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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1952)
it - - r r - ' ' i I -ait DOING NICELY is doctor's report on Mrs. Elizaoeth Pinkham, 35, and quadruplets, three girls and boy, born at Portland Me., nospitai. Mrs. rinKnam uves wiux nusuauu, anas, to, auu uauguwi, Boxanne, 9, In tiny two-room cottage in country town of Standish. (International Soundphoto) Korean Truce Anniversary Finds Single Paragraph Delaying End of Fighting Panmunjom (U.R) The Un ited Nations and the Communi ists on this first anniversary of the start of armistice negotia tions are within one paragraph of ending the Korea war. The months - long wrangling over the deadlocked question of forced vs. voluntary repatriation of war prisoners has tended to obscure the progress already made toward a cease-fire. 63 Paragraphs Settled Altogether, 63 of the 64 para graphs in the proposed 28-page armistice pact have been agreed upon. No. 51 in the pact is now the subject of secret talks in the conference tent. The military advantage passed to the Reds as the armistice talks dragged on. They have built up their Army to 1,000,- 000 men, dug m in depth, and massed 1,000 to 2,000 planes just across the border in Man churia. Agreed Last July It took the truce teams 16 days just to decide what to talk about. They finally agreed on a five - point agenda last July 26. The next major agreement didn't come until four months later. On November 27 the truce teams fixed the then battlelines as the cease - fire line provided (teflTERfllL J) Crazier Jf j KENTUCKY JM SMOOTH l'ln & MELLOW Al Xm MB. an armistice could be completed within 30 days. Then May 7, President Tru man and then Supreme U.N Commander Gen. Matthew B Ridgway disclosed that the ne gotiators had cleared away two of the last three remaining ob stacles to a truce. They said the U.N. dropped its demand for a ban on military airfield construction in North Korea during a truce. In ex change, the Reds gave up their insistence that Russia serve as one of the "neutral" nations which would go behind the lines to make sure truce terms were being observed. That left only the exchange of war prisoners to be settled. The Grange tt PROOF 701 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS " featerfllland Fraiiir Distillery Co.Ba-dstown.Ky, Phoenix Grange Phoenix Grange met July 8 in regular session with Master' Claude Hutton presiding. A clever program preceded the meeting with Florence Drake in charge, assisted by Dollie Lat tie. Revealed was the presenta tion of the new Grange sashes to each officer. Master Hutton reported a spec ial committee has installed a wash basin and made other im provements in the ladies' room. This has been a project of the Home Economics club. Members were informed that dues must be raised and this matter will be discussed at the next meeting, July 22. The annual picnic will be Sunday, July 13, at the home of Master Hutton. Everyone should bring their own table service and favorite eats. Ice cream and coffee will be fur nished by the Grange. All mem bers are welcome. i Next regular Grange serving committee will include Mr. and Mrs. Merle Simmonds, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest James and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Swingled The evening closed with a wa ter-mellon feed served by the Koy Bolzses, Hunters and Wal ters. KEEP OREGON CRPPM 33 0 0 A" SI II Iff! m m mm mm n. w 7 Take down your receiver to minimize doYm-time! TO keep your money-making "Caterpillar" Equipment making you money, phone us for the genuine Caterpillar parts you need. And cut down on down-time! These parts have the precision fit and fitness of the original ones on your "Caterpillar" machine. Our experienced parts men fill orders from stock promptly. In response to your call, your part for "Caterpillar" or allied machine, will speed to you right quick. We are as near as your phone, ready to back the earning power of the machinery we sell. Crater Lake Machinery Co. mearora, uregon CATERP Phone 2-6207 DIISH ENGmtS TIACTOK . OTOt GRADERS USTHMOVme l(KIPNT 4-H Club News Central Point Clubs Central Point 4H clubs will hold a potluck picnic for club members and their parents on July 13 at 1:30 p.m. at the Har old Gebhard ranch on Kirkland road. Each family is asked to bring their own food and table service. Central Point Dairy and Beef clubs met at the Robert Russell home on July 8. President Joann Russell explained how to fill out and record books. Floyd Char ley, beef leader, showed how to lead and train beef animals Joann Russell demonstrated how to show dairy animals. Dale Smith and Joann Russell demonstrated different ways of fitting beef animals. Animals used for the demonstrations were stock belonging to Carol and Joann Russell. The pre-fair is to be held July 19. The community and county fairs were discussed during the meeting. Refreshments were served following the meeting by Mrs. Robert Russell and daughters. Carol Russell, Reporter. Use of Lash Being Revived In Sections of Australia I Thursday, July 10. 