MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHD, OREGON
Loaded Barge Goes
Down in Heavy Sea
ABERDEEN, Wash. (UPI) -A
lumber barge loaded with
waste sulphite pulp liquor sank
in heavy seas Monday near De
struction Island.
The baiCP Was the TclunH
Cypress, being towed by t h e
lug oucioury u Vancouver,
B.C., according to officials of
Rayonier Inc. for whom the
shipment was consigned.
Heavy seas and 50 mile per
hour winds were reported in the
area.
The tug came into Grays
Harbor for gear repair after the
barge sank. There were no
casualties.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER IS. IMS
1 Select your
1 Personal
1 Christmas
I Cards and
avoid that
m ,ast
i minute
II rusr.
40
217 E. Main
Mcdtord
Dennis the Menace
"5S I uLJi-i r
i
l ttNDIRta-OlAUWEPSOW I KU0WJ'
ARIES
y&l MAR. 2:
2- 8-14-29
32-43-54
STAR GAZEliJ
By CLAY R. POLLAN'
, TAURUS
J- APR. 2)
MAY 21
?35-37.40-45
GEMINI
y --J JUNE 22
D 12-26-38-49
51-76-79-8d
CANCER
n 1-25-33-59
64-77-80-82
g JULY 2J
-. AUG. 23
7-10-13-31
-52-55-66
VIRGO
'f; AUG. 24
'ife SEPT. 22
?ll 1-1 6-1 8-46
48-58-63
Your Doy Activity Guida
According to tfts Sforj.
To develop message for Wednesday,
read words corresponding to numbers
01 your Zodiac birth sign.
lYou 31 And
2 Someone 32 Keep
3 Dome 33 Mol-e
A Take 34 New
5 Don't 3b Better
6Foriui'e 36 Your
7 Your 37 Look
8 Expects 38 The
9Siioke 39 Might
10 Tired 40 Up
11 New 41 Good
12 Stay 42 Hobby
13 Mind 43 A
MYou 44 Be" .
15 Up 45 Valuable
16 Financial 461s
17 Don't 47 Idea
18 Venture -48 Worth
19 Really 49 Other
20 Fritter 50 Pleased
21 Not 5! Fields
22 Smiles 5 Bcdy
23 You 53 If
M A 54 Your
25 Con 55 Needs
26 Put 56 Promise
27 On 57 Money
28 To 58 Trying
29 A. 59 Good
30 In 60 Papers
LIBRA
SWT. 23 rW
OCT. 23
23-39-44-50O
69-70-83-84
61 You
62 Boots
63 Out
64 On
05 To
66 Rest
67 Borrow
68 Meer
69 With
70 Someone's
71 Awov
72 Anything
73 Jewelry
74 On
75 Cash
76 Are
77Testi
78 Today
79 No
80 And
8! Issues
S2 Interviews
83 Romantic
84 Gesture
85 Firmly
86 Richer
87 Yours
88 Non
89 Bored
90 Essentials
IfWIA
Adverse Neutral
SCORPIO
OCT. 24
5- 9-30-54
62-68-8K83V;t-
SAGITTARIUS
NOV. 23
DEC. 22 p3j I
4-1 5-29-34 iT
42-53-87-89ML.
CAPRICORN
DEC. 23 4&
mn! 20
21-24-41-47J ,
7-72
AQUARIUS
IAW 51 .7.
tea ia IV-.,--1
3- 6-19-220
27-61. 78
PISCES
AR. 21
17-20-36-57
71-74-88-90j
A 3
Any Rumor of Ike's Candidacy Clearly Quelled in Constitution
By LVLli C. WILSON
United Press International
The whimsy now is advanced
that former President Eisen
hower has asked former Atty.
Gen. Herbert Browned whether
he, Ike, is eligible to be elect
ed vice president of the United
States.
It is not suggested that Ike
is much interested. But it is
stated that he did ask. Harry
S. Truman got into the act in
response to questions in New
York. HST said that in his
opinion a former president of
the United States could seek
the vice presidency but that it
was a legal matter lor the at
torney general to decide.
All of this is disturbing to
y n ii r correspondent's peace of
mind to say nothing ot the
shattering impact of this silly
business on the bright little
minds of students who. abcut
now, are contemplating the ele
ments of a course called "civ
ics
ship, to civil altairs or, more
generally, to the art and sci
ence of government.
These students probably will
Four Men Appear
In Circuit Court
Two men were sentenced,
one had a trial date set and
a prcsentencing report was
order on a fourth in circuit
court action Monday.
Paul Jerome Flower, Mon
terey Park, Calif. , was senten
ced to 2'k years in the Oregon
State Correctional Institution
after his probation was revoked
for violation of probation.
