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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON WEDNESDAY. JULY 31. 1963 .... LJ ""' T' 1 i --ir-T- e I ' ...ji.iiiiiiMiuiiuiiiui.i.m.n. -fw115smvw,,, ' tVLAN D ; V. i II .,, C:-' feci 51 . :-V. change of its kind between the world's two best known amusement centers. Disneyland tour guide Donna Jackson, 23. is currently taking Miss Krough's place in the Tivoli information center in Copenhagen. (UPI) Patent Office One Of Busiest Places In Nation's Capital VISITING HOSTESS - Birgitte Krough. 23, of Tivoli Gardens, Copenhagen, Denmark is greeted by Mickey Mouse as she arrives at Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., to begin her duties as a tour guide in the first ex- T.. -i miT Kou Specify. . . ...We'll Satisfy LASH Oakland, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Other California Points. Call Jack Fitzgerald, V3-7761 Los Angeles-Seattle Motoi Express, Inc. REWARDED WITH EGGS Pasadena, Tex. - iUW - A bank sack discovered and turned over to police by Rob ert Boyd, 8, was found to be the property of a New Caney, Tex., poultry farm. As a re ward for his honesty, Robert received four dozen eggs. London - iUPI. - The Daily Telegraph reported today that Britain was in the fifth day of a "heat w.'ive." 1'he high tem perature in London Monday was 77 degrees. New York iirpn One of the busiest offices in the nation's capital, summer heat or win ter chill, is the U.S. Patent Office, today striving to keep abreast of at least 100 times the volume of work it han dled a century ago. Where ever industry func tions, particularly in the fast moving and highly competi tive electronic and chemical fields, someone in a research and development job attempts to keep an eye on patents af fecting his particular area. Ordinarily, he will use the Official Gazette, a weekly oublication of the patent of fice and one for which there is a regular charge. In its bulky 500 pages a week there are abstracts of the 1,000 or so patents which may be is sued in the average week. Third Form Or, a company may put in a regular order for any pat ents issued in a particular class. When it comes to dig ging back, it may employ a third form of discovery, in a patent search. The American Management association, in its Manage ment Review magazine pub lished earlier this year, de voted an article to the value of the patent office to man agement, and noted that many companies do not know how to use its facilities to their best advantage. It quoted a communications company executive as sug gesting that open minded ex ecutives make a personal tour of the patent office to get a first hand look at the re sources available there - a store of more than 3 billion patents, divided into 300 main classes and 62,000 sub classes. A New York publishing house, Rowan & Littlefield, Inc., now has made a further contribution to patent re search with the beginning of an ambitious project for a catalogue of patents which would bring together in clas sified form the patent infor mation included in more than 5,000 issues of the official ga zette. It also plans to publish an index of patents issued be tween 1790, when the patent office got under way, and 1960. Eaoch unit is planned to contain patent numbers by class and sub class, cross-referenced patent numbers and separate listings of patents by time, subject and number. Four volumes of the nation al catalog now published list all patents filed with the U.S. Patent Office in 1961 in the electrical and chemical fields. They are shown in the form of one major claim and one drawing. f '.V 4- t 4: sen". -J "V ' v 'I f M J. fc An "6 a sags "WW 'Jn . A piece of paper that makes cash old-fashioned! Oh, sure, coins are handy for parking meters and telephone calls. But the modem, . time-saving way to pay bills is by check. It's businesslike, too-cancelled checks are proof of payment. Besides regular checking accounts, we have low-cost Special Check ing Accounts-for folks who don't write many checks. A Special Checking Account requires no monthly service charge and no minimum monthly balance. And each check is personalized with your name and address free. Now is the time to start enjoy ing the convenience of a checking account at U. S. SERVING MEDFORD with TWO BRANCHES The United States National Bank of Portland Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 55 yyyyyyyyyyyyyy: Goldwater Warns On Futility of Pact With Russia New York-HTO-Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R-Ariz.), Mon day warned of the futility of a non-aggression pact