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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1963)
MONDAY, JULV 1. 1963 MtUhOHU MAIL '.H.aufU.. MfcDt-'ORD. OHtOUN MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON ACTRESS MAriRIES Las Vegas, Nev. - (UPD - Ac tress Jo Morrow, 23, and MONDAY. JULY I, 1963 A 7 of the lots of blood can be determined, and then correct ed. For instance, a woman with a "fibroid" of the womb which causes her to flood each month may have to un Two Hospitalized Generally Fair Weather Prevails Following Storms Three Uninjured as I Two Approaches Some Think Architect's Position At Capitol Should Be Abolished n.. nm. vutct . .... ... I The Medico ftocindup State TB Hospital Otticer Takes Over Salem -UIPD- Dr. Robert D. Michel, 46, former assistant professor at the University of Oregon medical school, Port land, took over today as chief resident medical officer at the State Tuberculosis hospital here. He replaces Dr. Robert E. Joseph, 56, who was discharg ed after the legislature placed the hospital under the admin istration of the state board of higher education. Joseph has joined the medi cal staff at Eastern Oregon State hospital at Pendleton. The Family Council hdltor'i no: Th Family Council consists of a Judse, phyrhlatrlst, Uirfa clergymen, three editors and a women's editor, crh article la a summary of a family disagreement presented to the 'ounctt. T Council deals with problems, major and minor, encountered by luldinee counselors and social workers. Edited by Irs. Alma Denny. (Copyright b General reature corp.) Boat Strikes Rocks As Autos Collide Klamath Falls -(DPI)- Two persons were hospitalized here late Saturday with serious in juries following a two-car col lision in California 18 miles south of Tulelake. California officers said a Jackie Barnett, 42, a tone- By United Prats International Generally fair weather pre vailed over the nation today after a week end of heavy rains in the East, tornadoes in the South and 90-plus tem peratures. Washington got 2.10 inches of rain during the 24 hours ending Sunday night, and Bal timore, Md., received 3.35 Officials in Fairfax County, buildings and knocked out at Virginia, across the Potomac least one power transformer. Minnesota's Twin Cities had 09 degrees Sunday, one degree short of the record for the date set in 1931. It was the highest reading since June 13, 1956, when the tem perature reached 100. Redwood Falls. Minn., had 100. Buffalo, N.Y., recorded 94. breaking a record of 93 writer for Jimmy Durante, exchanged marital vows Sun day night in the Gold Room of the Flamingo Hotel. from Washington, estimated that lightning struck about' 20 homes. Many trees were knocked down and a few Depoe Bay, Ore. -flJPlI- A IT foot outboard boat struck I ..wwt nie iu.i ni nrcniioot nr&. . iriutnft than u..v t. : . ...... ..... . . . .... ... . . n , ins ime or arcnuect pres ently is worn by J. George Stewart, a genial gentleman who goes about the Capitol puffing on a pipe and per forming what he construes to be good works. The $26 million new Senate office building, the $20 mil lion east front extension and the $118 million newest House office buildings are among the projects carried out under his aegis. Some members of Con grass, however, do not ap praciata all that Stewart has dona for them. There saama to be feeling that ha la Killing insm wun Kindness. As Sen. William E. Prox mire (D-Wis.) put it: "We have nothing but disasters to show for the enormous amounts of money that Congress has been persuaded by the architect of the Capitol to spend." He told the Senate that the new buildings were "incon sistent with the rest of the architecture"; that the con struction has been "exceed ing expensive"; that "actual spending always soars far over Initial estimates," and that "blunder has followed blunder." All of this led Proxmire to conclude that the Capitol i myself, this had the ring of dergo a hysterectomy, or a stomach ulcer or piles that bleed