B
THURSDAY. AUGUST 8. 1963
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON
Third of Married Women Employed At Outside Jobs
cenl to think of her earning
CorvallU-One out of every
tnree married women in Ore.
gon it working at a full or
part time Job and more are
probably going to be spending
a longer part of their lives at
a Job in yean ahead.
Mrs. Roberta Frasier, Ore
gon State university family
life specialist, reports some
trends in number of women
working and offers some con
siderations to wage earners
who must find help in caring
for children
About a fifth of the married
women working are mothers
who have children under
years of age, says Mrs. Fra-zier.
If Mom works, what's the
effect on children in the fam
ily? Generally, studies show
that the attitude the mother
has toward her children will
show regardless of whether
she's at home taking care of
them or working at another
job. If she's sincerely inter
ested in the youngsters' devel
opment, she'll try to provide
the kind of care that will en
courage their best growth and
development,
Some studies show that
mothers who want to work
but out of a feeling of duty
to their children do not work,
create problems for them
selves. They may unconscious
ly resent their children and
have some problem in child
rearing.
Husband's Rol
What should be the hus
band's role if his wife works?
How much should he be ex
pected to help with house
work? A study made at Florida
State university shows that
husbands of working wives
tend to be more liberal in
viewpoint in r e g a r d to all
women who work than do
husbands whose wives don't
have jobs. Husbands of work
ing wives also were more
agreeable to helping with most
household tasks, and were
more likely to favor equal
pay status for women on the
job.
Husbands whose wives
worked were more likely to
be proud of their wife's abil
ities outside the home, more
democratic in recognizing her
independence, but a little retl-
Doctor Rescues
Man Injured by
East German Mine
Helmstedt, Germany - (UPD
A middle-aged West German
doctor crawled into a Com
munist border "death rone"
minefield and dragged back
to safety a fleeing criminal
shattered by a mine blast, po
lice said today.
West German police said
Dr. Ernst Stoeter, 56, moved
90 yards through barbed wire
and land mine strips Wednes
day to reach the wounded
fugitive from West German
justice.
The 25-year-old fugitive had
fled on foot from West Ger
many Into East Germany with
his 21-year-old wife and 4-year-old
daughter to escape a
year's prison term on a
morals charge. But 30 yards
into Communist territory - on
the edge of the East German
border anti-refugee strip - he
stepped on a mine.
The blast shattered his
right leg and splinters blood
ied his wife. His wife drag
ged him under a bush, tear
ing the blast would bring
East German guards, and
dashed back to the West with
her daughter for help.
Summoned from a nearby
home for aged persons, Dr,
Stoeter stood at the border's
edge while the weeping young
wife pointed across the barb
ed wire to the bush under
which her husband lay.
The doctor removed his
coat and crawled out.
"I could not let the man
bleed to death out there. A
human life was at stake.
am a doctor," Stoeter told
newsmen later.
Nashville Power
Outage Explained
Nashville, Tenn. (UPD
Two radio stations and a tel
evision station went off the
air.
Mntnristn t I a - saffCed
through Intersections with
useless tramc iignis.
Elevators hung up between
floors in office buildings.
Restaurants had no boil
ing water during their peak
coffee-break period.
Lights went out.
It was ail nvpr In 12 min
utes, but John Tipton, assist
ant general manager of Nash
ville Electric Service, was
a long time explaining why
' to alarmed callers Wednes
day. It seems, he said, that a
Pigeon landed on a high volt
age wire . at a sub-station
which feeds electricity ' to
downtown Nashville, causing
"a short circuit of some mag
nitude." As for the culprit, he said,
"There's probably nothing
but a few feathers left."
more or taking over the tradi
tional dominant male roles in
the home.
Children whose mothers
worked tend to do more
housework and take more re
sponsibility around the home.
If mother's objectives for
working were shared and
agreed upon as important by
the husband and teen-age chil
dren, she was likely to get
more support from the family
in holding down a job.
Mrs. Frazicr says that one
of the most important tasks
for families is to find adequate
child care if the mother
works. A baby needs his first
one or two years of life with
his mother or a mother substi
tute who can give him lots of
love and a feeling of security.
The younger the child, the
more important the kind of
care he receives. The stimula
tion a baby gets in the first
year of his life lays down the
basis for his whole personality
structure, she emphasizes.
Evaluate Care
She suggests that mothers
look for qualities in a care
taker that children need-acceptance,
warmth, a home
that a child can feci free in,
and can learn to trust. Rela
tives, as caretakers, should be
evaluated on the kind of care
they can provide. Regularity
in care is important.
When a youngster is shifted
from place to place, he may
learn not to depend on others.
If he isn't able to enter into
deep relationships as a child,
it may affect his relationships
with others as an adult.
Before aranging for a baby
sitter or group care, make a
personal leisurely visit to the
home where the child will be
cared for, advises the OSU ex
tension specialist. Try to de
tect the feeling tone of the
adult. Look at the setting.
Does it have the kind of
equipment that encourages
children to grow?
There's a limit to the num
ber of children one adult can
caro for and give children at
tention they need. The ex
periences a child has in his
pre-school years are impor
tant. Special provision also
needs to be made for supervi
sion of school-age youngsters.
A total of 216,367 women
were in the 1 a bor force in
Oregon in 1960. Of these,
132,494 were married and liv
ing with their husbands and
24,946 of them had children
under age 6.
Salvation Army
Doughnut Girl Dies
Portland -IUPD- Funeral ar
rangements were pending to
day for Mrs. Margaret Shel
don Stufflebcam, 79, Portland,
known as the "original" Sal
vation Army doughnut girl in
France in World War I.
