Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 07, 1963, Image 22

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    10 B
FRIDAY. JUNE 1. 1963
MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON
They'll Do It Every Time
tmmm. By Jimmy Hatlo
f MORE 6IVE4WAy A ( THIS IS TME THIRD ONE ) I'M (XXhCj TO START A MAIl
LETTERS THATS ALU I UFQOM THE BlRCS-NEST "Si CAMPAIGN-JUST SEND OUT V
OCT THIS ONE WANTS SURVEV THEY'LL TELL ME 1 SCRAP PAPER VOO DOtrJ
f ME TO HAVE ALIPE- A HOW MANY CUCKOOS iVE A, HAVE TO READ-JUSTpr-J
TIME OP LITERATURE".') 60T FOB PRACTlCAUY--tTHBOW IT AWAY 1 7i(ow t
7 Z CAN JUST LIE DOWN NOTHIKI6-T- M iCHOW WUAt
ku?lth NEED A " IT- KILLED THE
(OCOFFSObi&OERTRAS f I PONY EXPRESS
iRRresWRpJ RHHOu 8 Bite for 1 rHHMa? mailing
8
Speaking op anti
litter CAMPAIGNS
wuat about all the
litter letters we
sucker-listers get?
Woman Killed in
Willows Collision
WUIow, Calif, -tm- Mn.
Gail Nelson, 28, Vancouver.
Wash., died in a hospital
Thursday from Injuries suf
fered in a two car collision on
U. S. 89 near here Wednes
day.
Mrs. Nelson. Michelle
Corey. 17, .Milwaukie. Ore..
and Maria Jo Lavender, 14
months, Gladstone, Ore., were
passengers in the auto driven
by Mrs. Charlene Lavender,
28, Gladstone.
The Highway Patrol said
the car left the highway, then
swerved back onto the pave
ment and smarted Into the
side of an auto driven by Jul
ius Swenson, 38, Springfield,
Ore. He was not hurt.
The small girl suffered a
broken Jeg and head injuries.
Miss Corey suffered a frac
tured skull. Mrs. Lavender
was not seriously hurt. A
fifth passenger, Tina Ann
Ramos, 13, Oakland, suffered
a possible skull fracture.
Arbitration Proposed
in Dispute With Union
Grants Pass-Brown Plumb
ing and Heating company of
Klamath Falls has proposed
arbitration of the dispute with
the union, which has . had
work on the plumbing con'
tract In the new Josephine
General hospital at a stand
still for more than a week.
The proposal calls for the
men to go batic to work dur
Ing the period of arbitration.
The Medical Roundup
Emeritus Coniultjnt In Medici nt
Mayo Clinic
Kmcrltui Prof a nor of Medietas
Mayo Clinic
(Refiner and Tribune Syndicate,
1013)
Kidney Transplant Inow struggling with is to do
r-. ii ho. ho.n anr. something to the person re
" ' . Inn th liUnra whlnh will
keep his body from throwing
out the foreign tissue that has
been introduced.
Sometimes the ability of the
tissues of the recipient to de
stroy the new kidney has been
lowered a bit with the help of
radiation-with x-rays. In the
case of the man in Leeds, the
resistance of the body was
lowered by a combination of
radiation plus a drug. It is
hoped that the success in this
British experiment represents
a "break-through."
I recently talked about this
to one of America's ablest di
rectors of a research group,
and he says that today the
craze for transplanting kid
neys is very distressing to
many families. A man with
severe Bright's disease will
say to his brother, "Give me
one of your kidneys." The
brother consults able physi
cians who say, "It Is useless to
perform the operation; it will
not prolong your sick broth
er a life by more than a tew
weeks." The healthy brother
then refuses to part with his
kidney and then his relatives
become disgusted with him.
geon's dream to help a man
who is dying of Bright's dis
ease by giving
him a good
kidney taken
f r o m a man
who has just
died, perhaps
suddenly alter
a heart attack.
I now read
that in Leeds,
England, four
doctors have
successfully removed a kidney
from a man of 64 who had just
died In a hospital, and used it
to replace a bad kidney in a
37 -year -old man who was
gravely 111. Four months later,
the borrowed kidney was still
functioning, and so the doc
tori were elated.
As I have said several times
in this column, there, have
been some 18 cases in which a
kidney was transplanted suc
cessfully from one alike-twin'
to another. When, however, a
kidney Is transplanted even
from a brother to a sister, the
kidney soon degenerates and
falls to work. The tremendous
problem (hat many men are
;5
,
there's
wore to"'
bTORO
meets
the
EYE!
;i tumefy w
i
i,
i.
DRAMATIC NfcWS HLADfc
Smooth, iharp, aiient
end eale.
1 A1-" Vi'V1"' .
NEW EXHAUST MIIFFLtR
, . .Ditfci the noita
into the iiound.
WtNOIUNNtL HOUSING
Spifisi cnanthei uri
clogiii and clumping.
