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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1960)
o o 0 o lcsfegf&&?ro4u(tiQn Rise, Beating Demand lsoVef9, lUv.-Technoio-q gicfl cha i dairying Point Uvarl jwiuction in creasa -hicn ill outstrip lu fo milf end i3y aftutt, t jio-r pres ent ie, J. f. Mason, of WtShwto, ZtC, conomist of tioarf Kilt ro X5uct leFation, told dairv- m fc rf ional meeting of wit, rnttioft at the Jla m 1 i &, yi re- "It- ductio hae bsen abi fo tne patt 3 years litfc ce suypot nurchases by W Commodity Credit ojgacttioa cdecliaiag," he O -Tiottt "Hoiver, recent trenttt im otv numbers and grcUigrtion per cow-w hen ccjijlef wivi available feed ugglit-indicate that we may fKpectun upsurge in produc tion i I960 and thereafter, C30T TBS TIES DEf D CPTDCl o Call OAYSPRAY 0 c? 2-9279 particularly if beef prices turn downward." The prospect f more milk practically precludes a price level that will assure farm ers of incomes anywhere near comparable with other seg ments of the economy, Mason predicted. , CeaiiiMed hy Economists "This analysis of the eco nomic difficulties facing dairy farmer was confirmed by a committee of economists and specialists appointed by the National Milk Producers Fed eration from among the land grant colleges," he continued. "The committee pointed out that dairy farmers must make a choice. Either they must ac cept prices near current levels, or they must subject themselves to a program which would curtail national milk production to bring about improved prices. "T h e committee advised dairy farmers that if they felt that milk production should be curtailed a system of transferable and negoti able bases should be serious ly considered. These would not be rigid controls, but would restrict total milk pro duction and-at the same time -permit individual farmers maximum flexibility in plan ning the best use of their resources. "The negotiable quotas would be factors of produc tion which could be bought and sold on the same basis as cows, lan, feed, and other items. The government also could buy bases as a means of reducing production with out requiring cutbacks on in dividual farms." Flynn's Daughters To Gel Allowance Los Angele s (UPD Two daughters of the late Errol Flynn will receive a monthly allowance of $200 from one of his insurance policies. Mrs. Nora Eddingtons Haymes, second of the actor's three wives, said in her peti tion that the children, Deir dre, 14, and Rory, 12 have re ceived nothing from Flynn's estate since hrs death last fall. Distribution of the estate of undisclosed value has not yet been decided. The court ap proved the allowance from the insurance Monday. REPORT CASUALTIES Cairo- (UPD -The newspaper Al Ahram reported Monday that 21 persons were killed, 20 wounded and 38 arrested during last week's violent clashes in Iraq between Com munists and nationalists. o o o gB 9 G P 0" ATTENTION! FRUIT GROWERS Look over this list of the most com plete selection of new insecticides designed for you. Norkem Corpora tion also offers you experienced field service. gives excellent control of major insects and does not harm fruit. Use 3EVIN SEVIN 50,W yourjplf ft fine finish and more top quality fruit, o o The Sea. .fray. The Combination yDD CV AC A of Protection and Eradication has f EaXV J&m YV provided superior control of Pear Scab. 0 GUTHION Controls codling moths, apple maggots, jites, Scale, pear psylla, cherry fruit flies. The Single Insecticide that controls all major fruit pests all season long! DIAZINON KELHANE Ability to kill many species plus long residual action add up to Low - Cost mite control. Phytomycia, Agrimycin and Streptomycin for effective, ef ficient Pear flight Control. ANTIBIOTICS CHLOROBENZILATE SJL al stages of mites and those types resistant to certain other miticides. For effective," easy, economi- A 1" " f II I CDC cal weed control, Norkem V V 1 1 IV IVlLLC Kj has the greatest selection available. DILAN W-25 another product to be used against pear psylla up to ithin 50 days of harvest. O O ' - For Experienced Field Service Contact jvlcn Oorporatioiiu ED SMITH G P.O. Ooi 1133 M.dford, Ore. SIP 2-S3L51 Otv I "000 KITCHEN I. "V T'a rH MMILV R00U P 11 1 E f-Vi- Ul I SERVICE nL PI F iti loJoEN 0 BEDROOM l m ",l0 y BATH . m 6 3'- 0 LIVIN6 ROOM i9 14 BEDROOM 12.14 I " tht!" n I HI it BEDROOM BEDROOM n LJ ""3 i2io U tm Fjl w,i5 y r"v, rtir. 