Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 25, 1955, Image 6

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    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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Tfcot -tnr SUr-plEX con safely b
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preMure in ffca hoHif for ooyt
AII-ploil,t SUmiX ii light, cailt
oiity. and if oaippad with Mttoch
bia Coasting.
$6.49
Free Parking! Free Delivery!
SPECIALISTS IN HOMEWARES
CENTRAL POINT MEDFORD
YOU BUY WITH CONFIDENCE AT HOME APPLIANCE
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED or YOUR MONEY BACK!
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1 r..
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"tv jf-
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DOWN - $13.31 A MONTH
A CARLOAD OF COLOR
Yes, now . . for the first time
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attractive, colorful kitchens.
Ask us to show and demon
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SEE THEM TODAY!
mm
Jg
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FOR A SHALL KITCHEN EXTRA SPACE
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IN MODERN KITCHEN PLANNING
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... one EXTRA Hi
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Automatic Oven Timer
Wide Spaced Surface
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Roomy Storage Drawers
with Big Nylon Rollers
Timed Appliance
Outlet
We Service
What We Sell!
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
OTHER G-E
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$139.95
mm store
115 EAST MAIN
Phone 3-5395
bargain store
303 SOUTH FRONT STREET
Phone 2-5595
t J
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TODAY!
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