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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 29, ISM A 3 IffSTAR GAZEBO W6-77 TAURUS AH!. 21 OiMM 3 MAY 22 J JUNE 22 ) 1-U25-36I CANOt JUNE 23 JULY 23 3 JULY 24 tAUG. 23' - I VMSO AUG. 24 SEPT. 22 1112.53-34-4.6 -Bf CLAYE.POLLAN- J Your Doijr AdhHr GuW M "7 According to tin Start. ' Tq dvelop messoge for Saturday, read words corresponding to numbers or your ioaioc Birth sign. i.r.-a.un 54-80-83'sg. I Don't 2 New . 3 No Don't 5 You'll 6Ltt 7 Bring SGoin 9Someon 10 Invejrigo. 1 1 Strtnorhtn UChtck 13 Avtnuos 14 L 15 Family 16Wiih 17 From 18MoMer 19 Your 20 B. 21 An 22Loy 23 Your 24 Of 25 Your 26 Tim 27 A 28 Port 29How 30 Penuoifv. .Good 31 Givtn 32 Artroctiv. 33Y.v.in.lf 34 DIM 35 Financial 36 Post 37 Especially 38 Problem 39 Efforts 40 Depressing 41 Powers . - 42 Full 43 Proposition 44 Open 61 The 62 Play 63 For 64 Might 65 Criticism 66 Solve 67 Up 68 Feel 69 Slid 70 Your 71 News 72Todoy 73 Their 74 Own Scorpio OCT. 24 NOV. 22 S-50.31-l?rj 149-70-78 45 Opportunity 75 Pay o Money 77 Problems 78 Help 79 There's 80 Or 81 Monty- 82 Your 83 Reorimond 84 Efforts 85 Hope 86 Wist 87 You 88 Indisposed 89 Core 90 Today Advene Nc'utral 46 If 47 Good 48 Show 49 Asks 50Am 51 Into 52 Credit 53lt 54To 55 Others 56 Open 57 You 58 Resolutions 59 Elders 60 Possiblt SEPT. 23 OCT. 23 MGtTTAftlUS NOV.23 , DEC 22 (53 9-16-27.3o.fS 4 CAPRICORN DEC. JAN. : 9.11.94. VktS M-56-47 V L20 AQUARIUS 'AN. 21 fl. FPR 10 CIS." UJ-04-J mcis ; 20 g MAR -21 t 11-15-26-374 48-59-87-891 Poultry Scientists Discover Method To Increase Egg Size By DELOS SMITH DPI Science Editor NEW YORK (UPI-What will science do next now that it can Boofo From SWEM'S 217 E. Main MEDFORD, OREGON Phone 772-9331 titititititltitltlti- FICTION UPON THIS ROCK by Frank G. Slaughter A biographical novel of Simon, called Peter, first disciple, beginning in hit childhood. About 350 pages. $6.95 SEVEN JAPANESE TALES by Junichiro Tanizaki Seven tenuous tales of some cur ious forms of human aber ration. $5.00 Q THE COLLECTOR by John Fawks Tells the story of a friendless English clerk, who wins a sum of money and kidnaps and holds prisoner the girl he worships from afar. Generates horror and compassion. $4.95 HONEYMOON DIARY by Jim Bishop Story of a successful novelist and his bride, 20 years younger who set out on their honeymoon, each with the bitter memory of a previous marriage. $4.95 POWERS OF ATTORNEY by Louis Auchincloss Com prises a group of short stories portraying daily life in a Wall Street law firm. $4.50 BOULDER DAM by Zane Grey Lately-published novel, in which a rich ex-football hero stumbles upon a mystery which in volves the destruction of Boulder Dam. $3.95. JUNIPER LOA By Lin Yutang Novel set In the troubled China of the 20's. The heroine is a wo man of strength who re-mins behind to raise her lover's son when he leaves to find his fortune in Singapore. $4.95. THE FIRST DAY OF FRIDAY by Honor Tracy Hilarious Irish novel about a young man with a run-down estate, a demented mother, a fi ancee with the mind of a field marshal, and Attract Smith, a sany housemaid. $4.95. THE HAT ON THE BED by John O'Hara Twenty, four short stories in this of fering by John O'Hara, mas ter of short-story writing. $5.95. 9 THE ASSASSINATION BU REAU, LTD., by Jack London. A previously unpuoliihed novel, unfinished at the au thor's death and completed bv Robert L. Fish. A plot of "meticulous intrigue." $4.50. If In Doubt, Give a Gift Cerlificale for Christmas Your Complete Book Store dictate to the chicken the size of the egg the chicken lays. It had been- a long-sought goal of poultry science and it was reached under pressure, after many failures. For ages past, hens have been making themselves nuisances to egg dealers, egg handlers and egg users by hanging onto the hen's prerogative of laying eggs of varying sizes. Eggs have had to be sorted and graded. Countless