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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1963)
COMPUTER COOKING NEW YORK (UPI) - The computer has moved into the baking business. A comnvroal cake baker is using a digital computer to direct the mixing, baking, warehouse scorage and shipping of cakes, repor's Elec tronics, a trade publication. MUSIC DIKECTOK DIES EUGENE (UPI) - Weston Brockway, 53, director ot vocal music ai aoum tugene High school, died Sunday of a heart attack. MEDI OHD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEUFOHD. OKLUON TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 17. 1963 Court Records MKHKORD MUNICIPAL COTRT Wayne Hoy Taylor, disobeyed name signal, ;. Elbert Clarence Williams, dis obeyed stop sign. S10. Jack Leslie Chastain, defective equipment. S10. Inctha Evelyne Owen, no opera tor's license in possess ton. $5 sus pended. Gary Lewis Hcndrix, violation ot basic rule, $10. Loren Lee Fleming, violation of basic rule. $23. Sandra Lee Smith, violation of basic rule, S10. John Hurshel Bean, disobevert Hop sign. $10. John Mc-Pher Duikin, improper lane usage, Sin. Jeanne Saladc, violation of basic rule, si (I. Danny Thomas Aldrich. viola tion of basic rule. $10. Nona Ruth Campbell, violation of basic rule. $10. Marguerite Mane E;isley, dis obeyed traffic signal. $10. DISTRICT COURT Thomas Jones Conning Jr., vio tion of basic rule, $10 Wilbur Kenneth Lake, failure to stop, $15. David Lyn Hurd. disobeyed slop sign. 57. 50. Cecil Loren Johnson, overload. $38. Donald D. Boise, no operator s license, SI 5. Mary Kathryn Rice, no opera tor's license. S,V Walter Philip Kan, violation of basic rule. S25. Richard D. Wnlford. failure to stop. $15. Donald William MacPherson. truck speeding', S10 Fred William Schotte. no vehicle license. S3. Herein Robert Raymond, over load. S22; overwirith. $13. William John Hmve. failure 1 stop. $1.". Mavnard Waynr TVillry. diy- obevori traiiir sicnal, SIM) Fave Iris Knehcl, no operator' license, $10. I 'Leisure Village1 Has Eye for Needs Of Senior Citizens NEW YORK (UPI) Dream for indoor and outdoor recrea- i Die thincs they'd alwavs wished , riisnlav rwntlv in ihp villapo i nari nf ih him co at tha (mnt ( fni of retirement? To many persons perhaps the dream of ideal retirement in cludes a home of their own, smaller and easier to care for, less expensive to maintain than the one they raised the family in: a leisurely yet full life in a pleasant environment; facilities tor indoor and outdoor recrea tion yet convenient to shopping and other community facilities. All of this within easy reach of family and old friends. Not everyone wants to pull up stakes and head for far places when the big day finally arrives. Some look forward just to doing, in familiar surroundings, the sim- The Medical Roundup Emeruur Consultant In Medietas Mayo rlintc Lmerltu. Professor of Medlctnt Mayo Clinic (Itegl&ter a.id Tribune Syndicate, 1963) SHIP DK11ICATHD Mrs. Edmund G. Blown, wife of the gov ernor of California, is handed a microphone by Adm. Floyd B. Schultz for the formal dedication of the USS Sacramento at Bremerton, Wash. The new ship is the largest and most power ful auxiliary ship built for the Navy. It is a combination of a tanker, ammunition and supply ship and was built at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard at Bremerton. (UPI) News About Servicemen cinniT counr Nona Irene Keys vs CAvry Lee Kevs, divorce complaint Sandra J. Simpson vs. Donald A Simpson, divorce complain! Jo Ann Katzcnhach vs. Charles Arthur Katzenbach. divorce coin plaint. Elaine Krause vs. Laurel Krause. divorce complaint. Sonia Lee Garrett vs. Dean W. Garrett, divorce complaint. Kay Pearce vs William T. Pcarce, separate maintenance com plaint. Nina Lorene Grecory vs Harold James Gregory, divorce complaint nwou.vrisi) Capt. Frank J. McKeown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Mc Keown. 516 Willamette ave., has received the U. S. Air Force commendation medal for meri torious service for duty as per sonnel and administrative offi cer for the 1907th Communica tions squadron at March Air , Force base, Seattle. HIX'KIVliS MEDAL Army Pfc. John E. Shaefer, son of Mrs. Nellie H. Vander pass, 340 Granite St., Ashland, was awarded the good conduct medal while serving with the 14th Quartermaster battalion near Hanua, Germany. MARRIAGK LICENSE APPLICATIONS Walter Richard Spcaie III, Whitman st,. Medlorci. ,-nd bara Joanne Taplell, 919 Da St. Medforri Darrcll LaVcrne Panss ,lr . North Pacilic hichuay. Med And Sharron Jcanclte Lvon. 2 Central ave.. Medtoid. Rar krilji 31111 lord. A01 COMPLETES COURSE Army Pvt. Daniel T. Remsen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Remsen, Pitt Star route, Butte Falls, has completed a fivc week basic aircraft mainten ance course at Ihe Aviation cen ter, Fort Rucker, Ala. COMPLETES TRAINING Pvt. Barbara Elyse Eskew, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. .lames O. Eskew, route 4, Mcdford, has completed eight weeks of hasic military training at the Wom en's Army Corps center, Fort McClcllan, Ala. 5 STEREO RECORDS With the Purchase of the Following STEREO CONSOLES at terrific reduced prices! 