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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1959)
O MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Friday, Oct. 2, 1959 MEDFORDTp)UXS o Everyone us Southern Orecaa Reada The Mall Tribuna - Published Diil except Saturday by MJJJFOrtD PRINTING CO ; 33 North ffa St Ph SP 2-6141 ROBERT W RUHL Editor . HERB GRE'V Advertising Manager ' GERALD LATHAM Business Mgi ERIC W 1LLN JR. Managing H.ditoi EARL, a ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHTPMAM Teleg Editor RICHARD JlgWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STARlHEB Women's Editof DALE ER1CKSPN Circulation MgT An Indeoendent Newspaper Entered i semnd class matter at Medfor Oreeon under Act of March 3 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mai '-. in Advance Copy 10c. Dail- and Sunday 1 year $15 00 Dail.J and Sunday 6 mos. BJDL DaiW ace1 Sunday 3 mos 4-2 Sunday Only One year S4.30 By Carrier1 In Advance Medford Ashland Central Point Eagl Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove Rogu Riv er Talent and on motor roaUa Daily and Sunday 1 year 918 00 Daily and SunOay 1 mo 1-54 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cast- in Advance Official Paper of City f Medfor Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire O MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CC- INC Of fices m New York, Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At lan Vancouver B C NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORI At Flight 'o Time Bedford and Jackson County History from the file of Th Mail Tribune 1Q,. 20,; 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO fP.T 2. 1949 fSundav) i John'PIetsch will talr of fice tomorrow as president of H h e Medf or d Toastmasters Club. Mayor Diamond Flynn and other Medford officials attend the League of Oregon Cities convention in Portland. 20 YEARS AGO ww f. -w- I- 1 1 i Crater Lake attendance forr the summer season has set a I ' new record, wth a toal of 225,101 visitors. ": From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The first faint signs of winter are appearing in the press, with reports thieves have started stealing potatoes - after &ey have been dug." 3 YEARS AGO Ocf. 2. 1929 (Wednesday) A Teamsters strike fti Je York threatens Bgfdjord pear shipments. East Medford residents ask gimination of the Bear ere4k bridge bottleneck. - ! 40 YEARS Oct. 25)1319 ffijuMdayJ Qater Lake loege cl6e for the seasoS; while the first frost hits the Rogfle vllgy. De Riff orchard cornice ?ears Sfi1 for a recfM a box in Nsv Yorg. YEARS AGO ct. 2. 1909 (Saturday) ' Rogsevalley fruilgien dis cuss fair sprays A group o( Medfordites buy the First Trust and Sav- - - . trl. 4ii r.K. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct i superior; sevsjo or eKjht is excellent; fhQ ee six is good. 1. What drug, used in ma laria, is obtained from the dried bark of a South Ameri can evergreen tree? 2. Do most rivers in North America flow northward, or southward? 3. How did the opera, film and radio star Grace Moore lose her life? 4. How long did President Dwight D. Eisenhower serve in the Army? 5. After sundown, will a desert cool off more quickly than a forest? 6. Was Omar Khayyam an Oriental poet of China, Iran, or India? 7. Do seals bray, bleat, bark, or honk? ; 8. As you look at it, does the eagle's head on a quarter- dollar look to the left or the right? 9. What bird can kick hard enough to kill a man? 10. Do you connect the name duPont, Curie, or Nobel with the discovery of dyna mite? 1. Quinine. 2. Southward. 3. In an airplane crash. 4. " Thirty-seven years. 5. Yes. 6. Iran. 7. Bark. 8. Left. 9. Os trict. 10. Nobel POLITICAL DOG-FIGHT London -4DPD- Liberal Party candidate Oliver Smedly re ported 'today that his wifs while helping him campaign was bitten in the hand when she tried to stop a fight be tween her bulldog and a "dog - r p AH4 nor. suasion. """ " Red Newsmen 'Scramble9 Critics of U.S.