'f-i.i T'-O" ' WORKSHOP PLAN NO 4711 '8 97 SQUARE FEET GARAGE 20.25 This Week's Home of Distinction New Farm Co-op Doing Business In Rogue Valley After being in operation about a month, the Western Farmers association branch store in Medford is servicing 120,000 fryers in Jackson and Josephine counties and ap proximately 8,000 turkeys, ac cording to Manager Jack Han- kins. The store opened Feb 22. "We hope to have contracts covering 16,000 turkeys in the area," Hankins added, "in about a month." Western Farmers associa tion is a cooperative group serving Pacific Northwest ag riculture in Oregon, Washing ton and Idaho. The association provides integrated marketing and purchasing services to member farmers, the manager explained. Medf ord's WFA service branch offers farm produc tion supplies including seeds, fertilizers, formula feeds, and other production equipment. Also, these petroleum prod ucts: heating fuel, diesel fuel, motor oil, gasoline, gear lub ricants and automotive greas es will be available. Bulk feed and petroleum delivery service will be avail able to farmers in the Med f o r d-G rants Pass areas through the branch store, Hankins said. WFA offers, also, a market for commercial producers of turkeys, fryers, eggs, feed grains and seeds. WFA is now building a new $lVz to $2 million modern, pushbutton feed mill at Pprt land. It is scheduled for com pletion late this year, and will mean additional facilities for Oregon members, .Han kins pointed out. 11 G In At 0 II 1 H. fct " eg .Make Extra r Dollars with ELEPHANT BRAND ... because each bushel, ton, crate or bale of crop costs you less to grow. Elephant Brand fertilizers give you L.P.C Lower Production Cost per unit and extra profit. Your Elephant Brand dealer is the man to see. His know ledge and advice will be really valuable to you. Contact him soon. IT PAYS TO CHOOSE FROM THE ELEPHANT BRAND-LINE 11-48-0 I 13-39-0 I 16-48-0 I 16-20-0 1 23-23-0 I 24-20-0 I 27-14-0 8-32-16 10-30-10 13-13-13 14-14-7 NITRAPRIl I 3 (AwHwoniwit Nilro) AMMONIUM SULPHATE TRIPLE SUPER PHOSPHATL IOT rvQPUCTlOil COST pc unit Elephant water soluble FE RTI LI Brand rrCLUSivs .. win accmt rom clcphamt imho fcrtil.izxks balfouk guthmic eo.. UTOO. ! FMCICO - LOS ANGKLCS - SEATTLE - rOMTLANB - SFOKANC - MINNEAPOLIS ft . . iiiff'iiiiiiiiiiiteM By HIAWATHA ESTES This home features a rustic ranch exterior that it so pleas ing to many, while offering a modern luxury of three baths, a dressing room and a center hall plan. The over sized garage has space for two cars plus a storage area and workshop. - Three of the bedrooms are just to the right of the wide entry. The master bedroom has its own dressing room and bath. The dressing room has wardrobes on two walls and a dressing table on an other. The fourth bedroom or den is separated from the oth er bedrooms and if not used as a den, could be used as an office or as a bedroom for a relative, guest or an older child. It has a long wardrobe plus a floor to ceiling storage closet which could be used for books or redesigned as a built-in chest of drawers. The 4.1 A 1 inree-quarier Datn serves a double duty as it is available from both the den and the service. From the kitchen, you can get to any other room in the house without having to pass through another room. The corner windows in the large nooK, together with the win dow at the sink, flood the kitchen with light. The kitch en has more ample cabinets plus a large pantry in the nook area. A wall opening above the built-in range opens the kitch en to the family room. Many call the family room the most important room in the house. It can be used for informal entertaining, dining, chil dren's playroom so mother can keep an eye