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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1963)
s 0 THLHSDAY. OC'TOHKR 3. 1,'t 19 A A W ....... MEDFORD MAI, TRIBUNE, MEDFCRD, OREGON VegefobU Cosrol AJafces Keal Mainstay One hot and hearty vegetable 'dish can be the mainstay of a light meal. Drain a can of blue ; lake green beans and mix the bean liquid with a tan of con densed cream of mushroom soup. Layer the sauce in a casserole with the beans and chunks of parboiled eggplant, ending with sauce. Sprinkle with grated Parme san cheese. Bake in :i50-dcgrec (moderate) oven unlil eggplant is tender. Malaycn Women War Against 50-Cent Divorce : ;l H M : - -iw sir v . M f.P I Mr -' AU.MIKKK HKWAKDKI) Pipe-smok'.ng leader of the British Labor Party, Harold Wilson, gives an autograph to an admirer at Scarborough, England. Watching is James Callaghan of Cardiff, a member of Parliament. (UPI) 'Ping-Pong' Valve Gives Man New Life By ANN II. PEARSON SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) A "ping-pong" valve has given a once-doomed nervy equip ment operator a new lease on life. Harry Carver's successful gamble for his life at the age t nf 49 bears new hope for suf-! ferers from "Ebstein's anom-1 aly," a leaky heart that usually causes death in the teens. One similar recovery is cited in Africa. Doctors here believe Carver's operation to he the first successful one of its kind in the western hemisphere. Carver was born with a de formed tricuspid heart valve that let used blood seep into fresh blood without going through the lungs to pick up new oxygen. He also had an atrial septal defect a hole in the heart. Somehow, he managed to cir culate enough oxygenated Wood to live a normal life unlil last year. Totally Disabled Then what should have hap pened long ago happened. Car vnr stiiri HnWiii'K mold have "nirkoH his Hjiv In dip " Hp was declared totally and perma nently disabled. When he entered Sillier Me morial hospital here .Ian. (, he could hardly walk and suffered j from discomfort, loss of brealh J and weakness. His skin was blue. Without giving any guaran-; lees, doctors tackled the case Mitral and aorlal Wilderville Group Begins New Year WILDERVILLE - Mrs. Wil liam Bondctti, who will serve as president of the Woman's So ciety of Christian Service this year, conducted the first fall meeting at the home of Mrs. Edward Koenig. Previously the executive com mittee had met with Mrs. Bon- delti to plan coming activities. Other officers are Mrs. James Lindsay, Miss Ri.pah Douglass, Mrs. David Browne, Mrs. Ed win Robinson, Mrs. John Bag well, Mrs. Olive Ahlstrom and Mrs. Shubel Robinson. diesis for the first meeting were the Mesdamcs Peter Mil ler, Charles 1 1 midway, Iladburn Robinson, Catherine Coleman and Nancy Woods. 1962 Farm Cash Receipts Top Off Ml But 1951 SAI.F.M - Cash receipts Irom marketing of Oregon (arm pro ducts totaled $4:15. R million in l!K2. Stale Direclnr of Agriculture James F. Short said this w a s the second highest cash receipts ; lor Oregon larm products on record. The all lime high was in I1I5I, when cash receipts from farm products were at $44!l.fl million. Short has just received from the U.S. Department of Agricul ture the first complete break down of income from the vari ous ciops and livestock pro- nlvos have hicrd in Oregon. El Capitan, on the Texas plains, has a sheer cliff rising 8,078 feet. Bv PHILIP CIIERIAN KUALA LUMBL'R (UPI) -Malayan women h.ve the right to vote. But, they sk seeking new equality in pay and a ban on the M-cenl 1 17 cents, U.S.) divorce. Franchise came in 1952 when both sexes voted for the first time Even so. women haven't advanced far in politics. Of the 104 seats in the Ma layan lower house of Parlia ment, only three are occupied by women. The only woman in the :-member senate, Mrs. Aisha Cham, took office late last year. Mrs. Ghani, 35, who works on the copy desk of the Straits Times, summed up the feminine i situation this way