-Russian exchanges might well harken to the report of a change in attitude by Russian newspapermen. Thomas Whitney, long an AP correspondent in Moscow, writes in the Washington Post that Soviet newsmen are adopting U.S. methods of tenacious reporting, "scrambling just like every one else ... to report the news as fast as they can get it." They still must follow the "party line" in their stories and the "facts" must agree with whatever has been decided upon by the propaganda lead ers. They have a new sense of competition, how ever, within the limits prescribed by the party. - WHITNEY sees this as the result of their eon tact .with U.S. newspapermen. Presumably, the Nixon tour gave them a clearcut idea of the determination shown by great numbers of U.S. reporters? This new approach will lead Soviet reporters to ask deeper , questions, seek the real answers. It will put them on the scent of freedom, o Those who would have us keep completely aloof from the Russians no cultural exchange, no trading f political visits should note this "conversion." With the Russians and the Ameri cans each observing the other's methods, it is the Russians who are changing. J'his is but one piece of evidence that a free society has nothing to fear in exchanging ideas with an imprisoned society.Oregon Statesman, Salem. MI Probably Happen It won't be long now.' A party of hunters will come down off the mountain. It'll be a grim group, far different from the happy, eager men who started out, t ine Doqy ineyn oe grim. One in the party will walk wrjodenly, eyes not seeing the trail, thoughts not on the hunting trip. He made the body. .. . He'll be remembering, like one remembers nightmares, the start from camp that morning. The higli excitement of first daylight on opening day. The deer sign on the moist ground. The clatter of a rock down the slope, the rustle of. bushes and the brief glimpse of a form slipping through the trees. ) . LIIS'LL remember bringing the gun to his shoul der. the shot that broke the earlv morninp- stillness. He'll remember spot. And he'll remember, every aching day of his remaining life, the lifeless body of his hunt ing companion sprawled on the ground. Its had been a good shot. If only it had been e aeer. It seems pretty certain that' all this will hap pen sometime soon. It usually does. There's little reason to expect that the worp occur again this opens Saturday. Albany The "Black" Sox The Chicago White always faithful fans have something extra going for $em in the World Series. They want to prove there s not a speck of black in those sox. They want to blot out a memory that has rankled for 40 years, since the last Chicago White Sox ever to win the American League pennant ent on to dump the Series. Or, more precisely, since the scandal, long bruited about in baseball's inner circles, was uncovered by a Philadelphia baseball writet in September, 1920, and a tearful lad tugged at the arm of the great Shoeless' Joe Jaakson and begged, "Say it ain't so, Joe." But Joe couldn't say it wasn't so, arid neither could the other seven White Sox players who besmirched baseball's brightest moment and in credibly fixed the World Series. THE fixed players were never paid what was premised them. Eight were indicted, along with ten fixers, but despite four confessions which miraculously "disappeared" all were acquitted. ' But baseball got a new czar out of the scandal, Commissioner Kennesaw Mountain Landis, who banished the eight Black Sox from baseball for life. , For fans, the lasting irony was not -in Ed Cicotte's plaint that he "done it for the wife and kiddies," but in the fact that pitiable Shoeless Joe Jackson was such a natural hitter that he led both teams in the 1919 series with a .375 average even when trying to strike out. &R.R. Hinfz Takes Over 41st Division Salem-(UPD-Brig. Gen. Al fred - E. Hmtz f Portland Thursday became command er of the Northwest's 41st In fantry Division. Gen. Hinta, who will be elevated to major0 general, succeeded Maj. Gen. George S. Cook of Seattle in cere monies here. Tha division is known as the "Rainbow" division. . Hintz is adjutant general of Oregon and the first man to hold both positions since Maj. Gen. George A. White, hrho died in 1941 - - pacKing win maKe tnem running eagerly to the same type of murder year after deer season Democrat-Herald. Sox - - and the team's not- BENSON VISITS FARM Moscow-dlPB-U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Ben son visited the "Gork-Two" state farm on the outskirts of Moscow Thursday and "liked particularly tht fa mous Kvadrat' trotter which has sired 420 cots, Tass news agency reported. The agency said Benson and his guide, Soviet Minister of Agricul ture Vladimir Matske.vitch, were guests at lunch of the farm management. VIRUS HITS NIXON -- Washrngton-fflPJ-Vice Fxesi dent Ri c h a r d- M. Nixon planned to return t his of fice today after a bout with a mild virus infection. Nixpn cancelled aU appointments Thursday and stayed noma. Dennis the Menace ! I'll I I & tt'5 TUB SAMBAS CHBCKB&5... .ONLY SlOWS? oiiimunioations 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 tc adit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation.. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the esntrarv is often the casa. Verses Versus To the Editor: Mr. Editor, I'm glad you're there Sitting in that M.T. chair. For a while I ha4 begun to wonder If Mrs. Gamin ill bad plowed you under. Of yeur comments Z was proud, Felt like shouting ss out loud Too bad some don't have the facts Before they use the chopping ' axe. Of discontented readers, there're a few, Of contented ones, though, there's a slew. So if a few pick you apart, Remember that most will take your part. Mrs. Delbert Ca&ey, Route 1, Box 354, Central Point, Ore. Transportation To the Editor: After I mad my first million, nothing much happened, I just start ed on my second million, then my third. I made part of my first million in Julesburg, Colo. Part of it was made in and around the rich min ing district of Tellurite, Colo., but the largest pert it was made in the Rogue Kiver val ley. My second and third mil lion were made much easier and faster than my first, but that -is the way with most millions, they say. With the kind of millions I have it is decidedly so. I can't spend my millions, I can't give them away, I can't take them with me and the Government can't tax them, at least they haven't found a way to do it yet. My millions are miles, not dollars. I have always been inter ested in transportation, since the first time I slid down the barn roof on the seat of my pants. At a very early age, I found there are four ways to get from the top of the barn to the strawstack. You can slide down on the seat of your pants, a sled was a little faster, a bicycle was much faster, but rolling down th.e barn roof in a barrel is out of this world. I do not recommend a barrel, unless you got a Square barrel or a very short barn. When I first came to Ore gon, I started in high school and business at about the same time. Why not? We had a cow, a wheelbarrow, some empty five pound lard buck ets, a small cider press and an old ice-box. I wux gettin' along pretty good in my biz ness of delivering newspap ers, milk, apple cider and raspberries, when a friend came up to our house in a one cylinder Brush automo bile and wanted to swap his car for my wheelbarrow. He needed something with handles on it for mixing and hauling concrete. After con siderable dickering, he gave me three gallons of gasoline and I gave him a' bucket of sour milk. It wasn't long be fore I found out I had been gypped. Everett Ackhn, - Ashland, Or. A Home To the Editor: , Although Webster doesn't define it, this way, my interpretation of the word "Home" is fully ex pressed in a little tableau of a typical country home, not so far from Medford in the lush country side, a place I happen to know weU. A nice little cottage, set amone the oak trees, sur rounded b ymany varieties of old fashioned flowers. The blue flowered morning glory vines covering the rear build ings, a neat little white feneed garden, little red bird houses, and a white bird bath, expressing a love for the song birds-so prevalent here. Neat, white painted mail box posts along a well-graveled country road. Thanks to our good county engineers. Inside this little farm cot tage, the sweet spicy smells of fruit being canned, and an old fashioned wood burning stove, along with a very en ticing odor of homemade bread for the oven. Piles of white muslin cur tains being ironed, and the resulting elean odors from freshly laundered linens. There are no indications of wealth here, "money-wise that is. nut inside, the singing Voice f a happy, contented, busy mother, fills the air. Where else can you pur chase such beauty, and peace ful happiness than in Amer ica, more especially in the Rogue valley? - , Mr. Khrushchev missed the very finest part of America in not visiting such places, where we truly found a 'home." Mary A. Williams, . 