ANM SCALP DISC
Protect! Iran, mower
. . and ontietof.
tXCLUSIVtl S.l.ly
Spn St.rl.r lor "Stnd
bttiind" tttrli.
MULII-USt BAG ANO
CHUTC
STURDY 4-CYCLE
NQINt
Carlilied by A S A.
What is a gallbladder for
and can you get along without
one? Are diseases serious and
what causes gallstones? These
questions and others are an
swered In Dr. Alvarez' book
let on "Gallstones and Gall
bladder Disease." To obtain a
copy, send 25 cents and a
stamped, self-addressed enve
lope with your request to Dr.
Waller C. Alvarez, Dept.
MMT, Box 957, Dcs Moines
4, Iowa.
Testimony Sought
On Sugar Quotas
Washington -UPlt-A House
subcommittee Investigating
fluctuating sugar prices has
called representatives o(
Brazil, the Dominican Repub
lic, Costa Rica, the French
West Indies and the Philip
pines to testify on their sug
ar quotas.
One of the representatives
John A. O'Donnell, was a lead
ing figure in the recent dis
pute over Fhlllipptnc war
claims. He still deals with
U.S. sugar quotas for that
country, but a subcommittee
spokesman said O'Donncll's
appearance would have noth
ing to do with the claims is'
sue.
The representatives were
expected to be asked about
the ability of the countries
they work for to meet this
year's sugar quotas which the
United Slates has assigned to
them.
The subcommittee, headed
by Rep. Leonor Sullivan (D-
Mo ), has been told that sugar
prices, which rose to a rec
ord level In May will return
to normal in the near future.
"Prices have been coming
down as rapidly as they had
been going up," Undersecre
tary of Agriculture Charles
S. Murphy told Sullivan.
i
aiiW-J
Small
Worlds
Around
Us
lynn W.
Watkint
mtiutor TrlbtuM lyadlcau, UJ
Pampered Goldit Listans
To Small Voic from Past
He lived a well ordered life,
was always served a) the ex
act time.' He lived with his
family in an apartment, steam
heated in the winter and air
conditioned in the summer.
He had regular medical check
ups. His toenails were care
fully clipped; his coat regu
larly brushed; his every wish
satisfied. He was a pampered
pet: a small, golden-haired
Cocker spaniel dog.
A one-owner dog, he had
been a member of the family
for all the five years of his
life. His owners were proud
of him, as they Tightly should
have been, for Goldie was
well-mannered, perfectly ad
Justed, obedient and affection
ate, and was a part of the fam
ily. He belonged, and his own
ers believed they understood
him, and he felt he understood
them.
There were, however, just a
couple or three actions his
owners could never quite un
derstand; actions, in fact, that
bothered thorn, for they be
lieved the long association
with humans should have in
fluenced the dog to overcome
some of the peculiar behav
iorisms he sometimes d I s
played .', . actions not entire
ly in keeping with an animal
that had, all its life, been a
sole human companion, and
never with any others of its
kind.
"Just why," the dog's own
ers want to know, "docs Gol
die bolt his food, when he
should know by this time
that he will always be fed,
and at no time is he raven
ously hungry?"
In spite of the fact this pam
pered little fellow has no def
inite knowledge that he is a
dog, he still Is influenced by
the inborn patterns and ac
tivities common to his biolog
ical stock. Goldie is still a
slave, to some degree, to instinct.
His long-ago ancestors had
to gulp their food, had to hur
ry to get what they could
while the getting was good, j
Some other wild dog might
come along and take It away.
Back In the beginning the dog
that gulped its food was the
one that enjoyed a full stom-1
ach: They knew, at least In
principle, those doe ancestors
of Goldie's, that "he who hes
itates is lost," and hungry, too.
Another of Goldie's habits
his owners mildly object to is
the rapid turning round and
round on a soft pillow or on
the davenport, even though the
dog must know the pillow is
soft and warm. But it's hard
on the pillow and seemingly
silly, especially for a well
behaved dog, who, in most re
spects, is a perfect gentleman.
Here again, Innate impulse
Is at work; instinctive remem
brance to very early dog-an
cestors, still returned after
thousands of years, of the time
when the wild dog had to
tramp down the weeds and
grass In order to maKe ltsell a
comfortable bed. A spark of
that old behavior pattern still
remains, even in today's pam
pered pet whose feet have
never trodden any surface
harder than a deep pile rug
or a well clipped lawn. Ho
sllll turns round and round on
the pillow.
As Intelligent as he is,
Goldie and all his kind still
listen lo thut small still voice
from out of the past.
Sandy Arson Case
Dismissed in Court
Oregon City - dim - An
arson case has been dismissed
In Clackamas County Circuit
Court here against Howard
William Baker, 61.
He had been accused in
connection with a fire which
destroyed the Sandy General
Store last Dec. 27.
Judge Ralph Holman grant
ed a defense motion for dis-
1 I that r.
evidence hns been presented 1
to show the lire bad been
set.
NO MONEY DOWN On Approved Credit
W Carry Our Own Contracts
LEONARD ELECTRIC
COMPANY
"M4ff4't Leading Aatluiic Dtir for Hit Part 11 Yon"
309 EAST MAIN ST. PHONE 773-4541
TWO PLEAD GUILTY
Portland - aTJ - Two sus
pects In the $54,409 robbery
of the Ea-ttoort Plara branch
of the US. National bank
here Jan. 24 pleaded guilty
Thursday in U. S District
Court. James T. Hollywood,
64. and Richard J. Young, 36,
both of Seattle, had earlier
pleaded Innocent.
$140 Million Voted for
n . r
Running or congress
nasningion - iith - ine
House Appropriations Com
mittee has voted $140 mil
lion toward the cost of run
ning Congress next year and
warned that another $-0 mil
lion will be needed shortly to
make sure the Capitol dome
doesn't collapse.
Moving Equipment
For RENT al
A lo Z Rental
111) N. litanM 779-1474
STOCKMEN
FEED PELLETS
Your coarse or unpalatable
rouejhaeje will make a bate
for a modern balanced ration
that you can teed with lirtU
labor and no wattaoe. The
incroaiod meat or milk pro
duced will f iva you maii
mum roturnt on small caih
Investment.
MORTON
MIUING CO.
500 Rots Una, Mtdford
HELP US CELEBRATE SALE ENDS TOMORROW, SATURDAY, JUNE 8
Aluminum 6' Redwood ' I p ' " Ji
SCREEN PICNIC fE3 MMM
DOORS TABLES fgj
LAWNSCAPER SPECIAL
Free bag of 60 If IRAND UWNF00D
(5.000 sq. It size) with purchase of
tOLf HMD UWMSrKUU
A '24.70 valua
, $1695
I0IH
roi oir VtT
ton U
ALL
FURNITURE
10
OFF
FOR CASH
In i" drill! th measure of VALUE lift f(l
POWER . . , fowcr tor dnllinf in wood. metl
or aiiowy . . . Powtr to rurtdli altKhrrtnts
mtf KCffUortts. Tfi.s Black ft Decker U-100
hai the poner yon netd and low L0.M price
to makt it a fcnuine VALUE!
1 itar tearaatte tueet far eouewreial tea.
10 88
U-200 " DELUXE DRILL
n.88 Reg
J26.95
Above-ivenit power nd performance, far
CMlltnf and operating accesiontt and
attachments for sawmf. undmi, polnh
inf. Industrially listed by U.L. Ptkiiim
Itired enutlt with key.
Versatile frco
standing patio.
Ask the factory
Representative about
this product!
, -an bo attached
a your house..
using Lascolite
fibre glass panels
Stt-p orftrt (Ms tfaGd and ttafcf a 1aml '
new world of comfort, relaxation and
gracious livmj. Imagine this picturesque
patio in your yard . . . the ideal place to
entertain -or retreat after a hectic day.
Thii new (vua idea, designed exclusively
for Lascohte, can mean a new, deltghrfttl
way cf life, yet the cost is modest lw
than yo ltricht fhink when you by
Lascolite and yoii can do it yourself I
Factory Representative,
on Hand All Day
26" x 8' $5.50 Sheet
26" x 10' $6.95 Sheet
26" x 12' . .....$8.30 Sheet
FLAT LASCOLITE
24" x Any Length . . 39c Sq. Ft.
10 DISCOUNT FOR CASH
..or to garag
BAMBOO SHADES
Inside Peel
3x6 $1.29
4x6 $1.69
5 x 6 $2.09
6 x 6...., $2.49
8 x 6 $3.29
9 x 6 .....$3.69
10x6... $4.09
12x6 $4.99
Thoroughbred
Perfumed
HORSE
MANURE
79
i
51 '2 Inch
SKILSAW
Regular $29.95
23
95
GARBAGE
CANS
21 $)95
Gal.... J
30 ST95
Gal.... J
GARDEN HOSE
PLASTIC
Reg, Sale
i2"x50' 3.56 2.19 10 yr. guar.
Vs"x50' 6.75 5.19 10 yr. guar.
Vs'W 5.95 4.99 5 yr. guar.
"x50' 8.95 7.19 10 yr. Nylon
34"x50' 11.95 10.19 10 yr. Nylon
y2"x25' 1.75 1.19 5 yr. guar.
s8"x25' 2.75 2.19 10 yr. guar.
FENCING
6'x25' EUROPEAN REED 10.95
6'x25' EUROPEAN REED 5.95
6'x25' OUTSIDE PEEL BAMBOO 5.95
6'x25' " BAMBOO POLE 19.95
1x8 Cedar S4S 5c L Ft.
1x10 Cedar S4S 7c L Ft.
1x8 Cedar Rgh ....... .5c L Ft
4x6 Cedar Rgh 10c L Ft.
BAMBOO
POLES
1 ".1 Vi"
x12'
!
1k
Mill
Good For
Pole Vaulting
BRUCE BAUER
LUMBER COMPANY
765 South Riverside
Hours: 8 to 5 P.M.
772-6211