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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 15, 1963)
A 10 MONDAY. JULY IS. 1983 MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON 1-48-W-63I mm X MAY II 53-541 61-64-73 MAY 22 JUNE 22 IffM W7-15-33 WV51-74-i CAHCH JUHf.21 JULY 23 6-18-21-38 'J0-66 uo J JULY 24 AUl!.21 i. it ta .1 : "erf'-" OS 13.70-74 12 VMO AUS.i svr.22 3.7.24-33 37-47-7I STAR GAZER M Br CLAY L POLLAN M Your Dailr AdnHy Guiik H "r According fo Jht Start. "T To develop message for Tuesdoyr, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. 1 Nw 31 Do 61 Social 2 Sen-ne 32 And 62 You j worcn jjwim 63 Or 34 JudgmM 64 Crete 35 lrnlobl 65 Amuwmtnf JG txctfltnt , 66 Plugging 37 Your 67 Inhueslt 38 Right oft Homo 39 Will S?Moy 40 Popular 70 Monty 41 Ntt 71 Apportl 42Trk 72 Or 43 Good 73 Today 44Wanx 74Raiulri 45Vibrotiom 7.SHonnin44 46 For 76Grouc 7 Wioring 77 Romonct 48 BiAint 78 Trip 4Tht 79Prtwntt. 50 Km SO To 51 Paopla l And 52 Trip 82 8. 53 In 83 B 54 The 4H.lo(ul 55 And 85Somly 56Hord 86 And 57Tnck. B7CornioVing stPT.a OCT. 21 4- 5-13-1 Bl-49-57 4Smil SKInd t You're 7 Your 8 Inspiring Hghr-upt .lOYou 1 1 Circular )2Poitpone 13Word 14Appnr 16 Will ' 17 Moke 180n 190oy 20SuipKt 2ITht 22 For 23ChonaMl.lt 24 Good 25 Contorts 26Wght 27A 28Lov 29 Short 30 You're 58 Opportunity 88 Clubs 59 Plauure 89 Hull 60 To WTolenli HI tcoeno OCT.24li NOV. 22 V l2.J7-29-52.rl IH-69-87-87 A U0ITT AIIUS N"" At OK. 22 TA 210-15-20 ell 4440-83-84XJ CAnucom OK. JAN. 11.10.79. k7.77-86-90S: N. 20 fX AOUAIIUS 9-14-23-35SS 155-56-8085' risen (SI 20 MAR 21 65-72-78 V21 Your Money's Worth By SYLVIA PORTER Copyright, Hill Syndicate, Inc. 'WRONG' BECAUSE THEY WERE 'RIGHT'? The lalo International currency expert, Dr. Per Jacobsson waji fond of telling about a Swedish banker who was happiest when he was wrong In his pessimistic judgments aooui eco nAmlr.f Innnpfnl trends. "The reason was," jacobsson said In a talk I had with him Just before he died a short while ago, "that the banker (Mar cus Wallenberg) made It his mission to shout warnings about , approaching economic trouble whenever he saw any signs of It and he would outline over ana over me steps to oe wnen to avert the trouble. Because of his warnings and advice, moves often would be made in time to reverse the trend. "Then Wallenberg would be accused of being 'wrong,' but It was only because he had been right In the first place. Since his aim all along was to prevent whatever disaster seemed to be developing, he would happily bask In the criticism." It is a delightful tale and exceedingly apt right now be cause rarely has business forecasting been under such attack as today. The recession so widely predicted for late 1962 did not materialize. Instead of slipping, our economy Just leveled off, then moved off the 1962 plateau into a renewed upturn. "You might as well use tea leaves," say some of the critics. The "leading indicators" which started to flash signals of pos sible downturn after the slock market crash of May, 1962, are being dubbed the "misleading indicators" by other skeptics. Here's where Jacobsson'! tale about Wallenberg comas In. for, I submit. It wall may ba that a major reason wa have not slipped into another racatsion so far Is that wa wara being warned of the possibility and actions hiva baan ' taken to prop our economy. To ba tpacitlct 1 Never before have so many policymakers in government, industry, labor, been so aware of the economic barometers and what they are saying, and thus never have so many been prepared to move to protect the U. S. economy as a whole and themselves in particular. The fact is that the Investment incentives given by Congross and the Treasury In 1962 to spur business spending on plants and equipment have sub stantially boosted this vital type of spending. Businessmen report a full $1 billion of the Increase In their spending iched uled for 1963 and 1964 is a direct result of the new tax credit and liberalized depreciation rules, and plant-equipment spend ing in-the final quarter of 1963 is slated to run B'i per cent ahead of this spending in the same months of 1962. The fact is the Federal government did accelerate various spending programs to stimulate the economy during the months of un certainty about its direction. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve System fed funds Into the banking system to encourage borrowing and the Treasury geared its debt operations to assist in expanding the economy. AH of these moves - and more - were significant props. Never before have businessmen had so many statistics and technical facilities to help -maintain their inventories in a proper relationship to sales. No longer are the risks so big that businessmen will overstock when times appear prosper ous and so add fever to lite economy, or go In for exaggerated slashing of inventories when times appear sluggish and so Intensify a downturn. Computers in themselves have revolu tionized management of inventories. The importance of this is far from fully understood. Navar balora