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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHD, OREGON The Family Council FRIDAY. MAY 31. 1963 Editor's phycbtitmt, fht.; .iIm" consists h. wiree .tutors t!10 P.eba Y.-My husband puis me through torture because I'm flat jhested. James Y. - Our marriage might have a chance i she had plastic surgery. Reba Y.-I'm in my 20's, married for three years. I'm considered beautiful and men used to line up to take me out. I chose Jim because 1 thought he truly loved me, not just my face and figure. Now he considers himself cheated and thinks it's all right to chase other women. He tells me I'm not a woman, but a boy. He wants me to try surgery. James Y.-A woman should look like a woman. Reba fool ed me. A man is entitled to a feminine wife, not just fem inine clothes on a mannish form. I don't know hov-.' much of our early love for each other is left, but it might re turn if she'd go see a doctor about one of those operations. 1 read that they're done suc cessfully in California. The Council: Because of frequent queries on this hush hush matter, we consulted au thorities in both plastic sur gery and psychiatry. We learned that there is a pad ding operation (transplants of a synthetic foam substance are inserted under the skin) which has been successfully performed by specialists. But no, Reba and Jim the surgery won't save your marriage. In fact, no accredited surgeon will per form it if that's the only rea son you present. The doctors usually work closely with psy chiatrists, lest a patient ex pect Paradise, Valhalla, Olym pia rolled into one forever after. We advise you to turn to a marriage counselor, not a surgeon. You must be helped to see that it is not the chest but the childish concept of "love" which has busted your union. For Fast, F.ffieitnr Service- gfeUSBE at: to of from Oakland, San :raneisco, Los Angeles and Other California Points Call Jack Fitzgerald 773-7761 Bill Would Abolish Capital Punishment Salem The net effect of Senate Bill 10, which will be come Oregon law if SJR 3 is approved at the next general election, will be abolition of capital punishment, according to James A. Redden (D-Med-ford). House amendments to SJR 3 and SB 10, relating to pun ishment for first degree mur der, were adopted by the Senate. , SJR 3, subject to approval of the voters, provides that the Oregon constitution, whether revised or not, will not specify the punishment for first degree murder as is now the case. SB 10 also provides for a 10-year maximum sentence for those convicted of first degree murder as well as pro viding for life time super vision after parole. The two Senate bills were among the most controversial measures coming before the House. Four floor debates were necessary before the measures were returned to the Senate. Redden said passage of the two measures rates as one of the most significant legislative steps to date. The two measures are on their way to the Governor's desk. Caiifornian Hurt In Freeway Mishap Coyle Edmon Spencer. 36, of 87 Delmar St., San Fran cisco, was reported in fair condition this morning at Rogue Valley hospital follow ing a one car accident on In terstate 5 on the south slope of Blackwell hill yesterday. Spencer is being treated, for back and leg injuries. State police said the Spen cer car was southbound when it ran off the highway, and went over the west bank where it rolled over several times. Cars driven by Linda Sue Bridges, 15, of 1834 Peach St., Mcdford, and Joe Luther Headlee, 56, of 89 Janney lane, Medford, collided at Mc Andrews rd. and Ross lane in tersection yesterday, police said. No injuries were re ported. A minor one-car accident occurred when a car driven by Connie Lee Peterson, 16, of Star route, box 442, Shady Cove, swerved to avoid a car entering the Crater Lake highway from the Eagle Point junction. The Peterson car slid in the loose gravel and hit a high way sign, officers said. The Medical Roundup f fx . v . Emeritus Cunsulunt In Medicine Miu Clinic Emeritus Professor of Medicine AUyo Clinic (Begisler and Tribune Synte, 19C3) Teacher Tenure Law Given Senafe Approval Salem -IUP1I- A bill revising Oregon's teachers' tenure law passed the Senate Wednesday. It set out provisions for hearings in cases where a teacher under the tenure law is subject to suspension or dismissal. It returned to the House for concurrence in Sen ate amendments. BISHOP PLANS PARTY London -itiPli- Dr. Michael Ramsey, the archbishop of Canterbury, made plans today for his first rock ''l'roll party. He will be host to 1,500 teen agers at London's Lambeth Palace June 29 as part of a church youth council holiday week end. n Cirrhosit of the Liver It is remarkable the num ber of letters I receive from people who say they are suf fering from cirrhosis of the liver. With this disease, the veins in the gullet en large greatly because hard e n i n g and shrinkage of the liver makes it diffi cult for blood to go, as it