She died last Friday in
Elgin, 111., while en route to
visit relatives in the east.
Mrs. Stufflebeam first
joined the Salvation Army
when she was 10 years old.
She was widowed in 1944.
Ker late husband served in
World War I and had been
in charge of Salvation Army
Headquarters in Roseburg.
Space Program Draws Praise From Senators
Washington tUPD Chair
man Clinten P. Anderson of
the Senate Space committee
said today the civilian space
agency has taken a long step
towards making the United
States "pre-eminent in space."
The New Mexico Democrat
made the statement in a
speech prepared for delivery
as the Senate scheduled de
bate on a $5,511,520,400 au
thorization for the National
Aeronautics and Space Ad
ministration. Anderson said
the agency has compiled an
"enviable record."
Another Democratic mem
ber of the space committee,
Sen. Stuart Symington (Mo.),
also had praise for the space
program and the way NASA
proposes to conduct it in the
year ahead. Symington, in a
prepared speech, called the
NASA budget "reasonable,
justified and worthy of con
gressional support."
Blunt Aniwer
Symington offered a blunt
answer to critics who contend
that the United States is con
centrating too heavily on "a
wild race to the moon." with
questionable chance of win
ning or acquiring anything
from the effort.
"They are wrong," said Sy
mington, adding that such
critics "misunderstand or mis
represent" the goals of the
balanced space program.
Both Anderson and Syming
ton in their prepared speeches
listed successful space flights
in the Mercury series and
praised other features of the
scientific space program. An
derson reported that "the
United States is in space to
stay."
South America's popula
tion averages about 14.7 per
sons per square mile.
Join the hundreds T3&Tr f? n . T7 where there is alw
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meat shopping at f ? H f? S? .V F Vf YOU ALWAYS (
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meats to select from - where shopping is made easier and
GET MORE MEAT FOR YOUR MONEY!
Swift's genuine Spring Lamb. Small carcasses of tender
young lamb. A popular warm weather meat.
Small Sizes
Leg of Lamb
Breast of Lamb
39
15
lb.
Square Cut Lean
Lamb Shoulder Roust 39
Lamb Neck Slices
Lamb Rib Chops
Lamb Loin Chops
Tender
& Tasty
Small nice
to broil
chuck
SWISS
chuck
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SUM
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pot roast
E MIS
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Family style special. Well aged
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Round bone culs. Tender, well
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Morrell's Pride or USDA
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Nebergall's pure pork.
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59
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Swift's Premium
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PAN READY
from the cool Pacific
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12-Oz. JAR
JUST
MARGARINE
Mb. Pkg.
4193
I CORONET 100
1 CORN CIL
BANQUET FROZEN
MEAT PIES
All Varieties 8-oz. Pkg.
nflifflnron
HOLLY HILL FROZEN
LIMEADE
6-0 z. Can
c
JIFFFY ALL PURPOSE
B9 .daiLV r TK .
i o : no
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if"11"1"
WTORffffltH'
BISCUIT MIX o , , 29c
PHEASANT
PANCAKE FLOUR --,89c
HIRES ROOT BEER, NESBITT ORANGE,
COCA COLA, 7-UP Bo,e6 99c C
RANCHO
CHICKEN IIOODLE SOUP 0 : 10 9Sc
SNIDER'S
CATSUP i4-oz. Bottle 3fr 49c
SI .19 Bag S2.97
20-Oz. Pkg.
37c
BONED CHICKEN 39c
APPIAN WAY
PIZZA MIX . 39c
CREAM HONEY - 29c
LADIES' CHOICE PURE
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES 79c
BLUE TABLET
VIM DETERGENT 59c
OCEAN SPRAY
CRANBERRY JUICE c...49c
DEL MONTE
APRICOT NECTAR 39c
Always More For Your Money
SEA STAR FROZEN
CANE SUGAR
10-lb. Bag
AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER
VEL 0 MATIC
LYNDEN
Breaded
"Heat and Serve"
8-oz. Pkg. for
4 Roll Pkg.
2 pound can Hlf
mm Try fx pyr jp wm
EySj j! liJ lH&li ilBIl lLLJ
FISH STICKS
M-D
TOILET TISSUE
BAKER'S INSTANT
COCOA H
CREAM WHITE
SHORTENING mean ffl
SACRAMENTO
TAMTA HUM: , c . mmt
WILSON'S
PIGS FEET
BRIDGFORD FROZEN
BREAD DOUGH
SCOTTIE
MARGARINE ml Bi.m-
MR. GOODBAR, KRACKLE
29c IIERSHEY BARS 29c
HCRSHEY'S
CHOCOLATE SYRUP cf: 2c
METRECAL
59c WAFERS s, 87s
MEADOWBROOK GRAPE OR
ORANGE DRINK 49eC
ERLAND'S PIECES & STEMS
filUOft
28-oz. Jar
white 3, Mb. Loaf Bag SS
. 4-Oi. Can
BEER n -oi. Bonie 6 for 79c
nam rv
POTATO CHIPS
OPEN
plus
dep.
Reg.
69c. 3 Pkg. Box
to
Prices Effective Thursday
100 Ft. Roll J
20;
CORNER JACKSONVILLE HI WAY AND LOZIER LANE
r .mjumm- . .......-. -..-.-.... M!alll!i;infllB
MISSIES
PLASTIC WRAP
Dlltli llir
y FAftlAI TIQQIIFQ c nei.
Through Sunday, August 11 ' ) Pkg. U for
SWANSDOWN WHITE
we r." lim1 ANGEL FOOD MIX
.17-01. Pkg.
3S&
o
13