857 Orr dr., Central Point, Ore. Widow-Makers To the Editor: Memories re fuse to stay just that in this crummy (pardon, the word is used as a noun) editorializing of Monday's M-T. For many years it was my chore to be armed with a sample copy of tne old logging-sawmill Tim berman journal to help the ever hungry circulation de partment and with note-book and camera swune to mv shoulder for special picture demands of the editorial room, to ride said crummy in the gray light of morning, or often before its coming, to the landing where it was parked for the day as refuge in stormy weather for the chaser-on-the-landing, donkey- maniacs', High cumber, rig ging slinger and that tophand, me high-loader, with the bull- of-the-woods sometimes there when the whistle sounded the noon lunch call. With the crummy being a poor resi dence for mice, to pick up the slack, it became just that. The landing was the meet ing place for log-hauling trucks, and workers, and the limbed and bucked logs, smashing their way in on the high-lead line or sailed over canyons on the singing sky line as it tightened down through the landing spar-tree bull-block to the donkey- drum, the other end of the steel-line having a tail-hold on another spar-tree on a mountain-top up to a half mile away.' When terrific power is ap plied to heavy resistant ma terials, it becomes a grim business, making troubles for the bull-of-the-woods, like: But the wail of the five caU He dreads .the most When the stretcher is hurried away . ; Where a still form sleeps, And a new widow weeps As the works are closed for. the day. It's a grim silent crew that takes the ' old battered crummy, generally' a . light company truck with open end ed covered back with plank benches along each side, with one taking his last rids in it. When scarce and high priced logs step up high-balling, this writer has seen mothers and wives with hasty apron raised to cover and wipe away wot- Washington Report By William S. White By WILLIAM S. WHITE j Washington - The postpone ment to next spring of Presi dent Eisenhower's journey to Moscow has perhaps defer red the climat ic moment in cold war ne gotiations. Un questiona 1 y, however, it has much has tened the com ing crisis in the domestic cool war between Vice-President Richard M. Nixon and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York for the 1960 Re publican Presidential nomina tion. The President's decision to delay from this, fall to next year his return visit to Nikita Khrushchev is a spectacular break for Mr. Nixon's political ambitions. This is the univer sal judgment of the top poli ticians here - in both parties. For the first opportunity for a Nixon - Rockefeller show down is the Presidenial pri mary to be held next March 8 in New Hampshire. A signifi cant chapter in the domestic political" story thus wUl have been told before Mr, Eisen hower sets foot in his plane probably in May of 1960 - on the way to the Kremlin ren dezvous. WHATEVER else may hap- pen one fact is unchange able: the critical New Hamp shire primary will have been run off while the "peace" is sue absolutely dominates the American political scene. If by that time there is still an international thaw Mr. Rocke feUer will be competing here at home against a man who helped originate that thaw, Mr. Nixon. In that event this much will be certain: almost every regu lar Republican in the United States, from the highest fig ures in the administration down to the county court houses, will be on one single GOP team, the Eisenhower Nixon "peace" team. This would leave Governor Rocke feller very- much! the lone some outsider. True, if, on the other hand, the early thaw has turned to frost by March of 1960 the Vice-President himself will be on the outside looking in for the nomination. This, how ever, in such international cir cumstances would have been the case anyhow, and even if the Eisenhower trip had been carried out this fall as origin ally planned. ' And it is eg- tremely unlikely that eve if the Russians are going to turn ugly again they would do so in the least way before the President's visit. MR. NIXON was aware, even before his