normally does, from the small bowel through the liver and up to the heart, A discussion of the disease was presented by Drs. A. J. Garceau, T. C. Chalmers and the Boston Inter-Hospital Liv er Group, who studied 471 people with these1 large veins in the gullet. When much of the blood cannot gel through the liver, it goes through veins at the lower end of the gullet, where this tube joins the stomach. In order to carry more blood, these veins gel larger and larger, until often one or more rupture, and cause severe bleeding. In some people with cirr hosis, the liver is large, and the spleen enlarges with it. In later stages of the disease, the abdomen fills up with water-a condition known as ascites, or dropsy. In a man, the breasts tend to get large, and little so-called "spiders" of enlarged blood vessels ap pear in the skin. In 83 per cent of the per sons studied by the Boston doctors, there was a history of an excessive use of alco-hol-that is, at least a quart of wine, or two quarts of beer, or eight ounces of whiskey a day. 0SE GROWERS! new health and vigor can be yours ARE YOU WAN AND NERVOUS, WORRYING ABOUT YOUR ROSES?... WORN OUT TRYING TO BRING THE BLOOM BACK TO THEIR CHEEKS . . . RUN-DOWN TRYING TO FIGHT OFF INSECTS AND DISEASE? HELP IS HERE AT LAST1 ORTHO HAS PUT TOGETHER A ROSE KIT THAT TAKES CARE OF EVERYTHING BUT THE THORNS! At last you can relax. Instead of struggling with a special spray for this insect and a special dust for that... or trying frantically to find the perfect fertilizer... you reach for one handy rose kit. The Ortho people have packaged together everything you need to get the blooms you planted for: the Ortho Rose Duster and a bottle of Ortho Liquid Rose Food. Rose Dust controls both insects and disease. And Oh i ho Liquid Rose Food is just what the experts ordered to feed roses a balanced formula in easily-digested liquid form. EASY DOES IT The Ortho people ant'd to simplify the time consuming task of rose care. First they invented Rose Dust. By combining insecticidea and fungi cides, they did away with the need for doing two jobs: controlling diseases and halting insects. Then they developer! the pliable plastic duster. You just aim the Rose Duster and squeeze. You put protec tion on blooms and leaves "pouf". . . like that! If you "pouf" around the rose bush about every 7 to 10 days during the growing season, you'll prob ably stop trouble before it ever starts. Rose Dust wards off most bugs and blights that ruin roses. Aphids. thrips, rose weevil, Japanese beetle, pow dcry mildew, black spot and rust. ROSE FOOD FOR THOUGHT Then they set out to make a pel feet rose food. They had to find a formula that gave roses all the nutrients they need ; a food that also gave a quick feeding for a surge of growth as well as a steady feeding to keep bushes growing strong. The answer: Ortho Liquid Rose Food, loaded with nitrogen, phosphorous and potash.With a chelating agent added to "unlock" iron and other valuable minerals in the soil and make them available to the roots. They made it liquid so roses could take it in quickly through their leaves as well as through their roots. So Ortho Liquid Rose Food goes to work fast, then lingers in the soil for lasting feed ing. Result: you get bigger blooms and more of them. Longer, stronger stems. Healthier foliage. WHAT PRICE GLORIOUS BLOOMS? Now before you rush down to the bank to with draw your savings to buy this kit, listen to the news. Ortho Liquid Rose Food and the Rose Duster together in one box cost just '1.88. Ordi narily, you'd pay 2.28. You actually saoe 40 cents! So why notapply that to the purchase of an Ortho Lawn Spray er if you don't already have one? It's the perfect way to apply Ortho Liquid Rose Food. It dilutes the liquid to just the right proportion as it sprays. And it gives you the per fect spray for proper foliar feeding. F.xtra bonus: it's guaranteed for four years. So pin a rose on the gardener who visits his au thorized Ortho dealer tomorrow and gets the best roue deal going: the new Ortho rose kit going for just 1. 88. Better hurry; he only has just so many. (Jrtho),'1! ROSE AWjj j DUST ROSEF0OiPPCMi Wf OFFER! i'i.VZ, BOTH FOR Z b.ssMsjJMuriTl X i (ORTHO) CALIFORNIA CHLMICAL COMPANY. nTHO DtvtsMH. ITO Bwfc St . Sm FtiMw 10,CilriKM In the worst cases, the pa tient went into a sleepy slate called hepatic (liver) coma. Coma means a state of uncon sciousness from which the person cannot be wakened. When death results from cirr hosis of the liver, it occurs either by bleeding from the gullet, failure of the liver or the kidneys to function, or sometimes an infection such as pneumonia. Dry Mouth or Dry Eyes When a person writes, tell ing me that his mouth is al ways dry, I usually cannot guess the cause. If the trou ble has been anoying him since childhood, I suspect the presence of some inherited de fect in the salivary glands. Sometimes the constantly dry mouth is associated with dry eyes, and is called