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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1962)
They'll Do It Every IN GOFFER HAD THE ONLY AILEVS IN TOWN HE DELIGHTED IN LOOKING DOWN HIS NOSE AT THE CUSTOMERS- j.,li Host A.Cohen, if KN0XVIUEI7.1ENN. Hie Medical Rocky Moun!ai tpoitetf Fever People sometimes ask me about Rocky Mountain spot ted fever This is an often fT5rafJraj sever disease r. which is found most frequently in people who live in certain Aivarei Maine and Vermont and several parts of the world. It is due to a tiny parasite called a Rickettsia. This is transmitted by four types of tick. Obviously, it is unwise in certain valleys for a person to sleep out on the ground. The disease attacks people usually in the summer months when the ticks are active. Fortunately, only 3 in 1,000 ticks in an infected area car ry the Rickettsia. These ticks get the tiny parasite from lo cal animals which serve as a "reservoir for the disease." When a man is infected by a tick bite, the parasites tend, at first, to damage the inner lining of his blood vessels. The usual symptoms are chills, high fever, marked prostration, severe headache, pains in the muscles and joints, and sensitivity of the eyes to light, perhaps with nausea, vomiting, nosebleeds, and cough. Jaundice may ap pear and some dropsy. Typical is a rash which comes from two to six days after the onset of the illness. It appears first on the wrists and ankles and then on the palms of the hands, the soles of the feet, the face and the scalp. There can be gangrene and toughing of certain areas of skin. The brain can be in jured, in which case the pa tient may become either very sleepy, or very restless and wakeful. The fever may last two or three weeks and then the patient will slowly Im prove. There are mild cases and also very severe cases in which the person can lose his life. He may bleed from his bowel or his urinary tract, and he may be very slow in I But just recentw a new, modern pin ?mudrsm ,ol' bov TV EMPORIUM OPENED NEARBV-ANO WUFFER j LONCj TIME NO DOwL; V s JUST COULDN'T BE SWEETER.- HEM-HEM-CMOM IN.' HAVE I jusi LUULUbCiivtticK. f ONE ON ME--JUST FIWN6 fSeSE 'iWM-T . .HrCTHE PL4CE UP"-VOU lTTl SKv Krl r GOTTA SEE (T X I f f tTy$ " J : : jj 1 - i valleys in the ft, Rocky Moun- K V I tains. but LfTL'ij 'Is0 metimes is CiiilA . J found in He maketh tks storm a coin, so that the waves thereof are still. ' St ' I S5J CORNER m i- ! i si t 1 , 10 iito M AVICI MEMBER BY INVITATION ahr (Drier a (lfr olbcnl.uk tjnjntc-iuiliaial trffilidixi c 'LkpcruLdlt Guncrsd l)imlor Time 't' tit'toii f"i-v t iki-wii sit 11 mow soon oolBu &SWAlTJSl Round upt merttu Cfmsiillfct In Metffrtnt Mayo clinic Emertttti Professor of Medicine Mayo clinic (Register and Trtbun Symiira !96J recovering. Persons who have suffered a decided injury to the brain are likely to be left mentally slowed up. A vaccine has been made to protect the ranchers who live in the valleys fhere the tick fever csn appeer. Aureo mycin and chloramphenicol often grettly help the pstient. On the average, one out of four or five people .vho con tracted this fever uw?d to le their lives. Now that the an tibiotics work so well, 19 out of 20 should get well. Severe Csew Aeafa Fortunately, in most girls, acne clears up by itself about the age of 22, but here I have a letter from a woman who says that, at 48, her acne is still raising Cain with her in spite of everything that skin specialists can do. At timeF, she has had to quit her work because of it. I agree with the woman that probably part of her trou ble is that she comes of a fam ily In which the hereditary tendency to acfie is strong. Four of her five brothers and