Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 13, 1952, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFOBD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Sunday. April 13. 1131
,rjMmm - Jul &
c i'A CnAPTER BUYS TRACTOR Shown above Is the
Central Point chapter of the Future Farmers of America, first
organized In Jackson county, as it appeared recently when it
accepted delivery of a new tractor, plow and disc harrow from
John Deaver, of the Deaver Tractor and Implement company,
Medford, Ford farm Implement dealers. Leonard Kunzman
(in dark coat near center of picture), agricultural lnstuctor at
Cra:tr high school, is advisor to the chapter. The tractor was
furnished the chapter by its own funds, by school district mon
ey and through the assistance of the Deaver firm. Superintend
ent H. P. Jcwett, of consolidated school district No. 6 is shown
in front of the tractor's wheel, and Arthur L. Straus, principal
of Crater high, Is to the left of Kunzman. Deaver Is standing
near the FFA sign at right.
OYSTER PRODUCTION
Seattle (U.R) The Wash
ington state Department of
Fisheries reported Saturday that
Washington produced $3,335,000
worth of oysters in 1951.
fo MAKE IT PLAIN
LET US EXPLAIN i
VQOR SAIiSfACTiON
Warnings, No Arrests
Issued on Dog Law
A large number of warnings,
but no arrests so far, have been
made by city officers under the
dog control ordinance, it was re
ported at the Medford police de
partment Saturday.
In addition to complaints made
direct to the dog control officer
some 21 complaints have been
telephoned to the police depart
ment, the report said. Warnings
to the owners of the dogs have
been issued in all cases.
The ordinance requires that
dogs be confined during the gar
dening months of April, May,
June and July.
In Ashland, 10 residents have
been cited by police under the
Ashland dog control ordinance,
according to the Ashland Tidings.
Seven were fined $5 each in city
court last week, another was
fined $10 for allowing two dogs
to run at large, and two others
have been ordered to appear in
court Monday.
SEEING
FOR APRIL ONLY!
GET A SCIENTIFIC
MINE WW
flORCAW
Our Fcrd ngin ex
pert analyze th per
formonc of your ngin
with Hilt ngine analy
i t which it recom
mended by the Ford
Motor Company
Hit RE'S WHAT
WI DO . . .
Hi
aan and wv spark plugt
Scientifically chck origin compratftloa
InifMcf nHr IgnlHon tyttam
Tif voltaga regulator, generator and battvry
Adjust carburetor and chock onNr fwol lyttom
Adutt clutch podat play
Lubricate chatilt
Chang onglno oM
tnspocl cooling tytrorn
Chock thock abiorber
Ctoan, repack and adutt front wheel bearing.
In t pact brake linings and brake drums
for Improper or dangerous wear
Inspect steering system end all Nres
Road test car
lew Vrdtof prkt" far Wf fWj
m iiii'ici'
Only $J
CRATER LAKE MOTORS
"WHERE GOOD SERVICE IS A MUST"
MAIN AND
FIR STREETS
PHONE
2-6297
Driver's Exams
Scheduled Here
Salem 'U.R) All state driv
ers' Jicense examiners will at
tend a conference here May 1-3
to study examiners' problems
and new develoment In proce
dures, Secretary of State Earl
T. Newbry said Saturday. This Is
the first such conference since
1949.
Because of the conference,
dates for drivers' license exam
inations In this area will be tem
porarily changed. The new dates
will be announced later.
Cities In which examiners
usually appear on the dates In
which the conference will be
held this year include Oregon
City, Astoria, Roscburg, Med
ford, Grants Pass, Eugene, Leb
anon, Salem, Portland, Bend,
Burns, Madras, Klamath Falls,
Ontario, Pendleton and The
Dalles.
Bartleff, Bosc Spray
Or Dusting Advised
Bartlett and Bosc pear trees
should now have the full bloom
spraying or dusting for blight
control, according to C. B. Cor
dy, county agent for horticulture.
The spray or dust of a fixed
copper is applied when 35 per
cent of the blossoms are open.
Application Is to be made only
when trees are dry.
For dusting, orchardists are
advised to use 25 pounds per
acre of a dust containing 5 to 7
per cent of copper expressed as
metallic.
For spraying one of the fol
lowing wettable materials per
hundred gallons is advised: One
pound of copper hydro, one-half
pound Ortho cop 53, one-half
pound COCS, one-half pound cop
per A or three-fourths pound
spray cop.
