MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
MONDAY. MARCH 11. 1963
A
In the Day's News
By FRANK
Oregon LEADS THE WAY
AGAIN as this dispatch
from Salem indicates:
In a rare JOINT appeal,
labor and management last
week urged the stale of Ore
gon to prepare to meet the
growing impact of automa
tion. They called for approv
al of a resolution to create
an interim committee to map
out ways and means to meet
the problems of technological
unemployment. The resolu
tion would create a commit
tee of legislators and repre
sentatives of labor and indus
try to make an overall study
of employment problems and
potential, and to suggest pro
grams and recommend ways
to finance them.
TVAN CONGLETON of Asso-
ciated Oregon Industries
and George Brown of the
, AFL-CIO both told the sen
' ate committee on state and
federal affairs it is time to
start NOW.
Congleton said:
"We must face the fact that
automation is becoming seri
; ous. Let's get a head start
on the problem we know we
are going to have to face."
Brown agreed.. :
l. "The longer wo wait," he
l said, "the more difficult it
will be." He added: "The un
ions are not against automa
tion and technological ad
vances. What we are. saying
is that, if necessary, we'll
, have to find an answer to the
: displacement of these peo
ple." IT has long been conceded by
sound economic thinkers
that the power of the people
to consume is limited only by
their power to PURCHASE.
There are two ways to provide
the power to purchase:
1. Higher wages. '
2. Lower prices.
fPHE higher wage solution
tion when unaccompa
nied by greater productivity
, defeats itself. It increases
' prices as fast as it increases
' incomes. So nothing is gained.
What we need is greater pro
. ductivity,' resulting in MUCH
LOWER PRICES.
If Oregon can find the an
swer to that,' it will have
done something fantastically
valuable to humanity. Auto
mation, if unaccompanied by
HIGHER PRODUCTION
COSTS, including higher tax
es, could make it possible to
bring prices down to the point
where people's ability and
Course in Religion
Set at St. Mark's
A 12-week course in relig
ious instruction for adults
'will start at St. Mark's Epis
copal church, Medford, Thurs
day, March 14, at 8 p.m. in
the parish hall.
The Rev. George R. V.
Bolster, rector and the Rev.
David V. A. Browne, assist
ant, will conduct the classes
which are open to the public.
The classes will not involve a
commitment for further asso
ciation with the church.
. Subjects to be covered in
ciude church history, doc
trine, worship and practice,
the Christian sacraments,
holy Bible, Book of Common
Prayer, church organization,
meaning and purpose of con
firmation and a class on per
sonal religion. The classes
will be informal and will al
low for questions and discus
sion. For those who desire, the
classes may lead to a com
municant membership in the
church.
CORNER
1 1 Vll' II' 1 Jit 1
MEMBER BY
ii1"' i
I8 1 1,111
Ml!
irr" i?
tol SERVICE
J NOT Y '
&7 coin
JENKINS
desire to CONSUME MORE
could so fantastically increase
consumption as to provide
jobs for everybody.
OOMEHOW-
J This problem of producing
more tilings at lower prices,
so that people can have more
things for less money, must
be solved if automation is to
bring to us the immense bene
fits it is capable of bringing
to us.
Who will solve it?
WHY NOT OREGON?
OREGON has been a pioneer
v' in new ideas.
Oregon was the inventor of
POPULAR LEGISLATION
the initiative, the referendum
and the recall. Most states
have modeled their initiative
and referendum laws on what
has come to be known as the
OREGON PLAN, which the
state of Oregon adopted in
1899 and extended in 1908.
Oregon invented the gaso
line tax, which made it possi
ble to finance vast new high
way systems without going
bankrupt.
CO-
Who is better equipped
than Oregon to find the solu
tion of this modern problem
of adapting automation to the
job of producing fantastically
more things at fantastically
lower prices so that people
can have fantastically more
things for less money?
ft . St
4h J r
STAR DIES- Jack Anglin, of
the Grand Ole Opry team of
Johnny and Jack, was killed
in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday
afternoon when his car left
the road and smashed into a
tree. Anglin was the fourth
Opry star, and fifth country
music personality, to die in
the 48-hour peoriod. Palsy
Cline, Hawkshaw Hawkins,
Cowboy Copas and Miss
Cline's manager, Randy
Hughes, were killed in a plane
crash near Camden, Tenn.,
Tuesday. (UPI)
Pope, Khrushchev
Exchange Messages
Moscow - IUPII - Pope John
XXIII and Premier Nikila
Khrushchev exchanged mes
sages of good will over the
award of the Balzan Peace
Prize to the Roman Catholic
Pontiff, the official Tass News
Agency reported Saturday
night.
