PACE TWO
MEDFOKD MATL TRFBUyE, BEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY. JULY 1. 1937.
REFUSE TO LEAVE
ANCIENTTLYWAYS
Biological Survey Finds
Birds. Unlike Humans,
Stick to Ancient Paths In
Spite of All Hardships
PORTLAND. July 1, (P) It'i
nice right now with the temperature
winging upward toward three figures
to consider the purposeful duck and
geese speeding southward through the
bright, cool autumn or bucking-wind
and rain on their way to ancestral
, resting and breeding grounds. - :
The sportsman mops his brow and
' remembers last November's outing,
deep In the frigid marsh. But the
biological survey men have no time
' to recall the magnificent flights of
a season ago, because they are busy
, studying data designed to protect
. North American birds and perpetu
ate a major outdoor Industry.
' t'nllke Humans.
The migratory birds of the drought
country, unlike the farmers who have
fled to the green slopes of the Pa
' ctfle coast, have not and will not
desert the fields they have flown
i over for generations, Field research
by the biological survey reveals that
while receding lakes and streams and
. dust-covered feeding grounds have
taken a heavy toll In migratory bird
life, the webfooted travelers still stick
to the same old flyway from the
hatching stage until death. No gun
can scare them out. .
This fact, discovered through ex-
tensive banding projects In the At-
l.ntlx llUilnlnnl untnl mrtA Da -
rta f1vwnv. nrMnfji the hlolnnlrAl
survey with one of Its greatest nrob-
lems. When life gets too tough for
in aunt dowi larmer, no picas up
mmm finnan. mill tlnlr I mi until
the bitter end. The same groups of
Individual birds follow the same
routes rigidly. '
llnhlts Determined,
The banding shows many habits
' they go, how long they stay and. how
fast they travel. Into the records
- of the Malheur refuge In southeast-
- em Oregon, a redhead wrote an eplo
' of winged speed. Banded at Malheur
' before noon on October SO, a hunter
at Sal ton Bea near the Mexican bor
der bagged the duck the morning of
November 1. Game authorities be-.
, lleve the redhead flew 1,000 miles
without stopping. Other birds band
ed In the Oregon refuge have been
returned from Todos Santos, Mexico,
California, Idaho, Nevada and Al
berta, Canada.
The attachment of a, bird. for. Its.
nroaf.rAl flvurnv tall irnm nvnArtJi
conclusively that If ever the popu
lstion Is wiped out In any one re
glon It may never be repopulated.
The midwest sportsman, for Instance,
may as well resign himself to the
sad tale that when his birds are
depleted there will be no sudden visi
tation from tbe east or far west.
LOAN COMPANIES
EXPAND ASSETS
WASHINGTON, D. (pl.) An
improved financial position and
heightened activity for Oregon sav
ings, building and loan associations
In 1030 as compared with 1935 la
shown In a consolidated report Is
sued today by the Federal Home Loan
Bank board. Yov 1030 the report
covers 38 thrift and horn e-flna net r.g
Institutions, both state-chartered and
federally chartered.
Combined assets of the Institutions
climbed from 16,228,000 la 1936 to
10.907,000 In 1930. Hone mortgage
loans outstanding Increased from
10,855,000 to 13.2DQ.000, a gain of
93.4 per cent, and reflection of the
rise In the volume or home building
recorded In the state during 1036,
which amounted to over 238 per cent.
A Jump of 40 per cent In the Um
"Incomplete loans" is due to the
greater number of mortgages on
homre which were under construc
tion. "Real estated owned" by these
units decreased by over 28 per cent,
showing a liquidation of asses ts us
ually classified as slow, as well as a
stronger residential real estate mar
ket. The accounts of Inventors In
these associations Increased from
10.107.000 to $17,037,000 over the
year.
76
ISSUED HERE IN JUNE
During the month of June 70 mar
riage licenses were Issued by the
county clerk's office, Dan Cupid be
ing slightly busier than taut year,
whan 07 were Issued. In 1935 the
June licensee totaled 58.
Approximately one-fourth of thr
licenses were Issued to California
couples end the balance to Jackson
county and Oregon residents.
Only two couples showed any bash
fulness about publicity for their
troths. Ono pair wanted the news
withheld until after July t; the
other wanted the world never to
know,
Board Your Pets at tbe
Humane Society Shelter
Summer Bales 1Ye Call and
Deliver
Mid Hay Huad Phone Mil
The Bridegroom Looks at the Bride
W. VV-. Wv V Vv J , i
Tfe, - v. '"via-, v
i
t l
' IS 1 if 'V. i ; l k''V ft
t 11 I f r'' " 1 VA iM
ml &i . 1 MiJ
I I V ' 1. J A f
Frnnklln D. Ronnerelt. Jr., and hi, bride, the former Ethel DuPnnt, are shown here Just after their wed
ding yrstordny at C.'hrUt church. Wl ImlnKtan, Ilrl, The bride, jrjwn Is of a modified renaissance design.
