Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 16, 1958, Image 10

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10 MAS. T&llUWk
, WeWiy, July 16, 138
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5esi. Toirse Says like Made
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By A. nOlEIT SMITH
Soil Tribune Correspondent
Washington Sen. Wayne
Morse (D - Ore.) criticized
President Eisenhower's dis
patch of marines to Lebanon
Tuesday, But Sen. Richard L.
Neuberger (D-Ore) gave the
President his support.
Speaking in the Senate,
Morse said Eisenhower "has
made a sorry and historic
mistake this morning. That
flag should come out and
those American boys should
come out; United Nations
forces should go in to keep
the peace under the tJnited
Nations doctrine, not under
the Eisenhower doctrine.
'Grave Mistake
Morse said it is a "grave
mistake" for the U. S. "to
undertake unilaterally, o r
even in conjunction with
Great Britain to interfere
with oevery development in
the world that appears to run
counter to some interest of
ours. We cannot direct our
own liking bv frfr of arms
all the furces of growth and
change that are now on the
. loose in the Middle East,
' South America or anywhere
else.'
"I am for taking a stand
through the United Nations
for a United. Nations force
and for the ree nations of the
world faking it clear that
we stan united behind the
ideal and the. goal of peace
MoQe concluded.
Neuberger ai& altflough
"many mistakes had been
made in tht fast this was no
111Q2 for gohtic! incoming
LiJgniJB e Yruatas Veaisiam
"This if Similar to the decis
ion 8jf President Truman to
int Kotat," eubrger
Oif . "Ma ha ot movti into
) &orfS vwilt not Hava had
qq Hsat lift im tna frae world.
8t j noVmoval ia fc cave
our ril ftuwt Kacar' bo-
(Jiticl uitrijua, v euld not
U hva rient Ian
n Neubergar at it 1 tnoufht
one of th blckaat pages ia
political history va tha way
RepdhUcfnK mate eofitictl
v jcapitil of th Korean criais
ana called m Truman' war.
"I for one heped the Ifemo
crats would not uacumb to
such a temptation in the pres
ent crisiftin the Mifldla last,"
euberger concluded.
Rep. Charles O. Porter
(D-Ore.) said he had "grave
doubts about the propriety or
the necessity of the president's
action."
"We should have taken the
matter up with the UN first
and worked with the UN if
there was a threat to the
peace," Porter said.
He added that he thought
the administration's policy in
the Middle East had done
nothing to prevent the current
crisis.
"We have held to the status
quo," he said. "We have not
had an constructive policy."
Progres Repotted
In Engineer Iff ike
Portland (UPI) ''Some
progress" wa reported by a
federal mediator today in at
tempts to settle a strike of
Operating Engineer against
Associated General Contract
ors -which mas tied up heavy
construction warh ?n Oregon
and Souhwest Washington.
The two sides met about
four hounft Tuesday afternoon.
A mediation efon fjetween
AGC and the Teamsters
Union, which joined the strike
Monday, was scheduled tor
today.
Meanwhile, the Laborers
Union, which struck AGC in
May, filed suit in Federal
Court against AGC charging
employers had caused a "ces
sation of work," violating a
contract. The laborers asfted
$44,000 in damages.
O
McLEOD
Wiener Roast Party Held
By CAROLINE L. HARDING
McLeold A wiener roast
was held at the Lennis Smith
home Saturday evening, June
28
Present were Miss Jackie
and Joey Hume, Mrs. Hack
ney and daughter, Betty, and
son, Danny, from Eugene, Mr.
and Mrs. E, Wilde and daugh
ter, Delo, and son Duke, and
the host, Larry Smith,
Recent dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Nate Edwards
at their summer cottage on
Big Butte creek were Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Jessel of Ashland
and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Har
ding.
Miss Martha Anstead of Ea
gle Point is the house guest of
Miss Joe Hume.
and
Mr,
House guests of Mr.
Mrs. Lennis Smith are
and Mrs. Norman Saint Ger
main and family from Grand
Ronde, Ore.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Clement
and daughter from Ontario,
Calif., are visiting the Lewis
Dussenberry family for a few
days.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack DeRosie
and family and Clifford Chap
man spent the Fourth of July
camping in eastern Oregon.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Scott and
daughters visited friends at
Crescent City over the Fourth
of July.
