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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1955)
SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Friday, June 10, 1955 They'll Do It Every Time " By Jimmy Hatlo HOPE TJAT RlSUT ARf LOOSE LINSEED-: WMEM TVlEM THREE SET UP TO HIT TrlEy LOOK LIKE OLD UDIES BE4T1M.4 G4RPET-- THiTF4T6UyS H been in the rough so much he's the new Kins of the WILD FRONTIER-, TI TROUBLE WITH Y"' f TJE THREE V n LINSEED IS HE ( 1 WORST DUBS I I U MULUMIS I IN IHCUUO ' R CFfTD!LlT AKln TUPVTCV 7 V Z?rZZ, MLM so MIXED W ffi Briiiiif hi iv PL4VER- iZwrrry c? i r:': -. - ' avdp v i v (dc. i fci'.Xjfe-io' JtVER Notice 4 good PLAYER KEEPS HIS MOUTH SUUT-4NDVICE VERS4 ? TU4WX 4M04 TP 0 TUC H4TU M4TtoUER4JSlStf , J Eighth Annual Field Crops Day At Experiment Station Tuesday The . eighth annual Crops Field day will be held Tuesday, June 14, at the Southern Oregon Agronomic Experiment station, it was announced today by Har old H. White, superintendent. The agronomic experiment station is located about one-half mile west of Talent junction a cross the Southern Pacfic rail road tracks. The first field trip is sched uled to start at 9:30 a.m. with the second slated for 2 p.m. A noon luncheon will be served by As We Live y ELIZABETH HU1LOCK, PH.D. Propose! In Haste Than Starts to Stall Marrying in haste is one of the most foolish things a person can do. (Q) "I am 32 years old and in love with a man of 30. I went out with him for three weeks and he then asked me to marry him. I see him every two days and he tells me how much he loves me and how much he wants me as his wife. .When he ask ed me when I wanted to get Dr. Herlock married, I said in June. I loved him and didn't want to wait too long. The next day, he called me and said he didn't want to be rushed. When I told him I wouldn't wait, he - ."J ..... 1.1 4U in June. From the way he taLked, I gathered he didn't want to be married for a long time. June is here and he never men tions marrying me this June. I have never met his folks. He said they would object to our marriage because they are very bitter toward those of -other faiths. 1 don't want to jvait for him forever and I don t know what to do." (A) It would be foolhardy to try to rush this young man into marriage when its - is, obivous that he is stalling for some rea son. Probably his parents' objec tion to his marrying a person of a different faith is holding him back. The very fact he had not taken you to his home to meet his family or that they have "not come to call on you and your parents would certainly mean that they would not accept you very graciously if you married their son. They mav not even know that he is .going with you. ! Put It Out Of Mind Until these obstacles are clear- ed up, you would do well to- put marriage out of your mind, j There could be no real happiness for you in a marriage where the ' man's family felt bitterly toward j you and where he might feel that you were responsible for a ; break with his family. j He has doubtless realized the j obstacles in the way of a happy marriage and that has made him j reconsider his desire to marry : you. Until he makes up his mind I what he wants to do. your best j tactics wil be to see less of him i and thus avoid becoming too ! involved emotionally. j (COPYRIGHT 1955, GENERAL i FEATURES CORP.) women of the Phoenix Grange The trips will cover some 30 different . fields devoted to various research experiments. These include alfalfa seed prod uction and forage; a wide variety of forage grasses for pasture and seed production; experiments in dry and silage com production; fertility trials, and weed control demonstrations. Also to be shown are specialty crops, including oil producing plants and fiber crops which re place sisal. Featured speaker during the noon hour will be Walter Holt, secretary and general manager of the Pacfic International Live stock exposition in Portland. Holt is a former county agent in Clackamas and Umatilla count ies. Assist Program Aiding in the program will be Dr. D. D. Hill, head of the farm crops department at . Oregon State college; T. L. Jackson, experiment specialist in soils from Corvallis; Jerry Nibler, extension farm crops specialist and R. G. Mason, experiment station editor. John Yungen, station agrono mist, will help conduct field tours. Others aiding in the prog ram will include members of the station advisory board They are A. E. Brockway, chair man; C. C. Hoover, Arnold Boh nert, Otto Bohnert, Otto Neider- meyer, J .N. Winton, Wallace Rice, and Clyde Broffel. The field day is being sponsor ed this year by the Rotary clubs in Medford, Shady Coye, Ash land, and Grants Pass. They are working to interest busines men and other urban residents to attend the field day. In addition, some 250 to 300 farm residents are expected to attend. Lazy Man's Filibuster Goes on in Illinois House Springfield, 111. (U.R) A lazy man's filibuster, in which the filibusterers don't actually filibuster, dragged into its fourth day in the Illinois House today. Two downstate representa tives had hit on a way of tieing up the House without doing much talking. Asks House Bills Read ' All Democrats Paul Zeigler and John Morris had to do was stand up and say "Mr. Speaker, I now ask that House Bill (pick a number) be read in full." The House clearks then took over for the filibuserers, reading as quickly as 'possible through bills which ran as long as a doz en pages. Then Zeigler and Morris re peated the process. The technique, permitted by the state constitution, has held House action to a crawl since Tuesday. Sessions have lasted into the early morning hours and tempers have become frayed as the legislators try to wait each other out. Want Bill Amended . , Zeigler and Morris said they would keep it up until the House amends a bill it has already passed which would channel some state funds into the build ing of a giant Chicago conven-' tion hall. The filibusterers and other "downstate" representatives ob ject that county fairs in rural areas should get the money. , House . Speaker Warren L. Wood adjourned the session late Thursday night, snapping "I'm not running a vaudeville show." But the weary affair was due to start again today. Czechs Broadcasting Western Dance Music Vienna (U.R) Communist Czechoslovakia, apparently bowing to popular demand, has started . broadcasting western style dance music for the' first time since the Reds seized pow er there in 1948. For seven