sisters had acne. On two of them, it stopped, as it should have done, in their early twenties, but then one of her brothers got it back at 38, and is no suffering from it. That is unusual. It is interesting that, in the case of this woman, a com plete hysterectomy at the age of 37 immediately caused the acne to disapper, but six years later, it returned in a severe form. One can guess why the acne left at age 37 because then the woman's ovaries were removed, but how arc we to explain why the dis ease fcas- since returned in a severe form? We know that hormones must have a decid ed influence in producmc acne because, so often, it starts with puberty and ends at the age of 20 or 22. We also know that people who are given large doses of male hormone can get sever acne even in their 50 s. What is sad is that, although often we phy?icians know a good deal about a disease, we do not know enough so that we can devise a good treat ment. It would seem that the resistance of the skin to cer- mm m iiMFW J PSALM 107:23 PERL FUNERAL HOME SIXTH AND OAKDALE Spacious Porking lot U t prnmpth rt pond tn tit tlnr or nu Sf. By jimmy Hatb J Former Medford Man I Retires from Service M.'Sgt. C. L. Conaway, Tacoma. Wash., recently re tired after serving more than 20 years of military service. A graduate of Medford High school. Conaway enlisted in the Army Corps in 1930. He was riiseharsen in 1937. but rejoined in 1941. In Septem ber, 1947, he was transferred j c the Air Force. He is related to R. J. Arn-j old. W. H. Arnold, and Miss Blanche Arnold, ail of Med ford. XIX Milwaukee, Wis. -HW- Fans attending Sunday's C ti b s Braves baseball game rooted for their favorites and the end of a ban against bringing beer into County Stadium j ports from the postal inspee with this sign: "Cubs - yes. tor in charge-Braves-no; six packs-yes!" ; tain pus-making germs is re duced, and the leading skin specialist in New York City 'has reported good results from giving each day a smal! do?e of an antibiotic. Some speci alists use grenz rays tsome ;hing like weak x-raysi and some advise scrubbing the face two or three times a day with soap. ; . , Are you bothered with ner- vousness? Dr Alvarez has wrmen a ooomei i numpn over Nervousness," which can help you. To get it, send 25 cents and a stamped, self-sd- dressed envelope with your request to Dr. Walter C. Al varez. Dept. MMT, The Regis ter and Tribune Syndicate, Box 957. Des Moines 4, Iowa, 1-1 i 1 1 SH AVI SENSATION! if II" I 1 I I tf KM II I I hiKXm " ' ' ' ' "' " ' I - ' X VWV. f . 1 La FITS ALL DOUBLE EDGE RAZORS! METAL MAGIC So smooth,,, you won't befieve there's a blade in your razor! World's fines! double edge blade with Ktonj edge. In handy, new slide dispenser. 15 blades, for 79, SCHICK THIN Gives you the feel you want, pius the fabulous Kfom edge. 10 blades for 39t, MEDFOBD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON? Feud in Congress Holding Up Bills For Appropriations Washington - CQi - Until two Congressional octogenar j ians settle a feud. Secret Ser j vicemen will be working for nothing. State Department of- ficials will sit tight because j of insufficient travel money. me small uusmess Adminis tration will not make loans, and a score of agency heads will be searching for ways to operate their agencies and pay employees with little or no cash in the kitty. The feud, between the chairmen of the Senate and House Appropriations Com mittees. Sen. Carl Hayden CD Am., 84, and Rep. Clarence Cannon (D-Mo.), S3, has held up final passage of appropri a;ion bills bills providing fund enabling Government departments to operate) for fiscal 1963, beginning July I, and of a supplemental appro priation bill providing funds