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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1961)
2 C THURSDAY. APRIL 20. 19ol MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON V. 1 1 1 ft' r"rr i 1 V 4 ' V ' , t ' i W, ' . MM' 0 . '':Ji The Family Council Editor'! Not I Thi ramllv Council eanilit of a Indre. a nivchlft- vjfct, three clergymen, three editori and a women's editor. Each article Is a luminary of an actual case history. The Council reports on prob lem uiai nave oecn aeait wiw oy responiioie afeneies ana counselors. ioi uenerai reamres vorp.j . 1 :v i I 4 i ! WINS PRIMARY ELECTION A happy James Mitchell hower administration. In the November election he will waves to well-wishers at his headquarters in Newark, N.J.,' face Superior Court Judge Richard J. Hughes, who won after he won the New Jersey GOP gubernatorial primary the Democratic nomination overwhelmingly. election. Mitchell was Secretary of Labor In the Elsen- "... .-, , (UPI Telephoto) Dusincssmcn Advised To Pay Attention To Old Age Market Br HENRY J. BECHTOLD ; Ufl TIMBCIU Editor New York - fflFB - Junior executives who are 25 today should plan on living beyond 100. So stated Dr. Clem e nt Martin, In giving the fol lowing advice to bill lness m e n : Pay more atten tion to the old age market. It haa a be- ' iHtMi nlJ growth. The medical director of the Continental Casualty Co. of Chicago pointed out that there currently is popula tion boom in aged persons that parallel! the baby boom. More than 1,000 Americans are passing the 08 mark dally, and a conservative estimate is that there will be more than CO million over-68era by 1070 j possibly 10 to 12 per cent I the population", v V. hat's more. Or. Martin M this segment of the popu lation cannot help but increase its percentage of the total, thanks to medical break throughs in the offing. ' : Cures Expected ' Of the three major causes lit death among people past middle age - hardening of the urterles, cancer, and strokes - ;'.":r-E:jy 7262 wessiS cures to the first two are ex pected by medical, science in the not too distant future, he said. .'.'". ' V And, he added, if more peo ple take better care of them selves in terms of good diet and regular exercise, harden ing of the arteries and strokes will occur less frequently no matter what medical science accomplishes, i Gettina back to the busi nessman and the old age mar ket. Dr. ' Martin cited the many goods and services the older people will want more of. , : These Include investment advice, travel services, books, hobby materials, educational opportunities and materials and the like to enable oldsters to realize ambitions they put off during their years on the treadmill. v The 'older people also want more of the special forms of clothing that are easier to get on and off and more Informal portswear. Health foods will be important as will special exercise equipment. Back To CUies : Special convenience features will be required in homes, and older people will continue to return from the suburbs to the cities.'' Dr. Martin also suggested that the auto industry could come up with special features for this group because "there's no reason an alert older man or woman can not continue to drive,- subject 1 to regular physical examinations." Asian example he cited hand controls, rather than foot, which he said would be a boon because hand reactions are better. Power features also will be important, he added. ; Insurance Offered The insurance Industry's re action to this growing seg ment of our population is to offer more new and different forms of Insurance to older people. , Dr. Martin feels that the private insurance Industry can meet the needs of old age hos pitalization insurance because the overwhelming majority of oldsters can easily meet neces sary premiums. ' Continental s surveys show that older people want to be self-reliant, "can pay normal doctor bills, but need and want ways to save them the costs of prolonged hospital stays which eat' into life savings. v - California-Pacific Seeks Bond Sale OK