Tass said Khrushchev,
whose son - in . law Alexei
Adzhubei met the Pope last
week in a prcccdente shatter
ing private audience, congrat
ulated the Pope on the award.
' Portland (UPH Mayor Ter
ry Schrunk observed his 50th
birthday Friday with a coffee
and cake party in city hall.
4
.'
Thouart my hiding place
and my shield:
I hope in Thy word.
PS ALU 119:114
-
PERL
FUIiERAL HOME'
SIXTH AND OAKDAlE
Spacious Parking Lot JJ2
We promptly re
pond to nil calls,
duy or night.
INVITATION
r ' t
h&ii v?i - lit
DOBIE GILLIS WEDS-Dwayne Hickman, television's Dobie
Gillis, and his bride, Carol Chrislensen, an actress and former
Miss Rheingold, are shown here Thursday after their marriage
at the Hollywood Immaculate Heart church. It was the first
marriage for the 28-year-old video star and Miss Christensen,
25. (UPI) ,
Strictly Personal
By Sydney
(c) Field Enterprle, Inc.
SECRECY
A man 1 used to know some
years ago, died in New York
recently, and when I asked
a mutual
friend (who
happens to be
a doctor) the
cause of death
h e answered
"Seer ecy."
This was a
most provoca
tive "reply,
and I pressed
: Marrl"
down the
him to let
medical barriers
and explain what he s a i d. It
was really quite simple-and,
so the doctor added, fairly
common.
The man had had two ail
ments, one affecting the heart
and the other the blood. He
went to separate doctors for
treatment -and did not tell
either doctor about the other
ailment, because he did not
want to be severely restricted
in his diet, his work, or his
social life.
As a result, the regimen
prescribed for one of the
ailments adversely affected
the other,, and he was car-
Space Cookery
May Be Problem
Los Angcles-IUPll-If an astro
naut whirling around the
earth in orbit were inclined
to boil an egg for himself, he
would soon discover that In
space there's no such thing as
a "three-minute egg."
It's likely a "three-orbit
egg," even when traveling at
1,700 miles an hour. .
Lack of air pressure is one
of the many perplexities that
man must face when he es
capes from earth. And it's
lack of pressure that changes
the cooking timetable because
the temperature of boiling
water depends on atmospheric
pressure.
At sea level, water boils at
212 degrees F., producing
enough heat to cook an egg in
three minutes. However, in
space, where the pressure is
near zero, water boils at a
much lower temperature, so
low is requires hours of boil
ing to produce a "three-minute
egg."
Space engineers at Garrett
Air Research have taken ad
vantage of this lack of pres
sure to cool the astronaut in
the Project Mercury capsule.
Oxygen circulating through
the capsule flows through a
I heat exchanger, a device sim
, liar to a car radiator.
Inside the heat exchanger,
water boils at around 60 de
grees F., drawing heat out of
the oxygen. After the heal is
removed, the cool oxygen
flows through the astronaut's
suit, keeping him comfortable.
Hope is not entirely lost
for the three-minute space egg
however. By using a pressure
cooker, the space housewife
of the future may increase the
pressure, raise the boiling
point of water, and once more
enjoy a short boiled egg,
cooked in three minutes.
Portland Lumber,
Sports Figure Dies
Portland - lUPH - Clay R
Brown, Portland lumberman
and sports figure, died Sun
day. He was 60.
Brown was first president
; of the group which brought
j out Canadian interests own.
I ing the Portland Beaver base
ball club in 1955. He was on
the board of directors of the
Portland hockey team at the
I time of his death.
He was president of a
wholesale lumber firm.
Survivors include the wid
)w, Dorothy, a daughter and
I V SJ
two sons.
J. Harri
ried off before either of his
physicians knew what' was
happening.
This may teem a bizarre
lillle tale, but it occurs
more often than the layman
realizes. More than a cen
tury ago, F. B. Winslow, in
his book, "Physic and Phy-,
sicians." wrote: "Secrecy is
commonly mixed up in
medical affairs. Some great
city practitioners have little
closets to indulge this feel
ing of fanciful patients who
do not want to be seen by
their fellow sufferers."
Winslow goes one to re
late the case of the Comte
de Virey." who carried this
mystery so far as to make
the slightest indisposition a
late secret."
One day the Count called
a surgeon to dress a wound
in his leg; and when a sim
ilar one broke out on the
other, he sent for a different
surgeon, so that the disorder
ed slate of his limbs might
not be known. "A circum
stance," adds Winslow "which
was the cause of his death."
