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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 28, 1956)
o o , o o o CO Q o o O o o o o c G G G O O o o o CFOUR MED'OP.D (OP.KGON) MAIL TRIBUNE MEDFOfUTRIE UNE "lVervoi;e m Sou-.r-.ern Oregon heads The Mali IriTjune" Lar fcxrer. Saturday by &I jFOHD P KIN TING CO 27-2S ,rtn F:r St frncr.e F.OBER7 W RL'HL." Editor KTRi CKV A-lertiAinB Manager CERALw LATHAM Biiiinew Manager ERIC AIO.i JR ManawTng Editor EARL H ADAMS Citv Editor C HAR RV CHJKMAN Ttiecrash Editor ftlCHAftlj JEV.E.T bD.rti Editor C4JVE 5 rAHCHr'P Society Editor aAL.E EHICKSO. Circuiation Mgr. An InrWPndentSW5paps Entered ai :cona clai matter at fcedforc Oregon under Act oi March 3 1 8 r 7 - SUCRIPTToN RATES CJBy Mail In Advance Per Copy 10c Daily tr.d Sunia Or. e Tear $15 00 Daily and Sunday Six montnt H 0r Dailv and S-indav T'nree rroa 4-25 Sl--Jt' Onlv One v-ar $4 20 By Carrier In AUvanca Medford. o Ainjar.fl Central i'oirit tag:" t'oini. J--konviJle Cnid Hi II Phoenix. Shadv Cove Roirue :River Talent nd 'D rrtor ro:e. Vnilv ani Simla- One year" SI8 00 lialiy and Sjnriav One month I 50 Carrier and DeJiVrs I0c ter cooy Aii Term C.'raa in Advance Cfflrlal paper of the Ctlv Of Mdfurd Ofttrlal Paper of Jackson County - t'0itd Press Fuj Leased Wire VttMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Rent 'tentative WEST-HOLI r Y COMPANY INC Office in Nw York' Chicago de trolt Sn Francwro Lou Angeles Seattle Portland St Louis Atlanta Vancouver R f NATIONAL EDITORIAL I ASSOCfATLQN J u jFjjnnj;.;j:iua SPAPER ISHERS SOCIATION ! Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mai! Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Dec. 23, 1946 (Saturday) County Agtmt Robert G. Fowl er estimates 1946 income of Jack son county farm and orchard products at S20, 000,000; same as i45. . From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: A skiff of snow fell here briefly Fri. Out sid of proving it could snow, tlie eatiierraan accomplished nothing. lit YEARS AGO Dec 23. 1938 (Monday) Deputy District Attorney GTge V". Nrilson will continue Ir. that crtpacitv undt r AUorm y rjfpnk J. 4e'.vman, clibtrici attur riey -elect, it is arnoum-ed. Water line under Main st. be tween Central ave. and Front St. disrupts sen-ice. 30 YEARS AGO Dc. 28. 1926 (Tuesday) Nash hotel fumigated on or ders of Df. L. Inskeep, county he-Jth offifr. after .small pox case k reported there. Southern Oregon grows larg :, et clover of any place in world ' as!. t!f hoaur valley has 42 dif ferent kinds of soil on its floor. Professor F C. Reimer tells Kiwanis club. 40 TEARS AGO CDec-.28, 1316 (Thursday) q Creation of a proposed -Med-iord irrigation district defeated trt election by 10 votes. A Phocniir Farm Loan associa tion farmed at the Phoenix town hall wiUi T. E. Scantlin. Med furrl. elected chairman of ooard 3 of directors. O O Wrist's Ycnr I.Q.? Nine or ten correct 1 inperlor: lev en or elht Is excellent; live or It t food 1: Was the Salvation Army founded- by either John Booth OT -Evangidme Booth? . O Does quicksand yield read 11' to pressure? Were the rumors of the ar rival of a Messiah ipread by the Sar?sees or the' Sadducees? . q 0 4. Who authored "The Legend O of Sieepy Hollow"? 5. Did Eleanor Roosevelt des,-isjt-f-.ie the specifications of the gravestone cf President Roose velt? o o 6. Correct the following sen tence: "Go and lav down." f'. Pid Roosevelt, Churchill, or Stalinxoin the demand for "un conditional surrender" at the Cao.blanca'Cprj'erence? 8cWhat is th name for a for m?l legal inquiry into death, as 9onduvted by . coroner? . O 9. Are anthropophsgians can nibals, apes, or Stone Age men? 10. In the proverb: "The moun tain had brought forth a m e."? Abswsts: 1. No." William -Booth (chartered 1377!. 2. Yes. 3. Phar Ures. 4. Washington Irving. 5. o. Eresident Roosevelt, himself, did. 6. "Go and lie down." 7. cRcaseell. 8. Inqirest. 9. Canni- u bals. o 10. Mouse. New York Art Museum Tojshow Japanese Movies '-Tokyo .1 Movies pro o duced 'fv Japanese film studios will be shown at New York's Museum of Modern Art Jan. 20 O 25 as1 part cf the first Japanese motion picture fair in the United "-fejates. the foreign office an nounced today. Two actresses will accompany O t!1 Japanese delegation U New York. O Old A map of more than routine interest has reached u a proof fiom a forthcoming "Pioneer Atlas of the American West," published recently by mapmakers Rand McXally & Company. It is a map of Oregon which first appeared in the same firm's Business Atlas of 1876. Medford, which was little more than the site of a ford across Bear creek (labeled Stuart creek