195i, Phoenix Church Bible School Program Friday Commencement exercises of the vacation Bible school of the Phoenix Baptist church will be held Friday, June 11, at 8 p.m. in the parlors of the Oakwood motel. A full presentation of the classes will be made. The pro gram will consist of recitations, Bible drills, singing and dis plays. The public is invited. Sydney, Australia (UP) In terest in the lash, dreaded weap on of justice in 18th century Australian colonial days is re viving in parts of the nation. A leading supreme court judge advocates the return of the "cat-o-nine-tails" for sex of fenders in New South Wales. The judiciary in Australia's northern gatepost already has brought the fearsome punish ment into force. When Chief Judge Frederick Beaumont Phillips ordered the whipping of a native found guilty of assaulting a young girl, some sections of the public strongly supported the sentence. Paper Agrees , The South Pacific Post at Port Moresby said "all sections of the European community . . . wel come the action." "The prevalence of crimes of this nature has long been a cause of great anxiety ... In resorting to corporal punishment the chief judge has taken a measure that is long overdue," the paper com mented. Judge Frederick W h i 1 1 o n Berne of the New South Wales supreme court suggested the use of the lash on persons convicted of male sex perversion. He said the use of the lash was permitted under an amendment to the Australian crimes act, which also provides a penalty of five years in jail. Judge Berne commented: "Picture shows, parks and public lavatories are all infested with these types. They are so low that even the criminal scum have no desire to associate with them." Sees Grave Danger "The serious part of the mat ter is that no child is safe with these people about and parents can hardly afford to let their children out of their sight. "It is no exaggeration to say that in the field of criminal ac tivity no greater danger has ever menaced the commuity than the present state of affairs. "It is useless to treat offenders with kid gloves. It is necessary to treat them without mercy. "The public has the right to be protected against it. If the courts do not do so, then assuredly peo ple will take the law into their own hands and act upon the in struction 'an eye for an eye.' Urges Crackdown "Medical science cannot curb these sex offenders of their in stincts and there is only one language which willthe lang uage which is expressed in the armed tongue of the law." Commenting on Judge Berne's suggestion for use of the lash, the state attorney-general, Clar ence Martin, said the crimes act provided for persons convicted of specified offences to be pri vately whipped once, twice or three times in addition to other punishment prescribed. "However, I regard the provi sions relating to whipping as ob solete and contrary to every modern development in pen ology," he said. Fishermen Drowned In Alaskan Storm Anchorage, Alaska (U.R) Three fishermen were dead and eight were missing and presum ed lost Thursday as the result of a storm which sank nine two man boats in Alaska's Bristol Bay salmon-fishing area. The three bodies were" recov ered. Identities of the dead and missing were hot known im miately, but it was believed they had been brought to the area from San Francisco by packers there. Reports received here said the fishermen were harvesting the heaviest run of the season when the storm started Friday but they decided to stay out de spite the danger because they were making such a big haul. MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE Milwaukie Man Dies In Automobile Wreck Coos Bay (U.R) Speed was blamed for causing an automo bile mishap that took the life of Elder W. Dietrich, 64, of Mil waukie, Ore., near the Coos Curry county line Wednesday. Dietrich was killed when the car he was driving plunged off a 30-foot embankment. State po lice said he was apparently driving too fast as he went into a reverse curve. Skid marks 140 feet long were measured on the pavement. Dietrich's wife, Emma, escap ed with severe bruises