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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1961)
14 B . SUNDAY. JANUARY 22, 196J MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. They'll Do It Every Time -. By Jimmy Hatlo WoO'RB TO GET YOUR PERMANENT PORCELAIN JACKETS NEXT WEEK MEANTIMETHE TEMPORARY ONES-' ZkEEP FALLINY. tLL BrTrt oUESTION Of (CTffiS OPP.'.' THIS IS I I RIGHT A J TIME-LET'S TRV A J THE THIRD TIME t WITH, Y JfA I IT AGAIN -THERE-ll All I )sXr S IVBHADTO V YOUy Vte-jW I 2 THINK IT ) UH ( KL . HAVE 'EM I --u- j&JJ MOVED A rYZA A CEMENTED V V LITTLE... vT UAGM. S Now THE PERMANENTS ARE READY TO GO ON-IT TAKES DYNAMITE TO GET THE TEMPS OFF-" The Family Council Krtltnr's Nati: Th K-nmllv r!nnnpll rntiKlsf of a Judge, a psychia trist, IhrcB clergymen, three editors and a women's editor. Kach article 'Is a summary ol an actual cafe history. The council reports on prob lems that have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. (Uopyngnt 1UHI ueneral f eatures uorp.j Mr. J. R. - We have two phones at home and the line's always busy on both, with my wife and daughter always talking. Sylvia R.-A talk with my girl friend clears up all my problems. , Mr. J. R.-I thought my wife wife held the record for non stop yak races, but I think she's met her match in Sylvia, our 15-year-old daughter. In order to free our telephone line for others besides Sylvia's Just Two Patches Wonder of the World, a fa vorite quilt of pioneer days. It will be an heirloom some day. This quilt is made of only two patches, two materials. It Is so easy to make! Pattern 7392: charts; directions; patch patterns; yardages. Send Thirty-five cents (In coins) for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for first class mailing. Send to Med lord Mall Tribune, Household Arts Dept., P.O. Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM BER. JUST OUTI Our 1901 Nee dlecraft Book. Over 125 de signs for home furnishings, for fashions - knit, crochet, embroider, weave, sew, quilt- tovs. gifts, bazaar items. FREE - six designs for popu lar veil caps. Quick - send 25 cents TODAY. friends, we got her a private phone and a separate number. Even so, I can't get through to the house during the after noon and evening, and I'd like to know if this is a normal situation. I'm not going to try to change my wife, but with Syl via there's still some hope. There must be a way to show her it's more imporlanl to read and think and work than to spend hours just talking. And what nonsense! I don't think they even listen to each other. They just yammer. What gels me is Sylvia never has time to talk to me. Either she's on the phone, just off the phone and behind with her homework, or about to use the phone! Sylvia R.-Whcn I talk with my friends I feel wonderful. It's especially relaxing on the telephone, because I , have their full attention and we can really get down to the bottom of tilings'. These phone, tests mean everything to me. I love my father but I could never talk to him the way I can to my friends. He's impatient. He says, "Get to the point." He'd call my ideas nonsense. But my friends don't care whether I make sense or not. We just pour out our Inner thoughts, and no one ridicules us or rushes us. Aflcr I bare my soul to my girl friend over the phone, everything in my life seems to fit into place. Otherwise, I worry about my marks and my social life and my parents approval. Be tween Gwon and myself, we gel things in order and then I can buckle down to reality better. The Council! The need to communicate is universal, nor mal and basic in human be- ings, we hasten to assure Mr. R. Finding channels of com munication is essential to men tal health. Even a hermit like Thoreau "communed" with nature. And conversely, being unable to communicate has been found to lead to mental illness. Thus we see all the talk," mentioned above, as a valuable, health-giving out let. What we must consider for Mr. R. and for Sylvia is the limits of talk. When does it cease to be helpful and be come nervous babble? How imporlanl is it to talk to the "right person? Up In a point, talk is mcdl cine. If It is poured into r sympathetic, non -judging (even non listening, some times!) car, it is a .salubrious unburdening, a healthful ca tharsis. "Belter out than in" is usually true of troubles, Joys, problems and news as well as adenoids! But there comes the point Christmas Package Is Claimed at Post Office The Christmas package which had been returned to tlie Mcdford post office from New Haven, Conn., was claimed Wednesday by. Mrs. Alicia Carter, according to post office officials. It was reported that the la bel on the package had be come detached and the pack age was returned to Medford, which' appeared on the post age meter tape. The package, which contained several indi vidual gifts, was claimed after an article in Tuesday's Mail Tribune listed the notes which were 'attached to the individ ual packages. