FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordJTribune
"Everybody In Southern Oregon
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OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 2p. 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
June 3, 194S
(It was Sunday)
Weather bureau officials re
port total rainfall for May of
4.58 inches, the wettest May
ever recorded here.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: A news
item from Canyon City, in the
heart of the cow country, reads:
"Though there are thousands of
cattle in the hills of Grant coun
try, there is an acute shortage
of beef here." Add that up and
see if it makes sense.
20 YEARS AGO
June 3. 1935
(It was Monday)
Osteopathic clinic and hospital
on East Jackson st. to open in
three weeks.
Eleven Medford youths receive
diplomas at Oregon State college
at Corvallis.
30 YEARS AGO
June 3. 1925
(It was Wednesday)
State teachers examinations to
be held at court house in Jack
sonville June 10-13.
California places quarantines
of Oregon cherries and potatoes.
40 YEARS AGO
June 3 1915
(It was Thursday)
Jackson county sheriffs offi
cers find burglar's cache on
Bear creek near McAndrews rd.
believed to belong to robbers of
Rogue River bank and Grants
Pass depot.
Organization of Water Users'
league to be considered at meet
ing of Rogue valley residents.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 1955. Editorial Research Reeerl
1. The Salk polio vaccine is
made from live or killed virus?
2. There are now five, four,
three, two, one or no Negro
members of the U.S. Senate?
3. The engine in a German-
made Volkswagen car is cooled
by air or water?
4. Evangelist Billy Graham
held revival meetings the last
week of May in London, New
York, Edinburgh, Paris or Chi
cago? 5. The right not to incriminate
oneself is guaranteed in the orig
inal Constitution or in an amend
ment? 6. Hudson seal fur comes
from seals; right or wrong?
7. Gerrymanders are animals,
political maneuvers, fixed horse
races. British army officers, or
South American dances?
The Answers: 1. Killed virus.
2. No Negro members. 3. Br air.
4. London. 5. In the 5th amend
ment. 6. Wrong (from muskrats).
7. Political maneuvers.
Tape Recorder Used
To Boosf Record Sales
Mountain View, Calif. U.R)
Jake Buhler, who sells records
and recording machines, has
come up with a neat advertising
gimmick that whets the appetite
of music-lovers.
Each week Buhler makes a
master tape recording of musi
cal and religious programs and
then invites owners of tape re
corders for a re-recording ses
sion free of charge.
Through a "patch" system,
Buhler can handle six recorders
working off his master tap.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Glimpses of the Future
One of mankind's chief preoccupations is at
tempting to foretell the future. Soothsayers, star
gazers, fortune tellers all have catered to man's in
satiable curiosity about what is to be.
The best of the prophets of the future have been
those who base their predictions on the present and
the past, constructing an extension of things as they
now are.
These extensions can be logical, as in the case
of the economists (who are, after all, cast in the role
of prophets), and statisticians, or intuitional, as in
the case of the poets. .
R EMBER, for instance, what Tennyson had to say
in "Locksley Hall" ?
For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see:
Saw the Vision of the world, and all the wonder that
would be;
Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic
sails,
Pilots of the purple twilight, dropping down with costly
bales;
Heard the heavens filled with shouting, and there rain'd
a ghastly dew
From the nations' airy navies grappling in the central
blue;
Far along the world-wide whisper of the south-wind
rushing warm,
With the standards of the peoples plunging thro' the
thunderstorm;
Till the war-drum throbb'd no longer, and the battle
lags were furl'd
In the Parliament of man, the Federation of the world.
There the common sense of most shall hold a fretful
realm in awe,
And the kindly earth shall slumber, lapt in universal
law.
TENNYSON'S predictions, made during the last
centuiy, have about 50 per cent come to pass.
It is to be hoped the rest of his vision, too, will come
about.
The prophecies of the economists and statisti
cians, while phrased in more prosaic form and usual
ly covering a shorter period of itme, have more cur
rency these days than do those of the poets.