The Rev. Ernest Evers of
the Trial Community church
performed the ceremony Sat
urday night, July 5, uniting
his son, Earl, in marriage to
Miss Lorean Ward. The cere
mony was held at the church
Guests were Mr. and Mrs
Charles Ward, parents of the
bride, her sister, Mrs. Gladys
Gilson and daughter, Lynn,
from Seattle, Wash., and Mr
and Mrs. Berl Young of Spo
kane.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith
of Shady Cove, Mr. and Mrs
Vic Chapman and sons, Dale
and Dwayne, the Rev. and
Mrs. Bruce McHenry and
daughter, Joan, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Snyder and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Hixson add
daughter, Caroline, and their
house guest, Mike Allen of
Crescent City, Calif., all went
on a picnic on the Fourth of
July to Long Prarie at Hersh-
berger lookout.
Mrs. Wilbur Boyd and fam
ily from Pacific Grove, Calif.,
are house guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Dawson and family
Mrs. Boyd and Mrs. Dawson
are sisters.
Mr. and Mrs. Walt Rhomes
of Medford and Mr. and Mrs
Bud Chandler all went fishing
at Diamond lake over the
Fourth of July.
Boies Promoleg
To Highway Job
' Salem (UPI) Charles A.
(Chuck) Boice will be pro
moted from assistant manager
of the Traffic Safety Division
of the Motor Vehicle Deparf-,
ment to public relations of
ficer for the State Highway
Department, it was announced
today.
Gene Huntley, director of
personnel for the Highway De
partment, said Boice would
take over his new duties next
week.
Previously an information
representative for the Indus
trial Accident Commission,
Boice also is a sports writer
for the Salem Capital Journal.
Quivering Driver
Tells Flash Cause
Dallas, Tex. (UPI) A stu
pendous flash of light engulf
ed most of Dallas county
Tuesday night. Sheriff's dep
uties and police officers scur
ried about suburban Irving to
see if they could be of help
at the scene of what they
thought was a major explo
sion. t
The lawrden discovered' a
quivering, shocked dump
truck operator. The operator,
new on his job, said he had
been thinking of a way to get
rid of a large quantity of
waste magnesium and dump
ed it into a burning trash pit.
The highly inflammable
magnesium instantly ignited,
sending a brilliant white
glare high in the sky.
Sondia and Gene Ressler of
Redding, Calif., are visiting
their aunt and uncle, Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Ressler, of Union
Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Rags-
dale have returned from -Mich
igan, bringing Mrs. Ragsdale's
mohter back with them.
Mr. and Mrs. Steel of Los
Angeles are 'spending the
summer at their cabin on
Rogue river.
Mrs. Peg Anderton, who
has been ill in the Rogue Val
ley hospital is now at her
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Nate Edwards
of Van Nuys, Calif., have pur
chased all the creek front
age from their cottage on Big
Butte creek to the Netherland
bridge, including up to the
county road from the A. B
Clark property.
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Carlton
are camping at Patrick creek
in California for several
weeks with their friends, Mr.
and Mrs. Dewey Anderson of
San Jose, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Kayhille
and Joanne of St. Louis, Mo.,
are the house guests of Mrs.
Kayhille's brother and family
Mr. and-Mrs. Carl Scott.
At the Willis Hawkins home
are Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wat
son and family of Plainview,
Texas.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hoag
have gone to Utah to visit
relatives and bring back Ro-
bey, their son, who has been
visiting his grandfather there.
Mr. and Mrs. Denzier of
Roseburg were Sunday visi
tors of Mr. and Mrs. Reed
McKay.
The Prospect Lions auxili
ary held their monthly meet
ing at Beckies cafe at Union
Creek Wednesday evening,
July 9, with president Velma
Chapman presiding at the
business meeting.
A surprise visit was made
by Bob Sekerick, who is a
teacher of physiology at Po
mona college, Calif. Plans for
the coming annual jamboree
were discussed. There were 14
members present and one vis
itor. The next board meeting
will be July 30 at the home of
Mrs. Lowell Ash in Union
Creek.
Visiting at the Copeland
home are Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Summers, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jerald Crownover and son
from California.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Evers
and family from St. Paul,
Minn., are house guest of his
brother, the Rev. and Mrs
Ernest Evers.
Is That So?
By EUGNE BURNS
Ranger-Naturalist
Amman We were sitting
in the shade of a rock watch
ing some ants five or six feet
away.
There were only a few of
them in the clean-swept, saucer-like
depression, surround
ed by a carefully molded ring
of sand, and even they seemed
to feel the heat as they slowly
approached the hole marking
the entrance of their under
ground home.
