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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1960)
MEDFORDfillWrRIBUNE HI'XTION K M KDI'OItU, They'll Do It Every Time R)SIOLA POPOVEP.THE NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR, BUSTS IN JUST WHEN A3ENDA IS ABOUT TO DO TVIE MORNING CHORES Sine Tim B.gan, Cobwebs Hit Clull.r.d Up the Houn Thpy were mildly bother nm then as well ns now and at lonii m house spiders share liny section n( Ihiii earth with u they will probably continue to Ho whiil they have always done, clutter up tha ceilings of the house and the rafter of the burn. Cobwebs have formed in the upper rornrra of man's bode lnce the beginning of time, for the spiders were her flrU. Cave-wives, whose only home was a cave In tho aide of a prehistoric hill, awept cobwebs from the rrcv Ices with a broom made from the branch of a tree or with the wing of a bird. F.ver since nnd even as of right now, modern homes have these filmy threads In th tintisrd corners that have to be swept awny nt frequent Intervals. There are folks who have peculiar nnd most ly erroneous Idens about rnl webs, even attributing their presence to some uncanny manifestation of supernatural forces. Haunted Houses All "haunted" houses as well as wine cellars were (enerously drcorntrd with cobwebs. . Moving pictures of the hero brushing nslde eerie curtnlns of cobwebs while he tried to determine "who dun It," Is very Important to spooky pictures. There Is really no mystery as to the villain - It Is the common garden spider or house spider that drops n thrend of silk from the rafter or ceiling. The spider Is set I it WELL-I'VE GOT TO tllYMB I latefIhee jxrFffiffim' 42sr SASHAYS OUT- g 9 JB Glasses Genuine CUT GLASS Start your set TODAY! One Piece with every minimum purchase at these Signal Stations " BIG "Y" SIGNAL SERVICE ' 2054 Pacific Highway LEWALSEN'S SIGNAL SERVICE Crater Lake Hwy. & Shady Cove WELCH'S SIGNAL SERVICE 3000 Crater Lake Hwy. TO OIIKCION, TIIUKHDA Y, JULY A I JUST Yl ST DOWN--I JUST GOT A- Small Worlds Around Us By Lynn M. Watkins ting a trap or more correctly, a net, to catch Inserts that may become entnngU-d in the sticky threads. The silken strands spun by the spider nre invisible at first. Neither the fly nor the housewife sees them until dust nnd lint adhering to the sticky threads mnke them no tireable. Then Instead of spider webs they become cob webs. It's the same differ ence. Usefulness Lost Of course by the time the web becomes visible the use fulness of the web Is gone as far as the spider Is concerned. So site moves to another lo cation nnd spins nnother web These house spiders seldom spin a regular web such as we sec In the garden or on a Clump of weeds. . . What eventually becomes a cdbweb Is merely a group of threads: a haphazard tangle of silk of various lengths. In spite of the strange sto ries and myths about cob webs having a mysterious or igin, a cobweb Is merely a spider web made by a spider Hint it too lazy to spin a reg ular web or too afraid to go ouldors where spiders should be. She fools herself, for aft er the lint and dust gathers on the web its usefulness is ended, nnd more work Is nec essary to construct nnother. The spider Is naturally n fastidious creature. When the cobweb becomes a cobweb, she Just won't live there nny more, nnd nt that time the equally fnstldlous housewife wraps n cloth around a broom 1 SNOWY BUTTE SIGNAL SERVICE 5010 Crater Lake Hwy. THOMPSON'S SIGNAL SERVICE 1501 North Riverside Price 10 Cents 14, lltflO- PACKS I to 4 By Jimmy Hatlo Pickets Prevent Unloading of Fish San Pedro. Calif. IUI'11 A crowd of albacore fishermen nnd their families Tuesday prevented a fellow fisherman from selling his catch, harbor spokesmen said. Louis Zermntton, 50, docked his boat at the Van Camp can nery at Fish Harbor. Termi nal Island, to unload his catch. He said pickets forced him to pull away. He returned later to the same dock and found the fishermen had been Joined by pickets of ILWU, Fishermen's Union Division- Zermnttcn, an independent fisherman, said he had In tended to sell his 12-ton load of tuna to Vnn Cnmp at the cannery's price of $325 a ton. He Inter anchored his bont In mldhnrbor without unloading. Police were on the scene but no violence was reported. The albacore fishermen are refusing to sell their first catches of the season to can neries because of n price cut oi $iio n ton. uist years rntch, spokesmen said, sold (or $435 a ton. Russia Accuses West of Oppression Moscow (ITI - Russia ac cused the West of "colonial oppression" In the Congo to day and nsked the United Na tions to take immediate nc tion to end this "nrmed ag