have wa been so awara ol the average age of business cycles, and we are becoming acutely conscious of every jiggle in the statistics whan an upturn enters "old age." Tax reduction la being urged not only lor the long term health of our economy. From lha short-term view point, relief from our oppressive tax burden alio would langthan the Ufa of the now "old" 19(1-? upturn. Just as a superb set of paint brushes doesn't make a great artist, so a superb kit of forecasting tools doesn't make a great economist, and the tools in the hands of amateurs may be grossly misused, But let us not shrug off the fascinating possibility that when the tools do indicate economic trouble ahead and we use the warnings to take effective offsetting actions In time, we may make the forecasts "wrong" Just because they were originally "tight." Nature of Woman More Complicated By Cellular Study By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor New York - tUPU - Several hundred scientists discussed the fundamental nature of women today and made her more complicated than even her most attentive masculine admirers have ever imagined They were discussing her cellular nature, where she is a biological double X. This X doesn't stand for the un known: no one should assume a doubling of this X means the unknown doubled Australians Argue Over Name (or New Currency Sydney, Australia -WPH-Aus- tralians are squabbling bitter ly over whether they should pay two wombats or two din gos for a dozen beers. Others insist that their roos, emus and opals are "real" money, some cry for support to harden the melba and still others plump for a pound or a dollar. The controversy is over the names Australia should give its new currency when it abandons pounds, shillings and pence in 196S for decimal coinage. The present Australian pound will be split into two units - each worth 10 shillings or $1.75. But Just what the name of the new unit will be is still not decided. Federal Treasurer Harold Holt says he favors the name austral" so the currency will have an Australian flavor. Ridiculed by Opposition This has been ridiculed by the opposition and a front page editorial in the Sydney Daily Mirror said: "Stop this damn nonsense." It added that to call any piece of currency an "austral" was ridiculously parochial. 'Any effort to find a name typically Australian would make the nation look foolish in the eyes of the world," it said. The Mirror said there was nothing wrong with either the dollar or the pound since both were accepted at the world's financial centers. But there is strong criticism gainst any Australian dollar being introduced on grounds that too many countries use the name and thai it would mean Australia was taking an- other step towards "Ameri canization." So the tussle goes on with Australian animals such as wombat and kangaroos-which have two abbreviations, kanga and roo-the emu, opals and even the nation's famous op era star, Nellie Melba, being mentioned as possible con tenders for monetary fame. Meanwhile, the Australian makes do with his customary quids or sheets (pounds), dcen- ers or bobs (shillings) and cop pers or brownies (pennies). Klamath Falls Man Held for Murder Klamath Falls - IM) - John Wesley Dean, 57, Klamath Falls, was being held on i charge of second degree mur der in the Klamath county Jail here today following the death of his brother, Hagan. Arraignment was scheduled later in the day. Hagan Dean, 84, died Satur day morning at a Klamath Cruiser Aground On Depoe Bay Rocks Depoe Bay -WPP- A 19-foot cabin cruiser ran aground on the rocks at the entrance to Depoe Bay Saturday after noon when lis outboard en gine failed. Six persons left the boat by climbing the rocks. The 1,300 vessel, owned by the Calkins Charter and Dory Ocean Rental Service at Depoe Bay, was being operat ed by Ray Moore of Portland. The boat later was beached outside the bay. RUDY ELECTED Gladstone -lUPti- H. L. Rudy of Portland has been re-elected president of the Oregon Conference of Seventh-day Adventiits. Falls hospital from knife wounds suffered during a fight last Monday. His brother was jir rested Wednesday on a charge of as sault with a dangerous weap on. The charge was changed alter the death. Yank Surrenders To Military Police Franklurt, Germany - (UPI) - A young American soldier sought in connection with the street-light death of a Frank lurt teen-ager surrenderd to U.S. military police early to day. Spc-4 James Michael Smith, 20, ol Longview, Wash., sta tioned at Gutlcul Barracks in Frankfurt, said he was the clvlllan-clad American who punched 19-year-old Herald Vllzmann in the stomach Wednesday night, an Army spokesman said. Vllzmann was pronounced dead on arrival at a hospital a few minutes later. KENNEDY BLASTED Tokyo-tlPD-A newspaper In Communist North Korea has called President Kennedy a "third class clown" for pro claiming "Captive Nations Week" and urging prayers for freedom, according to a Pyon gyang radio broadcast moni tored here. If you need a SUM of money for a SUMMER vacation, whisper the sum to us. Then pick up