needed now by some 28 gov ! ernment agencies to meet ex i penses before the conclusion .of the current fiscal year June 30. The Feud For 180 years, the House, by tradition, has initiated alt appropriation bills. However, Senate - House conferences, held to iron out differences in appropriation bills passed by the two houses, have tra ditionally taken place on the Second Class Rale Awarded Post Office Fort Jones, Calif., post of fice is scheduled to be ad vanced to a second class rat ing effective today, according to information from the re gional office of the Post Office department in San Francisco. The change in the rating is based on receipt information furnished by the finance di vision of the region ?nd on re- 'f&sriian Gen-fes Se For Doutms Fesir Roseburg A "Martian Gar den' is planned as a focal S point of the Douglas county fair Aug. 15 through 19 in Roseburg. according to Bert Allenby, fair manager. The gardens will be com plete with smoking volcanoes, lava flows, and displays of Douglas county garden clubs. Fourtccn cJ;tbs will present displays on the "Gardens of Tomorrow" theme .competing for premium awards, Allenby ssl$ Gibraltar, the smallest Crown Colony in the British Commonwealth, has its own i government, its own stamps, and police force. 111?'" "t I'-iriiMMi nr - J2 HJJ lr;.. :hk tJ ;9h : i nil I ' IjV j V nl NG- . : x JM : ? ' .U I. t I -3 1 t - v v fit va. I , 1 Va til T1...I. I. ., l 1,1 II. 1 .f .lt.lI..IMl(- Mlln'nll.l'lll . .,l.l,l.ll-.H..llll Mil I ....Mil I l.-,JI-t.,l' .. IM ..JKH. .1 Senate side of the I ;trim! j at naif the conferral,' m with a Senator presiding. The j '.. The Senate in rcsfHmsr current feud arose in April it-nce asain catted for the tight when the House Approprta- j to initiate half of all apnrnprt tions Committee passed a res- atton bills Seven representa- olution calling for a rotation between the House and Senate sides of the Capitol as sites for conferences. The Senate countered by proposing that. in the future, half of alt ap propriation bills be initiate by the Senate. As a result of the dispute. the House and Senate confer ees met only once, April 10, to discuss the hill providing funds for the Treasury and Post Offiee for fiscal IftfW The two sides did not meet at all on the Second Supple mental bill for fiscal 1962 providing funds needed be fore June 30 by a variety of Government agencies. tme of which are nearly out of man- m i any way. ey. j The curtain wtH rise at 7:30 To meet the e.fierencv ' i m- Friday in the outdmtr needs of these aeeneies. the Carnival theater, sn amphi House on June 14 passed a heater m evergreens, ad- resohition provides $133 mil- Ijon a 3 stop-gap measure until the two steles could agree on the supplemental bill. The and "5 cents for students. Senate Committee, however. They may be purchased he unanimously opposed the fore the performance at the House resolution n- "made- quale" and urged the House day through Friday after eenfcreeg to meet whh them ; noons at the bos office. No on the bill Itself in the Om Supreme Court Chamber -a room located approximate!. half-way between the two sides of the Capitol. The Chamber room location satisfied the House dem,d for a "rotation of conference sites, but Chairman Cmrmn brought forward a new House demand: that, from now en. a House member he chairman WHY DEAL u,im.wmnwwMmnimm,,ui.mmw iwi.mn jnwnyimuwu. u,,.,. M,J.1.ii,TIii. t,iln.l,iB..:.Wiii 1 1,1' ; . i'W v,j'y il f , m R?rf r, n r?nT nr rn 5 tarn mxTfiT-F& V.,;- f-n.iK Mirier M.m, Iki knws yfjij jsu t.f , h.i- the l-intvt m limn.,, i;t M hiitt M.ir. tirt1-, ?hf firr-t !irc! line rntmsh '' ibr t non Oil ajinc THR I IM.ST TKRMS: 1 m. rflr H Lif t Mm. TIH. I IM.ST SI