Original charge was burglary
not in a dwelling involving the
entering of the Bookman An
tique House, Jacksonville, on
May 2, 1961.
James Kenton Young, 22, of
140 Seventh st., Ashland, was
sentenced to three years in the
Oregon Slate penitentiary for
violation of his probation. Orig
inal charges was uttering and
publishing a false check.
A trail has been set for Jan.
20 in circuit court on Woodrow
W. Edwards, Vancouver, Wash.,
charged with perjury. He was
arraigned in circuit court yes
terday and pleaded innocent.
He is accused of making a false
statement as to length of his
Oregon residence during a di
vorce trial on June 4, 1962.
A presentence report was
ordered on Walton Charles Till
man, Butte Falls Star route,
Eagle Point, who pleaded guilty
to uttering and publishing a
false check.
1Mb,
Periwinkle Can't Decide
Where He Wants To Live
There is a simple little flower
commonly known as a periwin
kle that grows along city streets
and in vacant lots. It was intro
duced into the United States
from far away Madagascar
some few years ago, but has
done so well it is now consid
ered a weed in some sections;
a weed with white or pink four
petal flowers and bright green
foliage.
There is also a periwinkle that
is a mollusk and lives close to
the sea, and is distributed along
the entire eastern seaboard of
America. It is also abundant m
Europe.
This, the periwinkle that is a
mollusk, is related to the clam
and the oyester and thousands
of others. It is headed land
ward, away from the sea-home.
It is already climbing trees and
weeds near the coast lines.
In England, people always
knew the periwinkle mollusk as
a "winkle shell.'' lis simple
beauty was appreciated by de
scribing is as a "pretty win
kle," which was changed to per
iwinkle, a sensible modification.
Besides, the shell creature that
lives in the periwinkle shell has
been a staple food in Europe
for centuries. It is sold in mar
kets and fish shops; even roast
ed on the streets and enjoyed
as a simple sea-com'ection.
Mundane Life
Undoubtedly the periwinkle
that inhabits the eastern shore
of the U.S. came from Europe,
as members of this family are
pretty well scattered around the
world. It seems to enjoy a
mundane life in the cold waters
Civics relates to citizen- know by now Lhat General Ike
has sent Herb Brownell on a
child's goose chase and that
HST was talking through his
hat. The shattering nature of
all of this is that the students
may suspect that these two
statesmen never had read Ihc
Constitution which both twice
swore to nreserve, protect and
defend. Or, if they did read it,
they didn't understand it.
MUM Do It
It is possible that a lawyer
could torture out of the lan
guage of ths Constitution some
kind of rule that a two-term
president of the United States
thereafter could be nominated
and elected vice president. A
lawyer might je able to do
that a Philadelphia lawyer,
maybe, or a Harvar I. But I'll
lay you a dollar to a dime that
Herb Brownell did not learn
Small Worlds
Around Us
By LYNN M. W ATKINS
(fitter fiMl Trikvot)
Sr4icat mj)
of northern latitudes, as well as
tropical, heated water? in the
extreme south.
The periwinkb shell is snail
like in shape, about an inch and
a half in height, and brown,
gray or pale yellow, with rows
of dark colored dots arranged
in circles around the shell. Some
are a rich, glossy black, with
or without the characteristic
specks and dots. The periwin
kle is a true vegetarian, living
entirely on plant food such as
algae or other minuto plants.
For the securing of this tood
Nature equipped this mollusk
with a long, rasp - like tongue
called a radula which is twice
as long as its body. It scrapes
the tiny plants from tree trunks
or rocks over which the moll
usk crawls.
Two Environments
These mollusks are almost
terrestrial in habit, spending
their lives on mangrove trees,
rocks, or weeds and remain a
short distance always above the
water. Mangrove limbs that
grow above the high tide line
are favorite grazing areas.
As the tide rises, inundating
the mangrove roots and lower
limbs, the periwinkles crawl
higher. As the tide recedes they
descend t h c tree trunks. They
love the beach but they don't go
in the water.
The unusual behavior of this
shell to move away from the
sea leads scientists to think it
is turning its back to the ocean,
to gradually become a land
dwelling mollusk. This transi
tion may take thousands of
years, but the periwinkle is in
no particular hurry. It has all
the time in the world. In t h e
Arsonist Sought
For Illinois Fires
MONMOUTH, 111. (UPI) A
"mad arsonist" set a scries of
fires that leveled two lumber
yards and nearly destroyed a
metal firm early today.
State police posted armed
guards around the Monmouth
Hospital and the Colonial Nurs
ing Home when the arsonist
made an anonymous telephone
threat that the two institutions
were "next."