For the inarringe ceremony, the bride carried an lABft edition o! a foreign prayer book, bound In Ivory, In
which were tied butterfly orchids and a shower of lllles-of-t!ie-valley. (A. P, Photo by wire and airmail to
Mall Tribune).
SLIP FROM SIGHT FOR
HONEYMOON IN SECRET
WILMINOTOM, Del., July 1. (AP)
Franklin D. Roosevelt, jr., and
Ethel DuPont were man aud wife to
day, honeymooning in wcret alter a
rich but simple wedding.
With th eyes of the country upon
them as they were joined In the most
publicized American wedding of the
year, the blonde, blue-eyed bride and
her tall, athletically built groom
slipped oui of sight with the expert
aid of te United States secret serv
ice. Both President Roosevelt, father of
the groom, and Mrs. Roosevelt con
spired with a few members of the
families and Intimate friends to keep
the honeymoon plans secret.
There were reliable reports that on
July 10 the young newtyweds would
go sbroad on the liner impress of
Britain, but their whereabouts mean
while was kept from the public.
The couple bode farewell to their
families and 1H00 frlfnd nt a re
ception held at Owl's Nest, home of
the bride's father, Eugene DuPont,
lost night after the wedding.
The wedding rltEs were completed
In Christ Protestant Episcopal church.
CANNON FREED UNTIL
TRIAL NEXT TUESDAY
Nelson Cannon, charged with In
voluntary manslaughter for the acci
dental death last April on North
Riverside avenue of Francis Lee Hery
ford in an auto-bicycle crash, was
given his freedom on his own recog
nizance yesterday and his trial set
for next Tuesday, July 8. Cannon
has been held in the county Jail
since the accident.
i Jll l miNG ON YOUR j
TT 7"HY run the risk of
tire trouble spoil
ing your July 4th outing,
when safe new Good
years the world's first
choice tires for 22 con
secutive years cost less
than any other operating
expense on your car?
Look (or this sign WHERE TO BUY
CAR IS THE BEST TIRES YOU CAN BUYI
The nvtragt maintenance cons obtained from the
records of fleet owners operating hundreds of
csrs on Goodyear tires show that a full set of
Goodyears costs only ont-fiftb as much per mile as
gasoline ont-fourtb as much as insurancejicenses
and depreciation er-Airrfas much as garage and
repairs out-half as much as lubrication, washing
and miscellaneous. Nationwide records prove
Goodyears cost under any conditions.
.ii!iit:;l;iiiiK"iii:iif;iii:ii!!l!i!;
PHONE
14
MEDFORD SERVICE STATION
MAIN AND
PACIFIC HIGHWAY
avii sr
rtAVC'OMII MOTOR CO.
unu POINT
tUill, roiNT IIARim.iKE
JACKJONVlLLf;
JMKSUNMlLt StRV.
AT ALL AUTHORIZED SHELL DEALERS
IS ORDERED FOR
Oregon Health Head Esti
mates Oregon Accumu
lating 3000 Cases An
nually May Invoke Law
I The public will be educated to the
fact that quack cures are extremely
dangeroua; that over-treatment U as
Injurious at no treatment, and that
no drug store remedies can cure the
Infection. Doctors will be asked to
submit esses to physicians specialis
ing; In syphilis, Dr. Btrlcker saying
only medical men educated to It can
recognize the "hidden chancre,' one
of the greatest causes of the disease's
spread.
Efforts also will be made to mar
shal public opinion behind a legisla
tive act to be voted upon at the 1938
elections, and which would require
parties to a marriage contract to sub
mit to blood tests before Issuance of
a license, as a eheck against an un
witting spread of dangerous diseases.
PORTLAND. July 1. (7P Upon
the barriers behind which syphilis
makes Its dread march against pub
lic health, medical leaders of Oregon
loosed a counter assault today, pledg
ed to conquer the last unchecked
major disease of the state,
Estlmstlng that Oregon, as a typ
ical state, was accumulating 3,000
new cases annually, despite Its popu
lation of only a million, Dr. Fred
erick Strieker, state health officer,
flanked by a committee of the Ore
gon Medical association, will employ
education, cooperation of the state's
army of doctors snd prosecution In
the courts If need arise to bring about
a decline of the disease.
Law Requires Report.
False modesty, failure or physicians
to report cases as required by law,
refusal of Infected persons to seek
treatment or their disregard of doc
tors' recommendations and the ignor
ance of many doctors of the vagaries
of the "great Imitator,'' as the dis
ease la known medically because of
Its simulation of other Infections,
was blamed for the continued ad
vance of syphUls.
As the opanlng gun In his cam
paign. Dr. Strieker Issued orders for
a census of the disease, beginning to
day, ay It he expects to ascertain
Its prevalence, sources, and locate
csea for treatment.