Salem-WPD-California - Pa cific Utilities Co., San Fran cisco, has made application with the Oregon Public Util ity commissioner for author ity to sell $2 million in series I, 5 per cent first mortgage bonds. ; V . ' v California-Pacific said pro ceeds' from the sale are need ed to pay short term bank notes issued for construction and to finance part of a $3.6 million construction program to get underway this year. California-Pacific owns and operates electric, gas and tele phone service facilities in Oregon, Nevada, Idaho, Wyo ming, Utah and Arizona. Discussed Red China London-flJPl) - Prime Minis ter Harold Macmillan said Tuesday he discussed with President Kennedy the ques tion of Communist China's ad mission to the United Nations. But, he told the House of Commons: "It Is not an urgent question there is a little time before It is necessary to face the next stage of this problem at the autumn meeting of the 'United Nations.": Mrs. T. A. We're concern ed over the flighty kids she pals around with. Hazel A. My parents shouldn't criticize and con demn my friends. . Mrs. T. A I though we'd helped Hazel develop enough taste and discernment to choose her friends carefully. Surely she knows that she will be Judged by the com pany she keeps. But her best friend moved away a few months ago, and then she quarreled with an other close ' pal, a sidekick from kindergarten days. So when a girl in her official class at school invited her home one afternoon, she ac cepted. After she'd been staying so close to Sandra for . several weeks, I asked her to turn the tables and bring Sandra to our home. She hemmed and hawed, but a few weeks later she turned up with San dra plus three boys with the rooster hairdos who were Sandra's entourage. . . 1 This girl is supposed to be Hazel's age, IS, but looks like 25 and acts like a "femme fatale." Being with her isn't going to help Mazers marks. Sandra's favorite subject Perfume Behind Ear Called 'Wasteful' Chlcago-IUPD-It's a waste of good perfume to dab it be hind the ears, advises beauty expert Jeanne Bryant. Researching the subject for a soap manufacturer, she came up with these tips for more effective use of perfume: Apply . it at the pulse spots-temples, inside of wrists, base of throat where body warmth keeps fragrance alive, Use enough perfume for it to be noticeable; otherwise, it's a waste. The best time to apply perfume is right after the bath. Don't mix cologne with perfume unless it's the same scent. . . ' ' Don't stroke perfume into fur or rub on clothes. It may stain and fabrics often change the aroma.- Then, too, you may want to use a different scent the second time around. Don't hoard perfume. An opened bottle gradually loses strength. So, If you vary your perfumes, buy them in small flacons so they'll be used be fore they dry up. , seems to be boys. . Hazel A. My mother jumps to conclusions about any friends I have who aren't bookworms, sne tnmKs San dra is a bad influence on me because she dances ' well, knows how to curl her eye lashes (and mine), and can talk about Greenwich Village instead of the Franco-Prussian War. But she's a wonderful friend for me. She opens my eyes to new tricks and she's. no dope, either. She writes poems, and she helps me with French. I can help her squeeze through math and social studies. I can't "take" to a girl simply because my mother likes her. That's why I quar reled with my former chum, My mother kept pushing us together, inviting her for din. ner, buying concert tickets for us, even though the girl was an awful square and bored me. Sandra is a live wire and that's for me. My mother doesn t have to like her. 1 don't like her friends par ticularly, either. - -;.v. . p m y The Councilt Of course peo ple "pick" their own friends, but parents are around to check on whether a teen-ager picks wisely - and - for what reasons the right one or the wrong. v Here's where a good rela tionship between Mrs. A. and Hazel will pay off, or a poor one becomes glaring. To im prove matters we recommend .6009 raw that Mrs. A. stop finding fault