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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1963)
12 A- WEDNESDAY. APRIL 10. 1983 Five Meningitis Cases in Oregon Portland -WP1'- Oregon has had five cases of spinal men ingitis this year but this num bcr is not unusual, the State Health board said Tuesday Wow your Imwn with NO CLUMPS NO CLOGS See the WHIRLWIND 19" A 21" TORQ Spiral, "Wind-Tunnert housing means smoother discharge of clippings. Won't dump or clog no corners to catch or build up grass. Quiet. New exhaust muf fling subdues noise. New S-Blade gives better, cleaner cut, 19' Whirlwind ftcoil JI9 95 19' Whirlwind Sifety-Spin-Stirt $94.95 21' Whirlwind Slfl ly -Spin -Start $99.95 21' Whirlwind Pow-Jt-Drivt Safety 5pm SUrl $149.95 tEirluaive mirk of Tore ManufaeLur fog Corp. NO MONEY DOWN on Approved Credit Wt Carry Our Own Contract LEONARD ELECTRIC CO. "M.alord'i l.idlna Appli.nc. Daalar far th. Pail 12 Yaart," 10 I. Main 77 3-4541 V J COMPARE and you'll buy the best! KitchenAid. PORTABLE DISHWASHER ONLY ) ( I 1 $22995 Regular $279.9S Olvi her f chance lo rclsx nficr meah. Thii Kitchen Aid roh from l,ible lo link...C00MCtl lo fsucel in Jecondi ... rolls anay when flnuhtd. And only KitchoiAhj hai "Ooldad Aclion" ah thai wht cleu...Unlliicd. Pic-Thru hoi-air dryint. .. porcelain inlcnoi and lid fur ImUiuj beauty. Hal douhia-wall coniiruciion for cool, quid opcuiion...caraciCy tor whole day'l dinner (en ice for ihc avrrate family, See ihe KilchenAid porlaWe Irnlav Olher KltchenAW dlthwuhen, lew. A KilchenAid for eery kilchen... eciybudjjei. - - NO MONEY DOWN ON APPROVED CREDIT We Carry Our Own Contract PAY AS UTTU AS $9.69 PER MO. LEONARD ELECTRIC CO. 1 Medf.fa i leading Appliance Daaltr for tht Pail 32 Yean" 309 E. MAIN PHONE 773-4S41 The Medical . lift, v" Mental Illntu The best guide I know for a family which hat- had the misfortune of having some member d c velop a men tal difficulty is a small pa per - bound book written by Mrs. Edith M. Stern; it was first pub lished in 1942, and Is now in its fourth edi tion. So many questions come up, when a family has this problem, and Mrs. Stern an swers them well. Her book is put out for 50 cents by the National Association for Men tal Health, 10 Columbus Cir cle, New York ID, N. Y. Mrs. Stern discusses such important problems as wheth er the patient should be put into a mental hospital, and if so, should it be a private or public hospital? She tells us about the problems of get ting a patient committed, of taking him to the hospital and of leaving him there. What will happen to him during his first few days in the place? What sort of a world will he find within the hospital? What are the treat ments that he is likely to re ceive.' What can he do in the hospital? What should be the relation of the family to the hospital and to their loved one there? Should they write to him? Should they visit him, and how should they be have when perhaps he is hos tile to them? How Family Shall Bahave An Important problem that Mrs. Stern discusses is that of how the family shall behave when the patient comes home. So often the hospital people find that because the untrain ed or perhaps outraged rela tives fuss at him and com plain to him about how much of a nuisance he has been, and how much he has cost I them, he decides thut lie i would rather ao back tn his I buddies In the hosnltal What 1 then should the family do to 1 help him, and how permanent is his recovery likely to be? An able psychiatrist says Roundup I Cmerilus Consultant In Medicine Mayo Clinic Cmerllui f'rofeuor of Medicine Mayo Clinic (Refiner and Tribune Syndicate, 1911) that in many a case, if the disturbed person had only had a sensible and kindly family to help him and take care of him, he never would have had to go to the mental hospital. You can help your doctor decide whether mental illness Is developing by understand ing the symptoms better. You will find help in Dr. Alvarez' 25-ccnt booklet, "When Men tal illness Strikes a Family." Send 25 cents and a self -addressed, stamped envelope with your request for it to Dr. Walter C. Alvarez, Dept. MMT, Box 957, Dcs Moines 4, Iowa. Veteran Political Figure Succumbs Porlland-WH-Funcral serv ices will be held Thursday for Joseph Edward Dunne, a vet eran Oregon political figure. Dunne, 81, died Monday of a cerebral hemorrhage. Dunne, Republican