on the map, is not shown at all. But Jacksonville, the county seat and largest city, is shown, as are Ashland, Phoe nix, Central Point and Ft.Lane, near Rock Point. ACCORDING to the map, which was not entirely dependable, we suspect, the two principal roads to the east were through Ashland and then on to Lower Klamath Lake in California, by-passing "Link ville," the county seat of Klamath county; and the freight road through Eagle Point, Brownsborough and Wesgates, which crossed Big Butte creek near its headwaters and wound north and east to Ft. Klamath. Crater lake is not shown on the map at all, al though it had been known for more than 20 years. The main route to the north appears to cut through the hills to the northeast of Grants Pass, which is shown only as a tiny community at the northern terminus of the road from Crescent City .through Kerby, then the largest community in Jose phine county. "rIAMOXD lake" is the name listed for what is now know as Crescent lake, and the present Diamond lake is not shown at all, nor is Lake of the Woods. Fish lake and Fourmile lake, both man-made, had not yet been thought of. Elsewhere in the state appear names which have vanished (like Linkville, now Klamath Falls; Cas cade, Ellensberg, at the mouth of the Rogue River; Empire City,- now Empire, which dominated the Marshfield-North Bend area; Eugene City, now Eu gene; Ft. Yam Hill, BakertOWn) as Well as Others which have changed m spelling. Many blank spots on the old map are the sites of cities today among them Bend, Burns, Medford, and a number of them along the coast. Great areas of land in the eastern part of the state are labeled "Sage Desert," or "Gold, and Silver Mines." A WASHINGTON map, also dated 1876, is inter " esting, too, although it does not have the im mediacy of the more familiar state. Accompanying it is a facsimile of a Northern Pacific railroad adver tisement of that date, which said in part: "This is also the Short Line to Portland, Whence Passengers go via the elegant Passenger Steamships of the Oregon Kaihvay and Navigation Company and the Pacific Coast Steamship Company to San Francisco . . . Pullman Sleepers and Elegant Dining Cars Between St. Paul and Portland. Time, 4 days!" That the map was new only 80 years ago is a measure cf the vast changes which have come about during the lifetime of men now living, and much of it in the past three decades. E.A. New Weather Theory Significant, though not fully understood, progress in small-scale control of the weather has been made during the past decade or so. If conditions are "just right," rain can be made to fall. Within certain limits, and under certain cir cumstances, wintertime snowfall can be increased. And there is evidence to show that fog can be dis persed to a limited degree under some conditions. Up to this point, however, that's about the size of it. And one of the nation's authorities on the weather contends that really- big-scale control of the weather would be virtually impossible. CUCH an effort, he points out, would require "noth- ing less than altering the Equator-Pole heat dif ferential, or the rate of the planet's rotation." Writing in the Scientific American, Victor P. Starr, professor of meteorology at Massachusetts In stitute of Technology, describes the new theories of weather which have been developed largely since the war. They have been based on a big increase in ihe number of reporting stations, careful tabulation of the results, and conclusions derived from them. As a result, the "classic" theoiy of how the atmos phere circulates has been found to be inaccurate. It held that air in the tropics rose, circulated north and south across the hemispheres, cooling as it went, then descended at the poles to circulate back again. ""THE newer theory of atmospheric circulation is based on the great rotating air masses known as cyclones and anticyclones. Dr. Starr says of them: "These are the familiar systems that appear on our weather maps as high-pressure and low-pressure areas. A high is most frequently a mass of cold air broken off the polar air belt: as it moves southward, the earth's rotation sets it spinning in the clockwise direction. A detached warm mass moving northward is similarly set spinning in the opposite direction and accounts for the lows. Liquid models of the atmosphere . . . tend to verify the new conception of the atmosphere as an air ocean set in motion by the sun's heat and broken up by the earth's rotation into big whirls fed by little whirls." He foresees that, with additional observation, aided by mechanical aids such as calculators, the art of long-range