years the Czech radio denounced jazz, swing and other popular western music as "decadent" and "a form of Amer ican corruption." But a few weeks ago .Radio Peiping started to throb again with familiar dance tunes, including U. S. favorites. The station now devotes about two hours of its broadcasting day .to dance music, all of it played by Czech studio orches tras. One of the bandleaders mentioned by name is Karel Vlach, who previously had been criticized by the Communists for his "bad musical influence." Observers here long have re garded American popular music as one of the most successful U.S. propaganda exports to Iron Curtain lands. Mailbags at Vien na radio stations bulge with rec ord requests from behind the Curtain. The Czech decision to resume the broadcast of dance music was viewed as an attempt to draw listeners away from western stations. The quality of the Czech stu dio orchestra is good. Bacteria Found Dental Decay Cause Chicago (U.R) Experiments with rats have proved that bac teria are the primary cause ef dental decay, according to an article in the Journal of the American Dental Association. The article said teams of sci entific investigators . from the University of Chicago and the University of Notre Dame stud ied germ-free' rats housed in specially devised chambers. The animals were divided into three groups. One group was kept germ free. The mouths of the rats in the second group were swabbed with enterococous bacteria. The third group was hot housed in germ-free cham bers but raised in normal germ laden environment. AU three groups were fed a tooth-decay inducing diet which included a glucose or sugar- water solution. ' At the end of the 150-day test period, it was found that despite the special diet, the germ-free animals in the first group were completely without dental de cay( whereas every member of the other groups developed cavi ties. "It became apparent," the sci- entists said, "that caries of the teeth must be primarily a bac terial disease." A NichoVs Worth of . . . Comment On This and That By HARMAN W. NICHOLS UnifrttJ PrM tatr Wrir A Harman Nichols Washington (U.R) When you drop a dime into a pay tele phone slot, don't cuss out the in- ventor. This fellow didn t die rich. In fact, William Gray of Hart f o r d, Conn., who thought up the pay phone, finally sold his rights for S5000. That's rather interes ting when you con sider that in 1954, the coin tele phones provided 6.7 per cent of all billings in the Bell Sys tem, $351,050,000. In Washing ton, the pay as you call business added up to 7.9 per cent of all business, and in the Manhattan area of New York, it was 9:5 per cent. Gray's invention now is on ex hibit in the lobby of the Depart ment ' of Commerce building here. Desperate Idea Gray invented the pay phone in a fit of desperation. As the story goes, in 1889, the young man had occasion to get hold of a doctor on the telephone. He cranked the old-time phone on the wall, equipped with batteries and magnetos and people listen ing in and worse than that, but ting in. Gray, it is said, went to an Underwood typewriter plant four blocks away to make a call. The Underwood man had a pri vate phone and let Gray use his private talking piece. So then and there, Gray de cided that . everyone ought to have a private phone, even if he had to pay for it. Gray's invention was unique.. Mr. G. was no dummy. He fig ured that very few people had three arms, and his gimmick called for some gymnastics. It worked like this. First you put the dime in with the left hand. With the other hand you picked up the cone shaped ear piece. When you heard a "howdy" from the ope rator you released the dime and pushed a little bell, two hands still busy. And, when the party of the second part answered, you jiggled a little lever down with the elbow. Contact was made. You had the right num ber if the operator was alert and, ask any operator, they al ways are. First Chest Protector Gray, as I said, didn't get rich on this one, although a lot of other people did. Neither did he get fat on his chest protector for catchers and umpires. Bill Gray, in his tender years. was a catcher. He got so sore and mad about coming down with broken ribs from wild pit ches that he invented what prob ably was the first chest protector for catchers and umpires. Gray was thinking more of catchers than umpires when he invented the chest protector. It was a ribbed thing, filled with cotton, and stuffed full of air via an old-fashioned bicycle pump before each game. In the old days, a good bump in the chest protector invented by our boy Gray would not knock the wind out of the catcher or the umpire, but games galore de layed while a new stock of air was added to the ribbed, cotton affair. Damage Action Cites Automobile Accident Guerino N. Cavalli is the de fendant in a $10,487.78 damage suit brought in circuit court here by Joseph P. Zash, according to records on file in the county clerk's office. Zash asks $10,000 general damages for alleged injuries re ceived April 14 of this year in an automobile accident at the intersection of Main and Grape streets. The complaint declares that Zash was in a vehicle which was struck from the rear by a ve hicle operated, by Cavalli. It charges that the accident was caused by negligence on the part of the defendant. Graduates Working Outside Major Fields Ann Arbor, Mich. ' (U.R) Outside of professional school graduates, only 38 per cent of college graduates go to work in the fields they majored in. A recent study at the Univer sity of Michigan showed that 96 per cent' of medical and dental students went on to a profession al career in their fields, but only graduates in the earth scien-- ces also tended to follow up their studies with related car eers. The Commission on . Human Resources and Advanced Train ing, which conducted the study, said this tendency of graduates to work outside of their major fields was a good one. They said it assures a steady supply of law yers who also know science, scientists who , know economics and economists who know law The study also showed that 50 per cent of female college grad uates soon leave their jobs for marriage. The study said those who do not usually end up work ing at sub-professional levels or as teachers. (Vodka in orange juice) Si It leaves you breathless mivnoff tfuqnmtt " - VODKA tOprocf . Mtdefrom 1 00 (rain Mutrtl tpirim ' Ste. Pierre Smiraotf Fit. Inc.. Htrtford.CoM. 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