with Sandra, because this is guaranteed to make Hazel ' rush blindly to her friend's defense. She'll be too busy fighting her mother to scrutinize Sandra and see the faults, as well as the attrac tions, for herself. , If 'Mrs. A. can dismiss her sense of panic, and rely upon the 15 years of "steering" of fered to Hazel, she can con fine her comments about Hazel's friends to matters of the moment. No dire predic tions, no threats, no ultima tums. This might' slow Hazel up and give her a chance to see the association with San dra in all its Implications. . Chances are, Hazel rushed to accept Sandra's bid, the way a ship docks at any port in a . storm. Bereft of two former bosom pals, she want ed to "show 'em" how easily they could be replaced. A nod from sophisticated Sandra may have gone to her head. And the breezy talk was novel and exciting. But given a pe riod of no conflict from Mom, hindsight and calm judgment may make Hazel see things her mother wants her to see. l7.!li'li7iTT) 5 PQUHOS 1 J Ymi rnn't knt rt kaU .X Uj. C...L-I. C W M c I I. c ; i i i i.i . 1 w'r'iBiftBi juyur n grown ana proaucea ngni nere in trie I West... by Westerners - 33: S 'lit i3H!i) -ggs; 13 .TUsB sBltE13 ;3 mi uTEHgt iG635' C&I Receives Daily I (sals While in Jar Dallas, Tex.- (tin -Kitty is outgrowing his three-gallon glass Jar, but he's still getting his bits of- liver without in terruption. . When Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Stubenvoll adopted Kitty a year ago, the cat watched Mrs. Stubenvoll - feed slivers of liver to tropical fish In their various jars and tanks each day. Kitty learned to pick an empty Jar, pop into it about mealtime and wait for some liver to come his way. Now. Kitty has grown Into cat, and has just about grown out of his three-gallon jar. He slips in frontways, squirms around inside until he's no longer bottoms-up, then sticks his head and fore paws out to receive the daily tidbits. U3 Full-Blown Rose it should ; be called Beginner's Choice, it's that easy to crochet. ' Do these medallions In white or in 2 shades of a color most effectlvel As you can see, they'll work up quickly. Pattern 7262: crochet . di rections. ; Send Thirty-live cents (coins) for this pattern add lst-class mailing. Bend to Alice Brooks, care of Mcdford Mell Tribune, Needlecraft Dept., P. O. Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM BER. ' JUST OUT! Our 1961 Needlecraft Book. Over 125 designs for home furnishings, for fashions knit, crochet, embroider, weave, sew, quilt toys, gifts, bazaar , items. FREE six designs for popu lar veil caps. Quick tend S5e TODAY,1 1 BRIDE WANTED ' , Chicago -IU7D- Lincoln Park Zoo resumed its search today for a suitable young mate for Mike, a 5-year-old bachelor polar bear. Zoo Director Mer lin Perkins rejected a $1,250 candidate Tues day because she was "all baggy. Her teeth weren't good and she even had a dewlap - a .sort of ver tical double chin." : i "We want a bride for Mike, not a grandmother," Perkins said. SPECIALS I I THURS. - FRI. - SAT, FRESH RED-RIPE LYNN'S PERSONAL SERVICE MEATS WEEK-END SPECIALS ON TOP GRADE MEATS TUMI PEAS FRESH GREEN BSKT. ARMOUR CAMPFIRE SLICED BACON MORRELL IOWA SHANK HALF PORK HAM Spare Ribs ib. 49 Try Some Bar-B-Q'd ' or Bake Sweet 'n' Sour Pure Fresh Nothing Added ALL GOOD BEEF GROUND BEEF C lb. '017 pkg. I PLUS SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS 5 w JfS Ib DUNCAN HINES CHASE & SANBORN 1 CAKE MIX COFFEE 2 - 39 58 With Coupon on Page 30 With Coupon an Page 30 FRESH!!! SANKA LOCAL EGOS INSTANT 2 doi,09 i 6 Korner Farms , t M Jar Large and Extra Large ' sW s ' NESTLES' COUNTRY KITCHEN CHOCOLATE evpilP CHIPS MKUr 3 pkg. 1 37 2 standby DELRICH CATSUP MARGARINE 18 . 4 .b, 89 GERBER ":? ' BABY FOOD OPEN DAILY STRAINED 8 a.m. Till 9 p.m. 10f.r99c SUNDAY JUNIOR .... - . .A 10 a.m. Till 7 p.m. 4 for 49c SPUDS ORANGES 29 GRAPEFRUIT 4 29 ONIONS 3 29 ARTICHOKES 3 29 Green Beans29 SWEET JUICE TEXAS SWEET PINK NEW CROP JUMBO GLOBE New Crop Tender i t C SWEET, RED RIPE WATERMELON ICE COLD 608 East Main lsQ0D i i