound, growers reported here. Adams Hereford Wins Bull Trophy Portland-OJPmA bull owned by the Double M ranch at Adams won the American Hereford association bull tro phy at the Pacific Interna tional Livestock Exposition Tuesday. M. C. Fleming of Boring entered the grand champion Guernsey bull, and Meadow land dairy took similar hon ors with an Ayrshire bull. Earl Simantel, Cornelius, showed the grand champion hog. The grand champion steer trophy went to Mike Wagen blast, 13, The Dalles 4-H club ber. The award was presented by Gov. Mark Hatfield.. Washington State univer sity won the first annual col lege meat judging contest. Oregon Stale was sixth in the field of seven. ; IwS'S Per Share from M 4 Y ""nary '"come I Jj Payable October 3!, I960, to I holders of Series H-C7 and ! vi T jf Series H-DA Shares of record 1 gf 1 I September 30, I960 I jjr l E l HAMILTON MANAOIMINll I 1 WvLj I CORPORATIOM I 3 I i. RICE, JR., Am. Diilriri Manaoar I I SMa P.O. Box W63, Mtdford, Orjon f SPrino 2-8469 , 11 SEE THE GREATEST SHOW ON WORTH! AlUMI-SiO, f.O. k IOOT, Imtkitm, (aiM. r..lnu la nrie ta from toe of can of I Alumi-CIo. Send ma refund for this amount JNA.K : -: Ajeeua. Crrr. JLotn Stah ! Tour Wur matt ba poatmukad not Uter than mid- I oiabt, Dec. 31, I960. Only one ranind to family- Mining Congress Offers Resolution Las Vegas. Nev. IUPD The more than 10,000 delegates at tending the 1960 convention of the American Mining Con gress here today were sched uled to participate in special discussions and demonstra tions dealing with latest min eral mining and processing technology. Late yesterday delegates to the largest convention this city has ever seen introduced a resolution caning lor greai. er mining depletion allow' ances and reduction of income tax rates. Members argued the tax re duction would assure profits needed to provide the incen tive to keep the domestic min ine industrv on its feet. The resolution also said only home production would assure the country of having adequate suplies of vital min erals on hand in the case of an emereencv. It added present deprecia tion provisions of the tax structures were suffocating economic growth through failure to cope with the prob You gel nearly 12 more front tupgage space In the 1961 Corvair 700 4-Voor Sa!unand there' more room for you, too. LOWER PRICES i!D BE HAPPY IDEAS FROilTHEn IS CHEVY CORVAIR! Want proof that Corvair's thinking about you? How's this: lower prices on nil. sedans and coupes for '61. More space for you and your luggage. Spunkier engines. Greater economy. Wagons. The happy ideas start with lower prices on all sedans and coupes. You get more room for you and yourjug gage (that up-front trunk has almost 12 more space), loo. A spunkier 145-cu.-in. air cooled rear engine. A gas saving new rear axle ratio . . . a longer range 14-gallon fuel tank. And will small won ders never cease! wagons. . The hard-working Lakewood with four doors and room -for up to 68 cubic feet of cargo. The Greenbrier Sports Wagon, that holds peopla galore and up to twice tha cargo you can get in wagons you're used to. And every , model wagon, coupe, and sedan shares in Corvair's . rear engine traction and nimble handling. , Why don't you visit your Chovrolet dealer's soon, for b closer look at what Corvair has to offer for '61. You'll like what you see, we prom ise you.- Thii Corvair Lalieuvod 700 Station If agon handles light as you please, yet does a wagon-sized jab mth your wrgo.'. Now in productionthe Corvair Greenbrier Sports Wagm with up to twict as much room for people and things a ordinary wagons. Shotvn with opliorud'Ol-extra-cost third seatia position.) "' ' ' '.' ' "f ' . , ! ' See Sie new Chevrolet cars, Chevy Corvairs and the new Corvette at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's COURTESY CHEVROLET 9th at Bartlett MEDFORD Phone SP 2-6115 lems of inflation.