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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1959)
13 1 ' L S PERMANENT nfttfZIW J I l IL ' f Y" 0iy yr phytic! li tf i 4 f laqcf fLjy?-V 1 1 f4 fvJ I ' U I I I I L UImm! Sm Mm flnr. rhM briaq yaw pr tJf II ffi) f&LJ VrT7l VVlF 0 I J 1 V s I ' J J rittot m! Oir rgitfred barmacisrs flf f7l? LAJ "J I fi J 1 ifS wklll Jeiir Sil - 1 j5 V Steak Knife Set rfffe SrBuHM Color 1 i70 fXi&' CHAIRS J n000 1 llJl .Bridal Doll j COFFEE fil u3 MAKER f R,mLJIL ?3I WARMER 2 C7(P 3 UNDERPASS Above is engineer's drawing of the new $1 million Geary st., underpass which is scheduled to begin in San Fran cisco in January. The project includes ex cavation of Geary st., between Webster and Steiner sts. and four lane bridge where Fillmore meets Geary. This is one phase of $3,700,000 plan to convert Geary into a 12 block expressway through the heart of re development. Expenditure qualifies San Francisco for federal cash grants. (UPI Telephoto) 'No Man's Land' in Relations Of Labor, Management- Gone Editor's Not: This is the first of four dispatches by tha general counsel of the National counsel of the Na tional Relations Board an alyzing the new labor re form law. This dispatch deals with elimination of the so-called no man's land in labor management re TELEPHONE INDEX 1.25 VALUE Save at PAY LESS By STUART ROTHMAN General Counsel. NLRB Distributed by UPI Washington -flJPD-The "no man's land'; in labor-management relations that has so long plagued the employers and employees in small bus iness appears .to be eliminat ed by the new amendments to the Taft-Hartley Act. The old law barred the states from taking jurisdic tion over-labor-management conflicts" in" small businesses if the business had a relation to interstate commerce. At the same time, the National Labor Relations Board, which administers the federal law, could not take these cases for lack of funds and other rea sons of administration. This created the "no man's land," which the new law is de signed to' eliminate. Under the new law, the states and territories may take "jurisdiction over labor disputes over which the Na tional Board declines ... to assert jurisdiction." This gives the states jurisdiction over cases which the National Board does not take, but it does leave for solution the question of how to determine which cases the National Board will take and which it will decline. Two Methods The board has fashioned two means of meeting this problem. One is the board's published "Jurisdictional Standards.", which state in dollar volume of business the categories of cases that the board will take.-For example, the standard for retail con cerns is $500,000 gross vol ume of , sales per year. The National Board will take cas es involving companies which have that much annual bus iness. Cases involving retail companies with less business go to the state courts or what ever agency'the state has es tablished to handle labor re lations matters. There are 11 of these jurisdictional stand ards. But, in addition to its pub lished standards, the board has provided regular proced ures for parties to cases be fore state courts or agencies to get an official advisory opinion on close cases. State courts and agencies also may. get such opinions from- the Detroit Man Faces Possible Jail Term Detroit, Mich. - (DPD - Thorn-1 as J. Dyke Jr., 19, faces a pos sible 15-year jail term for al legedly trying to stretch a dol lar bill too far. Police said Dyke took four $20 biUs, lopped off the cor-- ners and pasted the corners to dollar bills. He had cashed three of the doctored one-spots and was trying to cash the re mains of a real $20 bill when he was arrested. Doctors Develop Vaccine for Trahoma Washington - IUPD - A team of American and Chinese doc tors has developed a vaccine which may - help stop the spread of trachoma, an eye disease which often leads to blindness. The Navy said the vaccine had 'tremendous potential" as a preventive and may alio be a cure, but still needed a board in Washington. Another important NLRB jurisdictional standard is that for non-retail concerns. The board takes jurisdiction in cases involving one of these concerns if it buys or sells, directly or indirectly, goods or services outside its home state to the value of $50,000 a year. This standard applies to manufacturing companies and wholesalers. The retail standard of $500,000 annual gross bus ness also applies to taxicabs, and the standard for transient hotels and motels is the same amount. In addition, there are. separate standards for truck and bus lines, public utilities, newspapers and communication systems such as television and telephone, office buildings and national defense industries. Associations of employers are treated as a single em ployer in computing their business volume for jurisdic tion purposes. Employers who refuse to supply data for com puting jurisdiction are taken without regard to the dollar standards if their company is involved in interstate com merce to any substantial de gree. In the District of Co lumbia, the board takes all cases, like a local board. And in secondary - boycott cases, the business of secondary em ployers as well as the pri mary employer is counted. De Gaulle Indicates Fighting Must Stop . Paris - IUPD - President Charles de Gaulle- declared Saturday it was "necessary that the fighting be stopped in the five-year-old Algerian rebellion. He said he was sure, that sooner or later "common sense will prevail over maneuve.s and ambi tions" in the rebel camp. The president, speaking in Alsace, indicated that he con sidered as a political maneuv er the proposal by the Alger ian rebel government-in-exile that de Gaulle negotiate a cease-fire with five rebel leaders imprisoned in France. -De Gaulle had quickly dis missed the rebel move Fri day, pointing out that his standing invitation to the rebels for Paris peace talks was directed to active insur gent leaders and not those "out of combat." But de Gaulle, apparently undeterred by the rebel move, told audiences on the final day of his Alsatian tour that he was confident peace would be reestablished in Al geria. Boy's Leg Breaks Again in Same Place Roseville, Calif. - (UPI) - Eleven-year-old -Bruce Black burn, who broke his right leg four months ago in a back yard football game,, had the heavy plaster cast removed Saturday at Roseville hospit al. Bruce hopped- about a few times, thensettled in the fam ily car for a happy trip home. But on the way, the Black burn auto collided .with an other car, breaking Bruce's leg again, and in thet same two places. . Neither his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Blackburn of Orangevale, Calif ., nor the driver of the other car. was injured in the crash. Known, reserves of crude oil in Assam State, India," now total 42,500,000 tons. . MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Mondsy, Nov. 23, 1959 s Airlines Identify Body from Crash , Miami - (UPD - National Air lines Saturday announced pos itive identification of another body, the tenth so far, in the Gulf of Mexico crash of a Tampa, Fla., to New Orleans flight which killed 42 per sons. The latest victim identified was Arnold Broolft Bates of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. CORONET VSQ BRANDY F 1 fef ? ,if :s j JL Tk vaSlNe aj V--e ' THE MOST WINNING GIFT I Twice os nice in this authentic ship sdecanterond bright holiday carton. Full fifth no extra cost. 8 HANDY OiST. CO, NtW YORK, N. V. CAUF. SRAPE BRANDY, 14 PROOF CO-4MA Newtpapen, VSt 64 m Who is your grocer? we hope he is the fellow supporting Med ford's Largest Industry . . . THE LOCAL FOOD INDUSTRY The local INDEPENDENT fOOD MERCHANT is a member of, a tremen dous family -of food producers, canners, distributors, haulers, packers, field workers, etc!, numbering countless hundreds of people making a liv ing for themselves and their families in and around Medford. An estimated 1500 families depend upon this tremendous industry to keep Medford dollars circulating. .... Your local independent, food merchants buy collectively with each-other thru their buying organizations to insure the advantages of quantity dis counts. This enables competitive pricing and lower food prices for Medford. WHO IS YOUR LOCAL INDEPENDENT FOOD DEALER? He is the fellow who employs local people Borrows his money. from local banks Deposits his rribney in local savings institutions (so you may obtain local credit) Supports local churches, schools. Boy Scouts, Y.M.C.A., Girl Scouts, Campfire Girls , ; many other local interests anc HE KEEPS YOUR MONEY HERE AT HOME by patronizing and supporting local industry and creating jobs to provide for families of hundreds of workers in numerous fields, such as The Dairy and Creamery Industry Local Repair Service for Equip. & Fixtures General Agriculture & Local Produce Local Warehouses and Truck Jobbers The fresh Meat Industry Advertising Media (newspaper, radio, TV) The Bakery Industry ... Fruit & Vegetable packers and canners The Freight Industry (trucks and railroads) Look for this emblem -the sign of your independent food merchant United Grocers Inc. "We buy together to sell for less" year of tests. II