with Russia and said such an agreement would be "sheer stupidity." Goldwater, regarded as a top contender for the GOP presidential nomination next year, made the comment dur ing an addresss here at the annual convention of the Beauty and Barber Supply Institute. Goldwater referred to spe culation that such an agree ment would be sought if the test ban treaty signed in Mos cow were ratified by the United States Senate. On the subject of the test ban pact itself, Sen. Goldwat er insisted he was maintain ing an "open mind" before deciding whether to vote for ratification. Previously, he was reported opposed to the treaty. He stressed the treaty would not prevent a nuclear war and called the pact "valueless" in view of the announced intentions of France and Communist Chi na to continue nuclear test. Goldwater said he prob ably would make up his mind on ratification when the Joint Chiefs of Staffs take a position on the matter, add ing that "the attitude of the military is most important." He was critical of the new treaty because of its failure to ban underground testing, and he said this would give the Soviets an opportunity to continue secret testing. The treaty calls for a ban on test ing in the atmosphere, outer space and under water. f1 3 Freeman, Nikita l Share Peace Pipe j Moscow Hint Premier i Nikita Khrushchev shared a peace pipe with visiting Sec retary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman in a Kremlin meeting Tuesday. Freeman ended a tour ot the Soviet Union with a meet ing with Khrushchev, also at tended by U. S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler. During the meeting Freeman, a former Minnesota governor, present ed Khrushchev a Minnesota Indian peace pipe. "Allow me to present' it lo you as a symbol of our com mon desire for peace in the world," Freeman told the So viet leader. Khrushchev gratefully ac cepted the pipe, telling Free man he docs not smoke but welcomes it as a symbol. After Freeman told him how In dians scaled peace agreements by passing the pipe around, Khrushchev held it close to his mouth but did not put the pipe to his lips or attempt to smoke it. The pipe ceremony took place at the start of the meet ing. Newsmen were allowed to watch it but were ushered out when the 10-minute talks began. Freeman arrived In Ihe So viet Union July H. He 1 as i been touring farms and agri cultural stations. 44 in Coast Guard Probes Drowning Portland IUPI) The Coast Guard has began an in vestigation into the drowning of a 2-year-old boy at Kala ma., Wash., Sunday. Steven Anthony Aldrich, Ktlama. perished Sunday when he was swept into the Columbia river by a large wave from the WHke of the freighter Philippine Mail, bound upriver for Portland. The child's body was re covered Monday by a skin diver. Capt. Emery II. Joyce, of ficer in charge of the Coast Guard investigation, said an opinion would be released shortly. Appearing at a hearing here Monday were David Lani, the helmsman; Wayne E. Lien, third mate and watchman on ! the bridge; Roy Morgan, sec j ond mate, who also was on ! Ihe brideg; Capt. Jack E. ! Smith, the pilot, and Capt. Eddo 11. Keycn, the ship's ! master. j Capt. Feyen estimated the ship's speed was about nine ! miles an hour. He said the j mariner hull on the Philip I pine Mail produces a greater ; suction lhan other types o.' ; hulls and they have "greater ! trouble with their wash" than other hulls. Morgan testifier! that the pilot had noticed the wash was "a little high" and told him to slow down. BAIN NAMED HEAD Washington -'t:Pli - Gordon Bain, veteran airline and Tov ernmcnt airline official, has been named to head the SI billion supersonic airliner program. USES BIG SAVINGS When You Shop DOLLAR DAYS SHORTS Values to 5.98 T-TOPS 2.98-3 98 Values CUT-OFFS 3.98 Values BLOUSES 2.98 -3.98 Values CALF SKINNERS VjIuoi to S.98 JAM AICAS & BERMUDAS 4.98-5.98 Values T-TOPS 4.98-6.98 Values CUT-OFFS Valuei to S.98 BLOUSES Valuoi 4.98 and up BEACH ROBES HOUSE COATS Valuoi to 7.98 CAPRI PANTS Values to 7.98 GALF SKINKERS Values 6.98-8.98 JAMAICAS and BERMUDAS Values 6.98 and Up CAPRI PANTS Values 8.98 and Up SKIRTS Values 6.98-10.98 JACKETS Values 9.98-15.00 DRESSES 150 SUMMER DRESSES Values to 16 98 0 HOUSE GOATS VALUES to 12.98 ill DRESSES OVER 100 LOVELY SUMMER DRESSES VALUES TO 19.98. If your CREDIT Is GOOD . . . It's Good at PICK'S . . . Convenient parking mjket if 10 eatv to visit Robimon Bo., Pick's and othtr down town Medford storea and ahopt. USE THEM . . . they're FREE when you shop DOWNTOWN IN MEDFORD. 11 Jr 112 EAST MAIN STREET Next Door to Robinson Bros.