Sjogren's syndrome, a group of symp toms described by a Swedish eye specialist. Unfortunately, the giving of a name to a dis ease does not necessarily en able us physicians to cure the discomfort or even to relieve it a bit. Sjogren's syndrome is a pe culiar disease that is usually found in women who have had the change of life, and it is marked by a dryness of sev eral mucous membranes; the dryness is a result of a de ficient secretion of the many glands in these membranes. The woman may complain of a dryness of the mouth, the nose, the tluoat, the eyes, and the vagina, perhaps with an enlargement of one of the glands under the lower jaw bone that produce saliva. There may be dryness also in the bronchi-tubes that lead air into and out of the lungs -and also in the sweat glands in the skin, and perhaps even in the glands in the stomach that make the gastric juice. Occasionally the person will suffer also with signs of rheu matoid arthritis-probably in the hands and feet. Or there is sometimes some trouble with the kidneys. When the dryness of the Spirited Oratory A 3 Magazine Editor Accused of Keeping Women From Engaging in Careers By DICK WEST Washington -UTIi- About a year ago, at a periodical press convention here, I interview ed Robert Stein, editor o f Redbook, on the haz ards of putting out a maga zine for wo men. This week Slcin was in town again . west facing up to a hazard of a different sort. He came down from New York to speak to the Women's Na tional Press club. Now let me say that I know many members of that group personally and they are lovely ladies all. Individually, that is. Collectively, they would in timidate the Mau Mau. Before this audience Stein was called upon to defend his magazine against charges that it is part or a conspiracy to deprive women of careers, or, as the saying goes, to keep them "pregnant and barefoot." mouth comes suddenly with a dizzy or woozy spell, I suspect a little injury to some nerve center in the brain, such as sometimes follows what 1 call a "little stroke." I am sorry to say that as yet, we doctors know too lit tle about Sjogren's syndrome. 1 do not know of any medi cine that is likely to work a cure. All I know is that some of the sufferers from dry mouth get help from chewing gum or from keeping some sort of troche dissolving often in the mouth. The sufferers from dry eyes can ask their eye doctor about using the so-called " tificial tears" that can be bought in a drugstore. The "Little Strokes" Dr Alvarez mentions in today's column are discussed more fully in his 25-cent booklet of that name. Send for It by enclosing 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, Your Money's Worth By SYLVIA PORTER Copyright, Hall Syndic sit. Inc. -r.1., ( I Wet BUSINESS UPTUHM 28 MONTHS OLD On Saturday, we begin the 28th month of the fourth business upswing of post-World War 11-a statistic which car ries major implications to the economic health of the Amer ican economy, your profits and your paycheck. Specifically: It means that this business advance already has decisively beaten the average duration of all the peacetime cycles of expansion in this country dating back to mid-19th century. There have been 22 peacetime upswings since 1854. On average, they have lasted 26 months. Had this upswing, which began In February 1961, been only average, it would have died two months ago. It is very much alive. 11 means that the 1961-? business upturn is a cinch to match the average life-time of all peacetime cycles since World War I. There have been eight peacetime upturns since 1919. On average, they have lasted 28 months. Were this one average, it would be dying right now. It Is far from dying. It means the J961-? business advance has reversed the frightening pattern of ever-shortening upswings since World War II. The first postwar upturn was 45 months old when It died in July 1953. The second was 35 months old when it expired in July 1957. The third was 25 months old when it faded Into recession in May, 1960. Had this cycle continued this regressive pattern, our economy would have gone Into a downturn this past winter. It did not. It strongly luggeiti this business advance may beat the average life of all upturns of the past 109 years bolh the prolonged advances of war and the shorler-run advances of peace. The average life of the 28 upswings this country has ex perienced since 1854 has been 30 months-a figure extended by the fact that the advances during wars have been pro longed, the duration of the Civil War expansion was 46 months; of the World War I expansion, 44 months; of the World War II expansion, 80 months; of the Korean War expansion, 45 months. If this business upturn lasts Into August it will be 30 months old. There's every reason to believe It will last into August. Finally it indicates that the 1061-7 expansion could break many more records of the past century-assuming Congress votes tax reductions on a sufficient scale and in time to