forecasting will be considerably im proved. But control of the weather and climate, he adds, now appear to be even more difficult than believed. He says "A complex of random, unmanageable processes seems to govern our weather patterns" which comes as no surprise to the observant layman who has had to live with the results. E.A. Friday. December 28, 155S ' Maps Russia, Hungary, Sue In Top Good, Bad News of Weekjln War on Cancer, By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent The week's good and bad news on ihe international bal ance sheet: Soviet Russia announced a big shake-up in its economic plan ning administration after a five day meeting of the central com mittee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Hungary, in the wake of its anti-Communist revolt, faced an economic crisis which dispatches said threatened to become a na tional disaster. After long wrangling, the Egyptian government agreed to let salvage vessels under United Nations supervision start clear ing the Suez Canal of ships which it scuttled to block traf fic in retaliation for the British French invasion. In what amounted to a "Yan kee, go home" vote, the Japanese natives of Okinawa, America's greatest Far Eastern military base, elected an anti-American pro-Communist as mayor of the island's capital city. Official statements issued in Moscow after the meeting of the Communist Party Central com mittee were interesting chiefly because of what they failed to say. The shake-up in the economic planning set-up was important. Maxim C. Saburov was replaced as chief economic planner by Mikhail G. Pervukhin. Six high ranking experts in various fields were named to aid Pervukhin in tightening efficiency in industry. But no mention at all was made of problems that must have been discussed by the committee. These include Poland, Hungary and the admittedly growing un rest among Russian university students and workers. It is pretty certain that the committee must have heard re- ports from Party First Secretary Nikita S. Khrushchev and others on relations with the "Titoist" government of Polish Commu nist Leader Wladyslaw Gomulka, on the critical situation facing the Hungarian puppet govern ment of Janos Kadar and means to get the students and workers back into line. NiQttQT Of FGCf NOT FORWARD BUT BACKWARD Washington The projected increase in the defense budget of S3.000.000. 000 or so will no doubt be hailed as a daring re sponse to the changed interna- Etewart Alsop Joeub Alsuo tional situation. It is, in fact, nothing cf the sort. It is a back ward, not a forward step. It rep resents a decision, not to in crease, but actually to decrease in relative terms the previously planned level of American arm ed power, especially in the air. Last July, Gen. Nathan Twin ing, Air Force chief of staff, laid the facts on the line in testimony before the Symington Air Power Subcommittee. The relative tes timony is too long to quote here. But it can be found in the record of the hearings, under the titles, "Cannot Maintain 137 Wings on Present Budget Policy," and "Will Request Six Billion More for Fiscal Year 1958 Than Re ceived for Fiscal Year 1957." In effect, Twining testified that the Air Force would need six billion more, not to increase over-all air power, but to main tain the current level of air pow er relative to the Soviets. He and other authorities had previously testified that Soviet air power was surpassing American air power in four of the five main categories. 'T'HERE are three reasons why the Air Force needed S6.000, 000.000 more, which, in fact, Twining had good reason to be lieve he had been promised. In the first place, the whole De fense Department has been liv ing on fat in the last four years Defense economies have been made by spending billions of for ward appropriations voted in previous years by Congress. But now the fat has just about run out, and the pinch has come Second, the Air Force has now reached a stage of "buying hard ware." when new plane designs like the 100-series fighters, and the B-52 bombers are rolling off the production lines and must be paid for. But there is a third reason as well. As previously explained in this space, as the Soviet air de fense improves, our existing means of delivering nuclear weapons to Soviet targets, prin cipally the B-47 and the B-52 bombers, will inevitably become obsolete, just as the B-36 has become obsolete. The Air Force is working on no less than seven alternative means of delivery two inter-continental ballistic missiles, the ram-jet "Navaho," an intermediate range missile, the B-58 jet bomber, an atomic powered bomber, and