But still they are often looked upon with sus
picion. OOW can they know, for instance, that the popula
tion of the United States in 1975, 20 years from
now, will be 220,982,000, as has been predicted by
the U.S. bureau of the census?
They can't, of course, know, down to the last
decimal point, but the actions of large groups of peo
ple are predictable, to a high degree (barring unfor
seen circumstances such as an atomic war, for in
stance). The pattern of age groups within this country's
population is revealing, too, of changes which are
going to take place in the economy how the work
ing force will or will not meet the productive needs
of the nation, as an example, or how the schools and
universities are going to have to meet a fantastically
huge growth in enrollments.
IT was only last week that the population of the
United States hit the 165,000,000 mark, according
to the census bureau's estimates. The forecast of an
increase of some 33 per
brings up other questions
and puzzling, in the long
schools and employment.
One writer, m a
took as a presupposition
population of about 2y2
crease at its present rate of about 1.2 per cent each
year.
At this rate, he says, in 7,000 years the resulting
population would total some ten billion trillion-tril-lion-trilion
men, women and children. That many
bodies, he concludes, would fill all the space in the
known universe.
FANTASTIC? Surely. But it gives a hint as to that
long-range problem. At the present rate of in
crease, mankind before too many years will face
overcrowding. At the present rate, it will face star
vation. The problem is not immediate, to be sure, but
barring a reversal of the population trend, or the de
cimation of war or disease, it is a problem which
will increasingly face our children, and theirs. E.A.
The Home Inspections
Medford firemen this week are winding up a
month-long project which has as its aim the preven
tion of future fires, and the resulting loss of property
and, possibly, of lives.
We refer to the program of home inspections
which they have been offering to every resident of
the city. It's been a big job, and in our view an im
portant one.
IT would be pleasant to .
mui iuu yci iciib cuupciauuu iium irj.cui.UlU. llUiilc-
owners and occupants, but the fact is that a small
percentage have refused the firemen admittance to
their homes for what reason we have no idea.
Other than that, however, the record is good.
Many of the homes inspected were free from the
most common causes of fire, and in many others one
or two hints by firemen caused them to be removed.
The program should pay off in fewer fires, and
the department has earned compliments on this pre
vention job. E.A.
Judge Asks Help On Juvenile Problems
Chicago (U.R) Judge Har
old P. O'Connell of family court
has asked 22 prominent persons
on university staffs and members
of civic organizations to help
him with juvenile problems.
Friday, June 3. 195S
cent in the next 20 years
which are even more basic
run, than those of the
half-serious, half-fanciful vein,
the theory that the earth's
billion will continue to in
report that they have met
ine judge said ne wants a
committee to work out better
ways of handling the cases of
youngsters. He also said he hopes
that training courses can be giv
en hit probation officers.
Mill ft.l-,
Oslo, With SAS Delayed
Who am I?
To give life, almost all of us
die our bodies providing food
for our young. During our most
strenuous" months, we fast
losing up to 45 per cent of our
weight. During our early years,
we have a distinctive coat; as we
approach the end, females be
come plumper while males be
come slender, take on a bright
hue, and occasionally develop a
grotesque jaw. Females build
nests. ,
Our native home is in north
ern waters. Our mature weight
may run from 4 to 40 pounds,
and in rare instances, 80. We are
cold-blooded, and have a two
chambered heart, many prize us
for our flesh.
Along my sides I have a set
of pores through which my
nerves "feel."
Except for those confined in
lakes, all of us pass our first few
months or years in fresh-water
streams where we grow slowly;
our middle life is spent in the
6-3r5S
ocean where we grow tremen
dously fast; and we always come
back in our old age to our par
ent river, in fact to the very
spot where we were infants. To
do so, we overcome rapids, cata
racts, and unbroken falls as high
as 12 feet.
When the female deposits her
comparatively large eggs in the
nest by the thousands, the male
simultaneously spreads his milt.
The embryo bursts out of its
elastic shell in early spring. For
the next six weeks, it is nourish
ed by the yolk sac which it ab
sorbs.