candi date for governor in 1934, was chairman of Portland public docks when he retired in 1957. He also was a candi date for mayor of Portland in 1944. Survivors include the wid ow, Emma, and two sons and a daughter. Whip up then budge, beau ties to wear a.s hostess for showers, bazaari, Sew TWO aprons from ONE yard 35-Inch fabric (Vj yard each color)! Bias bind ing saves on hemming. Pat tern 7408: transfer; pattern pieees. THIRTY-FIVE t K N T S (coins) fur this pattern acid IS cents fin each pattern for ftritcUsa mailing and special handling. Send to Alice Hruuks, Medford Mail Trib une, Needlecrafl Dept , P.O. Box l(i;j, Old Chelsea Station. New York 11. NY. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. 18638 Biggest Needlecrafl Show stars smocked accesso ries it's our new Needle grill Catalog! Plus over 200 fresh-to-you designs 10 knit, crochet, sew. weave, embroi der, quilt. Plus free patern. Send 28 cents now! Turn fnr final i rt v i vi viivi mar mm L This is a toucan. Color his bill orange. ff II If big bills are a problem with you, E Me see us for a personal loan. j MEDFORD STAR -Br CLAY ATI MAP 22 M Your Daily Activity CuioV M T" According lo frit? Stan. ' To develop me.iocje for Thunder, read word cor respond iryj to numbcri of your ZodioC birth iigr,. 1 31 With. rSITn i 7-10-12-131 33-34-28 4 TAUfUS AW 21 MAY 21 ? Pomonco 3 Keep 4 Ccet ult r Heo'tth 7Newi 8 CM 9 And 10 ti I I D'StOnt l2Tro.e.l-ng i ; Hmi, 1 4 Personal 1 5 K eep I-: UT.i; 1 Don't 18 Sod 9r.Je 20 Gei ?! F'leod 22 Could 23 You've 24 Oath 25 Hopoinew 26Vtady 2? Or 28 Are 29 All 30 For Good 414 16-221 .14 En 24-31 -32-901 3 b E.'.ooogo 36 The 33 Opera 39 be 40 Alrjyi 41 Got 42 Or 43 I'-ok 44 Your 4b 'svnm 40 Sign 47 A 41 ChM 49 Delightful 50 Wtlh.n 51 Tromrk 52 You'll 53 Helpi 54 Thrill 55 Ycu',e1f 56 To 57 Up 58 You 59 So h0B.g (K)Adverv: GEMINI V.20-26-30-45 -y60 71-72 CANCf JUNE 23 36-37-39-50J HV55- 59-31 89 uo j JULY 24 ' AUG 23 - -OIOJOOOI 65-67.80 83 VIRGO "ffi A AUG 24 VI 2- 6- 9-2$ -28-29-85-S6 The Family Council Editor's note: The Family Council MMlsU of a JUdRr, a nhyi-hlatrKt, three clergymen, thrcr editors and a women's editor. 1 ai h article le a nummary of a lamlly dUacrremcnt presented to the l.ountil. The Council deals with problem., major and minor, encountered hv iculdance cotUUtlori and nocial workers. Ldlted by Mr. Alma Denny. (Copyright by General Features Corp.) Rollo D. From social drinking, she has descended to secret drinking. Betty D. It was he who got me started. I used to hate the stuff. a--.e e Rollo D. Now I know what's wrong. Betty's excuse for not having meals ready used to be that she didn't feel well. But I came home unexpectedly early from a week's business trip and I thought a tornado had struck. Betty had forgotten where she left a bottle of whiskey and had turned the place upside-down. Since then I find that labels on bottles don't mean a thing. She hides liq uor in vinegar bottles, thermos jugs, even in a hot water bot tle. Well, now what? Betty D. I was frantic that day because I'd been rob bed of liquor by a handyman and a maid who came across some, and I was hoping they'd missed a bottle I'd counted on. Rollo shouldn't kick or be surprised. I'm 41, our children arc grown and away, I'm lonely and get no sympathy from him. When I tcctotalcd, he called me a wet blanket. So now I'm a wet lush. lie used to force mc Idown an old-fashioned before (dinner. Now I like them in stead ol dinner. And I us usally hold them well. e The Council: Addiction to anything is a form of slow poison that can often be view ed as suicidal. The person who drinks too much, eats too much, takes drugs com pulsively, even smokes too much - such a person is say ing. In effect. "I don't care!" So the first line of reply, in order to reverse the destruc tive habit, is, "Why? What's wrong? Can't we find a heal thy, constructive way to raise your spirits?" . . . Betty Assault Charged In Benton Incident Corvallis -WW Gerald Con-j rud Swart., 29, of Monroe has been charged with assault j with a deadly weapon after i a shooting incident at the j home of his former wife in the Benton county community of ! Alpine. Benton county sheriffs dep Uttea said Swartl was wailing for his former wife, Betty Ann. 2j, and her fiancee. Bob Lyons, at her home about 4 a.m. Deputies said the woman told them SwarU threatened her with a rifle, then fired three shots m the direction ot a neighbor, shot out the lighis. and hit her with the rifle barrel. MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON GAZER' R. PULL AN "I v 3 44-43-5741 1 &M-73 J scorr-io OCT 24 Ub, 32for'ly A7t-yncjrrte 33 Vour 63 The OV 22 17.18-19-35(1 2 4687 : 67Sti pfl VteH 69 jhw.k 0 G'ecKr 71 Money 72 New;. JTur-Mnrj 74 C'ning 75 Sick 70 But 7 Food 78 And 79 May PO ' ral-0". 