in an inter- view with United Press lnterna l tional: "Malayan women can be con sidered luckier than our counter parts in several countries. Vc were given voting rights on a platter. But let this not deceive you inio ueuevuig uiai eveiy thing is all right with us. We have lots of things to fight for and we certainly will do so. "Men, our (riends in govern ment and other high places vith whom we fought hand-in-hand in the national liberation move ment, now tend to forget their promises. They even pretend we should be happy with our pres ent lot. They have us wrong." "Malayan men do not recog nize the principle of equal pay for equal work," she said. "The fight is already on, led by 15,000 women teachers and it will be followed by nurses, government employees and thousands of women working in commercial firms. "The present marriage rules are too lax," she continued. "The Moslem men marry sever al times. They may keep four wives at any time and may keep on marrying as often as they like if they keep to this (four at a time) rule. "Many men make liberal use of the rule although it is eco nomically impossible to main tain four large families ." About 50 per cent of the pop ulation in Malaya follows the Moslem religion and men are allowed four wives if they can support all. Non-Moslems are permitted only one wife but many Chinese by-pass the rule by taking concubines. What frets many a Malayan housewife is her Moslem hus band's right to a 50-cent divorce. All he has to do is announce he no longer wants his wife and pay a fee of 50 Malayan cents. Koranic law still dominates Malayan marriages, but another symbol of Islam, the veil, is not in use. Purdah, the practice of keeping women's faces hidden in public, did not take hold in Malaya. JUMPER'S NO JUNIOR ORANGE. Mass ' UPI) -John Laler, a Manchester. Conn., broker who w ill be 64 next birth day, claims to be the nation's oldest sport parachutist. PLANNING APPROVED WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Community Facilities Adminis tration today approved a $650 advance for preliminary plan ning of sewer facilities at Amitv. Ore. You Are Invited To See the WORLD SERIES 'Roomful of Color' By Magnavox Unmatched by Any Other Color TV PURUCKER'S in no Centnl been replaced successtully in recent western heart surgery, but not the bigger tricuspid. The doctors combined deli- ; The director reminded that ' these figures represent gross I receipts to Hie farmers of Oro I gon. Net receipts totaled out rate technique and skill with i sum 4 million, mcanini: that trial and error to devise the farmers actually net less than operation They experimented one - thud because of high pin- on nogs, under ine guidance oi duct ion expenses. Drs. Robert S. Cartvvrighl and Edward Smcloff, live valves were fashioned so that the pro per size would be available when the heart was opened The valves ranged from I' ll) 2 inches each a cage with j n "ping-pong" tvpo hall inside Titanium prongs circled the hall of lough silicon and rub ber that would keep the blood from flowing backward. Took Nine Hours On May in a nine-hour procedure, seven doctors and as many nurses and technicians opened Carver's chest, put his heart and lungs on a pump, sewed up the hole, cut out the deformed valve and inserted the largest mechanical one On June 26, Carver smiling, walking with a spring in Ins step, and his skm a heallln pinkish while-left the hospital, his ping-pong heart valve lunc lioning successfully. He re turned to Ins home in Placer ville to convalesce A deep cut was made in the 11162 cash receipts by production expenses o( Oregon farmers, which totaled at J:I6; :t million. ( ash Increase Income in Oregon from I i v e- sluck showed a cash increase from slii-l :l million in 1I to Simi !i million in 11162. However, it dropped percentagewise from 4V. :i per cent of the marketing to 45. '.I per cent Meal animals accounted I n r 26 4 per cent of the income from livestock for a total