TOTTR MEDrORD (OREGON)
soman
UlfS
"Everybody in Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFOR& PRINTING CO.
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- ROBERT W. RUHLt Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Menafer
Z. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR., City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
June 6. 1945
(It was Wednesday)
Use of water in Fish lake and
Four Mile lake will not be neces
sary before July because of
heavy May rains.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The weath
er is now talked about more
than Herr Hitler, suspected of
being swallowed by the earth,
or Argentina. The weather is
always wrong. It tries to make
the valley a suburb of the Flor
ida swamps, or the Great Amer
ican Desert. Things are always
right for it to float away, or dry
up or blow away.
20 YEARS AGO
June 6, 1935
(It was Thursday) .
Bill Bowerman named new
Medford High school coach,
coming here from Franklin High
in Portland.
K. V. Hill, Chicago engineer,
arrives to supervise work on
new Medford sewage disposal
plant.
30 YEARS AGO
June 6, 1925 t
(It was Saturday)
Ashland and Medford register
greatest number of out-of-state
tourists in first five months of
1925.
New fire department pumper
shoots stream of water over
Medford hotel in test.
40 YEARS AGO
June 6. 1915
(It was Sunday)
Rumors indicate sale of Bar-
num line to Southern Oregon
Traction company (Bullis line)
for about $60,000.
The Kell fish screen, invented
by Charles Kell of Gold Hill,
adopted by state game and fish
commission to prevent fish from
entering irrigation ditches.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Rart
1. Patents are now granted,
on average, about one-half, one,
l'.-s, two years, or more than two
years after application?
2. The longest U. S. railroad
is the Sante Fe, Pennsylvania,
Southern Pacific, N.Y. Central or
Northern Pacific?
3. The Roman system of nu
merals used seven, eight, nine,
10 or 11 different letters?
4. The baseball team once call
ed the Gashouse Gang was
Brooklyn, N.Y. Giants, St. Louis
Cardinals, old Baltimore Orioles,
or Chicago Cubs?
5. Iraq and Iran are two dif
ferent states in the Middle East,
or different names for the same
one?
6. President Eisenhower is" or
isn't the first President banned
by a Constitutional amendment
from more than two terms?
7. Izaak Walton was a famous
preacher, general, political lead
er, highwayman or fisherman?
The Answers: 1. More than
two years. 2. Sante Fe. 3. Seven.
4. St. Louis Cardinals. 5. Differ
ent states. 6. Is. 7. Fisherman.
Washington (U.R) Demo
cratic House leaders who plan
to launch a drive this year for
legislation to liberalize social
security benefits were prodded
Saturday by a Republican Congressman.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Graduation Thoughts .
We know a man who doesn't count the seasons by
the calendar. He uses his own system, based on child
hood impressions.
Winter, for instance, always starts Dec. 1, simply
because it is after Thanksgiving and before Christ
mas. Autumn starts Labor day, no matter what the
calendar says. Spring is less definite, and depends
on how the air smells in the early morning.
Summer starts with high school graduation.
THERE'S something special about graduation.
There's the excitement felt by the students and
their parents. There are the solemn thoughts voiced
by the speakers. There are the high jinks preceding
and following the formal ceremony.
Most of all, perhaps, there is the feeling of ac
complishment and satisfaction of the graduating sen
iors: "Well, THAT'S over with."
Despite the fact that it is called "commencement,"
there is something final about the last days in high
school. A chapter is closed and the new one has yet
to start.
HOW much high school seniors listen to advice is
ing graduation ceremonies. But we'd like to pass
along a hint that Edward R. Murrow gave the other
day. We can't quote him exactly, but his suggestion
was to the effect that faith is a fine and important
quality, but that it doesn't contribute nearly as much
as do curiosity and doubt in stimulating education.
We think he has a point, a good one. There are,
naturally, some things that have to be taken on faith.
But where would this country be if the Founding
Fathers hadn't brought themselves to doubt that the
divine right of kings was the natural and proper ord
er of things?