your cash. CITY FINANCE COMPANY 185 E. Main St. Phone: 482-2431, Ashland Life insurance ivailabl on all loans at low group rates 2S22 TO 15002S this X stands for a sex chromsome. There are two sex chromosomes in every cell whether male or female. If both are X's you have a fe male. In male cells one of the two is a Y chromosome. Subject of Conference The female got an original X from each of her parents. These originals produced all of the billions of her cellular double X's. Now if only the paternally derived X func tions in some of her cells and only the maternal in others, you have a staggering compli cation. The possibility that this is female fact of life was the I big subject at the internation al conference on congenital malformations sponsored by the national foundation. It is incorporated in the "Lyon Hy pothesis" which has scientif ic fascination because it is ca pable of explaining scores of biological mysteries pertain ing to human beings. Chromosomes are packed with the genes which convey inheritable character i s t i c s from one generation to the next. The X chromosome, un like the Y, is more than a sex chromosome. Among its genes are many which have nothing to do with sex. These carry the chemical recipes for the are assisting in the forma- tivate many phases of vital body chemistry. A long-standing mystery is why these activations are not much stronger in the female with her two X's, than in the male who has but one X. The "Lyon Hypothesis" seeks to explain this basic mystery by asserting that in any given cell only one X works and the other is dormant. It holds that in the first divisions of the newly fer tilized ovum destined to de velop into a female, both the paternal and the maternal X are assisting in the forma tions of a new life. But as matters proceed, either moth er's X or father's X goes into chemical arrest. Occurrs at Random This occurs at random, the hypothesis holds. Thus the female human being is a "genetic mosaic". Approxi mately half of her differenti ated cell lines are activated in part by characteristics in herited from father and the other half get their character istics, so far as the genes of the X chromosome are in volved, from mother's contri bution. Dr. May Lyon, distinguish ed English geneticist and author of the hypothesis, was one of today's discussants. So was Dr. Murray L. Barr of the University of Western On tario, whose name is now a common name in genetics. He is the discoverer of the "Barr Body," that being a speck in the nucleus of the cell which by the Lyon Hypothesis must be the inactive X chromo some. The scientists agreed there wprp manv reasons to believe the hypothesis is correct and no reason now apparent to in dicate it is wrong. Their dis cussion developed a number of lines for future research which will pin it down in its presently uncountable details. Burial Insurance Sold by Mail . . . You may be qualified fQf $1,000 fife insurance ... so you wilt not burden your loved ones with funeral and other expenses. This NEW policy is especially helpful to those between 40 and 90. No medical examination neces sary, OLD LINE LEGAL RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE. . . . No agent will call on you Free information, no obligation. Tear out this ad right now. , . . Send your name, address and year of birth to: Central Security Life Insurance Co., Dept. K-85J 1418 West Rosedale, Fort Worth, Texas. Adv. MM (If iMsJS.' Jlf ' " I More variety? Of course! Finest quality? Naturally! Greater savings? Yes, yes! These are just a few reasons there's always more for you at Safeway. You'll find USDA Choice meats, close-trimmed to remove excess waste and fat; sparkling fresh fruits and vegetables: famous brand groceries; perfect frozen foods; fresh bakery treats; appetizing delicatessen foods; favorite health and beauty aids . . . practically everything on your shopping list. MARGARINE Coldbrook All Vegetable Mb. Pkg. if CAKE MIXES Mrs. Wright's White, Yellow, Spice, Devil Food Reg. . Pkg. F 0 R $11 Reg, Bar Dial Soap Princess White, Pink 239' TV White King 33 Granulated Soap. 18Ji-oz Detergent Whit King. mWfj 49-oz. pkg. White King 14-ox. size Cleanser 229' Thompson Seedless U.S. No. 1 Quality Sweet and juicy for snack time nibbling. (Olc lb. Snowdrift AC Shortening. 3-lb. can ORANGES Sunkist m Valencia 3 lbs. I Peaches lZV " Carrots Snappy fresh ,19 .,10 Bell Peppers Stuffing n Full flavor Golden ripe Size OforjCeJ 6 ,bi $1 Gal Food Figaro. 6-01. can Mustard Morehouse. Western Style. 20Vt-oi. 229 25 TUNA - m m Sea Trader INO. VI can eaaayi p $' 1 JELL-WELU 6149 c SMI Bologna Freshly Sliced Mb. Packages Ea.49 Quality Controlled. Always fresh at Safeway. FISHCAKES Pre-cooked, ready to haat and serve. 12 ot. pkgs. 3 Jl LINK SAUSAGE All Beef. New taste treat, breakfast special. lb, RATH SMOKIES Vacuum packed smoked sausages. 12 oz packages (t) Copyright 1962, Saftway Stores, Incorporated Priest effective Monday, July IS thru Wednesday, July 17 at Safeway in Med. ford. We reserve the right to limit. We Give . . . GOLD BOND STAMPS