Authorities also placed guards
around all industrial plants and
throughout the business district
of this west-central Illinois com
munity of 10,000 persons.
The Monmouth Lumber Co.,
occupying a quarter block on
the west side of town, and the
Fullerton Lumber Co., which
ranged over half a block on the
south side, were destroyed. Half
of the Monmouth Metal Culvert
Co. burned to the ground.
meantime it continues to be a
dweller between the tides; a
resident of the splash - zone,
neither aquatic or truly land
dwelling. The little fellow can't
seem to be able to make up its
feeble mind to swim or float.
In the meantime it balances be
tween two environmants.
that kind of law at the Yale
Law School.
If Ike and HST had read the
Constitution, they could not
have missed the concluding
sentence o' Article 12, proposed
by Congress Dec. 12, 180J, and
proclaimed adopted Sept. 25,
1804. That sentence reads:
"But no person constitutionally
ineligible to the office of presi
dent shall be eligible to that of
vice president of the United
States." Plain enough?
Bans Third Term
This sentence musi be under
stood in the light of Article 22,
effective Feb. 20, U'M, which
forbade uny person thereafter ;
to be elected president more !
than twicj. The tnird tcrmi
amendment. It follows, then, '
that General Ike is constitu
tionally ineligible In the cilice
of president and, therefore, is
not eligible lor elacton as vice
president.
Of course Ike would dress up
a stop-Kennedy ticket, even in
second place, but the whole
idea is balmy and should be
filed in the loony bin.
However, we might get a
new constitutional amendment
requiring a candidr.ro for presi
dent to prova he ha read '.ha
U.S. Constitution before he is
put in charge of pressing,
protecting and defending same.
Seems reasonable!
LOG ENDS
Quick Delivery
MEDFORD FUEL CO.
S & H Green Srampt
PHONE 772-2111
16 PROOF ECHO SPRING OIST. CO.. LOUISVILLE- KY.
mm Mre i
IT! years old
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BOURBON
The success of the "Ages"
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of savings waiting to be harvested by YOU.
All sales final. No layaways. No approvals,
No exchanges!
ayQL7TjJ
ff IMPORTED "V
f Italian Knit Mohair 1 I
J I SWEATERS! If
Wide range of colors, gm 0 f 3 V;
I I cardigans or V-neck XffllWW
E pullovers. Sizes 38 and II J W:
1 40. $13.98 and 3 & .
e 14,98 values. Vy Efl M e-
L HARVEST SALE! ' 0$
CAPRI
PANTS!
Sizes 8 to 18, proportioned length,
lots of colors. Regular $5.98 value.
$099
J Ea.
Mj0 LOOK! 200 l00K! "K FUr ScaS0" t
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Si! b..W-l-. i i . ll; Sizes 8-18. Good selection styles I VXLmLA U UallU4taV 1
f Double knit wools, dressy wools, fall cottons, umper 1 ,ncj coors E 3 V;
ii dresses and shifts. Regular $12.98, $14.98, $16.98 and M& $ If ,n0 a . v i irw Ml'
IP m n An i ... . r r w i Of t 70 Australian wool. 20 1 4 I
ll JZZ m 1 VJ99 II angora, 10 nyo. All pull- (-UU M if HARVEST
11 $099 $W9l 14 ll - 1 Y If SALE
ife, 1 i BlEacl, 5 if HARVEST SALE! mm
;11P1. "rfj ". (Matching Skirts at Left Below) 0 p
Jj? WOOL ""O fjf Rayon or Nylon
ROBES & ff SKMT$I IP Len9th ( BRIEFS! I
I f lIIUtt II W H I; iV B77IP I al Colon and loti of while. Sizes 1
HOUSECOATS! ttxcjpqq V$ COATS! I
I Slim skirts and full skirts. J) & Watcr Repellent I HARVEST R IIU
Quil,s MjQQ $16-98, J) Ea. St To wear with capri C AT QQ So,
Corduroys tdJVjf 11 HARVEST SALE! Z h pants or slacks. X MM mfcf
Values to $9.98 1 1 Va,Ue 8 $16-98" iVV ' '
. - El Co 1 E Get several ipt at thete low Driceil 31 P . . . If 11
HARVEST SALE! " r Jjflf harvest sale JJ
112 EAST MAIN STREET
Next Door to Robinson Bros.
If Your CREDIT Is GOOD ... Its GOOD at PICK'SI
. . . convenient perking mikes It
to eaiy to vilit Robinson Bros.,
Pick's end other downtown
hopt. USE THEM . . . they're
FREE when you shop DOWN
TOWN IN MEDFORD.
Ci)