on them while doing her kitchen chores, a television room and most important of all, a room that helps keep the family together. The patio is accessable from either the family room or through the sliding glass doors at the rear of the liv ing room. Such doors are very important as outdoor living has become an integrated part of the modern family life pat tern. The family and living rooms are sepa-r.ted by a stone fireplace, wood box with storage above and a stor age closet which opens into the family room. A cedar shake roof, stone veneer and planters, together with for a elevation, wood siding, combine very pleasing front Complete working drawings of the above plan can be purchased at a cost of $7.90 for the first set and 5.00 for each additional set when ordered at the same time. This plan will be available at these prices until Aug. 3. 1960. Please allow two weeks for delivery. If the above home does not entirely meet with your satisfaction, a new homeplan book, HOMES OF DIS TINCTION; may be purchased for $1.00. Send all orders for either plans or books to: Hiawatha Estes, P. O. Box 404-T, Northridge, Calif. Safely Devices Urged for Ponds Farm ponds are beautiful, have great agricultural value, but can be dangerous, warn ed C. W. Jetfsen, chairman of the Rogue Soil Conserva tion district. Most of these ponds are near farm buildings and if not properly Jenced can be a hazard to small children. Tragic, accidental drowning of small children may result, he said. Such ponds can be used for irrigation, recreation, stock water, and in case of fire, as a water supply for pumpers. They also have great value in raising fish, Jensen sug gested. In some areas they have produced as much as $400 per acre in fish. The total number of farm ponds in the soil conservation dis tricts in the United States is 993,823 ponds. During one year 66,809 such ponds were constructed, as of June 30, 1959. During the same period Oregon had 2,844 ponds, plus 481 irrigation reser voirs. Jackson county has 73 of these ponds. "I urge and hope that ev eryone having such a pond on his property will take proper precautions to prevent any tragedy," Jensen concluded. FORFEITS BAIL 0 Hollywood- (LTD -Mrs. Flor ence Adland, 42, mother of the late Errol Flynn's 17-year-old girl friend, Beverly Ad land, forfeited $20 bail Mon day by failing to show up for trial on a drunk charge. Mrs. Adland was arrested Feb. 28 outside the home of Jack An drew Dulin, 32, demanding to see her ' daughter. She pleaded innocent to the charge and requested a jury trial. Her failure to appear and subsequent bail forfei ture closed the case. MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. 7 Tuesday, March 29, 1960 . FEArfs AXIS REVIVAL London - (UPD Pravdas To kyo correspondent has taken a diai view of West German Chancellor Konrad Aden auer's visit to fapan. In a Pravda article relayed to Lon don by Tass news agency the correspondent said the visit was an attempt to reviige the World War II Axis alliance between Germany and Japan. ATTENDS NATO TALKS Norfolk, Va'. - (UPD - Adm. Robert L. Dennison, head of the North Atlantic Treaty Or ganization's Atlantic Fleet Forces, left Monday for 12 days of talks with NATO com manders in Europe. 6adalui 40 ftafeta, Biu&A (p Ccffle, WE'VE GOT 'EM! Famous Cudahy Gold Bricks . protein blocks made to the same high standardsas Cudahy Mineral Blocks. Come in and let us quote you on Gold Bricks today! ALBERS FEED & FARM SUPPLY 4 330 NORTH FIR Are You Pickling Your Seed In Acid Soil? A soil test will tell you. See your district SCD office, your County Agent or local ASC office. AGRICULTURE LIME DISTRIBUTING COMPANY BOX 637 UL 5-1245 We Will Deliver Your Lime Spread on Your Field GOLD HILL, ORE. Write Us for Free Copy of '100 Questions and Answers on Liming Land" Production Record Completed by Guernsey Peterborough, NH.