a sort of The Hungarian Red govern ment was in desperate straits. Shortage of coal for power, due to the recent rebellion and the refusal of miners to return to work, kept industry in a near paralyzed state. Kadar started drafting farm ers into the mines. Suez Egyptian President G a m a 1 Abdel Nasser, after stalling for weeks, agreed to the opening of Suez Canal salvage operations. But even if Nasser permits the work to proceed smoothly .mrraungeGtsons Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. Ground Observer Corps To the Editor: Will you please publish the following letter, which Capt. LeRoy Pellonari sent to our G.O.C. chapter? "This year America has once again celebrated Christmas with the assurance that no aggressor has been able to destroy our na tion through a sneak attack. America can be assured of this because the Ground Observer Corps along with the many other facets of our air defense system have been maintaining a con stant aerial surveillance of the vast reaches of the United States. Many of these unselfish and . patriotic Americans have been a part of the Continental Air De fense Command's "Twelve-mile-high-wall" that has been on alert Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, to ensure that this holiday season will be celebrated for many years to come. "Therefore, with sincere grati tude, the officers and airmen serving the Sacramento Air De fense Area wish you the Merriest of Holiday Seasons." Phil Morgan 1 King st. Medford, Ore. P.S. We NEED volunteers. If you are interested please Phone 2-6483, 3-2541, or 3-4488. By Jo. and Stewart Alsop dream fuels." bomber using "exotic IN THIS fantastic array of stra taip weanons of the future. some have passed beyond the relatively inexpensive research stage and Into the far more cost ly prototype stage, ine suD-somc Snark missile and the B-f8 al ready exist In prototype. Great advances have been made on the deadly I.C.B.M. (thanks largely to two casualties of the Eisen hower administration, former Secretary of the Air Force Har old Talbott and Assistant Secre tary Trevor Gardner). An appro priation of $100,000,000 for an I.C.B.M. launching site is actu ally projected in the forthcom ing budget, and the first proto tvoe may be tested in 18 months. And so the spending pressure has suddenly and sharply mount ed. In the often bitter debate on military spending wnicn nas hn oninz on Denina tiuscu rtnnr.! in recent weeks, the econ omy advocates of the scnooi oi Spcrptarv ot me ireaiuij George Humphrey proposed tak ing an enormous risk. They have arsned. in effect, that the I.C.B. M. is, alter an, me uiinuaic weanon," which will do the job nf massive retaliation more sure- iv than any other weapon- So whv not go all out for the i.e. B.M., relying on the B-52 to do tha ioh in tne meantime, auu onttinff way back on all the oth er programs, including iavanu and the B-58? T IS a tempting proposal, and not only because it would r-il ih. Air save money, i-i.,: Force cannot go all out on all the means of delivery nsieu above. Some must be dropped nr throttled down. Gardner long ago proposed that Snark be dropped as militarily valueless. nrf there are wen-grounueu doubts about the real military value of an atom-powered bomb- r'Moreover, the B-53, while t marvelous plane in other ways ha, so limited a range that it will be heavily dependent on froin bases, especially critisn bases. But the danger inherent i an attemot to tump siraigni from the B-52 to the I.C.B.M. is oicn obvious. It is that the B-52. like the B-36 before it, might become a sitting duck to the So viet air defense, well oeiore an operational I.C.B.M. system could be established. This would mean losing the retaliatory ca pacity which is the shield of the free world. In this situation, the Congress has a right and a duty to ask whv the Air Force budget is be ing" increased, not by the six billion figure which Twining named, but. by a small fraction of that amount. For if we lose the retaliatory capacity, the Western world will be, in Win ston Churchill's phrase, "As de fenseless as a girl's boarding school." (Copyright, 1956, New York Herald Tribune, Ine.) which is nnlikelv it will take weeks if not months to clear the ' canal. Okinawa Kamejiro Senaga, leader of the strong anti-American ele ment on Okinawa, was elected mayor of Naha on a platform which calls for the immediate r,eturn of Okinawan political control to Japan. His election registered the resentment of Okinawans to American occu pation and to American policies, principally the requisitioning of iand. He's Still Hopeful To the Editor: It all depends what one is used