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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1963)
BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON TUESDAY. MAY 28. 1963 Inventions Part II Taking Another's Idea, Improving it, Often Brines Success for Inventors By HARRY FERGUSON Washington - UPli - Most fa mous inventors merely took another man's idea and im proved on it. You do not have to come up with something entirely new lo get a patent. The Wright Brothers in vented the airplane after read- performed by a Belgian nam- down tne Mississippi river nis ing about the work of Otto ed Hans Lippcrshey. boat got stuck on a dam. He Lilienthal, a German who Even the most simple thing j devised a set of bellows manufactured Bliders. Galileo can be improved upon and placed just below the water did not invent the telescope because of a sudden inspira tion but because he had heard about experiments with lenses ; I Ml mi1? : - - !- .V - 5 1 tr-v ft a ' ii SWITCH ACTIVATED President Kennedy presses a gold telegraph key to activate a light switch in the rebuilt Mark Twain Lighthouse in Hannibal, Mo., while attending the an nual While House Press Dinner in Washington. President Franklin D. Roosevelt turned on the lights in the original building, which was destroyed hy a wind storm two years ago, in a similar ceremony in 1935. (UPI) patented. The other day pat ent No. 3.085,272 was granted to Laverne M. Cowan of Cov ington, Ga., for a tooth brush. His idea was to set the bristles into the handle in the form of an X. To apply for a patent you make a drawing of your in vention, write a letter describ ing it and mail them, along with $30, to the U.S. Patent Office. Your application will go to one of the patent of fice's 1,000 examiners who will determine whether you have come up with a novel idea. If the application is granted, you have exclusive rights to your invention for 17 years, but only in the United Slates and its terri tories. After that the inven tion goes into the public do main. Unless you get a patent in every country in the world, anybody in a foreign nation can take your idea and go into business without paying you anything. Patience Pays Off Patience is a virtue which every inventor must cultivate. It frequently takes 20 or 30 years to develop his idea to the point where it becomes commercially feasible and profitable. The zipper, for in stance, is in such widespread use today that most persons assume it was an instataneous success. Actually the basic idea was patented in 1891 by Whitcomb L. Judson who call ed his idea "a clasp locker and unlocker for shoes." It was made of hooks and eyes with a sliding clasp and Judson soon extended the idea to women's dresses and sold his product for 35 cents. Complaints began rolling in immediately. There was no way to lock the first zipper and when women sat down, their dresses popped open. Judson could not devise a solution to the problem and died without cashing in on his invention. A momentary discomfort or irritation frequently results in an invention. Patent No. 6,461) was issued to Abraham Lincoln because on a trip line of the hull, and the idea was that when the bellows were pumped up the boat would float free. There is no record that his invention ever was put into production, and a few years later he became pre-occupied with larger matters. Mark Twain ran out of glue one day when he was pasting items into his scrap- book and immediately put aside literary matters to con centrate on the problem. The result was that he got patent No. 121,992 for what was de scribed as a "self pasting scrapbook. It was simply a scries of blank pages coated with past, and he sold 25,000 of them Few persons have heard of Alfred E. Ischinger of Mount Penn, Pa., but he is a famous man in the U.S. Patent Office, In 1937 he set a record for the largest documentation of an invention - 170 sheets of drawings and 146 pages of specifications. His machine was for "the uninterrupted knitting of shaped fabrics.' Next: Strange ideas that flow into the patent office. Police Check Two Accidents in City Medford police investigated two non-injury vehicle acci dents in the city Monday. One driver was cited, officers said. Vehicles operated by Wil liam Jennings Cooney, 67, of 717 Dekota ave., and Eliza beth Ann Wehrly, 49, of 139 White Oak dr., collided about 1:20 p.m. at 11th and Holly s t s-. Investigating officers cited Cooney for disobeyed a traffic signal. A vehicle operated by Charlie Mull, 56, of 2978 East McAndrews rd., struck a parked car registered to Jar- very James Dutton, 2321 Cap ital ave., about 4:54 p.m. on Jackson st. near the Wood stock St. intersection. No cita tions were issued, officers said. e?3- tft this Memorial Day