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF SAM HIMMELL, paper magnate, unearthed this astonish ing document, published by a big carriage manufacturer tn New York in the year 1872: It read in part: ATTENTION! No. 1. Office employees each day will fill lamps, clean chimneys, and trim Wicks'. No. 2. Each clerk will til ing in a bucket of wa ter and a scuttle of coal lor the day's business. No. 3. Any employee Vho smokes Spanish ci gars, uses liquor in any iorm, frequents pool or public halls, or gets ehaved In a barber shop will give good reason to uspect his worth, intentions, integrity, and honesty. No. 4. The employee who has performed his labors faith fully and without fault for five years will be given an in crease of five cents per day in his pay, provided profits from (he business permit. . a UU. by Benrtttt Off. Distributer) by Klnf natures Syndicate of diminishing returns, where talk is but a prolonged eva sion, a substitute for any posi tive action. Then it is not communication, but static. Sylvia must learn to know the dividing line. Too much talk, as an indulgence, can be as paralyzing as too much whiskey. As Sylvia points out, whom one talks to makes all the difference in what one says, how detailed the saying and how one feels afterward. A trusted friend is fine for just getting things off one's chest. Even better is someone who won't take sides, someone ob jective like a guidance coun selor or youth worker. Actually the National Asso ciation tor Mental Health looks forward to the day when "lalk-it-over" clinics will dot the land, out-patient centers which will be open 24 hours a day where people with burn ing problems can spill them into the ears of wise, impar tial, expert advisors. . Meanwhile, Mr. R. might try doing what Sylvia-and Marc Antony - ask of their friends: lend an ear! Easy-Sew M-14-1A I Rudy Tetreault Receives MSC's Distinguished Citizen Plaque Rudy Tetreault, 1981 presi-i dent of the Medford Safety council, received the council's distinguished citizen in Safe ty plaque at a banquet at the Rogue Valley country club Friday night, attended by an estimated 135 persons. Presentation of the plaque was made by Ralph Matthews, outgoing president of the coun cil. Matthews said Tetreault was awarded the plaque for being the man most active in the council, and being the most active in the community in the promotion of safety. . The award was but one of nearly a dozen awarded to outstanding individuals and industries who have done the most to promote safely in Jackson county during the past year. Edward M. Syring, manager' of the Oregon drivers license division of the state depart ment of motor vehicles, was the guest speaker at the ban quet. Syring cited a number of statistics to indicate the value of the state's driver im provement program. He said the program, which sometimes results in driver's license suspensions, is not meant to be arbitrary, but is meant to try and change the driving habits and attitudes of drivers who need these habits and attitudes changed. Syring called for public sup port of the program. Two Saved-A-Life Awards were awarded at the banquet. One of them was given to Bjarne A. Bjornsen, 23, of 21 South Columbus ave., for pre venting a possible multiple fatality accident; and the oth- Myers Elected Head Of Allied Council Charles J. Meyers of the Medford Barracks 540, Veter ans of World War I, was elect ed president of the Veterans Allied Council of Jackson county at a recent meeting. Other 1961 officers include Vaughan Beer, Jacksonville Post 100, American Legion, vice president; Pal Graham, Jackson County Cnaptcr 8, Disabled American Veterans, secretary; and Edward Smith, VFW 1833, Medford, treas urer. ' During the meeting, the council favored the procure ment of hospitalization facil ities for veterans at the White City domiciliary. Thus, in case of emergency, the individual would not have to travel to Portland, Vancouver, or to hospitals in California. er was presented to Miss Naomi Jean Walker, 17, of route 1, box 24, Gold Hill, for saving an 11-year-old boy from drowning in an irrigation ditch. Bjornsen's feat was per formed on Oct. 2, during a rescue operation at a fatal plane crash site on Dutch man's peak. Bjornsen spotted a large boulder rolling to wards a truck containing two men. In an instant he picked up another rock and threw it at the larger. one, thereby de flecting its path, and saving the lives of the men in the truck. Miss Walker saved the life of 11-year-old James .Martin of Gold Hill several months ago, when she pulled the boy from an irrigation ditch into which he had fallen. The boy had been carried 150 feet down the ditch from where he fell in before he was res cued. Miss Walker revived the boy through artificial respira tion. , . Officer Milton Hanson of the Medford Police depart ment and Sgt. Faye Holly of the Oregon state police office, Medford, both received recog nition awards for unsuccessful attempts to save lives. - Both men had tried to save victims of heart attacks by using the relatively new meth ods of mouth to mouth resusci tation and chqst heart mas sage. The Medford Safety Council Hull award, awarded to the industry which has had the best safety record during the past year, went to the Ideal Cement company of Gold Hill. The Hull award is named after the late Frank Hull, one of the organizers of the safety council 16 years ago. Berry Bigliam, who made the presen tation to Ideal Cement com pany, noted that the California Oregon Power company came close to winning it. Copco did win one of the council's four industrial awards. The others were pre sented to the city of Ashland, the Ashland branch of the California - Pacific Utilities company, and the Ideal Ce ment company. New officers of the coun cil were introduced at the ban-, quet. They are, besides Tc trault, Buford Johnson, vice president, Joe Jarvis, secre tary, Paul Betliol, treasurer, and Berry Bigham and Greg Orr, members of the board of directors. More than 500 newspapers print all or part of the daily stock transactions of the New York Stock Exchange. t-18-20 " ' 9163 Iry UTtVi.tvn'nik So "practical for kitchen duly! Tunic-top apron is Easy Sew - no waist seams. Sec diagram! Choose gay, thrifty cotton with contrast bias binding. 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