to. Like the recently arrived Hungarian radar engineer who said in ef fect, "No, this dollar given my small family and me is not going to be spent for anything. It's going to be kept as a symbol of freedom here in America, where we can go where we want to go, say what we want to si'y, do what we want to do and hear laughter and see the happy faces that have become strange to us Hungarians under Communist rule, not mentioning the won derful food provided us that woud have been wondei ful if only bread and potatoes in gen erous amount." This appears to be dependable evidence of life under Red rule. But it is completely futile to offer it as any kind of proof to the pinkos, the fellow - travelers and defenders of the Soviet way. When pinned down, for lack of ny adequate answer, their last resort is. "Capitalistic propa ganda, the lying press!" It is to ponder why this should be. Why otherwise good people, born and raised here in freedom, prospering to the extent of ex tensive land holdings, having mortgages on the homes of others, enjoying the best of everything our way of life af fords, proving as it does the old saying; convince a people against their will, they'll be of the same opinion still. Perhaps it's a natural law that keeps us up on our toes, to com pel us to realize that the price of freedom is everlasting vigi- ance. Anyway, it is good to know that as the old year ends and a new one is in the offing, that goodness of heart reigns in the majority of mankind, the major ity mind you, who in united thought and effort is bound to make this a better world for all concerned, the good, the bad. the indifferent, even if some do choose to show so little apprecia tion for the many blessings that are ours. F. J. Clifford, 1211 West Main st., Medford, Ore. Average U.S. Farm Now About 250 Acres Minneapolis, Minn. (U.R) The average U.S. farm has ex panded from 215 acres in 1950 to a present size of about 25,0 acres, the Northwestern Na tional Life Insurance Company said today. The family economics bureau of Northwestern said a statisti cal study revealed that the average sales value of farmland, including the buildings, has risen from S67 per acre in 1950 to about S90 an acre for 1956. The increase in size and sales value has resulted, the study showed, in the average U.S. farm unit today being worth about S22.000, compared with 514,500 in 1950. The upward trend was at tributed to a continuing absorp tion of small farms into larger units. This was seen with a drop in the total number of farms in the country from 5.400,000 in 1950 to under 4.7000,000 in 1956. the bureau said. Why Fsed Milk Profits to Morton Milling Co 10 West Jackson 1957 Year of Hope Society Head Says BY DAVID A. WOOD President, American Cancel Society Written for United Press Among its more fervent pray ers for 1957, the world will in clude one for "the cancer cure." In modern countries like the United States, cancer comes to two of every three families and kills one in six of us. Happily, it can be reported that "the cancer cure" is now here for many who will have the disease this year. One in three cancer patients now are being saved they ejre saved by surgery or radiation or both. Only a few years ago, the figure was one in four. Steady Progress One can predict with certainty that further advances toward cancer control will be made dur ing the coming year. At long last, research is mobilized, fin anced more generously than ever before, and all along the massive front, from studies of cell chem istry to the treatment of patients, progress is being made. Few if any responsible scient ists expegt that 1957 or any other year will produce a single drug which will cure all cancers. There is a growing' likelihood, however, that eventually and no one can say when a variety of drugs will be developed which may cure many of the cancers that now resist radiation or are too far advanced for surgery. New Drugs Coming Science in recent years has developed about a half-dozen, drugs which will cure certain ex perimental cancers in laboratory animals. One big hope is that some drugs scores of them are now coming off molecule as sembly lines in chemists' labora tories will begin to cure human cancers. So far drugs have given substantial help to patients; but none has permanently cured hu man cancers. Beyond the field of drug treat ment or chemotherapy lie several other avenues of lively research promise; And among many other types of study, improvements in surg ery and radiation will mean im mediate saving of human lives. The year of Our Lord, 1957, is one of continued hope and of in creasing promise. IFA Records