Another step will be the employ
ment of an enforcement officer by
the state health board. He will seek
out physicians who fall to report
cases, and If need be cite them to
court, where a state law carrying a
$100 fine for failure to report cases
will be Invoked.
Physicians will be instructed to re
port cases by number, and if pati
ents fall to take treatments, doctors
will be obliged to turn their names
over to the state health board. Suf
ferers first will be offered treatment
and If they refuse they will either
be Isolated privately or put In Insti
tutions by compulsion.
Ofrer Treatment Course.
Because many doctors are not
equipped medically to fight the dis
ease, a post-graduate course will be
added to the curricula of the Uni
versity of Oregon medical school to
give physicians special education in
treating the disease.
PERFECT WEATHER
AT
DIAMOND LAKE. July 1. (Spl.)
The weather here U clear and warm
and all roads leading to the lake, in
cluding the north entrance to Crater
Lake are open and in good condition.
Fishing l& excellent with, spinner
and troutoreno. Fly fishing Is im
proving both on Diamond lake, Lake
creek and the North Umpqua. Good
catcnes are being reported dally.
Larger and larger fish are being tak
en from Diamond lake. On June 29,
Oeorge H. Kellogg, 15-year-old Salem
boy, landed a 13 pound rainbow.
The same day Phil King of Hollywood.
Calif., caught a slx-poundpr. In ad
dition there were plenty of average
catches weighing between two and
three pounds.
CLARK IS APPOINTED
10 NAVAL RESERVE
John A. Clark, superintendent of
the Medford sewage disposal plant,
today received notice that he had
been appointed by Navy Secretary
Swanson as an assistant civil engi
neer with the rank of lieutenant Jun
ior grade in the United States naval
reserve. With this rating he will be
subject to call to duty whenever his
services might be needed.
Clark became superintendent of
the new disposal plant here laBt No
vember 1. He is a graduate of Stan
ford university and a registered civil
engineer in Oregon. After graduat
ing from Stanford, he served for five
vears as santtarv enslneer In Ala-
! meda county, California. Later he
was a California state assistant direc
tor of mosquito control.
Pot Oreater Satisfaction
Buy NOLDE & HORS1 HOSIERY at
Ethelwyn B Hoftmanna.
6 St H Green Stamps.
Use Mall frlbune want ads
OF VACATIONISTS
IN FOREST AREAS
Forester Urges Patriotism
in Saving Timber Lands
From Fire Destruction
Safety Edicts in Force
The exercise of patriotism In saving
forests from fire destruction was ask
ed of July 4 vacationists In a press
release received here today from C. J.
Buck, United States regional forester
at Portland.
Throngs are expected to strike out
for the forest playgrounds over the
holiday week-end and the utmost
caution was advised to avert fires.
Serious blazes can be started by the
careless discard of a match or cigar
ette stub or by failure to put a camp
fire out completely, Mr. Buck empha
sized. Despite recent rains, fire haz
ards are gx?at, he added.
Beginning today, permits are re
quired for all campflres In the na
tional forests excepting at certain im
proved and protected campgrounds
which are clearly designated, Mr.
Buck pointed out. Permits may be
procured from rangers or other for
est officers. The national regulations
are usually applied to state forests
through a proclamation by tbe go
era or.
Smoking Prohibited.
Regulations effective today als
ban smoking In vehicles passing
through the forests. Mr. Buck stress-
ed. All parties entering the foteta
by vehicle or pack train and camp-
tng at unimproved and undeelgnattd
campgrounds are required to M
equipped with shovel, axe and bucketi
V Hornrs'i m ha n naH frnm tha fJ
ests.
The equipment required must meal
these standards: the shovel must
at least 36 inches long and have
blade at least eight Inches wide; a
at least 36 Inches long with a heatl
weighing at least two pounds; thi
bucket must be of one gallon capacltf
at least.
1936 Mark Exceeded.
"The records show that earel
smokers, cigarette toesera and eampi
era cause more than half at
man-caused fires," Mr. Buck's state
ment said. "These people don't want
to destroy their own ptaygroundai
but they do. Each year some cholei
recreation area or roadside strip m.
permanently scarred by preventable
fire, it looks as though we are not
going to get away from this condl-j
tlon until the public la thoroughly
aroused over the loss a little care
lessness kindles." '
The number of fires and acreage
burned within the national forests of
Oregon and Washington this year al
ready exceed the marks set for the
same 1936 period, Mr. Buck said. To
tal fires for the season to date art
166 against only 127 for last year.j
and the area burned totals 1,334
acres as compared with 357 In 1936,,
the records show. ?
Bardstown, Ky.,is the site of "My
Old Kentucky Home," one of Ameri
ca's most famous houses.
mm
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IT'S IN THE SACf
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Gives you extra value, too. AIRWAY is
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to order while you wait I You'll like its deep
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sold with a money-back guarantee)
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(WTwnK
1
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