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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1960)
;6 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. SUNDAY. JULY 17, 1960 1 - -:;w " HALF-STORY-Soda mountain lookout Is a on the building help reduce the glare o( the half-story structure located on the Green- sun and assist the lookout in spotting small - springs mountain east of Ashland. Shutters fires. nn ' ilMaaaMI rarjraeraearjMeaM ... v "I.'- h (: ' THREE FREQUENCIES-If things are quiet conditions. Radio communication to Med ' on one frequency, Thelma Sims has two ford, Klamath Falls, and Yreka are main . more to keep busy with in reporting fires, tained at this lookout by three fire districts. relaying messages, and reporting on weather if m . - BURNT PEAK TOWER-The Burnt peak is stressed both during training sessions and . tower is 29 feet high with two flights of , on the job to help prevent accidents result stairs leading to the top. Safety on lookouts ing from falls. . . : Democratic Picnic Slated July 24 . The annual Jackson coun- ty Democratic picnic will be ..held at TouVelle State park Sunday, July 24, starting at " 10 a.m., according to County Cemetery & Mortuary in One Location Centrally Located ; h SISKIYOU MEMORIAL PARK (Modern-Care Cemetery) . iifjl tate lookouts Aire Manned' by Womemi 1 j"""- 7"' pT" j , W'" Commissioner Ralph James, Sams Valley, picnic chairman. Entertainment will start at 10 a.m. and lunch will be served at noon, James said. Robert Duncan, house speak er, will be master of ceremon ies. The annual event is open to the public. The picnic committee will meet this week to decide on Within Medford City Limit 1 r -n Ilk 1 -'4 r 3 speakers, James said. Reports will be given by Jackson county Democrats who attend ed the Democratic national convention in Los Angeles last week. These include Dun can, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Nor ton, Phoenix, Larry Sheehan, Rogue River, and Mrs. Edward C. Kelly, Medford. SISKIYOU Funeral Service INCLUDES: Mortuary Ground Inttrmtnt ' Miutolflum Crtmttory Inurnment 2 Lookouts Have 30 Years Service With SW District By JIM FISHER Sunday drivers out for a week end trip in the moun tains occasionally find them selves at forest lookout sta tions maintained by both fed eral and state forest agencies. Quite often these visitors are surprised to find Uiese lookouts "manned" by wo men. The use of women on forest lookout stations was a result of the manpower shortage during World War II. At that time, manpower was being de voted to the war effort. Wo men were tried as lookouts and because of their success they are still being used, but only by the state forestry de partment. Uud Married Couples The U. S. forest service un til recently used married couples as forest lookouts with the husband working five days and the wife two days. Some married couples still live in the towers during the summers, but only the hus band is on the payroll. With the Oregon state for estry department, the situa tion is quite different. Women are still being hired each sum mer to watch from mountain top towers for the first sign of smoke. The southwest Ore gon district of the state for estry department, for exam ple, has hired women as 12 of its 16 lookouts for the 1960 fire season. The ages of the women range from 18 to more than 60. For some, this is their first summer on a lookout, while others are old hands with many seasons of experience behind them. Meeting During Winter Oddly enough, the two wo men with the longest lengths of service with the district as forest lookouts get together during the winter months to keep their summer friendship alive. For Mrs. Thelma Sims and Mrs. Howard Ash nothing is more fun than to relate their individual experiences to each other in the fall when fire season is over. Strange, too, is the fact that both women are on the same lookout that they started with many sum mers ago. For Mrs. Thelma Sims, working as a forest lookout was a welcome relief from her winter-time employment as a private nurse caring for ailing persons . in their own homes. The solitude, the scen ery, and the change-of-pace have kept her coming back to Soda mountain in the Green springs mountains east of Ash land for 15 summers. Thelma recalls her first trip to Soda mountain as quite an experience. She went on the station just before July 4, 1946, as a late-comer to the district. She had missed the annual fire school and receiv ed her training on-the-spot be fore she was left alone. She says now that "if someone had told me that I would still be here now, I would have said : that they didn't know what they were talking about." Sees Into California From her 6,091-foot peak. Thelma can see into Califor-I ma as well as on the south west Oregon district and the neighboring Klamath Forest Protection district. She has ra dio contact with both Oregon districts and also the Yreka headquarters of the California division of forestry. Last year, she made the first report on the fire that later burned a large acreage in the Horn brook area. In 1997, Thelma had a ring side seat to the 14,000-acre Bogus mountain fire that burned Into Oregon from Cali- Entries Accepted For Talent Show Roseburg-Entrics are now being accepted for the eighth annual Rickctts Revue and Talent contest at the Douglas County Fair and Exposition Aug. 25 to 28 here. Contest Manager Chuck Ricketts said that applicants should register at Ricketts Music store in downtown Roscburg, The contest is open to any resident of Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, Coos, or Curry county. Any kind of amateur act that can be classed as enter tainment will be welcomed, according to Rickctts. Contest ants will be divided into six categories: singers 16 and un der, singers 17 and over, In strumentalists, pianists, danc ers, and miscellaneous. Acts are to be limited to a total of eight people in any one group, a LOCATE SMOKE-Uslug binoculars helps Katie locate a smoke or check a suspected fire. Other oids include glare proof paint for the buildings, panoramic photographs Willi landmarks indicated, and contour maps. fornia to the east of Soda mountain. Her reporting of the fire's progress helped Ore gon state forestry department personnel to prepare for the fire's control. Visitors to Soda mountain are always greeted warmly by Mrs. Sims and invited into the small half-story cabin that serves as