As I wondered what they
found to live on in the desert,
an Englishman next to me
tossed down a few seeds he
had stripped from a nearby
bush. Almost immediately an
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Grieve
spent the week end of July 12
at Odell lake fishing.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Myklebye
held open house Sunday, July
13, honoring their gilden wed
ding anniversary. Their
daughter, Mrs. Jim Sawyer,
was hostess, with their grand
daughter, Sandra Sawyer,
serving at the punch bowl
Mrs. Allen Rogers poured for
about 75 friends who called
during the afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hume
and twin daughters spent Sun
day, July 13, fishing at Brook
ings with the Dussenberry
family.
Mr. Marion Train and fam
ily of Coquille, Ore., spent
the week end at the home of
their niece Mrs. Albert Estin
on Laurelhurst road.
Miss Ethel McHenry, R.N.,
from Philadelphia is the house
guest of her brother, the Rev.
Bruce McHenry and wife.
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Estin Saturday
evening, July 12, were Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Hansen.
Elk Creek Country Play
house is having a public dance
at their clubhouse Saturday
evening, July 19. Everyone is
welcome.
Holmes Protests
Bill Amendments
Salem (UPI) Gov. Rob
ert D. Holmes today protested
what he called "emasculating
amendments" to the Klamath
Indian timberland bill passed
unanimously by the U. S. Sen
ate in May.
In a strongly worded tele
gram to House Speaker Sam
Rayburn and Congressman
Clair Engle. chairman of the
House Committee on Interior
and Insular Affairs, Gov
Holmes asked that the House
sub-committee return the bill
to its original form.
The governor said proposed
amendments would result in
great resource being dis
posed of on a "fire-sale" basis
ant 'appeared and examined
the seeds. Seconds later more
ants swarmed out of the hole,
grabbed . the seeds and car
ried them underground. In
three or four minutes the
saucer was bare again.
The ants were . such notor
ious grain hoarders, my com
panion said, that the Talmud
had laid down rules on how
ant grain hoards should be
divided by men. If any ant
granary was found in a corn
field it belonged to the owner
of the land. But if the dis
covery was made after the
reapers had passed, then the
owner got only the lower
part of the heap. The upper
part had to be given to the
poor.
What the ants do with the
grain is to store it in special
chambers until it is complete
ly dry. That done, theyj cut
the grains up, converting the
stuff into a kind of paste by
the addition of saliva. That,
in turn, is dried until it be
comes a dark, crumbly bread
of pinhead size or a little
larger. ,
Ant Calls for Help
As we sat there, I inadver
tently disturbed part of the
sand ring with my foot. Sec
onds later an ant appeared,
appraised the situation and
called for help. A stream of
workers joined him and set
about the task of restoration.
Many of, them seemed to
back into the job, digging rap
idly with their front legs and
throwing the sand- behind,
puppy-fashion. Others lowered
their spade-shaped heads into
the sand and walked back
wards, pulling the grains with
them toward the rim from
which" they had been removed.
Yet other ants, apparently
confronted with larger grains,
scooped them up in their man
dibles and dumped them in
the breach.
In less than a quarter of an
hour the job was finished and
the ants were gone.
(Released by McClure News
paper Syndicate)
Free By special arrange
ment with the editors of the
Encyclopedia Americana, my
panel of judges will award
each week to the reader who
sends me the best true-life
nature adventure, the best na
ture observation, or the best
question on nature and wild
life, a complete 30-volume set
of this v world-famous refer
ence work in a handsome Seal
craft binding. Each week
new submissions will be con
sidered. Sorry, I simply can't
answer your many friendly
letters. Please address your
letter to: Is That So! co Med
ford Mail Tribune, Box 1069,
San Francisco, Calif.
Parade Highlights
Sports Car Rally
In Valley Sunday
A "poor man's Concour's
d'elegance and a parade of
sports cars through Medford
and on the Southern Oregon
Timing association's drag
strip at Camp White high
lighted the two-day Cal-Ore
rally of sports car clubs of
northern California and south
em Oregon last week end.
The Alps Foreign Car club,
Redding, Calif., Cresecnt City
Car club, Redwoods Sports
car club of Eureka, Calif., the
MacKenzie Auto club of Eu
gene and the Siskiyou Sports
Car club, Medford, partici
pated in the event.
The Siskiyou club was host
to visiting organizations at a
dinner Saturday night at the
Rogue Valley Country club.
About 90 persons attended the
dinner, at which Paul Selby,
member of the local club,
welcomed visitors. ,
Chairman of Rally
Dr. Paul C. Roberts, Eu
reka, Calif., and chairman of
the rally, spoke.
During the Concour's, 20
minutes was allowed each
driver to clean his car." The
Concour's was held at Haw
thorne park Sunday morning.
