Neuberger Criticizes
Yaquina Statements
Washington U.R) Sen. Rich
ard L. Neuberger (D.-Ore.) today
criticized statements charging
that adidtion of the Yaquina
bay harbor project to the omni
bus public works bill in the Sen
ate was instrumental in causing
President Eisenhower's veto of
the biU.
He charged that a statement
attributed to an unnamed
"White House source," saying
his action in behalf of the Ya
quina bay project was a major
factor in causing veto of the
bill was "an incredible example
of Republican election-year poli
tics." Neuberger said he had been
criticized for "prematurely" ob
taining the addition of the Ya
quina bay project in the Senate,
after the House had left it out.
He said that the Yaquina bay
project had won approval of the
Board of Engineers.
Officials Seeking Boy
For Rabies Treatment
Rockwall, Tex. (U.R) The
Texas Department of Public
Safety appealed to state high
way patrols all over the South
and Southwest today to join in
a search for a little boy marked
for death from a mad dog's bite
unless he gets help soon.
The little boy, four or five
years old, was bitten by a stray
dog last Tuesday at a grocery
where he and his parents
topped for a cold drink. They
apparently were tourists.
The mother was upset, but
the wound did not appear seri
ous. So they continued east on
U.S. highway 67. Thursday, the
dog died and an analysis of the
head showed he was rabid.
Mayor Howard Dobbs made a
nationwide appeal Saturday
through the news service. He
asked the parents, no one at the
store got their name or noticed
what state the car was from, to
call him collect.
Two Women Sought
In Portland Robbery
Portland U.R) Police today
searched for two women as sus
pects in the burglary Saturday
night of a reported $20,000
worth of furs, jewelry and other
valuables from the home of two
figures in the recent Multnomah
county grand jury investiga
tion. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Clark
said they returned from a foot
ball game to find their home
ransacked. Miss Sonny Martin,
a friend of the Clarks who lives
nearby, said that she caught a
glimpse of two women carrying
suitcases walking away from
the home.
Police said the house was en
tered by forcing a small kitchen
window.
Clark and his wife were
among those indicted in the re
cent investigation.
School Bus Hits
Auto; One Injured
McMinnville (U.R) A school
bus loaded with high school
youngsters returning from the
Shrine football game in Port
land collided with an automo
bile on Highway 99 about three
miles east of here early Sunday
morning, critically injuring a
passenger in the car.
Mrs. Kae Halvy of Dayton was
taken to a hospital here where
doctors said she was suffering
from a head injury and multiple
fractures. None of the high
school students In the bus was
injured.
'Suitcase' Gunman
Holds Up Hotels
Portland (U.R) The elusive
"suitcase" gunman struck in
both Salem and Portland Satur
day morning, holding up a hotel
in each city.
The gunman obtained about
$10 from the Sovereign Hotel in
Portland and about two hours
earlier got $77 in a holdup of
the Argo Hotel in Salem.
Officers said the bandit fol
lowed the same pattern used in
several other robberies staged
recently. Each time he has car
ried a tan suitcase and a grey
topcoat draped over his arm
concealing the gun.
Rooming House Is
Damaged by Fire
Portland (U.R) A three
story rooming house was gutted
by fire here Saturday afternoon.
An elderly man missed being
trapped in the flaming building.
The two-alarm blaze started in
the basement of the structure
and raced up the back walls to
the roof.
A passerby, Andy Hill of Oak
Grove, climbed a telephone pole
and the framework of a billboard
to reach 72-year-old Sam Sam
uels who was trapped on the sec
ond floor of the building.
Use Tribune Want Ads
Easy, Just Dial 2-6141
Cairo Services Held
For United Press Man
Cairo (U.R) Diplomats, gov
ernment officials and newspa
permen attended funeral serv
ices Sunday for J. Walter Col
lins, Middle East manager for
United Press and dean of West
ern correspondents in the Mid
dle East.
Services were held at the All
Saint Anglican cathedral. Bur
ial followed at the British Prot
estant cemetery here.
Collins, 61, died Saturday of
heart failure following an attack
of pneumonia.
Collins covered every major
news story in the Middle East
since 1932. He was a British
subject.
wtoftmeIYoSm
MF" w
Ua Mill Tribune Want Ada
"Col. W. B. Greeley Nursery .
The tree nursery of the West
Coast forest industries was first
plowed and seeded in 1941. Two
years later Stewart Holbrook
described it this way:
"Out in a handsome clearing
the Nisqually river in western
Washington is a sight to cheer
the bleakest soul. On 49 acres
of smooth, level ground, hedged
by forest . . . are wide beds of
young seedlings marching across
the rich soil in bright green
columns, 10,000,000 strong.
"Here is a forest industry tree
nursery," Hols wrote on, "own
ed and operated by progressive
loggers and lumbermen of the
Douglas fir region of Oregon and
Washington to raise trees for
planting on non - restocking
burned and cutover acres . . .
It is the first large-scale under
taking of a group of lumbermen
Baruch Observes
86th Birthday
New York (U.R) Elder
statesman Bernard Baruch cele
brated his 86th birthday quietly
Sunday with his family in his
Manhattan apartment.
to pool their efforts in the grow
ing of young trees with which to
replant their forest lands."
Now 15 years old and with
20,000,000 seedlings growing in
stead of ten, the expanding in
dustrial nursery is at long last
to be given an official name. The
christening will take place on
Monday, Aug. 27, with Wash
ington's Gov. Arthur B. Langlie
the orator of the day. It will
be named "the Col. W. B. Gree
ley Forest Nursery," thus mem
orializing a founder.
Teenage Trees ...
President Corydon Wagner,
Sr., and Secretary-Manager W.
B. Greeley of the West Coast
Lumbermen's association, in 1940
formed plans for a loggers' for
est nursery, after the success
ful starts of Keep Washington
Green and Keep Oregon Green.
In 1939 forest fires had burned
over 357,165 acres of privately
Monday, August 20, IS56
MEDFOBD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE TKXBTHtaT
owned and state owned timber
land in Western Washington and
Oregon.
In time nature's restocking
could be expected to make the
blackened lands green again. But
thousands of acres would need
to be planted by hand with nursery-grown
seedlings to close
all gaps of idle' land on which
lumber companies were paying
taxes and other compulsory costs
of private ownership.
When the first seedlings were
lifted from the beds of the log
gers' nursery at Nisqually,
World War II had begun. The
yearling trees were planted on
burns by teenagers of 1942, in
large part high school boys
who were willing to work in
the woods week ends.
The baby Douglas firs that
were planted in World War II
are teen-age forest stands today
on tens of thousands of indus
trial tree farm acres. They,
with the young plantations and
the "wide beds of young seed
lings" at Nisqually, are an evergreen-ever-changing
memorial to
Col. W. B. Greeley, creative for
ester. On Monday, Aug. 27, this
will be made official.
Nature's Way First . . .
The U. S. Forest Survey of
1933 classified 2,232.000 acres
in Western Oregon and Wash
ington as non-stocked. The lat
est series of surveys, beginning
in 1948, indicate that non
stocked areas in the Douglas fir
region have been reduced to j
748,000 acres.
"No more than 200,000 acres
of the non-stocked lands of 1933
have been hand-planted success
fully," states W. D. Hagenstein,
chief forester of the Industrial
Forestry Association. "The big
job has been done by natural
means, with loggers and indus
trial foresters providing seed
sources and protection from
fire."
The Col. W. B. Greeley Forest
Nursery will always serve, how
ever, to close the gaps of idle
hand between areas of natural
reproduction in the Douglas fir.
And it will keep green the name
of the region's great leader of
industrial forestry.
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