Although I am among man's
most valuable crops, in many
areas he has destroyed me with
dams which I cannot surmount,
by diverting and polluting the
water, destroying my spawning
grounds, and netting too many
of my numbers. Besides there
are my natural enemies otters,
ospreys, fishers, seals and such.
I'm lucky if one adult results
from 3,000 eggs.
I ami A. Eeel, B. Salmon, C.
Porpoise, D. Lamprey, E. Sea
Otter.
I am B, a salmon.
(Released by McClure
Newspaper Syndicate)
Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my panel of
judges will award each week to
the reader who sends me the best
question On nature and .wildlife
a complete 30-volume set of this
world-famous reference work in
a handsome Sealcraft binding.
Each week, new questions will
be considered. Sorry, I simply
can't answer your many friendly
letters. Please address your
questions to: IS THAT SO!
co Medford Mail Tribune, Box
575, Sausalito, Calif.
Communications
Letters to the Editor mutt bear
the name and address ol the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
iible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
When Jack London Was Here
To the Editor: Needless to say
we were always an admirer of
the late novelist and author of
Western and Alaskan gold-rush
and dog stories by the famous
writer Jack London, who's earth
ly abode ended sometime in the
year 1916.
We suspect there are yet quite
a number of people here who
remember some of London's ex
ploits through the Rogue River
valley in 1909, driving four gray
horses to a reconstructed stage
coach.
We" stopped off at Glen Ellen,
Sonoma county, Calif., one time
to see his much adored Valley
of the Moon ranch as he had
named his last hideaway and
writer's den on the acquired
ranch. In Jack's last years he
did not find much time for
leisure or to relax due to the
fact he so enjoyed riding horses
around the big farm daily. We
had a letter from Mr. London
in the early part of 1916, saying
he simply "was worked to
death." Somehow we lost that
much prized letter, but Jack
London's name and books will
always remain in our memory
and live with us.
London also wrote some very
interesting short stories in Sun
set magazine about persons and
places he visited in southern
Oregon. As some of the best
"shorts" were written in 1912
that are referred to, here, we
regret now not saving some of
those old stories enjoyed in years
past in Sunset and others. Per
haps aU collectors' items now.
Bert Kissinger
'520 Boordman
Medford, Ore.
r i r
iteiease or
By Red China Tops
Good News for Week
By CHARLES M. McCANK
United Press Foreign Analyst
The week's good and bad news
on the international balance
sheet:
THE GOOD
1. The Chinese Communists
freed four United States Air
Force officers whom they had
imprisoned for
more than two
years in flag
grant violation
of the Korean
armistice. The
Reds said they
took their ac
tion in a move
toward reduc
ing interna
national ten
sion. There
Charles McCann were indica
tions that the Communists soon
would free 11 more airmen
whom they had sentenced as
"spies." Encouraged by the new
atmosphere, the United States
tried to get the release also of 52
additional Americans 41 civil
ians and 11 Navy and Coast
Guard men believed still held
in China. President Eisenhower,
however, urged caution in as
sessing the motives of the Com
munists in their altered attitude.
2. Nikita S. Khrushchev. Rus
sian Communist Party boss, and
Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin
failed in an attempt to get rPes
ident Tito of Yugoslavia to re
turn to the Soviet bloc of na
tions. Tito is now arranging to
tell the United States, Britain
and France about the visit and,
it is understood, to ask addi
tional military aid of them.
3. Russia and Japan opened
negotiations in London for a
On The Side
(Distributed by King
If one should give me a
heart to keep,
With love for the golden key.
The giver might live at ease
. or sleep;
It should ne'er know pain, be
weary, or weep,
The heart watched over by me.