cake rec ipes have disappointed because the eggs were too small or too large. Premature midday hun ger pangs have annoyingly re minded multitudes that two medium-sized eggs for breakfast are not as nutritionally lasting as two large ones. Pressure High These and other egg com plaints have kept the pressure high on poultry scientists as they theorized and experimented in search of some reliable tech nique for persuading chickens to lay eggs of standard size. No one ever has made an impression on a chicken by ar guing. Clearly the only possibil ity of success hinged on manip ulating the chemical means the chicken uses in running up eggs for laying. Poultry scientists have tried injecting chicken with hormones and other stimulates. But this method had to be ruled out. Either stimulants didn't work or they got into the eggs and were passed on to egg consumers. The most promising approach proved to be through chicken feed. Eggs are high in protein. It became clear Dial chickens feeding on feed relatively high in protein laid large eggs, al though not consistenty nor uni formly. The amino acids are the building blocks from which chickens (as well as people and all animals) chemically build their own characteristic pro teins. And so amino acids were added to high-protein chicken feed. Results Disappointing But again the results were disappointing. Egg size gener ally increased but still there was no consistency even in one hen much less in a flock of hens. Puzzling over these inconsist encies B. E. March and J. Biely of the Poultry Science De partment of the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, theorized that "balance" of amino acids rather than the amounts fed to chickens was the decisive factor. With 48 white leghorn pullets they proved out the theory. All were fed fixed amounts of grains, distillers solubles, soy bean oil meal and vitamins which added up to a protein diet. The 48 were divided into three groups of 16 each. Each one of the three got a different formulation of amino acids as a supplement. Over a period of many weeks, the groups were switched around amone the three formulations. j The result was a clear demon 1 stration that while taking in l lysine and methionine, all pul lets laid uniformly large eggs. On the other hand, glycine, another amino acid, "depress ed" egg size when it was the only dietary supplement. The whole business worked like a charm. After four dys of lysine-methionine intake, the nul- j lets went into large egg produc tion. Four days after they ; stopped getting those amino acids, they switched back to 1 smaller eggs. 1959 Chev. Vi Ton Pickup 3 Speed Hetter Com. Bumper $1199 PAUL LEA MOTORS 12TH AND RIVERSIDE UULJUU VAJUAJ GO! See What's New for '64 SAVE! On '63 Model Closeouts . Even Houdini would have been a mazed! See those before and after pic tures above? You get that magic self cleaning result electrically with G-E's new P-7 Oven! And you never touch the dirty oven! No hand-scrubbing, wiping or messing with chemicals! You just set a dial at "clean," set a thermostat at "clean," set the timer and latch the door. That's all you do! All the , spatters, roast drippings, crusted-on pie juice just disappear. Your oven will be as spotlessly clean as the day you bought it . . . even the cor-. ners and ridges you could never clean before. Hard to believe? Then see M for your self. Come in for a demonstration. ' 11 i If K h-N-Jiflora. j : Wmm ""' "tg JflMMe)MMHMHHtiiMEM&BfiSSE?. ' -ii ......a o itn8iiti'w.,nnr. 1 mVIlT T OF 1963 WASHERS AND DRYERS SMALL WASHBASIN LOADS The amazing P-7 Oven is available In three models the 30:inch Spacemaker, the Americana, and the Americana with a built-in Exhaust System. See them at our store now! fa -ssr rinif -'i ii' a' I i.. mi. i. ill . """9i ;ifiilliljilllEs lylutlve new ''l FOR PEOPLE WHO HAVE FREEZERS! 13 cubic feet! 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