HVICI.: WS.a-. a t m.nOil cu-t.!i.t;t, k4 Mmi' M.m rr metve o ; tives trom each side met tm j June 18. but they were unable to settle their differences. I Theater Presents ; 'Charley's Aunt' Eugene -"Charleys AtmC the next Carnival theater pr&- ; duct ton at the University of Oregon, wtH begin Friday, Jttly 6. Written In the Wth cen tury, this play is the original situation comedy. Over the . m t n vKru -Stlcem lo im? university tnea- ttF- Tickets are Sl-50 &r adults door of the theater, or Mon- seats are reserved. Charley's Aunt will play July 7. VX 12. 17 and 23. Club Intime. another Car- nival theater summer under taking, wilt move from the rh Memorial union to the outdoor theater Wednesday, ? July 4 and will be held at the outdoor site each Wednesday evening throughout the sum - mer. WITH A STRANGER... WHEN IV ; jur t nlm Ch 10c company i'Ult. UNi0N Cumnm UM reporters tie- iniHftanee ivf the rliii-rm-hip was that the Senator p-r. sidms was often m a pe-MU't to dertee what "the rmpr- imse w ill be and that pnt 'i , at a great disadvantage '' Not- mg that the Senate frequent- ly inereayed the House ! : amounts, he sid "if we could ; : preside at conferences half ot '' the time maybe we could cut I out half of these increases. f Cannon pointed to the dif I foresees m the current suppie- mental bill; the Senate voted j S36o million the House 5447 ; million. In the three other Money bills awaiting eonfer ; enee. the Senate amounts ; have been higher; Treasury : and Post Office (Senate. S.V : 526,558.000; Il-st S;.4tit - 671,00; intermr Appropria tions (Senate. 52,5,82; House, S8tR.595.tMHH; and De fense Appropriat son (Senate $4a,423.22!imn, House 54?.-S3S.-t9l.000t. The Effects The p i et f esq ue si gh t o f two octogenarians iocked in legislative combat has not amused many of the Govern ment officials fared with the prospect of operating thecr agencies Without frds. Thr Chief of the Secret Serv:re on June IB sent out a memo to some 70S Secret Service- j men requesting them to voUm Mcer their services from June j t7 until ?ueh ".ime as Con gress appropriated the fmls needed Ut pay Ihem. It is il legal hr a federr! emphnee to work for nothing unless he ha specifically vr Interred to do so. The Small Business 1 Administration susoended its lending operations on March OIL COIWPANY OF CALIFORNIA MOKDAY, JlftY 3. a in order to maintain smf f i- f ed. The Hou&e has passed tfte Hem money m a revolving ; bill providing fimds for Coa fund tn meet emergency re- gressmeft for fiscal 1963 fetf quirtntem The State H t ste has imf y aefed partment needs travel funds in finable foreign- servtee of- f aers to travel to or from i their assigned posts. ! Congressmen f h e m s elves niay face pay-day difficulties f the feud is not soon sets! - iUROPE - LUXURY TRAVEL - Perlland-LeRdpn by JET AIRLIKE ;sr S7is WHLE IN EUROPE USE A EURAIL PASS . . . it Offers Ya Urtfimifed Rf Ctara Bail Travel in 13 Countries 1 ierJh , , . , S11B 2 iecfes , , . , SI50 3 rteis ,,.,$188 Aik Abauf Our New "Tkkt; by Moii" Ssrvic SEE GEORGE iEWiS Rogue Travel Service lit E. Sfh S. YOU NEED A estr aifcttthon exfr fi jlnft-ttp tervke at iH I num ihl stsrinns thnnrhmit the Hest. Rrmcm!r; tthtft ywt iktve en stnf Misttte Mn fire vmi enjw the extra ct.inliikme tl tf---wecfe service throui;h(ff the Wot.. Yost' lifio't hive tn wast far a sttire tn ojea ott Mt. tiiy tl yti jint serk e on the weekend. Stop in at the Stga ot the 7& md see the first titet lint ettttugh tt ssar the Union Cfii um& A 5 son the bill As Congressman Cstnmm pointed st with respect ts the feud, "One thing about kL e re savung msaey. ; Csp?nght I3S2, Cssgresss 'tl Quarter!?! Isc4 ECCKCIY RATES MEOFORD 772-6779 MEW TIRE? ISfcl