Judges were O. A. Martolin,
Medford; Floyd Cox, Redding;
Bud Rader, Eugene; and Bar
ry Garell, Eureka. Cars are
judged for cleanliness after
the 20 minutes.
Among the 45 cars entered
in the rally were an Austin
Healy, Triumph, Volkswagen,
M. G. Porsche, Ghia, Jupiter,
Morgan, Thunderbird, Volvo,
Sunbeam Rapier, D. K. W.,
Corvette, Alpah, Citroen, Jag
uar, Fiat and Willys Jeepster.
Area residents interested in
joining the Siskiyou Sports
Car club of Medford may call
Bob Forbes, SPring 2-9150 or
Mrsi Martolin, SPring 2-7584.
McElroy Cuts Short 1
Visit at Eniwetok
Honolulu (UPI) Defense
Secretary Neil McElroy cut
short a visit to the U.S. nu
clear proving grounds at Eni
wetok to fly back to Washing
ton today, presumably for
urgent conferences on the
Mideast crisis. '
He was scheduled to land
in Washington early Wednesday.
Sack Dress Makes For Safer Driving
Charlotte, N. C (UPI) At
least one group " favors the
sack dress.
' "We like the sack," said
Thomas B. Watkins, president
of the North Carolina State
Motor club. "It's what we
need for , safer summertime
driving."
Watkins said that ladies
wearing shorts, especially
short shorts, were a traffic
hazard because the shorts dis
tract the attention of drivers.
Last summer, he said, the club
reported the traffic accident
rate was going up alarmingly
because shorts were getting
shorter.
The club even issued a re
quest to girls to wear shorts
only in their backyards, away
from the view of motorists.
"Now," Watkins said,
"Thanks to the clothes de
signers, the trend is to the
other extreme, perhaps in the
WE ARE MHKWOvT1,
KEEP OREGONiyL
GREEN Ejjl
interest of highway safety. 1
"The problem is, so to
speak, in the bag this sum
mer.
o O
f Vifftij, AhciSt
&Htlf Test Plan
Konolulu. (UPI) Ship
ping and jircraft traveling
nir Johnston island, 700
miles southwest of Honolulu,
were warned away from the
area for a radius of 75 miles
Tuesday night in preparation
for a nuclear test.
The warning said the area
would be dangerous to all
traffic from the surface to an
unlimited altitude for an
hour;
We Want To
WINNERS
of Grand Opening Prizes
1. John Holtz
2. Dorothy Young
3.. Mrs. Jessie Metzger
4. Roy Hopkins
5. Betty Rose
6. Mrs. Lewis Kiiborn
(7
fine people of the valley
for helping make the
Grand UDenina of our
new "BUILDITORIUM" a big success. It. was wonderful meeting
so many of you new friends and gratifying t se co magy old
friends come in during the past few Aayc. We lage fe you
all again very soon . . . thanks again vevf tftweth.
Also, be sure to save the key chain given to you during the opening. We will have j drawing frmn the numbers
on the chains once a month for a voluable prize . . and if you ever lose your key, we have jt y armanant record
of the number whereby you may recover them. Be sure to watch our bulletin board enca month to se if your
number appears. .
msiaag Biaagmua tmx swum (6131
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5- Foot- $4.15
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THERE ARE MANY OTHER OFTEN-NEEDED
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12,000 Sq. Ft. of Warehouse and Displays UNDER
Truman Says Ike
Had 'No Other Choke
Independence, Mo. (UPI)
"President Eisenhower had
no other choice" but to send
U.S. Marines to the Middle
East, former President Harry
S. Truman said Tuesday.
Truman who once called
out American troops to inter
vene against Communism ag
gression in Korea, said "The
peace of the world is at stake"
in the Iraqi and Lebanese
countryside. He reserved any
further statement.
Jo Nagging
Backache Means a
Sood Night's Sleep
KamruiE? backache, fie&ffach- nr mnsi-ir.
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overexertion, emotional upsets or day
to day stress and strain. And folks who
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If you are miserable and worn out be.
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Lot us shew you how
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No down payment on approved credit
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SPECIALISTS IN HOMEWARES!
245 S. Central at 10th Plenty of Free Parking
Any resident living within 150 miles of Medford, Ore
gon, can and should be a subscriber to Mercy Flights. At
$4 a year per family, it is the only way that a wage
earner can afford air ambulance service for his family.
Accidents don't just happen to "someone else." The most
common comment by Mercy Flights patients is: "1 never
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If the time ever arises when your family is saying this.
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MERCY FLIGHTS, INC
Box 522
. Medford, Oregon
Published as a public service by the Medford Mail Tribune