own ice- breaking trip to Russia which opened the way for Eisenhow er-Khrushchev exchanges, that he was getting himself into a position of great danger as well as great promise. He knew that if the outcome of it aU was very bad, instead of moderately, eood to good, ae was finished anyhow. So, the timing of the un folding, and fateful, dialogues between Mr. Eisenhower and Mr. Khrushchev is inescapably to Nixon's advantage. It is in escapably to Mr, Rockefeller's disadvantage. The substance and upshot of the dialogues, as distinguished from the timing, is, of course, something else again. If every thing had gone sour Mr. Rockefeller would look rela tively better than Mr. Nixon. But in that unhappy event no Republican would look very good for election in 1980 - whether named Rockefeller or Jones. No Republican Presi dential nominee in 1940 can avoid identification with these negotiations. Thus it is that a strong good fortune though often aided by bis own intuitive sense of good politics - still smilingly dogs the Nixon footsteps. It is such very good fortune in the present instance as to make premature last week end's otherwise sound speculations that Mr. Rockefeller was cer tainly going to contest in New Hampshire. - TJIS VISIT to the state was strictly the visit of a pros pective candidate, right enough, notwithstanding his amiable refusal to say yea or nay. But what has happened in connection with the Presi dent's Moscow plans cannot but have hit people very hard in the governor's mansion at Albany. . Nixon himself is now going to New Hampshire, just a week behind Rockefeller, to make a determined showing of ried tears as they said good bye to their providers, and to welcome them back home with heart-felt thanksgiving in the gathering dusk. So it is with all of us, in daily ac tivities, with lethal widow maker ever overhead, ready to faU and cut short our stay here On earth. F. J. Clifford, Route 2, Box 200F, . . Ceatrai Point, Ore. William. White Newsom Of Mass By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor Man-of-the-week: Chou En- IaL premier of Red China. The place: Peiping. The q u o t e: "W e advocates of peace" cele brate the suc cess of Soviet Premier Ni- kita Khru shchev's trip to the United States. It was the 10th anni versary of the t i S w ViM Kewsom Try and Stop Mo y BENNETT CERF- A DAINTY DANSEL who had been living too long on the Loft Bank in Paris returned home at last and cluttered up the house with a lot of ultra-modern furniture. Two weeks later she came down witin ' a severe case el cramps. "And it's a wonder it wasn't worse," reproved her fam? ily doctor. "For 12 nights straight now that fool girl has been sleeping on a book-o case that resembles a bed!" A new draftee was as signed to a bumptuous cap tain as his new filing clerk. Some hours after he re ported for the job the cap tain wanted some impor- tant papers and called for the recruit to bring them on the double. Five minutes later the cautain roared, "You dummy, where are those papers?" The rookie called back cheerfully, "Keep your shirt on. Cap. 3b far I haven't even located the filing cabinet" ' . C 1353, br Banett QtxC XfetrffaU4 fcr Ksig Features Syndicate. , -- In the ay'o News y RAMI As this is written, Hurri- cane Gracie is slashing across the Carolinas, and indications are that she will roar on into Virginia. - TORRENTIAL RAINS are preceding her as a vanguard precedes an in vading army. rpHAT brings np the subject -- of precipitation--which is timely, because this is the last day of the current stream year. In the stream year that is due to end in a few hours, total precipitation -at Klam ath Falls, where this is writ ten, stands at 1.0 inches. The corresponding figure for last year was 20.58 inches. That figure, of course, is for Klamath Falls. Precipitation figures vary from ptiint to point. But it must be general ly agreed that all over south ern Oregon and rar northern California this fees beeji a VERY dry year. We're aU hoping for heavy precipitation this winter. In the greeter peet ed'eu Stcte of Jefferson, water is- LIFE ITSELF. BUT : Up at Kelso, in the state of Washington, they're WOR RIED by the rainmakers-in this case, the. Pacific Pover and Light company, which wants -more water, running over .its dams in the Lewis