1 only. RCA DANISH WALNUT CONSOLE, $Q I O Reg. $675. Reduced to Clear Vtr7 1 only. RCA WALNUT HUTCH CONSOLE, $03 Reg. $675. Reduced lo Clear tV 1 only. WEBCOR STEREO, slightly STj JLL damaged. Reg. $259 Yours for lUO 1 only. WEBCOR DANISH BLEACHED Si Af WALNUT, Reg. $249. A Steal at B07 Years of Beautiful Music are ahead for you with these fine values! RECORD SHOP 217 EAST MAIN STREET in the heart of Downtown Medford A CHARGE PIATE STORE 3 Floors of Books, Gifts Leather, China and Glass Stout People ami Hunger 1 doubt if thin people can con ceive of the suffering that some stout persons undergo because of their tremen I dous and corn er I nn, a i most constant hunger. Here is a letter from a : young woman of 24 who savs that all her life she has had to fight over- Aivarcj Weight. A S she says, m her last high school year, her weight shot up to 147 pounds, which was bad for a girl only 5 feet, 5 inches tall. Somehow she managed to take off 30 pounds so as to get back to 117. She then looked very well. But since then she has suf fered so much from violent hun ger that she has had first to stuff herself, and then to slick her finger down her throat so as to vomit all of the food. She admits she doesn't like (his practice; it makes her feel ashamed; it makes her disposi tion unbearable, and it disgusts and outrages her mother. The girl not only devours most of the food that comes into the house, but she is constantly raid- ing tne refrigerator. Her par I ents with whom she lives are angry with her because they feel she is wasting too much money on food. Actually she has none left for clothes, which is sad. Her work is deteriorating, and her memory is terrible. She says that of course she would very much like to handle the situation in a different and better way, but she eels that, for her, this is impossible. She says that even on 1100 calorics a day she can gain a pound and a half. She can't bear the thought of becoming a fat wom an. Another woman of this type writes me to say that her hun- ! ger is "terrifying." All day and half the night she can think only of food. i Almost Impossible I realize how foolish it is to say to these people, "Stay on a 1,000-calorie diet." For them it is almost impossible. I have known a number of people, who weighed between ;)00 and 400 pounds, and with my help, look off perhaps 1(10 pounds; but then, in a few weeks, they went right back to (heir original weight. I know a taxi man who weighs 40(1 pounds, and he al ways carries around with him a bag of sandwiches which he keeps eating, even while he is at work. His hunger is unbear able. I remember well a woman who came into my office weigh ing 320 pounds. Her mother and three sisters were almost ex actly like her in build and weight. As she said, it was hard for her to reduce because when she and her sisters went lo her mother's house, (hat lady loved nothing better than to watch her daughters eat, and promptly cooked for them a big dish of (at pork sweet-breads. Occasionally, if a stout woman can fast for a few days, eating nothing, she can develop chang es in her blood which will so knock out her appetite that soon she will have no trouble living on but little food. I have seen this happen, and of late some physicians are relying on this mode of reducing. Treatment lor Asthma A number of people have been asking me where to go to get the new operation for asthma. Thev have read reports which made them hope that a real cure has at last been found. In this operation the little carotid body, which helps to regulate blood pressure, is removed from the neck. During the last year, since a paper on this appeared in the .Journal of the American Medi cal Association (June, i'M',2) I have been asking my friends who specialize in allergy what they think of it. So far, all of them have said they were reluc tant to try it and were wailing for reports to come in from men thev know and trust. 