Emperor Penguin
Male Has Big Role
In-Hatching Eggs
By DELOS SMITH
UPI Science Editor
New York-(UPI)-Of all fe
males, the female of the em
peror Penguin probably has
IC"" the softest
time of it. She
has reduced
the inconveni
ences growing
out of the fe
male share of
; perpetuating a
race to the
barest mini-
I mum.
DcIm smith she lays an
egg only one egg, mind
probably just once a year,
then goes off with the other
girls and stays away until the
male has hatched the egg in a
lonely vigil of nine weeks.
During those nine weeks,
the matrons are gadding about
from one eating place to an
other, but the males are fast
ing because once you start in
cubating an egg, you keep
right on sitting on it you
can't let it get chilled
Gather in Group
Science's limited knowledge
of the way of life of emperor
penguins has been filled out
with these and other details
by Richard L. Willing, mem
ber of the Australian scien
tific research mission in the
Antarctic.
Penguins are seized with
the desire for penguin perpe
tuation all at once, and in the
very depth of the Antarctic
winter. This, Willing said, is
peculiar." The females ga
ther round, usually on the flat
sea ice, and each produces
one egg. Then they depart and
work-free
starching
Just add water I
easy, beautiful
. ironing, tool
penetrates fabrics evenly
r
get QUICK ELASTIC LIQUID
m
r
Selection
s
Pi
AVVJfckS
oj
Probably not just offhand. But when
you know what to look for it's easy. Look
for the tuna meat with a clear, clean, light
color. This comes from fresh, prime qual
ity tuna. Look for firm, special-cut chunks,
always just right and ready for casseroles,
salads or sandwiches. These neat chunks
come from packing fresh prime tuna with
great care. There you are. You've already
picked the Bumble Bee
chunk style tuna. It's
p. and e. in the nirtiirPL
OOQ Now you're
for nine weeks. Willing said,
not a female is seen anywhere
even close to this rookery.
Work Together
Just as the babies are break
ing through the shells, the
ladies suddenly return. After
nine weeks of fasting, the
males are quite lean and very
hungry and they're permitted
to go off and build themselves
up with sustained eating.
Meanwhile, the females feed
the offspring. As the babes
grow and develop enormous
appetites, the males return,
pitch in and lighten the fe
males' burden, It is work
cheerfully done by both, in a
bustling atmosphere. Willing
estimated that in one rookery
there were 12.000 adult pen
guins and 8,509 chicks.
His observations confirmed
and elaborated those of earl
ier Antarctic scientists who
believed penguins have con
tinuous access to the sea and
its supply of oeneuin food,
fish, because the fides keep
making cracks in the surface
ice.
Swim Under Ice
lne rookeries are on or
near the coast. Willine fig
ured the "complete absence"
of females while the males
were hatching the eegs meant
the girls had gone far out to
sea where the eating would
be best, "possibly to the pack
ice 50 or 100 miles away."
They didnt' walk there, in
his opinion. He couldn't prove
it since he hadn't observed it,
but he thought it "almost cer
tain" they swam there under
the ice. Not 50 to 100 miles
under solid ice, but from one
hole in the ice to another hole.
Penguins are clumsy walk
ers, as anyone knows who
has ever seen one. Since they
are flightless birds, swim
ming is their only other way
of getting around. Willing
went all the way in suggest
ing they were tremendous
swimmers, covering "large
distances in a relatively short
period."
Hatfield Regrets
Neuberger Illness
Salem -UPD- Secretary of
State Mark Hatfield, Republi
can candidate for governor,
expressed his regrets today
at the illness of U. S. Sen.
Richard Neuberger.
"I join with all Oregonians
in the earnest hope and
prayer that Sen. Neuberger
will experience a prompt re
covery," Hatfield said.
Neuberger is recovering
from an operation for remov
al of a genital tumor, which
was diagnosed as malignant.
v
of chunk style Light Meat
Next time you buy chunk style Light
Meat Tuna it will be Bumble fiee Brand.
Won't it? .. An Oregon Product
getting to
Columbia River
MARKING NEW PHASE of fabulous story of Dionne quintuplets is word that two of
survivors are expecting. Cecile, whose baby is scheduled for September, is caressed by
husband, Philippe Langlois (left), 27. Annette (right), whose first child is scheduled for
October, is kissed by husband, Germain Allard, 25. Both families are living in Montreal.
Brokerage House Finds Only
Half Dozen Stocks at $1,000
v By ELMER C. WALZER
UPI Financial Editor
New York-UPD-So you want
to buy some $2 stocks and
some $1,000 stocks?
Well' sir, that's just where
the shortages
are. The big
ones have
been split up.
The little ones
have been bid
up.
The broker
age house of
Merrill Lynch,
F e n n e r &
Rimer Walzer smiui u i u
some digging and found there
are only a half dozen issues
selling at more than $1,000.
Back in early 1945 the firm
in its publication "Investor's
Reader" managed to dig up
16 of those thounsandaires.
Today's six include the Los
Angeles Turf Club at $70,000
Christiana Securities, $13,000
Superior Oil of California
(only big board giant) at $1
820; Kansas Citf Life Insur
ance, $1,425; and Upjohn Co
at $1,300.
The other ten have been
hacked down by stock splits
The big split was San Fran
cisco Bank which in 1945 be
fore the split sold-at $12,000
a share. It was split 500-for-l
in January of 1945 and in the
following December it de
clared a 100 per cent stock
dividend.
Subsequently the name of
the San Francisco Bank was
changed to First v Western
Bank & "Trust." The $12,000
share of 1945 is now 1,000
shares worth $37,000.
Ups and Downs
While the stock split route
has been taken by most of
the $1,000 issues, the little
ones have been rising on in
creasing demand.'
. Last week Standard &
Poor's index of low-priced
Tuna
Packers Assn., Inc., Astoria. Ore.
0
stocks set anew high at 46.93,
up 1.6 per, cent from the prev
ious week. The year's low was
34.55 1941-43 equals 10.
Standard this week is de-
County Team Takes
Third at State Fair
Jackson county 4-H teams
placed t'.iird in forestry iden
tification and fourth in crops
identification and judging at
the State Fair in Salem re
cently. Allison and Clifford Pink
ham and Bill Anhorn, all of
Central Point, were the coun
ty representatives in the for
estry identification contest
and Russell and Truman El
more, Applegate, and Philip
Krouse. Grants Pass, repre
sented the county in crops
judging and identification.
Thirty specimens of forest
trees and shrubs were to be
identified in the one contest
and 30 crop and weed plants
and 10 crop seeds were to be
identified in the other con
test. .
Linn county's team took
first in the forestry identifica
tion and 4-H club members
from Clackamas county took
top honors in the crops divi-j
sion.
Teams from 12 counties en
tered the crops judging event
and 14 counties were repre
sented in the forestry identi
fication contest. 7
Local Youth Hurt
When Hit by Car
A 9-year-old Medford youth,
Michael Leone Hall; 124 Lin
coln st., was injured Tuesday
when struck by an unidenti
fied driver, according to city
police. The accident report
showed that Michael was
walking east on Sixth st. and
as he crossed Holly st. a car
going north ran into him.
The boy suffered a bruised
left ankle and hip, according
to police reports.
A second accident reported
to police involved a car driven
by Roy Ernest Gibson, 69
Arnold lane, and a parked
vehicle, registered to William
J. Davenport, 405 North Cen
tral ave.
Gibson reported: tnat ne
was traveling south on North
Central ave. when his car was
forced into the parked car be
longing to Davenport by an
unidentified third vehicle. No
injuries resulted, but the Gib
son vehicle was damaged in
the front end and the Daven
port car received a damaged
rear bumper, police said. ,
SLANTING toward skies,
this new Hercules missile is
unveiled for first time. It is
capable of destroying an
entire formation of planes.
Army reports of missile.
THE
DANMOORE
HOTEL
1217 SWMorrison St.
PORTLAND, OREGON (
All transient guests. All those wha
come, return. Rates not. high, not
low. Free garage, TV's and radios.
Reputation fop cleanliness.
Reservations' by long distance
phone refunded en request
upon arrival
voting a feature article in its
"Outlook" to "Opportunities
in Low-priced Stocks."
A low price tag, Standard
& Poor's says, does not neces
sarily connote inferior invest
ment charteristics.
"As a rule," the article in
the "Outlook" notes, "low
priced stocks show greater
percentage gains in a rising
market than high - priced
shares. Another important ad
vantage is that diversification
is made possible at low cost."
Barron's recently listed a
group of low-priced stocks
which showed gains running
to more than 400 per cent
from their reaction lows to
1958 highs.
Trade Dominated
Low-priced ' shares have
been dominating the trading
recently. In the week ended
Aug. 1, the average price of
the 20 most active stocks was
$51.38 a share. Two weeks
later average was down to
$27.24. It was $28.81 last
week.
Barron's recently listed sev
eral reasons for demand for
low-priced shares:
For years the group has
lagged behind the market. ,
It has taken 12 years for
low-priced stocks to equal
their 1946 high and presum
ably this long interval has
eliminated the more impatient
owners and the stocks have
passed gradually into strong
hands.
Low-priced issues occa
sionally attract a following
simply because they are
cheap. Today would appear to
be one of those times.
A plethora of investment
funds, fear of inflation, and
a mass psychology of "get
rich quick" apparently are
fueling the current drive for
cheap stocks.
Barron's warns' however,
that today's bull market in
cheap stocks may be nothing
more than an abnormally
strong rally in an over-all
bear market.
"If so," it adds, "it will be
followed by a decline to new
lows."
Russia now has more than
240,800 women doctors.
TABLE ROCK ROAD AT
GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS
U.S. No. 2 IDAHO
POTATOES
CELLO PACK
CARROTS
t - -
LARGE CRISP GREEN
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It...... . - . ....... ...
Filler Paper 5,.,1.
12 PACK REGULAR 49c
PENCILS
REGULAR 75c GENUINE
CRAYOLAS
REGULAR $1.00 SCRIPTO
BALL PENS 2 ,.. 1.
Store Hours 8:00 a.m. - 8:30 p.m.
EVERY DAY .
London's
Scene of Negro Race
London-flJPD-A haze of foe
hangs around yellow street
lamps and the lights shine
dimly on the peeling yellow
walls of the tenements in Lon
don's Notting Hill district.
White and Negro residents
cluster in front of the build
ings on the stairs leading up
the pavement, looking nerv
ously down the street for new
outbreaks of trouble.
This is Notting Hill, a Har
lem-type area where recent
race riots have evoked de
mands for a legalized color
bar in Britain. Tuesday night
Notting Hill was quiet but
tense under the eyes of 1,000
police.
Race Riots Are New '
Race riots are a new phe
nomenon in Britain which
looks down its nose at the in
tegration issue in the United
States
The British riots started in
Nottingham, a war-shattered
city 100 miles north of Lon
don which is noted for its
pretty and sporty girls,
Holmes Studies '
Tax Conference
Salem -(DPI) A plan to
schedule state tax confer
ences and hearings in various
parts of Oregon is under
study, Gov. Robert D. Holmes
said today.
The governor said he had
written Tax Commission
Chairman Carl Chambers not
ing that one of the recurring
complaints about administra
tion of tax laws was that con
ferences on income tax mat
ters were held only in Salem
or in Portland. '
Chambers said that a pilot
plan was now in the mill to
determine if more widespread
hearings were feasible.
The governor suggested
that eastern and southern
Oregon should be represent
ed. Two Burglaries Are
Reported to Police
Two burglaries were re
ported to city police Tuesday
at the same address. One in
volved the loss of $70 and the
other the loss of a radio val
ued at $10.
Officers said John Francis
Simcoe notified them that
about $70 in dimes and a sil
ver dollar, were taken from
his apartment. It is believed
that entry was gained through
a previously broken window,
they reported.
The radio was taken some
time Monday night, according
to owner Elmer E. Kyle", of
aDartment 3. Officers said
that the rear door of the apart
ment was left open and the
thief probably used the door.
Both cases are being inves
tigated.
The aardvaark, an anteater,
is from four to six feet long.
4 CORNERS PHONE
2
Lbs.
10
Lbs.
3
Pkgs.
2
stalks
REG. 25c
3.1.
2 -1
Notting Hill Area
As far as anybody can see
after an evening in the trouble
center, the provocations come
from both sides.
The. rioters seem to see
themselves as heroes in a
cheap gangster movie. Their
entertainment costs nothing.
Tuesday night was quiet,
in sharp contrast to the win
dow smashing of the previous
three nights vin the Notting
Hill area around Blenheim
Crescent.
It began to look like a dull
ft
Sorry, T
"That Dr. Ross' sure
does taste good ! . .
and a fellow simply
can't wait! The meat,
liver, chicken and vegetable-beef
flavors
realty hit'the spot!"
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MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Ore.,
"9
night. The pubs closed, and
the streets emptied.
Trouble Flares
But soon troublemaking
youths drove up in cars from
other parts of London. A
truck unloaded six armed
with clubs. A boy not more
than 15 stood in the road in
a leather jacket, flaunting his
club.
Negroes emerged from the
tenements. Many live six to a
room. With them were white
girls wearing bright clothes,
just couldn't wait!"
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Thursday, September 4, 193S SA
tight-fitting sweaters and dyed
Suriiipnlv a hnttl of flam-
rnarivunv from n hirlrion allv:
way and crashed in the middle
of the Negro group.
The flames roared up the'
paintwork of a liquor store
next door to the club. Th
Negroes scattered and four
police cars roared up to the'
scene.
By this time, the Negroes
were back on the corner by'
the Blues Club. They stood
there jeering until the police
cars returned.
Police cars hurried them
along. The mob surged to
another corner. Police repeat
ed the process. . ;
or Half
lb.
4
dot. U
lb.
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0
3