81 Medtcite 82 Move. 83 f oshionf 84 Out 65 Youn) 66 Now 87 Popel 88 Pelolrves 89Pdox 90 Aims 411 j Neutral SAGITTAifUi NOV 23 ft 1- 5- 8-214J"! 77 6a 75-88 J CAfllCOtN DEC 2i JAN 20 52 54-56-64(0 177-78 33 VSJ AOUAMN ;an. 2 ; efj 1? 11-13-40 43 0 76-79.34 risefs 20 Vv 93-41-47.49C- (12-6974 V-i found that a little hooch gave her a lift But a lot of hooch will sink her lower than ever. To achieve gaiety, soothe weariness, and banish depres sion, she needs a solid not a liquid approach. Rollo must stay close lo her, guide her perhaps to a psychological counselor or to A. A., so she cand find alternative ways to fill the empty spots in her middle-aged life. Penneywise Pretty 9169 SIZES 10-18 (ru tlTiiina?TtM Crisp, cool version of the shirtwaist look - this lime Willi trim tucks below smart yoke detail. Choose lemon. Ume, tangerine cotton. Printed Pattern 91U9: Misses-' Sizes 10, 12. II. 16. lit. Size 16 requires 31 1 yards 35-Inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern - add 15 cents tor each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling Send to Marian Martin. Med ford Mail Tribune. Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York It, N Y. Print plainlv NAME. ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. FREE OFFER! Coupon In Spring Pattern Catalog for one pattern free anyone you choose from 300 design ideas. Send 50 cents now for Catalog. i i i i Remaining Whooping Cranes To Start Annual Canadian Trek Washington - UPI - Any day now, all that is left of a once mishty flock of whooping cranes will start winging into the sky from Aransas Wildlife Refuge in Texas for their nesting area in Wood Buffalo Park near Great Slave Lake, Canada. This time only 28 apparent ly will make the 2,500-mile journey, four less than return ed to Aransas last fall and 10 less than flew northward last summer. The Interior Department's Fish and Wildlife Service hopes that some of all of the 10 missing birds have sur vived and will rejoin the flock. In 1946, only 17 whoop ers, including five young, were counted throughout the winter. Yet 22 adult birds came south that year. The speculation and hope this year is that the birds now missing escaped observation. In Small Groups The whoopcrs probably will leave in small groups over a period of six or seven weeks. Last year, the first five lo take wing left on or about April 2. The whoopcrs are mostly white, about five feet tall, with red-crowned heads and black-tipped wings. In migra tion they fly high, sometimes out of sight, carried along on wings with a seven - foot spread. Their trumpet - like calls, or whoops, can be heard for great distances. When the west was young and bison roamed the plains, there were thousands of whoopcrs. The birds disap peared gradually. Now there are only a handful that fly the usual migration route across Texas. Oklahoma, Kansas, Ne braska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Eastern Montana, and into Saskatchewan and Al berta. The Fish and Wildlife Serv ice made 38 aerial counts of whoopcrs in the Aransas area between Oct. 19. when the first arrived from the norlh, and March 25. The buildup was gradual until a peak of 32 cranes was noted on Dec. 7 and again on Dec. 20. Since then the counts have fluctu ated between 19 and 28. Vigilance Increased Because six adult whoopcrs did not return lo Aransas in RAMBLER AMERICAN "440 WINS CLASS C New Hardtop Beats Other Large -Engine Compacts In Los Angeles -To-Detroit Run Chalk up another trophy for Rambler! A stock Rambler American "440" Hardtop with Flash-O-Matic transmission and 1'25 horses under its bonnet llie famed Rambler Overhead-Valve Six' took on the most fuel-sparing cars in itt class scored the best gas mileage of them all Rambler did it over a tougher-than-ever Los Angeles-to-Detroit route, too. So once again Rambler claims its right lo the much sought afler title, America's Economy King., LEA Stcctr Used Cars. the fall flight and because no young birds were born during the year, Refuge personnel Increased vigilance over the numbers that did return. The I number and range of recon-; naissance flights were in creased in an effort to locate the missing birds. There have been many ru-1 mors regarding the missing cranes. There were reports that northern hunters had j shot southbound cranes by mistake. Other reports were that the cranes had been shot by careless hunters seeking sandhill cranes. The Interior Department said all such ru mors were studied and that none had been substantiated. The only definite information is that 38 whoopcrs started north in 1962, only 32 came DacK. one wun young, ana that only 28 were sighted in far - reaching surveys in March. Population Varies The population of wild whooping cranes has varied considerably since counts started in the winter of 1933 39. Beginning with a low of 14 then, a full decade passed before the number increased lo 31. During most of the 1950s, numbers dropped into the 20s, reflecting both the low productive potential and loss es from unknown causes. The Murder Parole Bill Approved by Senate Salem - lUPU - A bill requir- j . ing a person convicted of first i degree murder to be Imprison ed for 15 years before be ( coming eligible for parole has ! j been approved 24-6 by the L ' Senate and sent to the House. The bill, SB10, is a com panion measure to SJR3 j i which was approved by the j I Senate last week. SJR3 calls ! for a vote by the people in 1 i 1964 on a proposal to change the state's constitution and eliminate the death penalty, and make the penalty for first degree murder life imprison ment. Under present law, a person convicted of first degree mur der could become eligible for parole in seven years. FLASH ! FROM MOBIL ECONOMY RUN 28.61 RAMBLER SCORES BEST MILEAGE OK ALL CARS IN ALL RimNer Amtricjit ""0 HturJtop MOTORS, 211 North Bartlett Too. Buy Now During Your Rambler Dealer's Used Car VALUE PARAD E population of 38 in the winier of 1961-62 was the greatest recorded since the counts started. In addition to the wild flock, there are seven whoop ers in captivity. Six, including the famous Old Crip and Josephine, are in the Audubon Park Zoo, New Orleans, and one is at the San Antonio, Texas, Zoo. Nine Factors Every Well-informed Investor Should Know... Now! What 9 factors may prove decisive influences oil Ihe course ol the market during the next 16 weeks? How would Mich development affect vrair invest ment portfolio? You can judge more effectively if you have the penincnt fads and informed view points discussed in Harris', Upham's new Market Review. Our analysts agree that these nine l.ictors could be highly important to investors in the weeks and months just ahead. Also featured in the new Market Review is a list of 21 top-grade companies whose slocks arc favored by insiitutional investors: a table of 21 categories that have continued to show belter Ih.m average demands in recent weeks; a selection of 52 out standing performers thus far in 1163; and an appraisal of the possible future direction the American economy might take. For your complimentary copy of ihc new Market Review, just till in the coupon below. c B Harris, Upham & cs i Mtmic and mm ' -h Yfrk Stock modily exihanses 44 South Cenlral Aicnue Medford. Ore. j 773-7701 ! Gcndemen: Please send me the Market Review. j Cu- MILES PER GALLON Yet top fuel economy is only one of I lie big benefits that earned Rambler '63 the coveted "Car of the Year" Award from Motor Trend Magazine. All the other clear-cut superiorities in performance and comfort and dollar-for-dollar value are spelled out in the free 'G,l Car X-Riy Books now yours for the asking at your Rambler dealer. Drop in and pick up your copies today. .-tmcn'crm Motors Dedicated to Excellence This adi-crtisrmcnt approird and the data Ott certified by the United States Auto Club U5AC RAMBLER 63 Winner of Motor Trend Magazine Award: "CAR OF THE YEAR " ENROLLMENT UP Monmouth - 81 - Spring term enrollment at Oregon College of Education reached . 1.200 Monday. Registrar Jack D Morton announced. Mor- ton said the 12 per cent year ago. total is nearly higher than a "OIL TO BURN" Mobilhcat S & H Green Stamps MEDFORD FUEL CO. 772-2111 Vh fceilia and either Icjdmz lecuriti' 4R Offices Jrom Cofljl lo Coast M-18 CLASSES!