heavily may have to be operated on. Washington-(tIPII-T h e r e is I generally a right way and a wrong way to approach a mi j; rvuai dchuuiui morning, O, What a beautiful day!' " " Although the other senators tactfully refrained from com ment, I suspect their reaction was that anything the archi tect might do would be pre ferable . to having . Douglas burst into song. the rocks at the south en woum oe better off without an architect. When the annual legislative appropriation bill came before the Senate last week, he introduced an amendment to abolish the of fice. Other senators pointed out that the architect does more than erect controver sial buildings. For one thing, ha keeps the air con ditioner, working. Proxmire replied that "A discontinuance of air condi tioning might be a good way to get Congress out of Wash ington." To a layman such as pure logic. l t KmariLiii Com Emeritus Consultant In Medicine Miyo ntiUc Emeritus Professor of Medicine Mayo Clime (Redster and Tribune trndlceia, ! trance to Depoe Bay channel Sunday but three Salem resi dents escaped without injury. It failed to sway the bulk of his colleagues, however, and the amendment -was re jected. I strongly doubt that the proposal would have been adopted under any circum stances, but any chance it might have had was lost when Douglas arose to support it. Lyrically citing the blessing it would provide, Douglas de clared that "If we were to wake up some morning and find that we were not graced with the presence of an archi tect of the Capitol, we would roads were flooded by the rainfall. Homes Demolishad A twister in Louisiana Sat u r d a y demolished several homes. A funnel cloud touch uroblem. a 1- though many people appar ently are not Jenny A I'd have a I thought at last room to myself. "imi iirtMem, io my nreams of overnight guests, and peace v. and quiet in a hide-away all mv own? I'm fllrlnna at thi. ' urk.i i j Aboard the craft were Da vid Vanek, 26; his wife, Letti, and Vanek's father, Joe Va nek, 52. The Coast Guard said a breaker hurled the boat against the rocks as it was on its way out of the harbor. Sick headaches are easier COFFEE SHOP to live with if you understand what causes them - and what car driven by William Hayes, 56, Portland, and one driven by Ray M. Jones, 38, Empire, Anemia Due To Lack of Iron I recently re-read an inter esting article by Dr. Ernest Beutler. chairman of the d e p a rlment accumulate in the blood any aware that they have a choice. With Mrs. n. A. - I can't turn my sister away while she's ill. - Jenny A. - I'm 16 and all my life I've shared a room with my older sister. Libera tion was in view because she's going to an out-of-town college this fall, but now comes the news that my Aunt Lou is moving in with me. more rapidly than when it is taken by mouth. If the patient takes Iron In pill form for a few weeks, and does not feel any better, the thing for the doctor to do is not to change to injections of iron, but to study the per son again to see if the cause you can do to avoid them. Dr. Alvarez offers such help in his little 25-cent booklet about migraine headaches. Send for it by enclosing a self-addressed, stamped envel ope and 25 cents with your request mailed to Dr. Walter C. Alvarez. Dept. MMT, Box 057, Des Moines 4, Iowa. iM.rinum Ore., collided. Jones and Mrs. Mrs, G. A. - My young sis- 1 tor tiiraa .Inn. ! r-U: Janice Hayes, 48, were hos pitalized. Jones suffered head, chest and back injuries and Mrs. Hayes a fractured leg, lacer ations and contusions. Hayes was treated for minor injur- inches during a similar pe riod. ed down 30 miles northwest of Corpus Christi, Tex., and destroyed barns and farm set in 1945 and the hottest NOW OPEN a 1 1 a u e re spect, I sub mit that Sen. Paul U T-n..n day since September, 1959 when the mercury reached 95 Washington (UPD Senator Thruston B. Morton (D-Ky.) views the rise of "favorite sons" in sUte GOP organiza tions as a desire to avoid divi sive primary fights rather than