river watershed ae that it canJ make more power to sell to its customers. In the hope of bringing this about, it is seed ing the clouds witti silver ni trate. ' Farmers up that way, how ever, are u.bj.l. riruj. iney are objecting vigorously They say the artificially sti mulated rainfall miapes the target at which it is specifi cally aimed and splashes over into areas where they raise bulbs, pstatoes, iruit, hay, tram, ete. all ot wnicn are DAMAGED by to much rem at the wrong time! The farmers say that if this business of tinkering with the clouds to make them let go with more rain goes on much longer they're going to GO TO LAW about it. Cowlitz ceunty commissioners are said to be considering the pas sage of stringent ordinances to regulate cloud seeding within Cowlitz county. THAT brings up something else. The Electrical World, which describes itself as "the elec- power in advance of 1960. Be ing Nixon, there will be no shy hesitations in this visita tion about being or not biing a candidate. And, again being Nixon, this second tourist to New Hamp shire will sttr up no unneces sary preconvention disputes on issues. "Dick," as a Nixon friend puts it with a grin, "is going up to dedicate a dam. But it is one of those old-fashioned dams built by the Army engi neers. It isn't one. of those new kind of dams where people, are arguing, long before a bucket of concrete is poured, about public versus private power. There isn't any power argument anywhere in tnis dam." (Copyright. 1959. by United Feature Syndicate Inc.j Sees Two Aspects iinist People's Republic of Red China and fathered in Peiping was the greatest array o Communist leadership under one roof since 1957 when the Soviet Union observed the 40th anniversary of the Rus sian Revolution. It was a conglomerate group. Khrushchev was there to report on his meeting with President Eisenhower. The heads of the satellite nations were there, and then there also were the hangers-on, the so-far unsuccessful revolution- sINKINS j trical industry's weekly rnaga- zine. says in an editorial in its current issue that electric utilites can make a powerful contrbuiion to public, welfare by campaigning for proper street lighting to REDUCE CRIME RATES. It adds: "It is an established fact that crime rates can be cut drastically by. proper street and area lighting. One na tions! poll of police chiefs found that 75 per cent of ma jor street crimes occur under the cover of darkness. - - "Another countrywide poll ef chiefs concluded that ma jor crimes of violence are re duced 50 per cent by relight ing with modern' technique and equipment. One chief in a large Southern city report ed that after relighting major crimes of violence fell 90 per cent." . THfT raises questions. If the crime rates, fall where the lights are bright, do they RISE "where the lights are dim? If s8, will the people out wheje Vie lights are dim raise a ruckus about it? And how about the country dist ricts, where they can't light all the roads? Will they kick up a disturb ance because crime and crimi nals are bemg forced onto Washington are doing because .... - r RAIN is being pushed onto them? - ! It's a complicSted. world, mates! - Porter Surprised Stand Coos Bay-(UPI-Rep. Charles O. 9 ortes- (D-Ore.) gaid Thurs day he was surprised at re ports that Gov, Mark Hat fiekl might not testify at Sen ate Interior subcommittee hearings in Oregon kito the Oregon Dunes-National Sea shore question. Porter said it had been in dicated that Dan P. Allen of the Goveanor's Committee on Natural Resources would test ify but that Hatfield would not attend. The conmittee is against the proposal t make the Dunes a national park. Porter said he was sur prised because Hatfield told him earlier that the governor would be willing to be cross- . - i examined i nis uvpusiuuu. i Pertlander Held For Extortion Portland - (DPD - A secret Multnomah county grand jury indictment charging lar ceny and extortion was re turned Thursday night and. a 37-year-old Portland man was arrested and held in lieu of $10,000 bond. A second man named in the indictments was not taken into custody. Charged in the indictment was Samuel Ruthford Pohr man. He was in city jail. Pohrman is accused of in volvement in an alleged home reoair swindle. The -victim J was an elderly