I
10 A -
Market Reacts
To Combination
Of Good Tidings
New York-WPMVall Street
ers found no more surprises
than expected in President
Kennedy's Monday night ad
dress on the economy, but
they blended it with other tid
ings and gave the market a
.little bounce.
. Comment in the 48 hours
after the speech to the nation
from the White House was
reserved but cheerful, gener
ally. None had really expect
'ed an immediate tax cut; this
had been discounted in ad
vance. But analysts were happy to
note that in the next full
.trading day following the ad
dress, the Dow Jones closing
industrial average popped
through the 600 level for the
first time since June 8.
Hold Unpredicted
With the caution engender
ed by a few bad bruises and
a slow recovery in the past
two months, none ascribed
this break-through to one
aspect, and almost none would
speculate whether stock price
, levels would hold at this
' height for any length of time.
But the Federal Reserve
Board announcement that in
dustrial production made a
new high in July came along
the day after the speech and
there were other Washington
developments, including com
mittee approval of a big pub
lic works bill, all of which
helped.
THURSDAY. AUGUST 16, 1962
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
0
XX
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:-
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"fit g IT-'
TRANSPORT BLOOD Three cartons of
blood, containing 28 pints of Type A nega
tive blood, were flown to Portland from
Medford for open heart surgery there. The
plane was flown by First Lt. John Gregory,
left, of the Civil Air Patrol. He was assist
ed in loading the shipment by CAP Major
John Keener. A similar flight was made
from Grants Pass yesterday.
Medical Professor Called to Scotland
Portland - The University
Court of the University of St.
Andrews, Dundee, Scotland
has named Dr. J. Englebert
Dunphy, chairman of the Uni
versity of Oregon Medical
School's surgery department,
as visiting professor in sur
gery with the ancient Scot
tish title of Praelcctor.
This is the highest honor
the medical faculty of St. An
drews can bestow. Dr. Dun
phy will be at the 551-year-old
institution, Scotland's oldest,
for four weeks beginning
Aug. 25. He will be giving
lectures, teaching and stim
ulating research projects un
der way there.
En route to Scotland he will
confer with colleagues and
conduct informal seminars in
England.
Following his assignment at
St. Andrews he will visit U.S.
Army medical installations in
Germany and France as a
consultant.
Small Worlds
Around Us
By LYNN M. W ATKINS
(Register and Tribune
Syndicate 1962)
Locuili Planned This
Year's Trip Back in '46
They've been "out of sight,
out of mind" for several years,
but their inner calendars were
adjusted back in 1945 to the
year 1962: Brood II, that is,
of the 17-year locust, or cor
rectly, the cicada.
They came this year, right
on time. From the earth,
where they have lived in
gritty darkness, they emerge.
In some sections of the United
States they will be very evi
dent. By summer's end they
will be gone again, but their
purpose will have been
served.
The female cicada will i.ave
cut a tiny slit in the bark of a
tree, either fruit or forest
type, and will have deposited
her eggs. She will use a rasp
like organ on the posterior
end of her body to make the
incision, and the same organ
will be used to insert the eggs.
Then, her work completed in
her brief period in the upper
air, she will die of exhaustion
and fulfillment.
May Break
Some tree limbs she has
wounded will be so weakened,
they may break. But whether
they do or not, the tree will
have suffered. After a few
weeks, those eggs will hatch
into tiny larva which crawl
out of the tree-nursery and
fall to the ground. They will
know exactly what to do: they
will burrow into the earth
for their nearly 17 years of
underground development.
In the earth they will feed
on the tender roots of plants
for nearly 16 years and 10
months. For them the time of
emergence is already set; the
insect timeclock is adjusted.
Some warm May day, in the
year 1979, 17 years from now,
the larvae, now ready for
adulthood, will emerge from
the earth.
Altogether, their numbers
APPOINTED PRESIDENT
New York - IUP1I - The For
eign Policy Association Wed
nesday announced the ap
pointment of Samuel P. Hayes
as president. Hayes, who will
take office next month, is a
professor of economics at the
University of Michigan and
director of the Center for Re
search on Economic Develop
ment. He was special assistant
to the State Department's as
sistant secretary for economic
affairs in 1949-50.
RULES FOR LONG LIFE
Stonington, Conn. - IUPD -Moses
Wilcox, a retired sea
man who celebrated his 104th
birthday Wednesday, attrib
uted his longevity to: "Hard
work, good food, a good
woman and a good cigar."
may be in the millions. They
will crawl part way up a
tree trunk or a plant stem.
They will grip the support
firmly; then their skins will
split along their backs. Out
from the now useless husks
will emerge the adult cicadas,
ready to fly, willing to eat the
tenderest foliage, and later to
lay the eggs for the next
hatching 16 years, 10' 2
months hence.
Man's Enemy
Traditionally, this is one of
man's enemies. Grasshoppers,
as well as cicadas, have
plagued mankind since Bibli
cal times. The so - called
"plagues of locusts" actually
were grasshoppers, but the re
sults to crops and the trees
was the same. But mankind
has some willing helpers
friends fighting for him. The
emergence of the cicada
hordes is the signal for terns,
sea gulls, gracklcs, English
sparrows and numeroue other
species of birds to feed on
the emerging insects. In fact,
the birds have saved many
crops at many times.
Even before the emergence
of the larvae from their years
underground, some of man's
unappreciated helpers are dig
ging out and eating the larva
the skunk and the shrews.
FOLGERS COFFEE
1- lb 69c
2- lb 1.37
INSTANT
6-oz. 89c IO-01. 1.39
Little Butte Market
Eagle Point, Oregon
But man, so bright in some
ways and so utterly stupid in
other ways, does his best to
kill the skunks as well as oth
er small creatures which ac
tually are playing on our
team.
By the time next hatching
of the .cicadas appears, most
of the four-legged benefactors
probably will be gone. But the
insect will emerge-in May, on
a warm night, in the year'
1979.
For Your Convenience I Savings Big Double Load Washers
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i "'f i U No. Centra 773-7484
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