WALL STREET
New York (U.R) The stock
market put in a dull day as many
investors deserted the Street in
favor of a long Easter weekend.
Prices moved in a very narrow
range, except in the case of a few
specialties which moved up a
point or so.
With steel negotiations reces
sed until Monday, there was
little In the news to influence
the market. Steel issues were
little changed.
Oil shares registered a few
sharp declines and television
stocks h a.d some good gains
Rails were firm and fairly
active.
Dow Jones closing stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 266.29 up
0.54: 20 railroads 93.40 up 0.28;
15 utilities 49.53 off 0.04; 65
stocks 101.51 up 0.18.
Sales Saturday approximated
172.000 shares compared with
430.000 shares a week ago.
" e
(Meet
eetfiif wftk
Onlr t.t .
7 4-Cycf t.jlie
A Month
This sturdy beauty it buftt
for years of excellent cr
TVe with no compromise tn
quality la eplte of It knr
cost. The Cruiser l rugged,
yet light arid a.y to hah die.
If the Ideal power mover
for the average lawn.
Stop in and In u
jAow you itt many fat jtatotrt,
Crain & Mohr
The Horn of Croiley
Shelridor
22S EAST 6TH
Narcotic Charge Puts
Portland Man in Jail
San Francisco (U.R A
Portland, Ore., cardroom gam
bler and one-time bootlegger
went to jail Saturday for 18
months un a narcotics conspir
acy charge.
Michael DePinto, 48, -pleaded
guilty Friday to the charge
of conspiracy to conceal and
transport narcotics and drew the
federal prison sentence.
Two other counts against De
Pinto were dismissed at the re
quest of government attorneys.
DePinto was indicted by a San
Francisco grand jury along with
several others, including the no
torious gangster Waxey Gor
don, as participants in a nation
wide narcotics ring. '
DePinto's 74-year-old mother.
Mrs. Alvergo DePinto, Portland,
was a weeping spectator at the
sentencing.
Tiny scales of wool fibres,
when subjected to moisture,
heat and pressure, interlock
permanently to form felt.
Record Vole Seen
For NJ Primaries
On GOP Candidates
Newark, N. J. U.R) A rec
ord number of voters Is expected
to turn out Tuesday for New
Jersey's presidential primary
elections, which will provide
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
with his first major test since he
quit as NATO commander.
Election officials predicted
that nearly 1,000,000 of the
state's 2,490,017 eligible voters
would choose between Elsen
hower, Sen. Robert A. Taft of
Ohio and Harold E. Stassen on
the Republican ticket. Thirty
eight GOP nominating conven
tion delegates will be chosen.
Running unopposed for the 32
Democratic delegates is , Sen.
Estes Kefauver of Tennessee, but
Gov. Adlal Stevenson of Illinois
was expected to receive some
write-in votes.
State Attorney General Theo
dore D. Parsons, a Republican,
has ruled that Democratic write
ins for Eisenhower or any
other Republican will be valid.
Republicans also may write in
the name of any Democratic can
didate, Parsons ruled.
Also at stake In the New Jer
sey primaries were nominations
for 14 congressional seats and
one seat In the U. S. Senate.
Eight Republicans and five
Democratic representative? were
running for reelection. The 14th
congressman, Charles A. Eaton,
a Republican is not a candidate.
R. R. Rabbif Assn.
Stockholders in
Revival Effort
The Rogue River Valley Rab
bit Marketing Association, Inc.,
has taken on a new lease on life,
and, according to Vice President
H. F. Swingle, cash Is now being
paid for all the rabbits brought
in, new markets have been de
veloped and information and ad
vice is available for anyone who
may wish to raise rabbits for
market.
Found Rough Going
Swingle said the association
found the going pretty rough for
a while last year and removal of
the plant from Its location here
at 3340 North Pacific highway,
to Ashland was talked but it was
decided to remain in the present
location.
Following the resignation of
the manager last fall, some of
the stockholders donated their
efforts, receiving rabbits, butch
ering them, stretching hides, de
livering rabbits to markets and
working far, into the night in
many instances, Swingle de
clared, the income all going to
pay ol4 bills and otherwise
straighten out the association's
tangled financial affairs.
WOODWORKERS NOMINATE
Portland (U.R) James E. Fad
ling, former president of the
CIO Woodworkers union, has
been nominated without opposi
tion for president of the union's
southwest Washington district at
a convention In Chehalis, Wash.,
it was reported here Saturday.
