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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1963)
A WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6. l'JM Oregon Primary Ballot May Be Test Of Nixon's Availability as Candidate MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON By ZAN STARK SALEM (UPI) -Richard Nix on's availability for the 1964 Re publican presidential nomination may be put to the test in Ore gon. The former vice president just might be listed on the Oregon presidential primary ballot. I The possibility adds spice to the politically important Oregon election and could have an Impact on New Hampshire's first-in-the-nation primary. Under Oregon's unique elec tion law, the secretary of state lists whomever he finds gen orally advocated in national Great to give, grand to get! mm you simtly WITH A FLASHING LIGHT ! WESTCLOX MOONBEAM wakes you pleasantly, easily, surely, without disturbing others. Is followed by audible alarm. Convenient push-button switch turns on steady nile-lite when needed. Only 1295 - WESTCLOX ELECTRICS news media" on the presidential primary ballot. The secretary of state doesn't ask the prospective candidate if he wants to be listed, and the candidate has but 72-hours in which to file an affidavit de claring he "is not and does not intend to become" a candidate. March 6 Key Date Adding zest to the Oregon primary list is the fact it will be announced March 6. just tour days before the New Hampshire primary. Disavowal statements must be filed by March 9 the day be fore the New Hampshire vote. Oregon Secretary of State Howell Appling Jr., a Republi can, isn't saying who's going to be on the list. But it seems likely now that Nixon, Now York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, and Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater would top the list. I Nixon, who missed the White House in 1960 by only 119,000 votes, won the Oregon primary, and carried the state in the gen eral election. At the Western Republican Conference, held in Oregon last month (Oct. 10-13), both Gold water and Rockefeller said they thought Nixon was a contender for the GOP i nomination. Oregon's Gov. Mark Hatfield mentioned both as a GOP vice presidential hopeful and presi- The Dalles Boys Have Brief Fling PORTLAND (UPI)- Police said two boys from The Dalles were picked up about 2:20 a.m. Tuesday and told officers they planned to go to California. The boy s, aged 13 and 14, were apprehended by traffic of ficer John Gilliland. One of them carried a large piece of bologna and the other a bucket of fruit, the policeman said. The boys said they were re turning to an automobile and planned to drive to California. Police said a market on Yam hill street had been broken into and that the car was reported tal.en in The Dalles. The were held by juvenile au thorities. dential dark horse, says he will not allow his name to be placed on the Oregon primary ballot. Likely Convention Delegate Hatfield expects to be a dele gate to the national convention. In Oregon, delegates are elected and required to back the winner of the state's primary. Hatfield used the Western Re publican Conference as a plat form to invite all GOP hope- tuis to enter the May IS Ore gon primary "to try the track for time and distance." He pointed out "any candidate who is successful in Oregon gains additional momentum to carry him into the California primary a few weeks later and into the convention itself. Hatfield is following a policy of neutrality. Because he is required to back the Oregon primary winner, the bigger the field, the stronger Hatfield's position becomes. And having Nixon in the Ore gon race could solve Hatfield's dilemma the Oregon primary could reveal whether the former vice president still has voter ap peal. It was Hatfield who nominated Nixon at the 1960 GOP national convention. The Medical Roundup By Emtritua Consultant In Medicine Mayo clinic Emeritus Professor of Medicine Mayo Clinic (Reilster and Tribune lyndlnte, 1161). Ik Hiatus Hernia In the past few years, since operations on hiatus hernias have become fashionable, I have received sad letters from people who have learned a num ber of things which they wish they had known before they had the operation performed. Here for instance, is a letter from a woman who says that five years ago she was suffering from a number of symptoms which her good family doctor said suggest ed an Indigestion due largely to her great sorrow over a son who had Kacome mentally disturbed. Hir story was that of an in digestion due to an alternation between constipation and diar rhea. The facts that her pain kept moving all over her abdo men, that it was constant, and uninfluenced by eating much food, or by her bending over to tie her shoes, showed that it was not due to her little hernia, or to a possible gallstone, or a J23-34M-61 STAR GAZERO TAURUS APR. 21 I MAY 21 S 8- 9-13-151 GEMINI MAY 22 JEJUNE 22 r 4- 5 46-461 .y50-70.80-90 CANCER JUNE 23 JULY 2J .44-45-47-59I 63-64-68 UO S JULY 24 AUa 23 VT) 6-lM9-2q H'39ii85.86l VIRGO AUG. 24 SEPT. 22 HA4W1-53S4 WV71-72-7: -By CLAY R. POLLAN- CO-33-41 SAGITTARIUS DEC 22 jjgJI 62-4M5 V M Your Doily Adhily Cuido H r According to fh Sfors. To develop message for Thursday. read words corresponding to numbers ' of your Zodiac birth slaa I R 31 Make fil Noruro I SCORPIO 2TcxJoy 32Chang 62To OCT. 24 ( 3 Increased -iJ Is OJ upponuniriesluov 22 SGrond 35-kj.ls 4A F-3-37-40S3 6You 36Are 66"T- HBIWS 7 Give 37 Inclined 67 Your 8Wolch 38 Upon oSYoursell 9 Your 39 To 69 Some 10 Slow 40 To 701s 1 1 Ma 41Noled 71 Rivalry l2Atlention 42Spend 720r 13 Pockerbook 43 Work 73 Competition 14 To 44 Try 74 Remarks 15 While 45 To 75 Desired 16 Thought 46 Duy ' 76 But 17 Interest 47 Creole 77 Possession 18 Should 48 The 78 Or 19 Be 49 Avoid 79 Avoid 20 Fotced 50 World 80 With 21 To 51 Anything 81 Your 22 Be 52 Your 82 Flippancy 23 Be 53 That S3 Interests 24 Moving 54 Involve 84 Drastic 25 Acquiring 55 Fulfill 85 A 26 Others 56 In 86 Proniiso 27 Focussed 57 Through 87 Only 28 In 58 In 88 BeholF 29 Distant 59 New 89 Moves 30 Af lairs 60Crowds 90YOU lMAR.21' , . . . 