and is in a Bandon hospital. Scientists think the parasitic sea' lamprey got started in the Great Lakes by hitchhiking on hulls of vessels going up the Welland canal past Niagara Falls and through the locks at Sault Ste. Marie. Sports Afield. Science at Work New York (U.R) Science has a newly-developed sex hor mone that may increase tre mendously the amount of meat and milk available to the mil lions of people in need of a bet-1 ter diet Sax always has been a vital factor in food production and controlled interference in repro duction has long been a goal for the farmer. For years, scientists have experimented with sex hormones which could be used to increase the productivity of plants and domestic animals The first to be chemically ident ified was estrone in 1929. Of the several that have been developed as the result of con stant research, ECP, introduced by the Upjohn Company, Kala mazoo, Mich., appears to be most active. Chemically, ECP is the oil-soluble 17 (beta) cyclo pentylpropionate ester of "al pha" estradiol. Successful Treatment ECP successfully treats ster ility in livestock. Perhaps its most dramatic application is in bringing ewes into heat twice a year instead of the usual once, making possible a doubled lamb crop. The hormone also mater ially reduces the ratio of "misses" for brood cows. Research at veterinary col leges and by practicing veterin arians in various parts cf the country ' indicate the effective ness with which ECP can be used. In most cases, one injec tion of the hormone has induced heat promptly in dairy cows, sheep and sows. Dr. W. J. Gibbons, head of large animal surgery and medi cine at Alabama Polytechnic In stitute, Auburn, Ala., has re ported that ECP induced estrum (heat) in 75 of 80 cows with non functioning ovaries. The five cows not responding to the first injection of ECP came in estrum after the second injection. On the basis of one injection, the average percentage of success was 93.8. Advantages Obvious The economic advantages of ECP are obvious. Almost half of all the dairy cows in the na tion are sterile on an average of three months each year and as a result produce considerably less milk than when healthy, ac cording to a recent United States Department of Agriculture study Made at the USDA's animal disease station at Beltsville, Md. the study extended over a per iod or more than three years 'By PAUL F. ELLIS United Prats Scitnc Editor and was under the direction of Dr. A. H. Frank. "Records o n approximately 1,000 cows for a period of three to four years," Dr. Frank re ported, "reveal that 48 per cent are sterile for an average of 90 days each year. Of the 48 per cent, roughly half were sterile as a result of not coming into heat; the rest came into heat but did not conceive without repeated breeding." Approximately 75 per cent of such sterile dairy cows can be brought into heat and speedily put back into milk production with the help of ECP, according to Dr. J. L. Davidson, head of the veterinary department of the Upjohn Company. Without treatment, the animal loss to the dairy industry be cause of sterility comes to ap proximately 3 million cow-years on the basis of current United States dairy cattle population, which iz in excess of 24 million. 1 WHISKY A BLEND tt NtOOf 9 ii 6SAIN HEUTUU SMITS toya&fies From .44 Easy DrPepper PfftiMe .Iff lit 91 Mm&Mi "Gel a Lift for life, It's Really True . . j .,tt. win the most fabulous yes, iu" hitorv-an in- often as you want; get your friends ana iauuiy , 899 Met- l$ft$6kPm$,Toot ia ianiy ,wnt PAY WIN -FIRS jl r , UT rottle vniTR ENTRY ON AN OFFICIAL FiN X v RI ANK. GET ONE AT YOUR DR. Ip?PFR DEALER, OR WRITE DR. PEPpIr, BOX 50S6. DALLAS TEXAS, foR OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK. Enter today! It's funrand a few ht mav win for you a minmcs o, . ., coDicuvM.-- Orvou can win one ,T, ioYALTY EARNliNu ir ivT to rhyme -Uma mil 'Get a utt tor - --- , er .. 2.ine just for completing - - The jingle to as simpie as, winning rhyme may ,lete 2-line jingle, e oclosing 55. ZLrtc cx or facsimile sneci completi Dr. Peoner each word in a 'or I Here's what you con WIN I botdecaportaim R0yaity from 44 Texas ou wens; -in the entire jmgU.iaKt as J Read Easy Rules and ENTER TODAY! Read How Dr. Pepper Pays 1 952 Federal Income Taxes on First Prize ! Contest will dose July 3!, 1952. Entries must be postmarked before midnight July 31 and received by met IS ftnlu antrlai. i.tk i . ... .' PRIZE NUMBER Or . NO. AWARDS PRIZE 1 1 RoyerHes from 44 Texas Oil Wells 2 I G- E. Dishwasher, Disposal! and Clothes Washer 3-S 4 Motorola TV sets 20" sceen 7-10 4 . . Hoover Cylinder Vacuum Cleaners 11-20 10 . G. E. Electric Blankets, Double Bed Size, Dual Controls 21-45 25 Colson Deluxe Bicycles 46.