accelerate business Investment and consumer spending in late 1963-64. On the basis of history the odds are only about one in four that this economic advance will last through 1963. It's a good bet lhat our economy will "win" against these odds. On the basis of history the odds arc only one In 22 that this economic advance will last through 1964. So long range a prediction would be foolhardy but if the tax re ductions do the Job they're supposed to do, our economy could "win" against those odds too. This is much more than statistical gymnastics, of course. The fact lhat we have pulled off the plateau of 1962 Into a new upturn rather than retreated Into a slump is of the upmost, importance to every one oi us. tven though unem ployment remains high, we have lo dale avoided another general recession. Why has our economy come through so far7 Oue reason is that you and I have continued to spend freely and have hiked our dollui spending as our Incomes have risen. Our spending patterns arc of the most crucial significance to our economy. Another reason is lhat businessmen have been boost ing their spending on plants and equipment since they received incentives via liberalited depreciation rules and the new lax credit in 1962. Business spending is alto a crucial factor In our economy's performance. A third reason is that government spending at all levels federal, state and local-has continued to fuel the economy. Whether or not you approve, the economic fact of life is that when government put more money Into the business stream than It takes out In taxes, it stimulates business. We have not eliminated the business cycle. We probably never will. But we're doing a better Job of controlling it this lime than In many yeors-a pleasant report with which to greet June 1963. Such a bill oi particulars was drawn up by Mrs. Bet ty Frtedan in a new book called "The Feminine Mys tique.' And the author her sen was on hand lo confront Stein with the indictment, far be it tor me to suggest that the program was denucr ately arranged to put Stem at a disadvantage. I'm just giving you the facts. Stein was seated at the dais as the lone male in the pha lanx of matrons who hold high positions in politics, the gov ernment and other fields of endeavor. Patty Cavln, of NBC, presi dent of the club, reported that the speeches and the questions to follow were expected to be over by 2 p.m. So saying, she introduced Mrs. Friedan. If you like oratory that is, i shall we say, "spirited," you I would enjoy hearing Mrs. Friedan's ringing plea for! feminine liberty. It was her contention that1 women's magazines are partly responsible for keeping wom en trapped In endless and empty housewifery." i A housewife is led to be- lieve by magazine articles j that the only answer lo her j longing for fulfillment is j "having another baby or j dying her hair blonde," she said. Magazine fiction, site con tinued, pictures the "happy housewife heroine" locked in a struggle with a villainous career woman who is "trying lo get her husband away or keep her from breast-feeding." "Even PTA chairmen have become suspect," she said. By the time Mrs. Friedan rested her case it already was two o'clock, the theoretical hour of adjournment. Slein bravely rose to present his rebuttal, but it was plain to see that he had been outflanked. In a laler column I will un dertake lo examine his ar guments and sec how they slack up against Mrs. Friedan. Right now I've got to rush home and unchain my wife. Roseburg Girl, 20, Killed in Car Mishap Toledo, Ore. - (DPI) - Caro lyn Rosalie Turner, 20, of Roseburg, was killed Thurs day when this auto in which she was riding skidded m U.S. 20 near here and plunged over a 50 foot embankment. State police said the other occupant of the car was Kath leen O'Brien, 22, Toledo. She was not believed seriously hurt. HILL REAPPOINTED Salem-iUPll-Gov. Mark Hat field Wednesday reappointed Jess Hill of Eugene to the Stale Welfare commission. GRADUATION CARDS When you tint: enouph lo send the very bcl 217 E. Main St. - Medford Repossessed Swimming Pools eat1 Original Price NOW $1500 $ 850 $1700 $1100 $2200 $1600 Different sites and depths available Pools may be inspected at any time Some packs have never been used , Tormi: as low as $25 per month Doran Taylor, Distributor 517 NE Dean Drive Grants Pass, Oregon Telephone 476-6535 Looking for quality... .11 WIS Valiant is quality-engineered by Chrysler Corporation. Tight, tough and strong, this lively car is put together to stay together for a good long time. Looking for low price... i .11 IT UYJ Km in 0 For '63, Valiant prices start lower than nine out of ten American compacts. Come in and let us prove that Valiant is the best all-around value! Looking for a deal... HUH And how! We're selling new cars so fast we can afford to pass our success on to you in extra savings, higher trades. Prove it to yourself by stopping in to see us soon. DICK KNIGHT CO. 33 S. Riverside, Medford, Oregon