Busiest -Tree Farm Year in '55 Portland The Industrial Forestry association certified one new tree farm in western Oregon and Washington every four days throughout 1956, ac cording to Nils B. Hult, 'presi dent. "It was the association's busiest tree farm year since it founded the now nation-wide tree farm program in 1941," Hult said. "A record of 100 pri vate forests were certified by the association as west coast tree farms during the year." The tree farms certified this year include more than 200,000 acres and pushed the total for the region to 4,831,677 acres at the year's end. Private forest owners of west ern Oregon and Washington may investigate tree farm opportuni ties through the association's foresters at Eugene, Portland, Seattle and Nisqualiy, Hult said. Buenos Aires Police Arrest French Citizens Buenos Aires (U.R) Police today announced the arrest of two French citizens charged with a triple murder In Paris last January. The arrested men are Jean ! Lunardi, 29, and Francis Ca-1 pezza, 23, who said they traveled 1 from Marseilles as stowaways on several ships, finally arriving in Argentina. They have been liv ing in a suburb for severaf months.. I Portland .(U.R) Commij-1 sioner William A. Bowes yester day was elected president of the Portland City Council far a six-. month term. Are Safe Rep! accents for MiSc In short, it costs Triangle feeding (or pellets) and ir i n CO Comment o Q WRONG REQUIREMENTS FOR DIPLOMACY Two names appeared in the news recentlv and the circum stances surrotmding their appear ance sitpgest that we are attempt ing to run atomig-age diplomacy with 19tK century methods. The first nime waJohn Hay (Jock) Whitney, saib by "au thoritative Sources" be the president's clPoice fo ambassa dor to .Britain as successor to Winthrop AldricS? Q The othercwas Bertna Adkins, assistant chairman othe Repub lican national committrje who, according to the nevs Veports, is "being boomed r an im portant government'"post." Just what tlie job will o be is not known, but Mrs? Adkins has ruled puP one possibility: She says she has not enough money to held a diplomatic post. O The news stewf described Whitney as "c' variable manof means who hsis dedicated his Hie to helping people Sind rft? horses." o Whitney is a graduate of Yalorj did pr.iduate work at Oxford, is founder of J. H. Whi,tiisy &qC!:, a financiap concern.0 established a foundation '-to aid Aujnricans whose racial; tr ?ui!ur.-(l) bj.c grounds hampered their oppor tunities. was a polo star io thej) 1930s and -as AHive irftlje1952 Eisenhower campaign. This is no critli pni of Whitney-;) If appointed he might well turn out to be one of our most suc cessful diplomats Nor ir this a Q suggestion -Vaat Mrs. cfAdkins ought to be an ambassador. But ir- this day and age when the condxict of our foreign af fairs may well determfte wheth er we or civilization survives, it seems incredible that Jhe first requirement for: an ambassador is that he be a millionaire. Back in the 19th century pefi haps the ability to set a finr table was a good and sufficient diplomacy. Perhaps it would not be an overstjiteil-ientoto suggest that times have chiged. Q Financial demands ufSfn our diplomats ace not fbnfirftd to those of ambassadorial ranki Many a mern'jrr of thearps of lesser rank has been heard to complain about the expense of entertaining junketing congress men to say nothingjof the regu lar demands of his pott. Ability to do the job should be the oonly requirement for these positions. It rny cost a& little more lut we ca effcxd G less.- jregon Journal. Portland. Operation Safehaveii . - r if lo tnd on scneauie o Munich, Germeiy (U-Rl-r-TheQ Military Air"Trasport Service will wind up Operation afe haven on schedule next Moiay, MATS officials predicted today. By tht time, MATS will have airlifted 9,700, Hungfeiar? refu gee to the United Statesptbe of ficials aif. The operation ran behind schedule for several days because of lsad weather? tfet more than 3,000 refu:eeshSve been flown put oC, MuniciP in the past three days. o AH ditcliii the1ioli(mys.. Xothlng dogs it 0 ."-like Seven-Up! o Boftfed broTfie 7-Up Bottling Co. MEDFORbo o ydur talvos? TRIANGVE , CALF FEEDS - O O Whether you're raising your calves for "future nllP rs" oj for the beemarltet Triangle cilpfeeds on save'you roney in several ways. Youjan ruse healthy vigorous calves yet sure your milk for the marjiet. Trunele calf fcedi help cut aS mortality to a remark able degree and extend the life of youroaerse cowtg o tar less to teea your caiv on a scheduleajf calf starter, ail meal call f roweg. 603-665 N. TILLAMOOK POCTIAMD 12, $60N u O o O o