it's Pepsi J? JLff- f ! f r inp rnnsR wnn minx vnune i i v.si " " Il,lllla-I1!1tJ if fs i PEPSICOLA Time off for a day outdoors calls for a time out for Pepsi-Cola. Light, brac ing Pepsi matches your modern activities -the think-young life I Pepsi's sparkling-clean taste is never too sugary or sweet. And nothing drenches your thirst like a cold, inviting Pepsi. So think young-say "Pepsi, please!" F-vtlfl bv rr'- Cr' 6?H'.rig Comtwiy, MHf"'H, unrjtt cpnmtmtnt trnm Fo'-Co' Corpjny, N.Y,, N.Y. gym 1 , "Trlpps," sav 'LET 'EM RACE' This IVi-year-old Beagle, and heard all the sleek race cars as they prepared for the Memorial Day race at Indianapolis, Ind,, but he couldn't care less. He was thankful for the shady spot provided by his master, Richard Houston, but he would just as soon be back in Elmira Heights, N.Y. (UPI) Quotes From the News By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Jackson, Miss. Businessman Joseph Albright, advising Mayor Allen Thompson on the subject of civil rights after Negroes walked out of a grievance session: "You run this city lo tht best of your ability for all con cerned and let tht agitators be damned." Dim Future (or Feed Grain Law Repeal Visioned A 3 Washington - (UPI) - Senate Democratic Whip Hubert H. Humphrey (Minn.) today pre dicted a "very dim future" for a new attempt to replace present wheat and feed grains laws with a new program. The new bill, introduced Monday by two Republican and two Democratic senators, apparently faced slow going in the Senate Agriculture committee. Chairman Allen J. Ellen- Washington Justice Arthur J. Goldberg, commenting on the unanimous Supreme Court ruling calling for a speedup in the desegregation of recreation facilities in Memphis, Tenn.: "The basic guarantee! of our Constitution are warrants for the here and now and ... they r io ba promptly fulfilled." Los Angeles Mrs. Elaine Johnson, 39, who lost 136 pounds on a hospital-supervised diet, commenting on her first meal in 117 days a spoonful of cottage cheese and one fourth cup of eggnog: "I couldn't eat it all, It was too much," Nairobi, Kenya Jomo (Burning Spear) Kcnyalla, possible first prime minister of Kenya, promising to protect the rights of the white minority: "We shall build a country where every citixtn may develop his talents io the full . . . The rights of all and of their properly will be fully protected." Racial Conflicts Hinder Diplomats Washington -JWit- Secretary of State Dean Rusk says U. S. racial conflicts force U. S. diplomats to conduct foreign policy like sprinters with one leg in a cast. Rusk called for solution of race problems which he said are causing "deep injury" to the United States abroad. The secretary, a native of Georgia, spoke out on racial problems at a foreign policy briefing for about 300 repre sentatives of private organiza tions. His remarks, first made on a "background only" basis, were released for publication later at the request of news men. Rusk said the United States "Is now confronted with one of the gravest issues that we have had since 1865 and . -this issue deeply affects the conduct of our foreign rela tions. I am speaking, of course, of the problems of dis-1 crimination in this country, in , whatever part of the country, based on race or religion or national origin." "I believe that in general the free world is in a position to move forward with confi dence ... if we do not let up, if we maintain our effort and continue to support the great causes of freedom," Rusk said. "But In this coun try we are running this race with one of our legs in a cast." der (D-La.) was due back to day from Louisiana but there were no indications he would support the bipartisan bill which Is backed strongly by the American Farm Bureau Federation. The measure was introduc ed by Sen. Bourke B. Hicken looper (R-Inwa) with Sens. George D. Aiken (R-Vt ), Clin ton P. Anderson (D-N.M.) and Spcssard L. Holland (D-Fla.) as co-sponsors. Humphrey said "to repeal the present feed grain law would be unfortunate , . . it is a good piece of legislation." He also attacked the new proposal on other counts and said he thought it would have "little or no chance" of pas sage. "I predict a very dim future for such an attempt,'' he told a reporter. The bill would repeal the feed grain law which Presi dent Kennedy signed last week just before the wheat referendum in which grow ers rejected the administra tion's acreage control pro gram. It also would remove tha a g r iculture secretary's au thority to conduct another wheat referendum next year. SALE! PETUNIAS . Singles Dozen DOUBLES $1 PER DOZEN 3 Day Sale! Wed., Thurs., Fri. Limit 2 Doz. Per Person Crater Greenhouse 1036 Crater Lake Avenue Phone 772-4401 i nnthind nnnlrl hp. mora prknV