REJECTS OFFER
Portland (U.R) Bob George,
head football coach at McLough
lin high school Mac-Hl at Mil-ton-Freewater,
said Saturday he
had decided to stay at the eastern
Oregon school. George had been
offered the football coaching job
at Portland's Franklin high.
HAWKINS GARAGE I
MEDFORD'S NIGHT GARAGE
We Fix 'em While You Sleep!
Modern Equipment
ALL EXPERT MECHANICS
for
Fleet Operator - Truckers
Car Owners
616 South Riverside
Phone 3-1534
3
Innocent Pleas Entered
By Washington Sheriff
Everett (U.R) Innocent pleas
were entered by Sheriff Tom
B. Warnock and four of his staff
Friday in Superior Court here.
Warnock and .his four assist
ants were charged with "know
ingly, willfully and feloneously"
permitting two trusties to escape
from a work gang last August
26.
NW Airlines Schedules I
Fast Cross-US Service
Seattle (U.R) Northwest Air-'
lines will pruide the western
Washington area with the fastest!
coast-to-coast airline service, be
ginning April 27, company of- j
ficials announced Saturday. j
George E. Hatch, western re-j
glonal sales manager for the air-I
line, said Stratocruisers will be
used for one-stop flights be
tween Seattle-Tacoma airport
and New York City. Total flight
time will be nine hours and 35
minutes, Hatch said.
The Manhattan Express will
leave Seattle-Tacoma at 11:30
p. m. and stop at Minneapolis
St. Paul.
irthday Sale
STARTS
MOW
DAY
SEE MONDAY'S MAIL TRIBUNE
FOR FURTHER DETAILS
PRICES EFFECTIVE ALL WEEK
FERGUSON
T
AGAINST
On April 9, 1952, the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York entered a final judgment,
with the consent of all parties, which ended four years of
litigation between Harry Ferguson, Inc. and Ford Motor
'Company and others. It was ordered and adjudged that:
1. The sum of $9,250,000 shall be paid to Harry Fergu
son, Inc. as royalties on Patents Nos. 1,916,945;
2,118,180; 2,223,002 and 2,486,257.
2. Ford Motor Company shall not manufacture, after
December 31, 1952, such tractors, and Dearborn
Motors Corporation shall not sell any such tractors
manufactured after December 31, 1952, as have
(a) a pump having a valve on its suction side, as for
example in the present Ford 8N tractor, arranged
to be automatically controlled in accordance
with the draft of an implement, or
(b) a pump for a hydraulically operated draft con
trol system for implement control and power
take-off shaft both driven by the lay shaft of the
transmission, as for example in the present Ford
8N tractor, or
(c) a coupling mechanism on the upper portion of the
center housing, of the form employed in Ford 8N
tractors manufactured prior to November 22,
1949; and Ford Motor Company and Dearborn
Motors Corporation must affix a notice on any
long coupling pins, manufactured by them, to
the effect that the pin is sold only for replace
ment on 8N tractors made by Ford Prior to No-
0
vember 22, 1949. This notice will continue to be
affixed until October 25, 1966. '
3. The Ford Motor Company and Dearborn Motors
Corporation shall have a period of time, expiring not
later than December 31, 1952, in which to make these
changes.
4. All other claims and counter claims are dismissed and
withdrawn on the merits.
A copy of the consent judgment is available to anyone
interested in reading it.
This settlement between Harry Ferguson, Inc. and The
Ford Motor Company resolves the issues. The inventions
in their entirety with which this action was concerned
will be found only in the Ferguson Tractor and in the
Ferguson System in the future.
It is fitting that farmers all over the world . . . and es
pecially in the Americas . . . shall continue to look to
Ferguson for fulfillment of all that these inventions
contribute to a greater and more prosperous agriculture.
Better implements, better farming practices, more abun
dant production, and lower farming costs have resulted
from the Ferguson System as employed in the Ferguson
Tractor.
Now, indeed, the Ferguson with the one and only com
plete Ferguson System is the tractor that meets more of
the needs of more of the farmers more of the time. This
cen be proved to you at a demonstration on your own
farm. Such a demonstration can be quickly arranged by
telephone. Won't you call us about it?
SEE US FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS IN FARM EQUIPMENT
WiHkeon Fai?mm Equipment
HIGHWAY 99 SOUTH
YOUR FERGUSON DEALER
I. I. (Smiley) Wilken, Owner
AT 4-K MOTORS
PHONE 3-3139
ONLY THE FERGUSON TRACTOR HAS THE GENUINE FERGUSON SYSTEM