. O'Shaughness Shavehness
Members of the Lucy Stone
League retain their maiden
names after marriage. For ex
ample Lucy Stone, the founder,
was married to Henry Brown
Blackwell. She never used the
name Mrs. Blackwell. Always
adhered to Lucy Stone. Said she
retained her maiden name as an
indication she had not lost her
individuality .by marriage. Now
some career women are going
even further as to the name
angle. Take Dr. Edith Summer
skill, celebrated British caree:
woman. She is married to Dr
Jeffrey Samuel. The couple have
two children, Michael and Shir
ley. And so what? Well, sir,
even though their parents are
still living together the children
have passed up their father's
name and taken that of their
mother. That is, they are known
as Michael Summerskill and
Shirley Summerskill. By the
way, Mister, does your wife ever
worry about marriage having
stifled her individuality?
Asking
Queries from clients. Q. Is
there such a name as Jacque
netta? That's what my wife
wants to call our first girl baby.
A. Jacquenetta is the name of
a Shakespearean character in
"Love's Labor Lost." Never
knew anybody having that
name. It's a nice name, but it
will make no difference if your
daughter is so named every
body will call her "Jackie" any
how. . . . Q. What major league
ball player was known as "The
Tabasco Kid"? A. Norman Elber
feld. He played shortstop for
'the New York American League
team.
Sidelights
Nina Wilcox Putnam once re
duced 56 pounds in seven
months and tells how she did
it in a book titled "Tomorrow
We Diet" . . . U. S. Army en
gineers who constructed a two
mile highway in Korea named
it "Marilyn Monroe Road." It
has 23 curves.
That Bite
In Chile the tax on' pari-mu-tuel
race track wagering is 27
per cent. Those Chilean horse
players must be gluttons for
punishment. Here in the United
States it is 15 per cent plus
breakage at New York tracks.
In Maryland, lowest of all States
has to pari-mutuel "bite," it is
only 10 per cent. Except at half
mile and harness tracks, where
it is 12 per cent. Should be 5
per cent and no breakage at all
tracks. Which, in fact, it was in
Maryland not so many years
ago.
Among the Married
It was Dr. Edmund Bergler, i
author of that extremely inter
esting book titled "Fashion and
the Unconscious," who said for
a husband to call his wife
"baby" is ridiculous. The hus
band, says the good doctor, is
always the "baby" of the family.
Horses ft Women
Suppose a young woman
whose height is around five feet
two wants to appear much taller.
First, of course, she uses three
or four inch heels. The second
thing to do is to hold the head
high. Surprising what an illu
sion of height that can give.
Airmen
Japanese peace treaty. Russia
had to seek the negotiations in
an attempt to keep Japan from
rearming as an airy of the free
world. Japan, which needs for
eign trade, would establish good
relations with Russia. But there
was every indication it would re
main allied with the west. -
THE BAD
1. Queen Elizabeth II pro
claimed a state of emergency in
Britain because of a strike by
70,000 railroad engineers and
firemen. The strike threatened
to paralyze British industry and
even to endanger the food sup
ply. A strike by nearly 20,000
dock workers made the situa
tion more serious.
2. France faced a new crisis
in North Africa. Seeking to end
the terrorism which has swept
the protectorates of Tunisia and
Morocco since the end of World
War II, Premier Edgar Faure
negotiated a home rule agree
ment for Tunisia. The agreement
could be a model for a similar
one in Morocco. But Faure may
not be able to get the Tunisian
agreement through Parliament.
He is also confronted by serious
terrorism in Algeria, which is a
part of France itself politically.
3. The Communists, in a new
move in their "baby blockade"
of West Berlin, cut the telephone
lines which link the stations of
the important elevated railroad
operating in West and East Ber?
lin. Red East Berlin controls
the railroad. By cutting the tele
phone lines, the Communists en
dangered passenger and freight
service in West Berlin. The ele
vated line serves 15,000,000
West Berlin passengers a month,
By E. V. Durling
Failures Syndicate, Inc.) '
Quaker mothers always gave
their daughters the following
advice: "Hold thy head high,
thy chin up and thy stomach
in." .