4TN. .117. I T 10 1J Oti IgJAdvcnc fJJNcuml UIRA SEPT. 23 OCT. 23 3-17-38.2911 CAPRICORN OEC JAN. 10-21-311? fe-7o-84-89'5 AQUARIUS JAN. 21 FEB. If 116.18-22.27 tlTl P8-43-83-37 -j PISCES 8. 20Y9V, Question Can Pontiacs possibly keep on getting better and better and better? Answer .,,v-t - riS Kxmm!!! H .-r"" !v Wtl ......-iViW' Vn i ,TT. iw 'nx-- .gajj-fr i innim-i, n VTiT'ii''li.tt: J' 'ii nflrn'li Y-v-fim. mmmm More than 70,000 people bought new Pontiacs and Tempests during October. SEE WHY AT YOUR AUTHORIZED TONTIAC DEALER DEAN b TAYLOR PONTIAC CO., Inc. 2177 SOUTH PACIFIC HIGHWAY MEDFORD, OREGON duodenal ulcer. Actually, there are thousands of people with a hiatus hernia which never pro duced a symptom; in other cas es the hernia produced a lew symptoms only when the person strained in some particular way, or when he or she ate a big meai Talked Into Operation What my correspondent now tells me is that five years ago someone talked her into having an operation on her little hernia. She writes: "I not only did not get any relief, but I got a new trouble which is more annoying than my old one.' I now have trouble swallowing. The stom ach specialist whom I consulted sent me to an X-ray man who reported that the surgeon had made the opening in my mid riff so small that now the lower end of my gullet is pinched and partly closed. He sent me to an expert who dilated my cardia (the valve between the gullet and tne stomach). "This helped me to swallow, out I stilt nave my old abdoni' inal miseries. Next, I saw s surgeon who assured me that my troubles had never been due to the hernia, but had all been due to a diseased gallbladder; and so I let him perform a cho lecystectomy. But again, I was disappointed, because the opera tion gave me no relief. As the next doctor I saw said, it wouldn't have done me any good because I never had had any localized symptoms of gall bladder disease. He diagnosed my trouble as a post cholecys tectomy syndrome. When I asked him what that meant, he said it was a polite term for a nervous indigestion that con tinues after someone's efforts to cure is by removing the gall bladder. More Comfortable My correspondent went on to say, "I went to a stomach spe cialist, who said that my old doctor had been right, and that my symptoms seemed all to be due to constipation. He relieved my constipation, and at last 1 am comfortable." This story interests me much because it bears out what I have spent my life trying to teach young doctors, and this is that when one tinds a hiatus nernia, a gallstone, or an ulcer, this does not mean that all of the person's indigestion, or abdomi nal discomfort, or pain or nerv ousness is due to what was found. In many a case, none of the symptoms are due to the disease that has been found. The indigestion and aches and pains may be due purely to tne fact that the patient's much loved child is dying with Hodg- kin's disease, or that the family business is going into bank ruptcy, or that the couple's only son has just been caught bur glarizing a store. Leaders Banquet ScheduledTonighf Jackson County's 159 4-H club leaders will be honored at a banquet in the Starlight Room of the Rogue Valley Country Club at 7:30 o'clock tonight. SDecial recognition will go to Flovd Charley, Central Point, who has completed 20 years of 4-H leadership. Charley is lead er of the Central Point Beet Club. Other leaders singled out for recognition on completion of 15 years of leadership will be Mrs. R. W. Badcock, lead er of the Rogue River Happy Hoppers Rabbit Club, and Mrs. John Bohnert, Central Point, leader of the Antelope Cooking Club. Leaders receiving recognition for completion of 10 years 4-H work are Mrs. C. W. Anhorn, Central Point, and Mrs. E. J. Nouguier, Medford. Leaders will receive Leader ship Recognition Awards, pre sented by Warren Bayliss of the U.S. National Bank, Med ford Branch. Andrew Schmidt. Aericultur- al Engineer of Pacific Power and Light Company, will ad dress the leaders. Also partici pating in the program will be Mike Rem, 4-H member from Jacksonville who will give the flag salute; Don Gail, 4-H mem ber from Gold Hill who will entertain with a humorous read-1 ing; Dr. George G. Roseberry, First Methodist Church, who will give the invocation; and frank Benesn, district man ager of Pacific Power and Light, who will give the wel come. The 4-H Leadership Recog nition Banquet is sponsored by Pacific Power and Light Com-1 pany. WORLDS FAIR, N.Y. (L'Pl) The dictionary defines a ron- delle as a flat, circular, faceted diamond, a gem cut in a disc. For that reason, the Johnson's World's Fair Wax pavilion, a disc-shaped theater 90 feet in d amcter. has been named "The Golden Rondellc. " The pavil ion will seat 500. 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