As an ironic footnote, to a
person who Inquired for the
Count shortly after his death,
his secretary said, '"He is
dead, but he does not wish
it to be known."
The recalcitrance of pa
tients must be cited as one
of the major factors in the
mortality tables. Patients who
lie about their symptoms, who
fall to follow instructions,
who pour pills down the drain
and toss diets into the fire,
who think that merely visit
ing a. doctor or holding a pre
scription will magically cure
them - all these contribute
heavily toward the total of
medical "failures."
Asked about the reception
of one of his comedies on
opening nigh,t, Oscar Wilde
quipped, "Trie play was a
success, but the audience was
a failure." Likewise, patients
can fail doctors quite as much
as the reverse; for all therapy
involves a collaboration of
candor.
Search for Boat
Victims Called Off
Toledo, Ore.-IUPH-A search
for the bodies of two men
missing and presumed drown
ed in a boating acicdent on
the Yaquina river near" here
last week was called off Sun
day after dragging and skin
diving operations.
Missing were Robert Serv
ice of Toledo and John Mayo
of Elk City. Searchers looked
three days for their bodies.
The bodies of three other
persons were found Friday.
The five persons left Toledo
Thursday night in a 12-foot-outboard
motor boat.
The body of Mrs. Clara Mae
Lawson of Sllctz was found
caught in a fence about 100
feet from the river's bank in
the area Saturday. State po
lice said she may have died
from a heart attack while
climbing the fence.
The bodies of Mrs. Ralph
Cook, 63, and Hcrschel Small,
about 60, both of Toledo, were
found Friday in the river near
the swamped boat. Both had
drowned.
FATALLY INJURED
Eugene - (UPI) - A Spring
field youth, James Kenneth
Miller, 18, was injured fatally
in a one-car accident here
Friday night.
Now Many Weqr
FALSE TEETH
With More Comfort
PABTEETH. s plnt alkaline
lnon-cidj powder, holdt false teetrt
more nriri!T.To eat and u:k in more
comfort, lust sprinkle ft mile FAh
TKKJH on your plate. No gummy,
gooey, panty taate or leeline. Che'-ka
"nlHte odor" (dentiixe breathi. Get
FAbTLtlH at any drus cnunter.
TOMATO JUICE
PEACHES
DOS FOOD
PINEAPPLE
CUCUMBER CHIPS
ASPARAGUS
COFFEE
TUNA
FLOUR
Gold Medal
101b. j
Plastic
BOWL BRUSH
ft 29'
Ironing Board
PAD & COVER
. SETS
Reg.
$1.19
set
Artificial
EASTER LILLYS
' 3 Blossoms & 1 Bud
I .'a 25g,:-1
uK BAKE TO
'
ANANAS
to
CARROTS
CABBAGE
Prices Effective
Through
Wednesday
r ;
We Reserve
The Right
To Limit
Quantities
Modoe
Freestone Halves
CHUBBY
Market
Slice or Chunk
Star Dee -
,.sul x
White Spray Light Chunk
No. Vi Tin
I BISQUICK II PEACHES Pa
.. , .. '. ' .... 8th Week i
Big 60-oz. Family Size Serra Mission .... I A I
. 120,G00 ff
2V4 Tin II fJl You my I" $1,000 winner -
" : M VX '' Everyon wins al least $1.
Lean and Tender T JZ3 g
Port Steak
Picnic Style
0
Randy's Veal
Cobe Steak W,
Chocolate
RAISED
DONUTS
49 do.
Mb. Cello Bag
Crisp and Tender
Sweet
Tender Heads
46-oz.
Golden
Poppy
No. 2Vi Tin
No. 1 Tin
Green Center Cuts
No. 300
45c 2 for 8
12 for 9 jP, ft)!
2j
No. 2ViTin. Ck if V
Big58.oz.Jar .Ql iHifl
Wilshire ff B jtlll JA "'
VI aW , II I I 1 1 ft 1 w
CINNAMON
KNOTS
49
No. 1
Golden Ripe
Green Tip
Pkg
2 for 29
Hi
W uim- J
Y7
- mm m m m
PKG. of 8
CINNAMON
NUT BREAD
doz. I ' 15-61. loaf
MEDFORD-Westgate Center
MEDFORD-13t-h and Central
ASHLAND-Gateway Shop. Center
W. Raurvt Tha Righr To Limit
Pricai IKactiva Thru Wadnaiday, March 13
i