-A reg istered Guernsey cow, Elrason P Mert owned by P. K. Nel son, Medford, has completed an official production record, according to the American Guernsey Cattle club. This, record was. for 12,354 pounds of milk and 614 pounds of fat. "Mert," was a five-year-old, and was milked two times daily for 305 days while on test. This official production rec ord was supervised by Ore gon State college. PICKPOCKET UNNERVED Cairo - (UPD - A pickpocket needs cool nerves as well as a steady hand. The cutpurse at the Cairo Zoo who dropped the wallet in mid-pick when a lion roared didn't have them "CYPREX IS OUR SCAB FUNGICIDE FOR 1960" "Without Cyprex, we would not have harvested half our pear crop or held our apple scab in 1959," ye grower R. W. Perry & Son, Box 430, Route 1, Hood River, Oregon grow apples, pears, peaches and cherries on 130 acres. "In 1958 we did not pick the north half of our interplanted block of d'Anjou and Bartletts because it was almost 100 scab," says Bill Perry. "The south half was not as bad, 15 to 20 scab. This even though we put on a de layed dormant of lime-sulfur and oil, a pre-pink and a calyx spray." The Perrys tried Cyprex for the first time in 1959. It was applied in the worst scab spot, the north half of the pear block, at pre-pink and calyx. Two non-Cyprex sprays were used on the south half at the same timings. The control was not holding on the south half so they applied one Cyprex spray. Later, a Cyprex spray was applied on the whole block. At picking time they had ob tained equally good scab control in both halves of the block, even though the north half had been far worse in 1958. Furthermore, it received only three Cyprex sprays as against two Cyprex sprays and two sprays with other fungicides in the south half. "Some fungicides curl our young leaves, making insect con trol more difficult, but Cyprex does not," says Bill Perry. "On apples we used a dormant and pink of non-Cyprex fungi cides. Then we put on two Cyprex sprays. Before our first Cyprex there was a scab spot on every leaf, even the small ones. The Cyprex stopped it. The scab was dead three to four days after spraying." Bill Perry says: "Our Bartletts have the smoothest, most shiny finish, that they ever had. Cyprex is our scab fungicide for I960." How Cyprex works to give long-term protection PLUS eradication Cyprex is an entirely new fungicide chemical that has proved its value in hundreds of tests over a 5-year period. It works as a protectant and an eradi cant in control of scab fungus. It is equally effective against apple scab and pear scab and also controls cherry leaf spot. Applied as a standard spray, it spreads a tough fungicidal barrier on leaves and fruit that gives top scab con trol even through heavy rains. Cyprex has built-in spreader-sticker action. Some Cyprex actually "moves around" during rains to cover adjoining new growth, while the original tissue re mains protected. Cyprex penetrates throughout the leaf where it works . from the inside out killing scab spores that land. This is called local-systemic-action. Even when Cyprex is sprayed after scab infection begins and spores begin to germinate, Cyprex can knock out the infection inside the leaf. The spray also has deposited a protectant covering on the leaf. The next Jtime it rains, this stick-tight fungicide Trifl be ready to knock out new spores before they penetrate. No fungicide in common use caiPgive you the protection, plus extra-long eradicant action, you get with Cyprex. Cyprex is compatible with most com monly used insecticides and otherofun gicides. It's non-caustic, low in toxicity to orchard workers. All the extra advantages you get with Cyprex give yotf that margin of control that can make the difference between fair and excellent crop's. How ever, none of them eliminates the need for proper timing, good coverage, and a sound schedule. e Consult your local agricultural au thorities for further information. Or write for leaflet PE 5061, American Cyanamid Company, Agricultural Divi sion, Los Angeles 54, Californ?a. Cyprex is American Cyanamid Com.' pany's trade-mark for dodine fungicide.- C VA ATA M t CYANAMID SERVES THE MAN WHO MAKES A BUSINESS OF AGRICULTURE' CYPREX865-W FUNGICIDE and . was caught.