Costly Pig '
Ten thousand dollars for a
pig. That's the price for a prize
porker bearing, the fancy name
of Landrace Bluegate. Pig breed
ing can be a highly, profitable
enterprise. The Landrace breed
of piglets can bring from $1,000
to $2,800 right after birth. May
be I'll breed pigs on my ranch
when I get - a ..ranch.. Sir Win
ston Churchill goes in for a bit
of pig raising at his country
place. So does Don Cockell, the
heavyweight boxer.
Seven Persons Dead
In Japanese Storm
Tokyo (U.R) At least seven
persons were dead and 49 others
missing today in a storm which
lashed the seas off northern Ja
pan the past week.
A lone survivor of the vessel
Kiyoshi Maru, which sank in
the storm, said the six other
crewmen went down with the
ship. Coast guard officials re
ported also that one fisherman
was killed and 49 disappeared
from a fleet of fishing boats that
sank.
New Dentistry Method
Cuts Down on Drilling
'Chicago (U.R)- A new method
of cavity filling that cuts down
on drilling was described to the
International Association for
Dental Research here.
Dr. M. G. Buonocore of the
Eastman Dental Dispensary,
Rochester, N. Y., said that by
using a specially developed seal
ing material, the filling can be
bound i to a flat surface, thus
eliminating the drilling involved
in making a "dovetail."
Ordinarily the dentist must
anchor the filling material by
preparing a cavity in an inverted
cone shape,: Buonocore said.
BRITISH SAID DISSATISFIED
Moscow (U.R) The Soviet
magazine .Literary Gazette
charged today that the British
rail strike was a direct result of
Britain's "unbearable military
expenditures." It said it was "a
question of the British people's
dissatisfaction with their situa
tion, a result of the country's
economic difficulties."
Dead line Sunday Classified to at
noon Saturday; 1 a. m. Monday for
Monday; other days 5:30 previous day
w m m ers v
ROAST
MirrrriM 1 pork i beef i cimi 11
Eisenhower Given
Jewish Honor for
Role in War II
Washington (U.R) The
United Jewish Appeal presented
its first Humanitarian. Achieve
ment Award to President Eisen
hower today "for his help to sur
vivors of Nazism" during World
War II.
The award was an . ancient
clay lamp "from the land of the
Bible" recovered during arche
ological excavations in Israel.
William Rosenwald, gene
ral chairman, and 11 other na
tional officers of the Appeal
made the presentation in recog
nition of Mr. Eisenhower's "lib
eration of the victims of Nazi
tyranny."
, They cited Mr. Eisenhower for
his "inspiring and unforgettable
role in that great event."
Led Allied Forces
A citation read by Rosenwold
said in part:
"... you led the Allied forces
to victory, threw down the gates
of the concentration camps and
helped to save from extermina
tion the remnant of the once
great Jewish populations of
Europe.
By your sympathetic under
standing of the problems invol
ved and by your effective ac
tion, you set a pattern of hu
mane and helpful treatment.
Your example prevailed in the
American zones of occupation
and served to revive and restore
the newly liberated Jews of cen
tral Europe and those who sought
haven there."
UJA will open a two - day na
tional conference Saturday to
plan its 1955 nationwide drive
for funds. It describes itself "the
major American agency provid
ing funds for distressed Jews
overseas and immigrants to Is
rael."
Four Outstanding
Farmers Selected
Minneapolis (U.R)' Four
young men who made a success
of farming against heavy odds
were named by the Junior Cham
ber of Commerce last night as
America's four outstanding young
farmers of 1955.
They were Homer R. Beedle,
31, Cle Elum, Wash., Alvin H.
Hanson, 34, Stanton, Mich., Clin
ton J. Harbers, 33, West Point,
Tex., and Jack G. Thomson, 32,
Buttonwillow, Calif.
Beedle was chosen because he
developed a top dairy farm in an
area classed by loan institutions
as "uneconomical." Hanson built
up a rundown 560-acre farm
worth $40,000 into a $250,000
business. Harbers ran a top-grade
620-acre farm while caring for
a family of seven and send
ing two brothers and two
sisters through college. Thomson
achieved an outstanding truck
farm on alkaline land in San
Joaquin Valley.