-51 6 Dormeyer Meal Maker Mixers 52-57 6 Fryrybj Deep Fat Fryers 58-63 S . Remington 60 Electric Shavers 64-88 25 Toastmaster Toasters ' - 83-100 12 Reslstel Buckaroo Mcset Western Hats - 101-250 150 Chjcago.Roller Skates 251-400 150 Astopoint Mechanical Penal 401-900 500 Personalized Stainless Steel Identification Bracelets 1 Print or write plainly your two-line rhyme beginning wtth i'Get Lift far i ifa if t r.sllu t, II.. blank, cr one side of a sheet of paper. Print or write plainly your name and address. All entries must be original work of the contestant and submitted in bis or her own name. o Mail to Dr. Pepper Jingle Contest, P. 0. Box 753, " Chicago 77, Illinois. Enter as many times as you like but with each entry, enclose a Dr. Pepper bottle cap or facsimile for each word In the complete jingle. Use a sturdy mailing envelope and affix sufficient postage. CAUTION: Do not send entries to Dr. Pepper Company. O Yon will be eligible to have Dr. Pepper pay your Federal Income Tax on the 1952 Royalty earnings on the first prize, if you write your entry or entries on an official entry blank and double the number of Dr. Pepper wiub caps or iwainwes you enclose wilft each entry. August 15. Only entries with sufficient postage will be judged. 5 En'r,es judged on the basis of originality, unioueness and aptness of thought by The Lloyd Herrold Com panv, independent contest judges. Decision of judges Ifn."i I" tres' eo"tents wA ideas become the property of the Dr. Pepper Company. Duplicate prizes in case of lies. A An resident of continental United States may enter ''except employees of Dr. Pepper Company. Dr. Pepper r 'fbans 8ents and their families. Contest w u w. . ailu )u(ai reguiauons. 7. f""18!5 be ennounced approximately one month ' efter.the contest doses. All winners notified by mail. Cmnl.t. ui .... .... . ' .'" -,, ,,,, m eguej, n yoy enclose self, addressed stamped envelooe with vnnr ntrv Eritry blanks it your Dr. Pepper dealer, or write Dr. Pepper, Box 5086. Dallas, Texas, for oflidal entry blank. "Covers payments of approximately $100 per month from fractional royalty interest under two-tracts in the famous East Texas Oil Fields. Independent geologists estimate copy on request that the future returns cf these royalties based on crude prices and allowable production as or Marco Z8, 1352, u oyer $20,000." No other drink picks you up like Dr, Pepper Lcever's Offer 5SP TT- mmJAtm WUUUW ALSO NO FINANCE CHARGES ON 12 MONTHS CONTRACTS. 100 MONEY BACK BLUE RIBBON GUARANTEE. FREE 2-DAY DRIVING TRIAL. AN These at Leever's Only! 1951 PACKARD 4-DOCR SEDAN Striking turquoise Ultramatic, heater, radio. Special washable seat covers. A0 Ceiling 2790.00 AWJW 1951 CHRYSLER NEWPORT HARD TOP COUPE Windsor Scotch plaid upholstery. 6!'5.QC Only 12,000 miles. This week PyyJ O 1951 MERCURY 4-DOOR SEDAN Heater, radio, overdrive. Only 18,000 miles. Look CIQC at this ceiling price $2296. Our price 1951 WILLYS 6 CYLINDER STATION WAGON All steel body. Overdrive. 15,000 miles T950 FORD CUSTOM V8 4-DOOR SEDAN Immaculate. Heater, ClliO'? radio, overdrive I 1950 PONTIAC CHIEFTAN DELUXE SEDAN Heater, radio. .1? QQB Exceptionally clean O 1950 BUICK SPECIAL DLX. 4-DR. tttyTC SEDAN Dark blue. All the extras. p I 3 1950 STUDEBAKER CHAMPION 4-DOOR SEDAN Heater, overdrive. Sharp fp R O Q g Ceiling $1653.00 JrtlOy3 O 1949 PACKARD 4-DR. SEDAN Two-tone tan and gray. Heater, radio, overdrive. Sold filIQC originally by us. One owner Ibtt O 1949 CHEVROLET STYLINE DELUXE SEDAN A really clean car. fijlTSOC Yet only 133 1949 MERCURY 4-DOOR SEDAN A-l condition. Heater, radio, overdrive. Ceiling fT ftftg $1653.00. Special this week P 1948 NASH "600" CUSTOM 4-DR. SEDAN Only 35,000 miles, one owner. Leever's ljl.C . best buy. This week O 1949 NASH AMBASSADOR 4-DR. SEDAN Clean and in fine condition. IOR Ceiling $1560.00 pIAf3 O 1948 PLYMOUTH SPECIAL DELUXE 6-PASSENGER COUPE This car is an exception. (Llfti E Heater, radio &tlja 1947 PONTIAC 2-DOOR SEDAN A COIS nice clean car, in top shape 'f CHEAPIES 1940 BUICK COUPE New motor $350.00 O 1941 OLDS '6' SEDAN A clean old car........ 350.00 O 1939 OLDS '6' 4-DOOR Runs good........ 95.00 1936 OLDS SEDAN 95.00 PICKUPS O 1950 WILLYS 4-W.D. PICKUP Recondi tioned motor. $1795.00- 1950 DODGE Vz Ton Pickup 4-speed, heater 1295.00 1940 CHEVROLET 'a TON 375.00 OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9. M. eever Motors FIFTH NEAR RIVERSIDE PHONE 3-3687 C9 a. s. t. on.