gression." Foreign Minister. Andrei Gromyko handed the text of a statement on the matter to U. S. Charge d'Affaires Ed ward Frecrs and the Dclginn ambassador. and sweeps the silken webs from the ceiling. (Released by Th Register and Tribune Syndicate, 1960) something NEW for YOU IMi v--.. il And remombar Signal gasolines nre the fineint you onn buy. So you pay no more for the boat gnuolineH, nnd nt tho anme time have the opportunity to fill nil your needs in beautiful glnHBwn.ro I GoFatfet- The Family Council r.dllor'i Nnlai Th Family Council eonililt of Judr. a ptyctilatrlil, thru cl.rrymaii, a n.wiaapar editor a wnmin't ailltor and two wrll.ri. Kara artlrl. li a lummiry nf an actual -aa. hlitory Th. Council rcporti on ' problem! that hava baan daail wife or raipnntlbl. aienclaa and counialora Marian B. - We can each make a happier life apart. Edwin S. - What about the children? Marian 8. - My husband nnd 1 have been married 13 yeors and hove four children. We have never been very hnppy together and I think we've now come to the part ing of the ways. The trouble seriously start ed about four years ago when Ed became involved with another woman. He wanted a divorce nnd I refused to give It to him. Finally the affair petered out, In tho meantime, however, we each went our separate woys nnd I tried to involve myself In community activi ties. Through these I met a man 1 love. Now 1 want the Scientists Fail To Inform, AAAS Committee Says Washington -(Science Service)- Scientists have failed In their responsibility to under take "nn Independent Infor mntllve role" in political, economic and social afairs involving science, a special committee for the American Association for the Advance ment of Science (AAAS) charges. This failure has contributed to a crisis that "may disrupt the history of man," the AAAS warned in a major poli cy statement in which it urg ed scientists to speak out and inform the public on key Issues, The report appears in Science, According to the statement, scientists have "a serious and immediate responsibility" to provide the public with facts on the control of nuclear energy, disarmament, popula tion control, the role of scien tific research in international military and political rival ries, the biological effects of food addtives, and the social consequences of automation. Five Years of Study The statement resulted from "more than five years of dis cussion and study within the AAAS." It was drafted by the AAAS Committee on Science in the Promotion of Human Welfare. The committee recommend ed that on any major issue relating to science, the AAAS should: 1. Stimulate discussion! within the scientific commu nity and provide guidance for the development of a specific program. 2. Prepare reports for the scientific community on ail relevant data and the conse quences likely from alterna tive courses of action. 3. Translate the scientific report into lay language for distribution "through all available channels." 4. Develop more contact on a local community level be tween scientists and the pub lic. CLARK'S SIGNAL SERVICE 6th and Grape MEDFORD TRUCK TERMINAL 1050 South Riverside HARTWELL'S SIGNAL SERVICE 340 E. Main-Ashland divorce, hut Ed doesn't. I feel now 1 was wrong about not giving him the divorce when he wanted II. After all, we don't love one another and we arc both still young enough to make a separate, happier life. Edwin 8. - What's sauce for the goose Is sauce for the gander. Why should I grant Marian a divorce Just because It happens to suit her con venience now? I lost the .woman I cared about because of Marian. And It was Marian's fault that I got Involved In the first place. Her coldness and con stant nagging drove me to It. I he woman I cared for was warmhearted and generous, but didn't want to live a "back street" existence. She wanted marriage. As far as I'm concerned, Marian can just suffer now the way I suffered. At that time she kept saying, "What about the children? What about our home?" Well I say the same thing now. She told me I should make sacrifices for the children. Well, how about her doing the sacrific ing now? Tha Council: This is a case of two individuals doing some right things for the wrong reasons - and It can't work out well. Both Marian and Ed are 3r Sugar Cant Field near Kckalia, Kauai , (Poolt " motivated by spite and they can only make life more mis erable for one another and their children. Divorce would n't solve their problems be cause Individuals bitten by the virus of hate and spite aren't cured by a simple change of partners, The happiness of children Is a good reason to keep a marriage together, but It is the height of cruelty and cynicism to' use