Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 03, 1963, Image 3

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    (
WEDNESDAY, JULY 3. 1963
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOHD. OREGON
A J
MAR. 22
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1 MAY r
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MAY 21
24-31 .32-901
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JUNE 23
36-37-39-5
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) JULY 24
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AUG. 24
SEPT. 22
1U-17-OJ-0O
STAR GAZER! O
r By CLAY r ptit t im
Jf, 'our Do Activity GoW J
' ccordinj la In. Slon. V
To develop messoge for Thursday,
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth siga
1 DrW,
2 Favors
311
4 You're
5 Be
6 Small
7 Give
8 Troubled '
9 Gifts
lOYourself
1 1 Patience
I2A
13 And
14 Easily
15 Break
16 Deoressed
1 7 You
l8Mo
19 Foes
20 Sup
21 If
22 By
23 Mora
24 III.
25 Personal
26 Forward
U Plans
6346-73
3' Or 61Urg.
32 Complaining 62 Heart
33 Seek 63 Belter .
34 Entertainment 64 Smiles
i , 65To
36Peool. 66 Consult
37 And 67Chong.
u ocioAaiion oo Are
U2-46-87
.",9 P-,.
40 Serious
41 Coin
42 Trying .
43 Plorviing
44 You r.
45 New
46 Social
47 And
48 In
49 New -
50 May
51 Follow
52 Mew
53 An
54 Frund
55 Need
56 Brings
0 uoubr
28 Cnmnli..., 1,0 I
29 Come 59Soeciol
ouwitn ftOZesr
69 Interest
70 W,U
7! And
72 Confidence
73 Authorities
7A I ,1,-1..
75 Temporarily
77 And
78 New
79 Needed
SO For
81 Handling
82 Belter
63Fo,th
84 Now
85 Your
86 Way
87 Problem
88 Altered
89 Now
90 People
.ri. y" vu People
CGaod (Adverse
SCT.2J ;
OCT. 33 i
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NOV. 22
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NOV. 21
DEC 22
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P7tC75-88
CAPIICOtN
Dec M .
;an. 20
P7-78-83
AOUAIIUC
JAM. 21
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FEB. 20 1
MAR. 21 12?
62-69-74 VS
Tfie Medical Roundup
m. V
Emenmt Consultant In Medicine
Mayo rilnlc
Emeritus Professor of Medicine
Mayo Clinic
(Reenter and Tribune Syndicate,
1963)
IMr
Child With Eager,
Inquiring Mind
Tne other days as I wailed
to board an airplane, I
watched a bright-faced young
mother who was being kept
very busy by
a small boy
who was ac
tively explor
ing the wait
ing area, try
ing to push
every avail
able button,
and to get in
t o every
Alvarez drawer or
compartment.
I spoke to the mother and
learned that the boy was only
18 months old; but he was fil
led with curiosity about every
mechanical device that he
could find. At home he had
to take things apart to see
how they were made, and
how they worked.
I was so glad to see that the
sensible mother was not an
noyed at her child's behavior;
she just kept trying to ans
wer his many questions as
best she could. She did not
get angry with him, punish
him, or try lo restrain his cur
iosity, as so many mothers do.
I said to her, "Be glad that
he is so very bright, so cur
ious about everything, and so
mechanically inclined. Some
day, with a brain such as he
has, he is likely to be a great
physicist or engineer or in
ventor." Many a time a woman has
come into my office with her
boy of 7 or 8 who has imme
diately started to explore the
place, and to examine the in
teresting weapons of primi
tive men which I, with my
anthropologic interests, have
gathered, and now keep on
a shelf.
Instantly the mother says,
"Willie, leave those things
alone; put that down; quit ex
amining that; come here and
sit down."
And always I have said,
"Let him examine everything;
let us rejoice over the fact
that he is so curious about
everything. How glad we
should be that he is so bright.
How much better this is than
if he were so dull and stupid
that he would sit beside you
apathetically, without any
curiosity. That would make
me fear that he would never
be inquiring enough lo learn
much about anything."
Treatment of Severe
Histoplasmosis
Most of the many persons
who have contracted histo
plasmosis - a disease due to
a sort of mold which grows
in the soil of a number of our
central states - have recover
ed from it without ever even
knowing they had it, and all
we find in their lungs is the
scar.
Recently, Dr. Michael L.
Furcolow, of Kansas City,
Kansas, an expert on this dis
ease, reported that some per
sons who have a serious form
of it, either acute or chronic,
must be well treated. Fortu
nately, he has found that a
certain antibiotic - ampho
tericin B - will help many
of the patients to recover. But
they must be treated expertly,
and for a long time, if they
are to be cured.
and a self-addressed stamped
envelope with your request
for it to. Dr. Walter C. Alva
rez, Dept. MMT, Box 957, Des
Moines 4, Iowa.
Family
Council
Edltnr's Note: The Family Coun
cil consists at a judge, a psychia
trist, three clergymen, a newspaper
editor, a women's editor, and two
writers. Eacn article is a summary
of an actual case history. The
Council reports on problems that
have been dealt with by respon
sible agencies and counselors.
(Copyright 1963
General Features Corp.)
Roslyn E. - An old flame
turned up and I'm wildly at
tracted to him.
Mrs. B. W. I gave her a
moral upbringing so why such
loose talk?
Roslyn E. - My mother
warns me not to see him, but
there's nothing to worry
about. My husband is on a
long Navy hitch and he
doesn't expect me lo be a her
mit. And with all the new in
ventions we have nothing to
fear physically, if we should
forget ourselves. 1
Mrs. B. W. - Roslyn fright
ens me with her plan to date
this man, play with fire, risk
her marriage. She claims that
these days couples can take
pills, injections, so there's no
danger of pregnancy or ven
ereal disease. So what? How
about the danger of just doing
wrong?
The Council - Even if all
fear is removed, as is quite
possible - fear of pregnancy,
of disease, of detection - Ros
lyn must still face the fact
that she is courting moral dis
aster if she proceeds with her
plan to two-time her husband.
Sexual morality in the U.S.A.
is still defined as belinging
within marriage, not pre-post-or-extramarital.
The big ques
tion raised above is: Can men
and women choose to be sex
ually moral, not from fear of
the dangers of being im
moral but because it's "right,"
because this form of restraint
has been found to yield the
highest return of health and
happiness? It's a question his
tory, medicine and religion
keep asking ... To put it
more simply, let's say a man
refrains from throwing a banana-peel
out of his car. The
low - level reason is that he's
afraid of the $50 fine. The
high level motivations might
be civic pride (not to uglify
the landscape), altruism (not
to cause a fellow -human to
slip), sanitation (not to leave
garbage and invite vermin to
breed) . . . Roslyn and other
young people with a sexual
"problem" may, in Ihe light
of new medical discoveries,
be able to chuck over the
"low - level" reasons for be
having themselves, but there's
high-level conscience left to
reckon with. Nourished prop
perly by parents and teachers,
this flashes directional signals
clearly, in living color.
Spots bcfoit- your eyes -and
many other vision prob
lems - are discussed in Dr.
Alvarez' booklet "How to
Safeguard Your Vision." You
may obtain a copy of the
booklet by sending 25 cents
Break and Entry Is
Checked by Police
Break and entry at the
Civil Air Patrol building at
the Mcdford Municipal Air
port was reported to city po
lice Monday.
Loss of annroximatelv $24
was listed. The original Re
port was made" by Elizabeth
Ann Weber, 558 Charlotte
Ann rd.
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i 73 nr? ir
Olympia
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