It was the first time the or
ganization has chosen outstand
ing young farmers on a national
level. Farmers between the ages
of 21 and 35 were eligible.
Low-Grade Roughages
Urged in Sheep Feeding
Chicago (U.R) Sheep can
be self-fed without danger of en-
terotoxemia, or overeating dis
ease, if a high ; level of salt,
ground corn cobs or low-grade
roughages are added to food con
centrates, according to a Uni
versity of Illinois scientist.
C. E. Schoettle of the veter
inary medicine college said that,
in addition to requiring less
workself-feeding did not cause
any cases of pregnancy disease.
Bred ewes, Schoettle says,
should have one pound of con
centrate per head per . day in
addition to a good quality le
gume hay or silage.
HOUSE CLEANING
Rugs t Furniture Cleaned
Walls
Woodwork
Floor
Windows
Venetian Blinds .
Randy's Cleaning Service
??1 PAST SlttTU ST. ' I
- - . e1Uk.CU
LIVER
ROAST
In the Days Hews
Br FRANK JENKINS
Modern world note. Let's put
it a little stronger than that.
Let's say ULTRA modern world
note:
An Eastern industrialist (name
of Robert Ferry) addressing the
annual meeting of the Institute
of Boiler and Radiator Manufac
turers in Absecon. N.J.. tells his
hearers that a nuclear-powered
home heating and cooling system
is a practical possibility that
may be realized within a few
years.
rpHAT is to say:
The time may come (relatively
soon, perhaps) when you can
have in your home a jigger into
which you can put a piece of
uranium or, possibly by then,
some other metal about the
size of a lead pencil stub and it
will heat your house in winter
and cool it in summer.
JET'S go on from there.
If this jigger can heat your
house in winter and cool it in
summer, it can be adapted to run
your washing machine and your
j u n j .1.11
uiaiiwuBuci auu yum - :iuiues
drier and all your multifold
other household gadgets.
pANTASTIC?
Improbable?
Pure dream world stuff? -
JET'S not be too sure.
There was a time when the
possibilities of steam were as
little dreamed of as are the pos
sibilities of nuclear fission now.
But look what steam did. It
brought on the Mechanical Re
volution, which provided the
power to run machines to do the
work that hitherto had been
done by human arms and backs.
Electricity expanded the use
of power still farther.
The energy released by the
splitting of the atom can extend
the uses of power farther yet. '
JJOW FAR?
Nobody knows.
In Sacramento the other day,
the California state assembly
adopted a resolution asking the
federal government to conduct
experiments in converting salt
wdter into fresh water.
If such experiments are under
taken, it is practically certain
that atomic energy will enter
into them. Converting salt water
into fresh water is already feas
ible on a LABORATORY scale.
The trouble is that it costs too
much. Under present methods of
conversion, the cost of making
fresh water out of salt water is
about $400 an acre foot.
Maybe atomic energy can
cheapen the process.
IlfHAT of the dams that are
' " being built (and planned) to
convert falling water into
power? Will they become out
dated and useless?
I doubt it.
As power becomes 1 more
abundant and therefore
cheaper the USES OF POWER
will expand fantastically. I have
a notion that we will need, and
use, ALL KINDS OF POWER.
thought in closing:
The bill to ask the federal
government to do more research
in converting salt water into
fresh water was introduced in
the California legislature by a
woman Assemblywoman San
dra Sankary, of San Diego.
We're ADDING THE POWER
OF WOMEN'S BRAINS, you see.
to the power of men's brains.
That should mean something.
There was a time in the world
when women weren't supposed
to have brains.
DOUBLE JEOPARDY
Knoxville, Tenn. : (U.R)
Mrs. Mae Rhoden divorced
Charles Rhoden twice within
three years, both times on the
grounds he has another wife.
Mrs. Rhoden said he tricked her
second time after their first
breakup, pretending he had ob
tained a divorce.
PHONE
-4069
BACON II
6(nV 0
B. tOlin H
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