this as a camouflage for spite. If Marian had kept her children's interest uppermost, she would not have closed the door to reconciliation with her husband and gotten her self Involved with another man. This involvement was not accidental. It had to be desired. We suspect that this relationship has more to do with Marian's desire to hurt her husband than with love or even liking for another man. The children, who are being used as pawns In this ugly battle, are not blissfully un aware of1 everything. They may not know all the details, but Marian and Ed may be sure that their children sense the emotional setup in their home. It is robbing them of a happy childhood and is likely to have long-lasting effects. If Ed really wants to keep the marriage together for his children's sake, he will not stop simply at withholding a divorce. He will make an active effort to win back his wife and start the marriage again in the spirit that moved him when he took his wed ding vows. (Copyright 1960, General Features Corp.) granulated 1 mm siodcs mm mm, mssM 'Horn' Segment In Los Angeles -(Science Scrv- ice)- A horn shaped segment of the brain may decide what Is worthwhile remembering and help recall the Informa tion when situations demand Band Camp To Open On College Campus Ashland - The Siskiyou Band camp will open its fourth annual session in Churchill hall on the South ern Oregon college campus Monday, July 18. Eligible for attendance are Junior and senior high school students, college students and school band directors. The guest conductor this year is Randall Spicer, director of bands at Washington State university in Pullman, Wash. Activities included in the camp are playing in the camp band, playing in a small en semble, studying privately with one of the camp direc tors, and studying private mu sic theory as well as taking part in various recreational activities. College students and band directors may take part in a seminar in band teaching methods under Spi cer. Anyone who would like to attend Siskiyou Band camp and has not already regis tered Is urged to go to Church ill hall at 9 a.m. Monday. Additional Information may be obtained from Southern Oregon college. (Grown-ups make it into CandH) The life of Hawaiian children is crowded with good things. A warm sun to play under . . . white beaches to scamper along . . . and a candy store run by Mother Nature that's big as a sugar cane field! The tall sugar cane you see in the picture above, grows so pure, sweet and clean, our little Hawaiian children eat it raw. We grown-ups, of course, make it into sugar ... for you. C and H Sugar. World's finest, we believe. Hawaii! Surely no other place on earth is more abundantly blessed with brilliant sunshine, soft rains and rich, fertile soil. This mtwl be the place where sugar was meant to grow. Wouldn't it be nice if everyone . . . everywhere . . could enjoy C and H Sugar? As you can. ...America's 50tt State Brain Plays Role the information. Experiments by Dr. Ross Adey of the University of California Medical School, Los Angeles, suggest this role for the segment, the hippo campus. One activity of this brain segment may be to "approve" an incoming message (or stimuli) for permanent de posit as a memory trace in an appropriate neural system. Furthermore the hippocampus may assist in recalling the item of information in a con ditional learning (goal-direct ed) situation Experiments showed that certain rhythmic waves from this brain segment provide a sensitive correlate of the ani mal's ability to engage In goal directed performance. This in volved training the animal to approach a food reward in a maze box. Approach Signaled When the animal responed as he had been trained, the AMERICA'S LARGEST SELLING ECONOMY PRICED DOG FOOD Help provide guide dogs for the blindsee Vets' label for details! in Memory rhythmic waves scorned to sig nal his correct approach to the reward. Drugs which CRUsed the anlmnl to forget his train ing for a time so that he wandered aimlessly about led to abrupt change In wave pat terns. Tho rhythmic pattern returned when the animal again responded as it had been trained. This rhythmic pattern from the hippocampus probably helps a person drive to work each day over a familiar route. The unconscious cue that tell where to turn were probably Indelibly Inscribed !n ,h? brain wilh the nclP ' the hippocampus. And as lone as this rhythmlo brain wave persists the driver will not make a wrong turn. ' Los Angeles - HOT - The ex clusive "750 Club" of Demo crats who contributed $1,000 each to liquidate the party'i debts today was told the cur rent campaign starts oft in the black. Pcd in HiMibflro, 0'qim msu