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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1955)
SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Monday. July 25, 1955 STAR GAIER AIIS 23-34 56-67 1-74 76-79-33 6-11-19-2d 'JV39-55 85-S6 to 1-10-21-3 CANCER Is a. 9-i Si M 24-57-60 uo ff- JULY 2 --, "-''5. 23 If ,26-36-37-4d 42 53-31-33 VIRGO ST 22 7-12-14-23 '6975-77 -By CLAY R. POLL A N M Your Doify Activity Cuid According fo fhe Sfors. To develop messoge for Tuesdoy, read words corresponding fo numbers of your Zodiac birth siga 1 Seet 31 A 1 H.t 2 Your 22 Turning 62 S"!3 3 Lc-e 33 rd 63 Eivred 4 E-peet 3- Th.njt 64 To 5 S;rr 35 P:om 65 Through 6 You'll 36 P'toored 66 Inte-ferenct 7 An 27 For 67 Carefully 3 let 38 In 63 You 9 Tr r,ji 39 In 69 Ee . 13 To 40 So". 70 Tvngi 1' Be 41 A'-e'.rton 71 D scounf 12 Arrroctrvt 42 S'rcnje 72 Fx' an 13 Deve oa 43 Re'or onf 73 F'orrery 14 P-cpoj.tion 44 Keep 74 Before 15 Don'r 45 An 75 Of'e'ed 16 Avo d 46 Of 76 You 17 Hours 47 Ir-ipcrront 77 You 13 ln-r,;je 43 Tp 73 Point 19 Fopj or 49 Snub 79 Wove 20 Lucky 50 Best 80 In 21 Be 51 A 81 Or 22 Be 52 May 82 Aeod 23 Loot 53 Scordol 83 W,jh 24 Puih 54 Ss'eoder 84 In 25 f.'ay 55 Le 85 And j 26 Ee 56 Over 86 Voney 27 Co-e'jl 57 A-. 87 Necrborj 23 Fovor 53 Ns S3 Dec s ens 29 Private 59 Secrer 89 Finances 30 Affairs 63 SitucTion 93 b'e Good () Adverse fiN..?! SCOWIO XT. 24 3i4 OV 22 -f 44-45-47-59111 143-64-63 USftA SET 23 ff-T OCT 23 Itfli? 2-35-52-61r? 62-65-66 &A SAorniius NOV 23 . DEC 22 f;5 i h6-13-22-27lTi be-43-83-37M CAPdCOtN DEC 23 Z .'ASl 20 3-17-28-29,0 130-33-41 V2 AOUAIIUS JAV 21 feb' i fir ''7 U9-51-53-54 P 1-72-73 PISCES FEB 23)y 4- 5-46-43,,- 50-70-80-90 vs: V ri r M' t-- - JIMSTiVCI3S Inow, you can buy ge I ( RANGES IN COLOR AT NO EXTRA COSTil Dsan of Inkslingers . . . My first piece of writing to be printed in a national publication bore the title, " Dairying at the Idaho Industrial Institute."' The magazine was Hoard's Dairy man., still going strong. The date of my initial literary appearance was Sept. 13, 1907. I was then 14 years old. So stands my stake on the claim to deanship in the book and magazine writing profession of these parts. My claims are modest indeed in regard to liter ary prominence. Readers of this weekly output well know that it is mainly written in the rugged confines of an ancient boompond shack and on a 1909 Model Oli ver Visible Typewriter that is well fortified with haywire. With little else to brag about, I can still claim to be a dean. The pay for my first essay was one dollar. But it was enough to keep inspiration primed for many a year. At last, in the summer of 1916, four "poems" were sold for S55 to the Saturday Evening Post. I was working in the Northern Cali fornia woods then. It was my fifth summer there. Winters I drove mules on Los Angeles con struction jobs. I knew no better than to keep on toiling and try ing. Butter Boy ... In the first place, I was a boy in the Idaho back country, living on the lonesome, unyielding land of a sagebrush homestead. The place was not very far from the Seven Devils Mountains and Hell's Canyon. The people were too few and too poor, finally, to hire a schoolteacher. I had only one hope to get more edu cation. Down near Weiser, on the Snake river, there was this Idaho Industrial Institute. It had been started back in the early 1890s as a school where boys and girls from the sagebrush might se cure high school educations. Jobs were provided on the school's big ranch and in the dairy and the shops for the boys in bakery, sewing rooms and layn dry for the girls. No student Neuberger Proposes McNary Memorial Washington (U.R) Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.) today proposed erection of a bird bath or small fountain as a me morial to the late Sen. Charles L. McNary (R-Ore.) on the capi tol plaza. The Senate recently adopted a resolution which would per mit erection on the plaza of a 110-foot memorial tower in honor of the late Sen. Robert A. Taft (R-O.) The only other statue on the plaza honors John Marshall, former chief justice of the United States. In contrast to the Sl.000.000 memorial proposed for Taft, Neuberger said the McNary me morial would have to be of more modest proportions. "Senator McNarv was a ly man of simple tastes," berger said, '"and I think a marble bird bath or fountain might properly bolize his abiding interest in the outdoors, wildlife, and our price less water resources." McNary represented Oregon in the senate for 28 years. could pay more than half of the charge for tuition and board with money the rest had to be worked out. Mine was paid en tirely by work, amounting to 30 hours per week. I was a year in the dairy when I wrote for Hoard's Dairyman: '"I have read accounts of sev eral different herds in the West and so I thought I would write about the dairy herd of the Idaho Industrial Institute, located at Weiser, Ida. '"The Institute is not a reform sclTool as the name indicates, but an industrial school where any trade can be learned among others, dairying. "The herd numbers 44, mostly grade cows, with five registered jerseys from the Hazel Fern herd of W. S. Ladd, Portland, Ore., and two registered Jersey bulls. There is a creamery run in con nection with the dairy in which there is made about 90 pounds of butter per weeTc. We have a large barn with cement floor . . " Exciting, hmm? It was to me. I was the boy buttermaker of the school. A Fine Plan . . . The founder of the school was the Rev. E. A. Paddock, who owned the ability to raise money from such tough customers as Russell Sage to educate sage brush kids. He brought home heavy contributions, too. from lumbermen of the West Coast as well as gifts of registered Jer seys from the Ladd Estate. The Hoard's Dairyman piece helped him some, I heard, as an illus tration of practical results from his program of industrial school education. The first high school commer cial course to be taught in Idaho was started at the Institute through a donation of a dozen typewriters, among them a cou ple of Oliver Visibles. So I learn ed typewriting there, as well as buttermaking and the piano. My trouble at this excellent school stemmed from relatives of Virginia origin who believed it was all right for a boy to start chewing tobacco at the age of five. This I had done. At the school I was caught three times a-chawing, and then I was out. But what did I care? I had sold my first storv. kind- Neu-even small svr- Highway 36 Wreck Kills Wedderburn Man Roseburg (U.R Amos L. James, 41, of Wedderburn. Ore., was fatally injured early Satur day on Highway 36 near Scotts burg when his pickup truck went out of control and crashed into a tree. His son Carl, 19, a passenger in the truck, was hospitalized at Cottage Grove, suffering from shock and couldn't be questioned i about the cause of the accident, j James was killed outright I when he was pinned beneath the wreckage cf the truck. j F;rt radio network began op eration in 1926. NOW! 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