of SI 15 mil lion, with cattle and calves lead ing at 22 2 H-r cent and a total 01 $6!i !i million in cash receipts. Dairy products cash receipts totaled $44 5 million for 10.2 per cent, poultry and eggs mil lion or 7 2 per cent , and miscel laneous livestock. I million or 2 1 per cent. Pears Drop Tears showed a slight drop in cash larm receipts. SIO.IH!). His boss says his job is wall- nop compared to $10,547,000 in I ing for him And doctors the chances are ''promising" that in a lew months the man who was declared totally and permanently disabled and given 1061, peaches Sl.lill.oOO compar ed to Sl.liwi.lHHI in 1061 and ap ples rose from jst.218.otKI in lt to S:i..;:.ooo in l2. moiig seeil crops, alfalfa I only days to lie will return to M..sl earned S4.2iki.ihhi compared his concrete spreader a normal man Old Carding Mill Planned af Village STUR BRIDGE. Mass. . I I'll Old Sturhridge Village, a re constructed early Amen can hamlel here, soon will have an antique carding mill in opera tion. The old mill, a single-story structure .16 by 25 feet in sie. is being moved here from South Watertord. Maine, nearly 20 miles distant. The protect was made possible by a Jtoo. 000 donSiion from a friend of the village. Grand canyon of the Color. ido Is 217 miles in length and in some places it is more than a mile in depth to $:t,625.HHI III 1061. 'Floating Bed' Used For Heart Research ROCHESTER. N V UTP -A "floating lied" is being used by scientists at the University of Rochester to measure the forces generated by the heart Floating a fraction of an inch above lets of compressed air. the bed is completely free from extraneous vibration It ertiiils researchers to obtain highly precise measurements that are unobtainable if even tlu slight est background tremors arc present. ! The biggest gold nu,gge i history. 105 poundsT wa IflHrwi from the Morgan claim al Car son hill in Calaveras town!; I Cahfnrma&n 1854 Success? car, '64 edition . . ' 1 " mm nw1 I I "7 The car that answers the question, "After their '63 model, what in the world will Pontiac do for '64?" Let's face it: ft wasn't easy coming up with worthy successor to our super-successful 'eJ. But we did it, as you can plainly see. Evidence? Trim new styling, with interiors just as clean and handsome as the exterior. A smoother, quieter ride which is scone thing we seem to deliver every year. Wide-Track for curve-straightening and 380 cubic inches of Trophy V-8 power in every model. All in all, every 't4 Pontiac looks and feels and acts like competitive cars wish they did and don't. Are we right in assuming you'd rather he down at your dealer's than sitting there reading? Be our guest! '64 Pontiac Pontiac pi us a whole new kind of &J - - jgSSS iiiii i i i ii-nl-yiS Y .-.1 --Jx- -y. xHTt4vv. IIS-K-.VBTII iWW WWW IT WWWBa. ! Ml 111 IHIHII IWMWHBBgWWJFK. Ji I id I K. zsr 3 ..-".-w; wnttl , C -mi i i - - " -'WKWlwVyl f 9 If you've been buying the srne low-priced car time after time, gefc ready to break the habit. And this is the haoit-breaker the e4 Toiitiac Tempest. I It it were any more of a Tontiav. you couldn't tell it Irom our other one.' Anything new? Practically everything, that s ail. A thntty new in-line ti cylinder frigine, a longer, roomier body topping a wider Wide-Track, bigger brakes, a smoother and quieter ride, precise new steering, a new frame and assorted mechai-ua! marve's. There s even an extra-cost 4--pcrJ gr.urvv lor the p or etra-cost Y-S . And most ot a!!, very, very handsonir Portiai -tv!r stvlirg. inside and . and LeMap im-.Iv p-or!(-AnJ :h.t! .: ." ;s ;y.'. v. O lr,p. it. I'rerr ,irr nirr pew Tempest modcis lor ?o now your " i'. wfiivh ope !o ihoosf? ;.:.i:i : be -r-.K h or a rrobie m. r P:r:,K ,:riirr so vviihpg 'e4 Ponliac Tcmpctit n o OO ,JfeC frf CNiV elALEI WHO SEUS THE WIDE-TACIC CAt4-YOU AUTHORIZE PONTIAC DEALER O O o u DEAN & TAYLOR PONTIAC CO., Inc. 297, SOUTH PACIFIC) HIGHWAY MEDFORD, OREGON o o o o 0 (Q) 0 & (o) 2 b) o C6 (6) to.