as "stop Goldwater" movements. diuiic it, Wlliuago, She has an operation sched- i uled for late August to cor rect an internal nhnnnmnlit.. o f Medicine Lightning struck the home of Joseph V. Charyk, head of the new Space Communica 6-12 MID The occupants remained of the City of Hope Med ical Center, of D u a r t e, Calif. Like most blood buildings. The temperature reached 101 at El Paso, Tex., and A heavy thunderstorm hit Columbus, Ohio, Sunday, flooding several underpasses. Lightning struck several aboard until a line was tossed NIGHT Weit las (D - 111.) chose the wrong way to try to abolish the architect of the Capitol. I plan to call for her and bring her to our home to con valesce. Before entering the 1 tions Satellite Corp., knock North Platte, Neb.. Picks- to them. They were helped ashore after securing the ves sel to the rocks. ing part of his brick chimney town, S.D., 103 and 105 at AT THE BIG Y into the backyara. Phoenix, Arlr. nospital she will quit her job, close her apartment, put her things in storage. Jenny must s p e delists I & L l.usy 4 41 know, he is d 1 t r e s sed over the fact mini, una is me way to be kind. a . ; ' ' Tt nn .... that almost always when we doctors see a patient with a secondary anemia, which is due to some loss of blood from the body, we seldom five the much needed iron; we give vitamin B-12, which Is not needed, and hence can not help the patient. Also, we may give i transfusion of a pint ot blood which is not enough to do any good - if the per son really needed it. About ell it can do is to give the person three chances in 100 to get a severe "serum hepa titis," which may even kill him. Iron deficiency anemias are common in women who menstruate too heavily; or who have badly bleeding piles; or who have been hav ing too-closely-spaced preg nancies. Pregnancy increases the body's requirement for iron. Some persons keep los ing iron which oozes from the Inner lining of their small bowel. In the case of a per son past 40 or 50, with a de cided secondary anemia, the physician must immediately make every effort either to find a cancer somewhere in the digestive tract, or else to make sure that none is present. As Dr. Beutlcr says so truly, some people can walk around comfortably with only half of the iron in their blood that they should have. I re member well the strongly- built farmer's wife with of ten-bleeding piles, who one day came into my office with a hemoglobin (red coloring and iron-containing matter in the blood) reading of only 80 per cent of normal. When I said, "You must be miser able with that," she eald "Why no; I am as healthy and strong as I ever was. Didn't Fial 111 Her anemia was not pro duclng symptoms. A physi cian with a big practice, one day years ago cut his hand on a sardine tin and noticed that his blood was watery. Next day, when he had his hemo globin measured, he found he had less than half of the nor mal amount. He, too, told me that with this tremendous anemia, he had not felt at all ill. An X-ray study showed that he was losing blood from a big but symptomless cancer in his large bowel. It was quickly removed by a sur geon, and It never returned Because of such observa tions, I disapprove ot the habit many of my fellow phy sicians have of saying to a woman who has perhaps 85 per cent of the usual amount of hemogloblnn in her blood, "You are anemic and must have iron shots several times a week.' Usually a good laboratory man can tell, on glancing at a stained blood smear, wheth er the person before him has a secondary or a primary iner- edltary) anemia. Dr. Beutler maintains, as other blood experts do, that In the presence ot a secondary anemia, prescriptions for liv er extract, vitamin B-12, co- : bait, folic acid or ascorbic acid, special diets, fresh air, or sunshine are of no value In hastening the return ot the amount of hemoglobin (red pigment) to normal. Dr. Beutler says that liver extract is "totally ineffective in the treatment of an Iron deficiency." Usually, when we physicians do give iron, we combine it with B-12, which Is not needed. A diet rich in Iron probably will not be enough to relieve the patient. When Iron is needed, Dr. Beutler believes In giving pills ot ferrous sulfate. There are some few patients who cannot handle much Iron by mouth, and then it may have to be Injected. When the patient can take his iron by mouth. Dr. Beutler prefers this way of giving It. He feels sure that the giving of it hy podermically, as so many of us physicians do today, is rarely indicated, because this does not cause the iron to - CATS GET IT ALL Aberdaron, Wales (ITD Miss Ada Tilley, 81, left all but $140 of her $182,000 es tate for the treatment of sick I . cats, her will revealed Sun day. "I feel very hurt," said Mrs. Tilley 's niece, Mrs. Doris Williams, who cared for her aunt for the last eight years I of her life, but was cut out of the will. CUT-UP GW Manor House Grade A Flash Frozen Pan-ready young fryers. Frash froien ' within minutes of processing. Pound Sams Franks 5 5 p Li ( J 1 a e$$rt $& 7(0)c lunch Meats -31-41 POTATO . u 11 .a. ruinr i caiiops : vr v.mra l-fr. I ST. i . a If"'-, n Rv I i.i it in i MPaitc vhv i 3-P.i . if nr i ZiJ Sirloins m I ' Boneless Bar-S and Dal Monto "Sweetheart. Just heat and sarva. Safeway brand. Always trash, tender and Juicy. Mb. Pkg. SUGAR-SWEET RED-RIPE Wfteirmellinis Each Be sure to include one of these beau ties in your holiday fun. Ripe Rtd Havanl 19c Peaches lb. 19c Sweat and tender, plump full kernels Frash, Crltp Celery Hamburger Site, Jumbo Yellow Onions i 10c Fresh Corn 5 .. . 39c Beautiful Golden-Ripe Fruit Bananas 3 . 49c Prices effective Monday, July 1 through Wednesday, July 3 at Safeway in Medford. Limit rights reserved. Time to Stock Up! Zee Napkins JSTi?' 229c Aluminum Foil Dixie Plates Dixie Cups Table Cloth Pancake Mix Biscuit Mix Dixie Cups J Kitchen Craft 12", 125 ft. White 9 inch disposable. Pkg. 10 for hot drinks. Pkg. of 15 Picnic Time work saver. Kitchen Craft 4-lb. pkg. Mrs. Wright's 40 oi. pkg. Siie 48 33c 19c 39c 19c 53c 35c 59c Check these low shelf prices! mm mm (C) COPYRIGHT 1963, SAFEWAY STORES, INCORPORATED Lemonade Scotch Treat frozen juice. Mix with water and serve. 6-oi. can SALADS lucerne, Cole Slsw, Health Salad, Macaroni Salad, Potato Salad Pint Cfn. 39 C Hot cereal, 18 oz. pkg. Cream of Rice Mushrooms St?"" 47c 2fof39c Chow Mein Nodles No. 303 can 2f"35c Soup Mix Minced Clams Alka Seltzer Wyler's concentrated. 4 vtyi. 1 5 ot. Snow's Ideal fer dips. 7'-i ot. Headache relief, large tize 10c 31c 44c ' Be ready to enjoy the holiday out-of-doors ! Plan fnr fnn cmrJ rrnnrl tnnA avntimA -1, nr. "L 0 w V WHlUbVUbt XV A1CX you prepare for this favorite summer pastime, we re featuring a tremendous variety of rnnV-nnf vfllnoa in oil "i an a vf wi an , iuu umuiiuarj throughout the store. Stock up now for outdoor and indoor meal needs at these low. low nrinfiS. Shnn Snfpwnv tnrlavf Vienna Sausage Sweet Pickles Zippy Relish Llbby's ; 4 ez. can Zippy, whole. 22ez.jar For Hot Dogs, Hamburgers. 12 oz. Look At These Values! Barbecue Sauce Canned Beverages MdrMimaiiuws Coney Buns Sandwich Bread Open Pit 18oz. btl. Cragmonr, fruit 4 flavors. 1 2 oz. Fluff-l-e.t. 1-lb. pkg. or Hamburger bum. Skylark, 8 ct. Skylark, white or wheat. 22Vi oz. . n7 n rF? n late. MJII. W , V "P!tS -1 a. --v - - - . - m M 'W JT .Kv v,:- . m tuffi i n in iii auis"-i iui i - .ruwvw xr a r-rrrrr- 1 . 1 - - : L-A STORt (- WttzY . : r - S I . MW a" . IN IV w dsV : . I :e-a ea a,iB m I 2 39c , SI 25c 33c 35c i - vi'.-- . ' r: . ii. . . Libby Values PeaS Sweat, libby's. 303 can Vegetable Cocktail a wOrn Cream Corn 303 ca Corned Beef Hash Corned Beef 5 Veg. juices. 46 oz. can 5 All-around favorite. ISHez. Oh, so good tasting. 12 oz. SI 39c SI 45c 59c CHARCOAL BRIQUETS Sattelite brand. Makes quick, hot coals for the best In barbecuing. io.!b. AQC Bag Kr Charcoal Lighter Wizard Lighter Fluid. Start Your barbecue fire the easy way. 32 ex. aH c Salad Pressing IRipe Olives Prink Piedmont 32 oz. iar Van Camp's No. 2 can ; Llbby's, select Tall can Srape er Orange Lucerne Half Gal. edium m Eggs TrAam O' The Crop Dozen 29c 3s49c 4 PI 2s49c af)!Sl U.B I Delicious Flavors Ice Cream Lucerne Party Pride Cherry Vanilla Peppermint Candy Choc. Chip Almond Choc. MarshmaMow Macadamta Nut Butterbrickle Butterfinger Banana Nut Vanilla Chocolate Maple Nut Choc. Marble Neapolitan Butter Pecan Half Gal. COFFEE 97' MJB BRAND 2-lb. Can Mb. Can 49c INSTANT 10 MJB 1 Mtk 6 at. 70- es. iar ! Plus the Added Bonus of GOLD BOND STAMPS S3; I tom AT.nl (O COPYRIGHT 1963, SAFEWAY STORES, INCORPORATED Libbv's 46 Oz. Can 5! I -ouncn-n would take a saint to say, Oh fine, it's quite okay for you to eras mv Inn-jiirDllAn .1 A- ... .-- ..o-n-iicu eian iu en joy a while room . . . all alone by the telephone, there is no one else but me. tra.l . as the song goes. But Jenny's no saint and Mrs. A. must ex pect her to huff and puff as sne rows off steam. In fact ' that steam, paradoxically, helps to clear the air. Mrs. A. tuiiiuuseraie Dnetiy with her disappointed daughter, but then stress the compan- SatOrV "PUnH fanlinn'l ,1.-1 will suffuse the latter as she plays co-hos'.oss to a lady in temporary (we gather! dis. tress. Perhaps Jenny'a imag Inatlon is mature enough to envision a possible similar emergency , in her own life, where a sister needs a sister. At the same time, Mrs. A. as against what may easily become Aunt Lou's "Squatter 5 Rights - thn min.n...n. to-dinner sort of thing. A time - table should be drawn up with a date set for "other arrangements," d e p ending upon Aunt Lou's health. Meanwhile, Jenny, with BiB C -...I ... . - j ,uu 11 nuve your parents, it not your room, all to yourself - nlus a dotinir aunt. See it that nv I Doctors Place i Soleen in Bodv 01 Colorado Bov Denver -(UPD- A 10-year-old patient at Colorado General Hospital had a new spleen to day following an historic transplant operation perform ed during the week end. Both the boy and his moth-' er, the donor of the ortran. were reported In "air" con-' dltlon after surgery, but the ' youngster still faces a crisis, month, when his body ts like ly to attempt to "reject" the spleen as foreign matter. The operation was the first spleen transplant in history. The mother and son are - irom f-ueDio, uoio. They have not been Identified. Antibodies Depleted Doctors said the bov was suffering from a disease which depleted the siiodIv nf ' sflitibodics in his blood. Anti bodies fight infection, and : because he did not have enoiign oi0 them, he was chronically III. A team ofstiigeons which has nprrnrmnrf . - a liver transplants here In re cent months undertook the spleen operation. Their Idea was that the new spleen, an organ which produces anti bodies, would provide the boy wun more immunity irom In fection. , Can Cat Along I A normally healthy persOA (like his mother can get along I without a spleen because antl. . bodies also ar produced by . other organs - the thymus gland and lymph nodes. in past transplant opera tions involving other parts of the body, a crisis period usual- ". v vv,mi:a wiiiiui iu w ,ju nays after the surgery. A spokes man for the surgeons said it was Possible that fh hnv'i transplanted spleen would : produce antibodies during that period which would at tempt to "reject" the spleen Itself. Towerful drugs will be used to try to prevent this. me uuy s own detective spleen was not removed from it nnsitlnn hnhinrl Ilia laft ribs, the new spleen was In serted In the right side of hii pelvic cavity. Monroe Woman, 21, Killed in Crash Corvallia (UPlt Mrs. Bar bara L. Osborne, 21, Monroe, was killed early today when her car plunged off Highway 99-W about two miles south of Monroe and crashed into a tree. Mrs. Osborne was en route from Junction Cily to Monroe shortly after 2 a.m. when she lost control of her car after rounding a curve, police said. She died at the scene. It was Benton county'i flrs$ traffic fatality ot the year.