her home and work ing quarters. Country Kitchen The small wood-stove, a rocking chair, and pretty cup board curtains gives the im pression more of a country kitchen than a forest lookout. However, the fireflnder on its stand in the middle of the room reminds everyone that It is more than that. Quite often Thelma may be found baking cookies in the oven, but no matter what she is doing, there is always the careful looking around for a tell-tale sign of smoke. After a while, new visitors to the station are so caught by her ever-watchful glance for smoke that they find them selves looking too as they talk. Several years ago, Thelma had the experience of having her lookout station struck by lightning. She had taken all Vacation Bound? We Hope You Have a Wonderful Time . . . but before you leave ask for the Mail Tribune VACATION PAK We will ho(d the Mail Tribune while you are on your vacation. Each issue will be held in our office while you are away and will be delivered to you personally by your carrier upon your return. It's No papen to pile up on your porch. You will be able to catch-up on all local new and special features when you return, i When you leave on your vacation just complete this handy order, and either give it to your carrier , . , mail it . . or just bring it in to the office. WE WILL DO THE REST . . . Medford Mail Tribune VACATION S Circulation Department PAK Z Medford, Oregon ' ORDER J ej Please tave my Mill Tribune while I am on vacation, baglnnlng . and deliver all el them to m g when I return en (If date un- J certain, pleaie call Mall Tribune whan you return!) -J Name J Addrett B City 4. of the safety precautions of disconnecting her radio and telephone and in staying In side on her glass-lug stool, but she still got a good shaking-up and a poor sense of hearing for a while from the blast. Relay Station Recently, Thelma's station got company on the mountaln top with the construction of a television relay station com plete with electric service. Thelma lives now for the day when she can have a refrig erator, electric lights, and pos sibly television. Most visitors to Soda moun tain have the opportunity to look at Thelma's scrnpbook filled with photographs, news paper articles, and her poetry collected over her years on the mountain. The subjects for her poetry range from a thunderstorm building up or a beautiful sunset to a fire burning or just thoughts on life. What force has brought Thelma back to Soda moun tain each summer from her work in California or her present home on Sterling creek will probably bring her back for many more years. Almost SO miles northwest cenuirc FR of Soda mountain is Burnt peak, a mountain that should almost be culled Ash peak In honor of n family thai has been closely Identified with it for a long time. Working her Itllh summer as forest lookout on nurnt peak this year Is Mrs. Howard (Katie) Ash. Katie and her husband havo lived on Elk creek at Iho foot of the moun tain for many yours while he worked at Elk creek guard station for the U. S. forest service. Ill health forced Ash's retirement from that work In 11140. The following your, a son, Gene, worked on Burnt peak as forest lookout, In 1942, Katie worked as a "checker" for a forest service closed area near her home. The follow ing spring, she was working as an aircraft observer with the Air Watch Service when it was discontinued. Another son, U c n n y, had Just left Burnt peak as lookout and the Job was still open. With Howard persuading both her and the forest service, she was soon Burnt peak lookout. Worked At Cook Katie has held the Job each summer since 1943 except for the summers of 1U52 and 10S3 when she worked as a cook for the Medford headquarters of the state forestry depart ment. In 1940, the local area and the lookout were trans ferred from tho U. S. forest service to the state forestry department. Doth Katlo and the state wore happy for her to continue as lookout. At the present, the Ashes arc living In the third lower to have been built on Burnt peak. The foundation and main structure of the present tower was built, of course, with all of the Ash family helping at one time or anoth er. Two years later, the lower was lowered 13 feet from a 42-foot hclghth to approxi mately 29 feet. This Job was done by the lookouts olong with friends from Uic depart ment to make It easier to sec out and down without walk ing the catwalk on the outside of the building or getting near the windows on the Inside. Katie and Howard live In a small cabin at the foot of the tower. They hope to make living quarters within the SPring SIGHT8 FIRE Lining up the fireflnder, Thelma Sims care fully sights through tho cross-hairs for the exact setting of the fireflnder. This Information, as well as the fire's loca tion by both legal description and landmarks, Is radioed to the fire dispatcher. friimewoik of the tower In the ncur future to help cut down on the stair climbing. Make Lookout Home Both a dog and a kitten make their homo at the Burnt peak lookout with the Ashes. The kitten wus first too small to climb the stulrs up tho tow er, so she would walk the nar row boards up the side of the stairway. Katie's lookout cabin l also more like a person's home than a lookout with com fortable furniture and small conveniences that experience teaches a forest lookout to have. If they aren't painting the cabin on the tower, they are cutting brush on the ground or working on the mountain road that leads to their station In addition to. their other duties. Supplies are brought to the lookout by Howard from tholr F.Ik creek home, Including fresh vegetables from their garden. Other supplies are often brought by their son. Gene, now forest wurden at McLcod guard station five miles south. Katie also hopes to keep coming back to Burnt peak as the forest lookout along with Howard to help her pick out the smokes and locate the landmarks. Each spring, Katie Ash and Thelma Sims assist with Uie fire school cooks In the prepa ration of meals. Then, It's "so Complete This Vacation Pay Order Today or Phone the Circulation Department. 2-6141 fit ill i rT T D .- :, mmim, - uJtk-Mi long" until next full when they cun once agnln got to gether to discuss their sum mer's experiences. COMFORTABLE CREDIT AT BARKER'S tka up to six monthsl PAY V OF YOUR BALANCE EACH MONTH BARKER'S Main-Central A Free Service of THE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE he added. f