woman who police said was bilked out of $1,000. W SJ- liUI Meetin aries from Vfcftern Europe and North and South Amer ica. Twe Ways of Looking There were two ways oj, looking at $is massing of Communist power. One way was to reflect upon the millions of dead, executed xor tneir anti-Communist sins by order of q i agreement wren .tnese men who now gathered in an aura of mutual admiration on the dais of the hall of CongreSI not far from the Gate of Heavenly Peace. ' The other way was to rec- ognize that these were men on iron will, bound by a com- mon determination Dto domi nate the world. And sinc the end of world War Jg, they had con a long way. For Red Chiaa, it was note worthy that the man whose voice should at least have been second, came first. It was that of Premier Chou En- lai. -v.'.-., There is no certafti meas- ure of the Red Chiaeseiier archy, except to ay that Mao Tse Tung is first. Since long beJtere the birth of the Red Chinese People's Republic and the defeat of the Chiang, Kai-shek forces on the mainland, Mao has been me accepted ino. gL. rsut in the first days of. the celebra tion, it was Mao $io evasgthe spokesman, and the man who welcomed Khrushchev to fiie gala event. West Knows fchou Best Chou certainly is the better known man in the West, but in reality both are mystery men. fltao rose from the peas antry. Chou from impover ished nobility. Both took part in the "long march" which marked the low point of Com munist fortunes in China and which ended in the Cas of Shensl .Province in the .far northwest. This, was the ma:h wtiich reportedly broke Mao's lalth although not his leadership. Today, t is Mao, the theore tician, arsl Chot, . the? exe cutor, . Paper dragons were rSirad ed through the streets of, Hel ping this week. Qnildren ipre sented flowe& to delegates from, all over , the worlov But first and fqremos it was a massing of (emmunlsP brains. . . e ' . LEGAL NOTICES 9 STATEMENT OF THE OWNER.. SHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULAR TION, REQUIRED BY THE ACTS n OF CONGRESS OP AUGJL'SV, 24, r 1S12, AS AMENDED BY THE ACT w Or MARCH 3, 1933, AND JULY 2, 194S. OS Medford Mall Tribune, pub lished daily except Satttrtjty at. rt Medford, Oregon, for October 1? 0 u 1. The names and addresses of ittft Tlllhlisher riitr : ntnnan'nff editor, and business manager&are: fuollsher nsdford Printing' Com pany, Medford, Oregon, Edfror, Robt. W. Ruhl, Medford, &gon; Q Managing Editor. Eric Alien Jr Medford, Oregon: Business Man- O affer. Gerald f. Latham, Medford, Oregon. & 2. rne owner isw Medford Printing Company, Med ford. Ore.; Mabel W. Ruhl, Med ford, Ore.; Robt. W. Ruhl, Medfrtd. Ore.; Roxanne Ruhl Sifflmons. -THt. Kisco, N.Y4 Robert Ruhl Simmons. Mt. Kisco. N.Y.: Thomas Sanford Simmons. Mt. Kisco. N.Y.; Charlesja H. Simmons m. Mt. Kisco. N.Y4 Jane Horner Simmoss. Mt. Kisco, N.Y.; Alicia Ruhl Mat-ArthSr. Mas sena, N. Y.; Francesca Laura Mac- O Arthur. Massena. N.Y.; Anne Chanwa dler MacArthur. Massena. N. rX.i John Roofe MacArthur. Masseha, I XT V . AJ T ineaw MwirilV t ro Herbert G. Grey. ' Medford.' OreV Abbie L. Ferguson, MSdfora, ore. 3. The known bondholr mort- eaeees and other security fio Solders owning or holding 1 ny cent or more of total amount (rt bonds, mortgages or otfier securities are: none. 4. ParaeraDhs 2 and 3 include. in cases where the stockholder or I security hogler appears upon the Dooks or tne company as trustee or In any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corpora tion for whom such trustee is act ing; also the statement in the two paragraph show 1fte affiant's full Knowledge and belief as to the cir cumstances and conditions under which stockholders and security hnlH.p. whn An nnf nniwar 1 1 nnn the books of the company as trus tees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner. 5. The average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or distQbuted, through the mails or otherwise, Jgpaid sub scribers during the 12 months pre ceding the date shown above was 16.425. GERALDS T: LATHAM. Signature ofejBusiness Manager. Sworn to an(T subscribtQa bgpre me this 2nd day of October, 1359 Alta Lindsey (0 Notary Public. Mv commission expires Oct. 16, 1961. FREE PARKING SFICIAIISTS if Hfif'AM-iE! 246 B. CantrcrJ lOJb 1 tf 0 L.- O o f 1 1: ' o o