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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1955)
Holly Leaf Miner Found in Northern Portion of State Salem (U.R) The holly leaf miner has been found as far south of Portland as the center of Milwaukie, according to tthe State Department of Agricul ture. ' The pest, which poses a threat to Oregon's substantial cut holly business unless controlled, was first found early this month on the east edge of the Eastmore land municipal golf course in Portland. Later it was found in ornamental and backyard plant ings in Portland as far east as S. E. 52nd Ave. Spread Traced The department has three sur vey entomologists tracing the limits of the holly leaf miner's spread in the Willamette valley, major holly growing are tv... state. So far the leaf miner hub not been found in commercial plant ings, but the department urged growers to check their plantings closely. Anyone who finds any sus picious leaves should send speci mens to or contact the survey entomologist, Frank McKennon, chief of the department's divi sion pf plant industry, he said. The fly of the leaf miner now is out and will be detected on young shoots and ends of new leaves of infected plantings. Spraying should be done at once to effect control. - n L 1 sw Portland Youths Die in Collision Portland (U.P.) A two-car smashup on the high-speed Port-land-Salem expressway yester day claimed the lives of two persons and injured five others, one of them critically. Rodney Gehring Smith, 17, and 18-year-old Mary Bitner, both of Portland, were killed in the crash near the intersection of the expressway with Barbur bou levard. The Bitner girl was trapped in the fatal car after the crash and died in the flames be fore he could be rescued. There were three other occupants of the car. In critical condition at a Port land hospital was Mrs. Vera Mandel of Sherwood, Ore. The other injured were Marcel Man del; Bryan R. Barkman, 17, Lar ry Dennis, 15, and Francine Adele Ireton, 16. Sheriff's officers said a tire on the car occupied by the teenagers apparently blew out, knocking it out of control and into the path of the Mandel car. Mandel was returning home after his shift at the Ross Island Sand and Gravel Co. in Portland. 69 Youngsters Given Salk Anti-Polio Shots . Sixty-nine Jackson county first and second grade pupils re . ceived their first Salk anti-polio inoculations Wednesday at a makeup clinic at the county health department offices. The clinic was for youngsters who missed the regularly sched uled inoculations because of ill ness or other similar reasons. In addition, two other young- ters, both from outside Jackson county, received their second anti-polio inoculations. l nose youngsters receiving first vaccinations yesterday will receive tneir second snots on July 12. Those who received in oculations at the regularly scneamea clinics will receive their second shots during the week of June 20. Roseburg Stupdent Dies In Eugene Room Fire Eugene (U.R) A Roseburg youth, apparently studying late for examinations at the Univer sity of Oregon school or archi tecture, died of asphyxiation Wednesday in his smoke-filled room, according to Lane County Coroner Fred Buell. Niel C. Clark, 25, son of J. H. Clark, Roseburg, was found in his bed by his landlord, George O. Adams, who reported that the mattress was afire and Clark's record player still running. Buell said the student, a jun ior at the University, may have dozed off with a cigarette in his hand while studying late. Ganges River Ferry Capsizes; 32 Persons Die New Delhi, India (U.R) Thirty-one women and a boy drowned in the Ganges river yes terday when a ferry boat capsized. Enioy health, rest, cam tort end hospitality omiefcr pleasant surroundings. Completely cumahed Sleeping and Housekeeping Cabins, with all modern facilities. HOT MINIMAL and MUD BATHS Pot Rhcrjinctisiii, Arttwiti, McvrltiBy ScMtico Ncnwuwts CARBON DIOXIDE VAPOR BATHS An exceMent for Eczema, Sines, ikm Insa Hens, Hiffc and Lew Bleed Preswre "Your Health Is Our Business" for Reservations and intennatien Address ackhera Mineral Serine, Rt. 1, Ashland, Areaon er Phone Long Distance, Dr. Herman Wexler, Direetor Evidence of War Readiness Fails To Disturb Happiness on Guam . BTTTWFBrftUn POITS . .... , ' WINNING top beauty honors, Carolyn Stroupe, 22, University of Florida, is named "Miss Co-ed of 1955" Dy Association of Col lege Photographers. West Palm Beach girl measures 35-23-35, Weighs 120 lbs. (International) By RUTHERFORD POATS United Press Correspondent Guam (U.R) Down here the B 36's take off uphill. The na tives never shout "Go home Yank." And there's an air force without any planes. This U. S. island possesion is the big offensive base of the Strategic Air Command in the Far East. It's a happy tropical island, ieven if SAC's bombers take off l every day for grim training ex ercises and there are rumors oi local A-bomb stockpiles. Hundreds of B-29 Superforts swarmed into the air daily from Guam 10 years ago to attack Japan. Today, one wing of inter continental bombers based here can deliver an atomic blow thousands of times more des tructive than all the B-29's could deal together. B-36's of SAC's Third Air Division, based at Anderson Air Force Base, take off from run- Medford United Press Full Leased Wire Tribune United Press Full Leased Wire Second Section MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1955 Six Pages ways that slope upward from a low point at the center. Con tinental Asia with its potential bomb targets is 1500 to 2000 miles away. New Air Force A new tactical air force, the Seventh, is being formed here. It, is two months old and still has no combat planes, but some are expected soon. The 30.000 natives of Guam are American citizens. They make too much money working for the U. S. Air Force and Navy to bother picking up cocoanuts that fall off the trees. Bets up to S2500 on one cockfight are not unusual. - Although a small island, Guam has thousands of acres lying idle in woods and grass while ships haul in food for the U. S. forces and the Quama nians. Three-fourths of the is land's 15,000-man labor force also is imported-from the Phili ppines. Air Force officials say the power of .atomic weapons and the ' high mobility of modern planes allows the Air Force to base only a small number of combat aircraft here and at other Far East bases. . ' -.The U.S. Air Forces on Guam, in Korea, . on Okinawa and in the Philippines, might appear to be thinly spread. But there are many bases, ready for action but unoccupied, which rely on quick reinforcement from U. S. reserves in case of emergency. - A half-dozen operation ' or quickly repairable bases are available on Guam and other Marianas Islands. They form what the Air Force likes to call a "complex" of bases. Guam is just at the limit of range for TU-4 bombers that could fly out of Russia or Com munist China. If a few got through on a surprise atomic raid, they could deal a severe blow to U. S. retaliatory power here. But SAC's Brig. Gen. Nils O. (Swede) Ohman doubts if Guam will ever be bombed, unless there is a general attack opening World War III. "And before this could happen," ; he says, "you are likely to have a period of tension to warn vou.' Not long ago, at the time of the Tachen Islands evacuation and high tension in the Formosa Strait, SAC's crews on Guam were on 24-hour alert. With a general warning, Ohman says, "we could be fully operational within 20 minutes." 17-Year-Old Arraigned On Burglary Charge A 17-year-old Medford youth was arraigned in, district court Wednesday and jailed, in lieu of $3,500 bond. He was charged with burglary. 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In) D fl ft'S tnKSW ' " L flEiLa and (CdDnjmTrrESYr Dartlett Streets EWIRCD mm Phone 2-6115 O Medford WMopractse