11THAT would be the status of our civilization if
Sir Isaac Newton, James Watt, Benjamin Frank
lin and a host of others had not had an overwhelm
ing curiosity?
Where would be our prized freedom of religion and
our healthy diversity of religious belief if spiritual
leaders had not doubted, thought, and then preached
the truth as they saw it? '
Faith is important. But to be valid for the indi
vidual, it must be based on that individual's personal
convictions. And it is stronger if those convictions
are derived from experience and thought and curios
ity; from a healthy, youthful questioning of the es
tablished, and a willingness to experiment.
Progress is change and change, ideally, is a rejec
tion of the outmoded old and acceptance of the new
for testing and experimentation. E.A.
The Mercy Flights Plan
An advertisement in Sunday's Mail Tribune point
ed out that more thn 360 patients have been carried
by planes operated by Mercy Flights, Inc., in the past
52 years.
It also was an indication as to how the organiza
tion, which is wholly non-profit, can continue to as
sume the considerable expense of flying and main
taining its planes. The answer is in what Mercy
Flights calls its "pre-paid subscriber" system.
I JNDER this system a family may subscribe to the
service for one year for $4. Single-person sub
scriptions are $2. The family subscription1 entitles any
member of the househld to free air ambulance trans
portation to medical centers within a radius of 400
miles in cases of medical emergency.
It also entitles subscribing families to a reduced
rate for air ambulance service in non-emergency cas
es. Non-subscribers are asked to pay for the service
(although no emergency case has ever been turned
away for lack of ability to pay).
TTHE pre-paid subscriber plan is the only thing that
. saved Mercy Flights from going broke and end
ing its service four years ago. It is a way in which
subscribers,' even though they may never need the
service, can make sure that the Mercy Flights planes
will continue to operate, saving lives and easing pain
for those friends and neighbors who need it.
It's pretty cheap "insurance," not only for our
selves, but for the valley as a whole. By purchasing
or renewing an expiring subscription, we can help in
sure the continued service of the planes with the big
red crosses on them. E.A.
'Best Suspect Yet'
Sought in Slaying
Kalamazoo, Mich. (U.R) Po
lice sought a sandy haired man
today as the "best suspect yet"
in the rape-slaying of eight-year-old
Jeanie Singleton.
Authorities said at least one of
the crippled girl's classmates
positively could identify the
man, who tried several times to
entice schoolgirls into his car
the day Jeanie was kidnaped,
May 23.
Police said the children told
them the man accosted them only
a few blocks away from the Sin
gleton home on the day Jeanie
disappeared.
Her ravished body was found
beneath a pine tree a long side a
country road nine days later by
farm children.
Lima, Peru (U.R) Chile,
Peru and Ecuador have rejected
a U.S. suggestion that they let
the world court decide the legal
ity of their arbitrarily-proclaimed
"200-mile limit," it was
announced Saturday.
Monday June 8, 1953
v"' 1 ft
TURNING undeveloped alkali
land into highly productive
truck farm wins honor of "out
standing young farmer" for
Jack G. Thomson, 32, of But
tonwillow, CaL Thomson is one
of four men selected at Minne
apolis' meeting, (lnt&rnatumal)
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; 10 ajn. Monday for
Monday; other days 9:30 previous day.
India's Diplomatic
Activity Shifts from
Red China to Russia
United Press Staff Writer
Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru of India is shifting his
diplomatic activity, for the mo
ment, from Peping to Moscow.
Nehru's ace diplomatist, V. K.
Krishna Menon, has just ended
a visit to Peiping, the Chinese
Communist capital.
Now Nehru is due tomorrow
in Moscow for a 16-day visit to
Soviet Russia.
The visit naturally will be
watched closely by the govern
ments of the United States,
Great Britain, France, and oth
er Western countries.
Nehru, from the western
viewpoint, is a little too friend
ly with the leaders of the two
big Communist countries, Russia
and China.
But perhaps it may be suggest
ed as it was of Krishna Men
on's visit to Peiping, that even
if Nehru can do no good in Mos
cow, it is most unlikely that he
will do any harm.
Reds Free Fliers
Krishna Menon was able, at
the end of his visit to Peiping,
to announce that the Chinese
Reds would free four American
fliers.
How much Krishna Menon
and Nehru contributed to the
Communist decision to free the
four men is not known.
United Nations Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold has
been working on the prisoner
situation for five months, in sec
ret correspondence with the Red
government.
Hammarskjold may well feel
that Krishna Menon has grab
bed credit undeserverly But
certainly Krishna Menon urged
the Chinese to free the four
Americans, and other UN pris
oners whom they hold in viola
tion of the Korean armistice.
There can be no doubt that
Nehru, in Moscow,' will try to
reduce tension between Soviet
Russia and the Western Allies.
The trouble is that Nehru's
ideas of relieving tensions al
ways involve concessions by the
Western Allies to the Reds.
Nehru is a puzzling figure. He
regards himself as a man of
peace. But he fought the Brit
ish for years for fndian inde
pendence. Since India attained
its freedom he has been con
stantly embroiled in disputes
with Pakistan, India's neighbor.
Nehru cannot be laughed off
as a world leader. He speaks
In the town of Icod in the Can
ary Islands off northwest Africa
stands the largest dragon tree
in the world, reputedly 3,000
years old. It is nearly 50 feet in
circumference at the base of the
trunk. Dragon trees are native
to the Canaries. Gaunches, the
islands' aborigines, used the
dark-red resin, called dragon's
blood, to mummify the bodies
of their kings and nobles. The
trees have all but disappeared.
Survivors now get protection.
Hi
Devil's Day
On Aug. 20, 1910, fiery hell
exploded over the Bitter Roots
and through the canyons of the
Coeur d'Alenes. It was the cli
max day of the Northwest's
worst forest fire season in which
85 lives were taken and 3,000,
000 acres of forests were burned.
The 24 hours of disaster ran
on the pattern of every famous
forest conflagration. Dry spring,
hot dry summer, many smokes,
increasing danger, then explo
sion the devil's own day in the
timber.
The "Yacolt Burn" climaxed
the fires of 1902 in the douglas
fir. It was the force that first
drove private timber owners
into organizing for protection.
The fires of 1910 fortified the
lines of these new organizations
and stimulated the growth of
state forestry in the Pacific
Northwest.
The "Keep Green" and tree
farm programs grew out of the
Tillamook and other great fires
of the 1920-1940 period.
A Man Remembers
Col. Bill Greeley was the field
general of the fight against fire
that was made by 10,000 men
with shovels, hoes and axes in
1910. This he does not forget
when he tracks around today
through the kfresh green growth
of West Coast tree farms or the
pine tree farms of Idaho. The
shapes of old arise above the
green, in gray smoke from
black snags. .
This is the meaning of an in
spired work of illustrative art
by Fred Ludekens, which pic
tures the Bill Greeley of . today
in the thick of a tree-farm tim
ber crop, looking mighty, migh
ty pleased upon it.
Probably you have seen the
picture, as it is the feature of
the current Weyerhaeuser Tim
ber company advertisement,
runmng in national magazines
with many millions of readers.
This is one of a series that be
gan with an illustrated story on i
Gifford Pinchot.
for about 360,000,000 Indians
who idolize him and he has
great influence in Southeast Asia
as an enemy of Western "col
onialism." At 65, he can look back on a
full career. Son of a famous In
dian lawyer, Nehru was sent to
Harrow Winston Churchill's
school in England and to Cam
bridge university to be educat
ed. He returned to become Mo
handas K. Gandhi's chief disciple
in the independence movement,
and spent a lot of time in Brit
ish jails as a result.
He has the look of an ascetic
but likes good living. He is a
tireless worker, who started an
18;hour day by standing on his
head for half an hour.
"I go. to Russia with an open
mind and an open heart,' 'Nehru
said before he took off for Mos
cow. "India has mucht to learn
from the Soviet Union."
Southern Negro
Leaders Planning
Integration Drive
Atlanta U.R) The South's
Negro leaders met in a closed
session here over the week end
to plan a South-wide drive for
racial integration of schools as
ordered by the U.S. Supreme
Court.
A campaign of petitioning for
immediate steps toward desegre
gation was already under way
as the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored
People met with its legal ad
visers. Reporters Excluded
The NAACP excluded report
ers from its meeting but sched
uled a press conference after
ward.
Nine Negro parents filed peti
tions on the eve of the session
for admission of their 19 child
ren to Atlanta schools. The
NAACP said similar petitions
were being prepared in three
other Georgia cities.
Meeting with the Southern
NAACP officials were Roy Wil-
kins, executtive secretary of the
NAACP, and Thurgood Marshall,
special counsel who had argued
on behalf of the Negroes in the
Supreme Court cases.
Requests Action
The Atlanta petition requested
that school authorities "take im
mediate steps to reorganize the
public schools under your juris
diction in accordance with the
constitutional principals enun
iated by the Supreme Court on
May 17, 1954.
This was the date of the court's
ruling that the principal of
school segregation is unconsti
tutional. This week the court
followed up the ruling with an
order that schools be integrated
as quickly as local problems will
permit.
'mm A
nminm
mUiSai
William B. Greeley was one
of the original "Pinchot Crusad
ers." After his fine work as
U.S. district forester , in Mon
tana and Idaho, he was made
assistant chief forester.
Through World War I, Gree
ley commanded 20,000 forestry
troops in France. As U.S.F.S.
chief, 1920-1928, he labored
with Oregon's great Senator
Charles E. McNary, on legisla
tion that is now the life blood
of cooperation between indus
trial forestry and the federal
and state agencies.
The Greeley career has been
in industrial forestry since 1928.
There his philosophy and expe
rience bore fruit in the "Keep
Green" and the tree farms pro
grams. The Spokane Meeting
When the fall rains came in
1910 U.S. District Forester Bill
Greeley had just begun to fight.
So had George S. Long, mana
ger of the Weyerhaeuser Timber
company. They stood shoulder
to shoulder in discussions at the
1910 Spokane meeting of the
infant Western Forestry and
Conservation association to meet
the challenge of the forest fire
problem.
The industrial forest manager '
and the federal forester agreed
that localized programs of coop
eration and education were a ne
cessity in building an effective
defense against the enemy.
George Long emphasized the bat
sic need of enlisting farmers
and loggers in the forces of for
est fire prevention. Greeley
agreed. So the planning went
on.
The ideas that were seeded at
Spokane in 1910 have grown
into the 34,000,000 acres of tree
farms and other programs of the
American Forest Products In
dustries today.
And so today Bill Greeley can
wear a big, broad smile as he
stands on a tree, farm hill and
remembers the smokes of many
fires.
1
European Corn Borer Due. for Trouble;
New Strain Will Resist Little Pest
Washington (U.R) There's
diet trouble brewing for the
European Corn Borer. ,
The Agricultural Research ser
vice is developing strains of corn
better able to resist the vorac
ious little pest which destroyed
almost 192 million bushels of
corn worth 261-million dollars in
1954. If the strains prove tough
enough, it is conceivable the
corn borer could starve.
Development of these strains
is underway at the European
Corn Borer research laboratory
at Qnkeny, la., in the heart of
the corn belt. The entomologist
agronomist team of F. F. Dicke
and L. H. Penny believe they
can meet a target date of 1960
for release of the new strains.
At one time, agricultural
scientists believed they were on
the way to licking the corn bor
er with an inbred, line of corn
with borer resistance. But the
borer, a resourceful insect, cross
ed them up by developing a new
strain of its own. During the
1940's, this new strain of borer
developed into a two-brooded
rather than a single-brooded in
sect. This gave the borer two
shots at destroying corn whereas
it had only one chance before.
New Findings
The change in the borer start
ed Dicke and Penny to reevaluat
ing resistance-breeding concepts.
They found that:
1. Restistance, which prevents
the corn borer larvae from feed
ing, is essential against the first,
or early summer, brood of the in
sect. 2. Tolerance to ear-shank and
stalk tunneling by toorers is nec
essary to save the corn crop from
the second, or July to September,
brood.
The first brood borers, hatch
ing from eggs laid on ' corn
leaves, tend to concentrate near
the stalk, in the leaf whorl. Re-
Helsinki, With SAS Did you
know that . . . the strongest back
in the world, quite likely, be
longs to the African hero shrew.
Only 9 inches long, this animal
can support the full weight of a
man without any ill effects re
sulting. Its vertebrae have in
terlocking prongs.
During a violent storm, the
door of a lighthouse at Unst,
northern most of the Shetland
Islands, was broken open by the
pounding sea. The door stands
195 feet above sea level.
Bane of all lawn growers, the
dandelion was introduced to
America from Europe. It got its
name from the Jagged edges of
its leaves which were supposed
to look like the teeth of a lion.
(The French word for lion's
tooth is dent de lion.) .
Of the millions of trees with
the billions of leaves, no- two
leaves are ever exactly alike.
Or, of the billions of snowflakes
that fall in a snowstorm, no two
are exactly alike.
Animals living in hard cold
countries tend to develop big
ger, rounder bodies with shorter
legs and tails. The underlying
principle, we are told, is that
the bigger the sphere, the smal
ler proportionately the surface
covering and with animals,
the bigger they are the less heat-
losing surface there is, propor
tionately speaking.
The largest bat, the flying fox,
has a wingspread of five feet.
With their wonderful power
of resistance to low tempera
tures, minute wingless insects
have been found in the fresh
water ponds of the Arctic and
when thawed out of block of ice,
in which they were frozen solid
ly for months or longer, they sur
vived. (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 refer
ence work in a handsome" Seal
craft 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! eo Medford
Mail Tribune, Box 575, Sausalito,
Calif.
NEW LOCATION
Chris the Tailor
36 N. Bartlett Tel. 2-8473
Tailor Made Suits
Alterations Remodeling
Repairing
r
-
r4Us,
sistance prevents these larvae
from feeding in the whorl.'-and
they starve. But when the corn
has no resistance,' the larvae re
duce yields by riddling and cut
ting the leaves and finally by
burrowing into the stalk and cut
ting the plant's food-carrying
system.
The second, brood usually oc-
Mcleod
McLeod Mr. and Mrs. Sy
mington and family have moved
to Yreka, Calif., to live.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Coburn of
Shelton, Wash., are the s house
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hoeg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Harding
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jess Eldridge at their home
in Grants Pass May 31.
Mrs. Madeline Halley and
daughter, Kathy, have gone to
Sierra Madre, Calif., for. a
month's visit.
David Ritcliey, stationed at
Stead" Air Force Base in Reno,
Nev., spent the week end of
May 30 at his parent's home,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Ritchey. Jack
Scott of California accompanied
David.
Luncheon guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Vaughn
on May 29 were Mr. and . Mrs.
Arthur Hume and daughters,
Jacqueline and Josephine and
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Harding.
Mrs. W. Hillman and Doris
and Jacky Darrohn have gone
to Los Angeles for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Collier and
two daughters of Creswell, Ore.,
were guests of the former's
mother, Mrs. Audrey Collier, the
week end of May 29.
Mr. and Mrs. Micklely were
dinner guests at "Folding Hills"
ranch Tuesday, May 31.
Steward Ditsworth was a din
ner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Vaughn Thursday, June 2.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barber
will attend the commencement
exercises at Oregon State col
lege Monday, June 6, when
their son, Richard, receives his
diploma, also his 2nd lieutenant's
bar. ;
Benny Collier, who has been
visiting his mother, Mrs. Audrey
Collier, for a few days, went
to Maryland by plane for fur
ther instructions in the army.
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Carlton
are attending the sessions of
State Grange at Klamath Falls
and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Harding
are on the Carlton ranch during
their absence.
Arthur Hume Injured his foot
while at work in the woods Fri
day, June 3, which required
medical attention.
Multnomah Coroner
Floyd South Dies
Portland (U.R) Multnomah
County Coroner Floyd South col
lapsed while working, in the yard
of his home here Saturday night
He died, apparently of a heart
attack, before a doctor could ar
rive. At one time a clinical profes
sor of proctology at the Univer
sity of Oregon medical school,
Dr. South was elected coroner in
1941 just before being called in
to Army medical service.
He was defeated for re-election
in. 1955, but was elected
again in 1948 and served until
the time of his death.
Ex-Truman Aide Among
Speakers in Portland
Portland (U.R) A former
chief economic adviser to ex
president Harry Truman, Edwin
Nourse, will head a list of guest
consultants at Portland's second
annual summer workshop on eco
nomic education.
. The workshop will be held
from June 13 to July 2. It is de
signed promarily for educators
to bring them up to date on eco
nomic problems and assist them
in developing instructional ma
terials and teaching techniques
in economics.
isi
Frank Perl
FINER
FUNERAL
SERVICES
in every
curs after the ears are formed.
These larvae feed on ears and
ear shanks, then move into the
stalk. Unless corn is tolerant to
this , attack, plants with severe
shank injury produce chubby
ears, or the ears drop and are
missed by the picker.
The Problem
The Research Service says borer-resistance,
like yield or ear
length in corn, is considered gen
etically as a quantitative charac
teristic that is, the more re
sistance factors present in a corn
strain, the greater is resistance.
' The service says it is fairly
easy to establish borer resistance
in new inbred lines of corn. The
scientists began in 1950 with a
few promising lines, and now
have 600. But the next job they
face is more difficult. They have
to introduce this resistance into
hybrids that have other desirable
characters such as good yield,
disease resistance, and stalk
strength.
If Dicke and Penny are suc
cessful, the new strains will
benefit corn growers in the 37
states attacked by the corn bor-"
er. .
Acid Stomach?
I never let it spoil
my fun:
Handy TUMS Neutralize
. Excess Add Fast!
A handy roll of Turns costs only
a dime but it's worth its
weight in sold whenever add
indigestion strikes. That's why j
f,rf t - m-
millions always carry inmi
wherever they go tor top
speed relief from gas, heart
burn, acid stomach. Turns re
autre no water, no mixing. Take
them anywhere. Get a handy
roil ot lums today.
TUMS FM THI TUMMY
Gave Her Blood
- GEO. N. TAYLOR
A soldier in India was dying
of a wound, when the nurse
from a heathen tribe gave her
. . own blood to
save the fellow.
The natives in
beds about,
looked on in
wonder since
only a fool
nriila4 0lra his
own blood; his
very life . . "I
have seen a
wife die: be
cause her hus
band would not
give his blood to save her.", So
wrote Dr. Wm. E. Dowd, Bun
dlehead, India. But the flush of
new . life .came back to this lad
to whom the nurse had given
her blood. And the 'natives in
their beds wondered. .
New Birth: Later this nurse
received Christ as dying for all
the sins of her entire life. But
1M .u. . . . kqii. nn in.
li. sue UI wc oay nc u .w
ful ways or thoughts, we de
ceive ourselves. But if we tell
God all about it he is sure to
tnroivf ns. and we eet back into
fellowship, for Christ died lor
that sin also. Every born-again
soul needs to read the Bible
Haiiv and Drav and grow up. So
we grow Christ-like. This mes
sage sponsored by a Portland
family. adv.
Since 1900
PERL
Mortuary
Phone 2-6675
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V SI ISIZi