1 Now, I learn from a letter in the New England Journal of Medicine by Dr. 1. W. Bailit, secretary of the Council of the New England Society of Allergy, that his group of experts do not see any reason why the opera tion should work, and they do not feel that the value of the procedure has been sufficiently proved. They suspect that much of whatever" benelit is obtained comes from Ihe drug, ACTH (like Cortisone), which is given daily alter the operation. Dr. Richard H. Overholl, in an answering letter, stated lhal ! only some 30 per cent of his patients have received great benefit from the operation; 40 per cent had partial benefit, which means that a remaining 30 per cent were not helped. I certainly hope that the opera tion proves to be useful, but in cases like this I prefer that my patients not be used as the guinea-pigs. There are no magic secrets to weight reduction so none are mentioned in Dr. Alvarez' booklet, "Weight Control." You may like to have a famous doc tor's comments about this im portant subject. You may ob tain his booklet by sending 25 cents and a self - addressed, stamped envelope with your re quest for it to Dr. Walter C. Alvarez, Dept. MiMT. Box 957, Des Moines, Iowa 50304. pie things they'd always wished they had the time to do. Model for Village It's a dream such as this that's Ihe model (or a new "leisure village." a community for senior citizens in Lakewood, N. J., being built by liobilt, Inc. Sixteen model units went on Sen. Kennedy Urges Resolution Support BELGRADE (UPI)-Sen. Ed ward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) Monday urged legislators from 59 nations to support a resolu tion condemning racial segrega tion, which he called "legally wrong, morally wrong, and bad for humanity." The President's youngest brother defended the adminis tration's civil rights record and said the United States would solve its Negro problems as it did those of other minority groups, including his Irish an cestors. "Neiher I nor the President of the United States would hold the positions we do if America had not taken down Hi sign that said "no Irish need ap ply," he said. South Viet Nam's Mme. Ngo Nhu, an outspoken critic of ad ministration policies toward her regime who met Sen. Kennedy for lunch Saturday, remained in the background today, contact ing delegates and giving Ihem her side of the Vietnamese Buddhist dispute. display recently in the village which, when completed, will i contain 4,000 one and two-story garden patio homes, and a com plex of recreational buildings, community halls, medical cen ter and outdoor areas worth some $75 million. Robilt President Robert J. Schmcrtz, said he has tried to plan everything in the village with an eye to the special needs and wishes of senior citizens. "This," he said, "includes a location that is a short drive from residents' former homes (approximately midway between New York and Philadelphia) so that visiting with families and ! old friends can be done with ease." The village covers 450 acres only ten per cent to contain housing; with the remainder de voted to scenic and recreational areas and buildings such as arts and crafts, shopping mall and medical center. An out-of-hospital medical plan for residents will provide at Sli per person each month prescription drugs, doctor's vis its at home and office and lab oratory tests. Recreational Facilities There is a swimming pool, nine-hole pitch-and-putt golf course and a 30-acre man-made lake, stocked with fish, and equipped with boats. There are picnic and other recreational areas and acres of pine woods. The garden palio homes themselves are fully electric ' from baseboard heat to latest kitchen appliances and remote I lighting which permits resi dents lo turn on lights in any part of the house at the front door; turning them off from either bedroom or kitchen. There will be no cross traffic in the community and all garages or carports are in the rear. There will be 24-hour doorman service at the entrance. The apartments will be sold (for $12,500 to $18,500) under condominium ownership so that each buyer will receive an in dependent mortgage for his unit, just as a homeowner does for a house. This title, Schmertz said, may be sold, transferred, borrowed against or willed to heirs. PACIFIC NORTHWEST COMPANY Investment Securities Since 1921 Bruce T. Mllll Registered Representative 302-3 Fluhrer Bldg. Central and Main Phone 773-7319 o Edmund E. Hasi Vic. President Telephone 773-7319 tn consult with Mr. Hass or Mr. Mills on investment and retirement programs using the securities of utilities, banks, insurance, industrial, and Mutual Fund shares. Other offices in Portland, Salem, Eugene, Seattle, Spokane, Tacoma, Aberdeen, Belltngham, Yakima, Wenatchee, WalU Walla, Kennewick, Boise, Lewiston. ID. ACIFIC orthwest Compact Investment Securities Members: Midwest Stock Exchange Correspondents of , , . KIDDER, PEABODY and COMPANY Members: New York Stock Exchange 4-r t 5 r t - , f ft I r' ij , ill JL , A. . 1 ..mJt A word to the wives . . . . Yes, a word is sufficient to inspire most money-wise families to open a savings account at FULL-SERVICE U. S. National. After all, money-wisdom starts with regular sav ings. And what wiser way to save than at a bank where you enjoy bank safety and dependable bank interest. Let a U. S. National savings account be your introduction to full-service banking where all financial services are available under one roof. SERVING MEDFORD with TWO BRANCHES Th United States National Bank of Portland Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation