Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 14, 1960, Image 9

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RAINBOW LEAGUE
Standings: w.
Steve Wilson Lbr. Two.. 14
Carolina Pacific Plywood 13
Star Body Shop nij
State Forest Patrol 8'
Steve Wilson Lbr. One 8
Crater Lake Mach. Two 8
Knights of Columbus 7
Hoot Owl Logging 6
Crater Lake Mach. Ont 6
Don Stathos Ins. 5'
Piggly Wiggly 5
Harry and David 4
L.
2
3
414
8
8
8
9
10
10
10 li
11
12
Results:
Steve Wilson Two 3 (Bruce Pom-
eroy 511) 2837; Harry and David
1 (Mink Barr 451) 2620.
Carolina Pacific 3 (Dave Rice
505 2744; C. L. Mach. One 1 (Carl
juyiutra 47 3 2ts.
C. L. Mach. Two 3 (Don Stoner
526) 2829: Forest Patrol 1 (Gordon
j-ayion sua) 27D0.
Knights 3 (Ernie Flakus 496)
2753; Hoot Owl 1 (Earl Lenz 570;
2677.
Star Body 3 (Pink O'Connor 528)
2786; Steve Wilson One 1 (Wallace
JNeece 519) 2755.
Stathos Ins. 4 (Neal Dow 520)
2737; Piggly Wiggly 0 (Russ Fowler
430) 2ao2.
BARTLETT BELLES
Standings:
Corner Club
First National Bank .
United Grocers
Clvystal Meats
Stauffer Reducing
Eagles Two
Trowbridge & Flynn .
Lininger's Rockettes .
Eagles One
sy s Place
Pepsi Cola Bottling Co.
Alexander Music
Roethler Shell
Baker Moulding
Double Dee Lumber
W.
37
30
29':
28 li
28
27
27
24
23
23
22
21
18
13
12
L.
11
18
18
191s
20
21
21
24
25
25
26
27
30
35
36
Results:
Roethler's 2 (K. Smith 463) 1984
D. D. Lumber 2 (Logan 408) 1960
Alexander 0 (Dyer 404) 1929;
Linineer's 4 (Neeley 490) 2087
Chrystal 3 (Nunes 496) 2241
Univ. Pump 1 (Smith 456) 2065.
Stauffer 0 (Cornelius 533) 2320
Trowbridge 4 (Nicodemus 613
437.
United Grocers 3 (Morton 516)
2269; Corner Club 1 (Davis 548)
151.
Eagles One 2 (Saterlee 462) 2119
1. N. Bank 2 (Ellis 499) 2165.
Eagles Two 3 IDaigle 445 1966:
laker Moulding 1 (Dwyer 431)
1907.
Pepsi 1 (Snedden 451) 2132; Sy's
lace 3 (Tuttle 525) 2202.
High games Kay Nicodemus
279; J. Hutton zzi; L. weeiey zua;
J. Saterlee 202; a. .Davis zui.
ALL AND CHAIN
Standings:
Mix Uppers
Woodchoppers
The Pills
Chuck & Orr's
Four Strikes
-Medleys
The Convicts
Four Blows
tig C-s
ea Pickers
Rock & Rollers
f inky-Dinks
Che Toppers
Four Spares
W.
, 27
. 24
, 22
19
19
19
18
17
16
16
15
15
13
12
12
14
17
17
17
18
19
20
20
21
21
23
24
gKsults:
Convicts 3 (J. Burroughs 603)
2074; Mix Uppers 1 (R. Heming
way 562) 1930.
Pills 2 (Jane Kessler 497) 1868;
Pea Pickers 2 (Flo Duncan 487)
1693.
Woodchoppers 3 (D. Harmon 562)
2016; Rinky-Dinks 1 (E. Feinstein
438) 1619.
Four Strikes 4 (L. Howe 592)
1966; Toppers 0 (Billie England
432) 1635.
Rock & Rollers 4 (K. Phipps 597)
1868; Four Spares 0 (Teddi Farrar
524) 1906.
Chuck & Otts 3 (C. Clark 513)
1874; Big C's 1 (Maxine McCall
579 1915.
K-Medlevs 0 (T. Thompson 493)
1653; Four Blows 4 (R, Vowell 514)
1787.
Results:
Valley Locker 4 (C. Mitchell 401)
2103; Niagara Dusters 0 (G. Nixon
388) 1931.
Kims One 0 (J. Coffman 323)
1847; Van Lees 4 (B. St.Clair 494)
2154
Tallv Ho 0 (C. Baylor 413) 1989;
Kims "Two 4 (M. Price 428) 2074.
High game B. St.Clair 184, M.
Price 170.
DALLAS GETS PLAYERS
Los Angeles -flJPD- The Na
tional Football League bol
stered its new entry, Dallas,
by awarding it nine players,
including quarterback Don
Heinrich of the New York
Giants and L. G. Dupre of the
Baltimore Colts.
ROBERTSON NAMED
New York-dJPD-Oscar Rob
ertson of Cincinnati, "The
Big O" with the big average
and the bright prospects, to
day was voted the United
Press International's college
basketball Player-of-the-Year
for the third straight season.
ALL-STAR GAME
Los Angeles -4UPD- National
Football League owners ap
proved an all-star game spon
sored by the American Foot
ball Coaches Association.
Pay Increases for
Millions at Stake
In Wage Discussion
Washington -Pay raises for sponsored by Kennedy (S
millions of American workers
are at stake in the Congres
sional controversy over
changing the federal mini
mum wage law.
Indications are that the
long-simmering wage ques
tion may boil into one of the
big campaign issues of 1960,
and several White House as
pirants may be singed in the
process.
There are two key issues:
(1) Raising the present $1
minimum, unchanged since
1955.
(2) Bringing additional mil
lions under coverage of the
law.
In testimony before the
House Labor Standards Sub
committee, Secretary of La
bor James P. Mitchell was
faced with some thorny tasks
on both fronts.
Mitchell's difficulty stems
from a drive by Senate Demo
cratic leaders to increase the
compulsory minimum to
$1.25, and bring at least six
million additional workers
under the law. Sen. John F.
Kennedy (D-Mass.) is spear
hearing the campaign, sup
ported by the AFL-CIO. A bill
Telegrams Arriving
Almost Daily Bring
New Cuban Charges
ROGUE ROLLERS
Standings:
Red Blanket Lumber Co.
Henry's Broiler
Hobbs Center
Hoot Owl Logging Co.
Skeeters and Skeeters
Team Two -
Jackson County Federal
Desert Service
Twin Plunges
Minnesota Woolens
W.
21
19
17
14
14
13
13
11
11
7
L.
7
9
11
14
14
15
15
17
17
21
Results:
Team Two 0 (Goff 491) 1896;
Ckeeters 4 (Hollenbeck 450) 2105.
Red Blanket 1 (Legg 508) 1946:
Hobbs Center 3 (Williams 477)
2013.
Woolens 2 (Weiss 433) 1832; Hen
rys Broiler 2 (Mang 488) 1919.
Hoot Owl 1 (Le Roy 455) 1948;
Twin Plunges 3 (McNeel 472) 2009.
J C. Federal 4 (Higinbotham
407) 1870; Desert Service 0 (V.
Miller 421) 1871.
High game G. Mang 187, M,
Legg 206, A. Williams 201, M. Mc
Neel 191.
Washington -(UPD- In a small
room at the State Department
telegrams arrive from the
U.S. embassy in Havana al
most daily, telling of Cuba's
latest charges against the
United States.
They are sorted, marked
and channeled to official
desks. They add up to some
serious accusations.
The charges have led to the
recall of U.S. Ambassador
Philip Bonsai for consulta
tions, to tense diplomatic
meetings here and in Havana,
and to Secretary of State
Christian A. Herter saying
that "circumstances might
arise" evenutally which could
cause a break in relatons with
Cuba.
Few From Castro
Relatively few of the
charges come from Premier
Fidel Castro himself. Most are
from Revolucion, Castro's
semi-official newspaper; Ra
dio Mambi and Union radio,
two stations he controls; Pren
sa Latina, the Cuban wire
service, sometimes with an
assist from the New China
News Agency.
The barrage began in earn
est last October. In a four-
hour speech on Oct. 22, Castro
blamed the United States and
the Senate internal security
subcommittee for bombings of
sugar cane fields.
Dec. 11, Cadena Latino-
Americana, a radio chain con
nected with Union Radio
"Secretary Herter, with . ,
characteristic hypocrisy . .
NIGHT HAWKS LEAGUE
Standings: W.
BAR 14
Mitchell Bros. Truck Line 11
Hamilton Manage. Corp. 9
Mechanics Laundry 8
Triangle Food Market 8
Team No. Five 6
Guy Havs Real Estate 5
Barco Supply Co. 5
L.
2
5
7
8
8
10
11
13
Mitchell Bros. 3 (Howard Baker
508) 1711; Barco 1 (Bob Bigger 510)
1664.
Triangle Mkt. 4 (Bob Foster 653)
1776: Hays 0 (Don Crawford 475)
1659.
BAR 3 (Ray Stewart 553) 1646;
Team No. Five 1 (Emil Rass 521)
Hamilton Mgmt. 3 (David Baylor
513) 1695: Mechanics Lndry. 1
(Vince Lobdell 472) 1695.
High game Emil Rass 205.
EARLY BIRD LEAGUE
Standings:
Kims Two
Valley Locker
Van Lees
Tally Ho
Niagara Dusters -
Kims One
W.
11
8
6
5
5
1
L.
1
4
6
7
7
11
Pilots Facing
Forced Retirement
Washington-OJPD-This could
be the last day in airliner
cockpits for some of the na
tion's finest pilots unless a
U.S. District Court in New
York grants a reprieve.
A Federal Aviation Agency
order grounding all airline
pilots 60 years and older goes
into effect tomorrow.
The Air Line Pilots Asso
ciation is seeking a temporary
injunction against the order.
Attorney Samuel Cohen, rep
resenting the pilots' union,
said if the district court de
nied the injunction, ALPA
will take its case immediately
to the U. S. Court of Appeals.
The injunction request was
filed in behalf of 24 airline
pilots included among the esti
mated 40 whose wings will
be clipped tomorrow under
the FAA rule.
said the United States was
making sincere efforts to bet
ter relations . . . Christian
Herter knowingly lies."
Dec. 18, Cadena Latino
Americana: "We have said
and continue to say that the
U.S.' government supports and
protects all dictators, tyrants,
and bloody governments."
Nixon Called 'Insolent'
On Jan. 18, Castro accused
Vice President Richard M.
Nixon of "insolent remarks
against the Cuban people" and
charged Bonsai with deceit
and bad faith. Similar charges
Jan. 21 led to Bonsai's tem
porary recall. He still has not
returned to Havana.
Feb. 27: "We here at Radio
Mambi tell you, Mr. Eisen
hower, that you are a servant
of the United Fruit Co. and of
General Motors."
Radio Mambi said of Presi
dent Eisenhower's Latin
American trip: "The old golf
player is now visiting again.
What a visit! It is a political
joke." On Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev's Asian
trip, a Cuban government ra
dio broadcast said: "It was a
resounding success for Soviet
diplomacy."
Last week, Castro made an
implied charge that the Unit
ed States was implicated in
the explosion of a French mu
nition ship in Havana harbor.
Union Radio summed up
U. S. officials in general as
"octopuses."
Striking Actors To
Negotiate Issues
Hollywood-flJPD-The striking
Screen Actors Guild and
seven major studios have be
gun negotiating on the cru
cial issue in the eight-day ac
tors strike the sharing of prof
its from the sale of post-1948
movies of television, it was
learned Sunday night.
The major studios had said
earlier they would refuse to
talk about the so-called "resid
ual" benefits.
SAG President Ronald Rea
gan told a star-studded mass
meeting of 3,000 actors, how
ever, that the issue was dis
cussed when negotiations were
renewed Friday. The talks are
to resume tomorrow.
Moscow -(UPD- The expedi
tionary ship "Ob" landed So
viet scientists on "Peter-The-First
Island" in the Belling
hausen Sea of Antarctica re
cently, the news agency Tass
announced Sunday.
SPECIFY AND INSIST ON
TTISU-MDX
CONCRETE
for
Uniform
Strength
CONCRETE C?
1046) will soon be reported
by the Senate Labor and Pub
lic Welfare committee. It
would raise the minimum
wage of about 6.7 million per
sons, including many clerks
in the big retail stores and
service establishments and
employees in low-paying in
dustries. Mitchell Position
Mitchell has long opposed
the $1.25 figure, on grounds
that, instead of helping many
employees in low-wage indus
tries, it would prove so much
of a burden to employers that
many persons would be fired
In 1950, Mitchell opposed any
raise in the minimum whatso
ever, and in turn was round
ly attacked by organized la
bor. Mitchell altered his wage
position in a report to Con
gress Feb. 4 of this year. Pre
paring the way for an in
crease, he said that his latest
surveys showed . that the in
dustries most affected by the
last minimum wage boost in
1955 had now adjusted to it
pretty well. He said a "modest
increase" would now be in
order, but he intimated that
too much of an additional in
crease in 1960 could place
these industries and their
workers in real trouble.
While attempting to blunt
the Democratic drive for
$1.25, Mitchell also has been
pressed to defend his own cov
erage proposals, which bring
in about 3.1 million addition
al workers.
Coverage Problem
The coverage problem is
one of the most complicated
in the minimum wage field.
The present law affects only
about 24 million out of a U.S.
labor force of 65 million. Farm
workers, executive and pro
fessional people and many
others are left out, in some
cases because they are self-
employed, in others because
they are not involved in in
terstate commerce; many are
exempted by specific clauses
in the law. There have been
no substantial changes in cov
erage since the wage-hour law
was first voted in 1938.
Both the Administration
and the Democratic leaders
have expressed a determina
tion to make 1960 the big
year for coverage extension.
There are indications that the
AFL-CIO, anxious to bring in
more members in the retail
field, may bargain more
strongly for coverage exten
sion than for the full $1.25
minimum, if it comes to a
hard choice.
Opposition
Retail merchants, theaters,
restaurants, hotels, manufac
turers and other potentially
affected groups are opposing
many of the wage and cover
age proposals. They say genu
ine hardship and loss of em
ployment would result in a
number of cases.
The Democratic plan has
given strong thrust through
the backing of Senate Majori
ty Leader Lyndon B. John
son (D-Tex.) and another
Presidential contender, Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey (D-
Minn.) as well as Kennedy.
The House, traditionally more
conservative on the minimum
wage question, is likely to
pass a narrower bill and there
may be some difficult wran
gles in conference.
Vice President Nixon has
taken no position on the issue
so far.
Mitchell said in a news con
ference Feb. 25 that President
What Is
The
' This column it prepared
as a public service by the
College of Law, Willamette
University. Salem, to ex
plain basic legal principles,
not to provide legal advice.
The reader is cautioned not
to apply these cases to his
own problems without an
attorney's advice, for dif
fering facts may change
the outcome.
Handing Money Over For
Safekeeping Has Legal
Implications
Because Paul had difficulty
holding on to his pay check
money for more than three
days, he gave $200 of it to
his friend Harry "for safe
keeping." Harry decided to
put the money in his savings
account; but enroute to the
bank, a pickpocket lifted
Harry's wallet and the $200.
Is Harry liable to Paul f orx the
$200?
Probably not. Although this
info rmal transaction was
simple and commonplace, it is
filled with legal implications.
As far as the law is concerned,
the actions of Paul and Harry
were "equivocal," and the le
gal relationship related to the
$200 is difficult to determine.
Would Have Been Debt
If Harry had borrowed the
$200 from Paul, a debt would
have been created. Then Harry
would still owe Paul the stol
en $200 even though he had
exercised reasonable care in
protecting the money. Money
belongs to the borrower the
minute a loan transaction is
completed; and the borrower
promises to repay a similar or
larger amount at a later date.
In this case, however, a bail
ment may have been created
between Paul and Harry. In
a bailment, the bailee merely
receives possession of an ar
ticle with the understanding
that he will treat it with reas
onable care and return it to
the owner at a future date.
Normally the same item is to
be returned, but because spe
cific bills of money have no
unique significance, a bail
ment involving money need
not require returning the orig
inal bills to the owner.
Not Responsible
As bailee, or holder of the
$200, Harry would not be
liable for the loss of the mon
ey unless Paul could prove
that Harry had failed to act
reasonably under the circum
stances. Since Harry was on
the way to the bank when his
pocket was picked, he appar
ently exercised necessa r y
care.
This transaction could have
created a trust. However, a
trust normally is a more se
rious arrangement instigated
with great formality. Because
the transaction was so inform
al and no terms were specific
in writing, Harry might even
argue that a gift was intend
ed. Paul might have difficulty
proving that such was not the
case.
Eisenhower approved his
wage report in advance, but
he declined to say outright
that the President supported
an increase in the minimum,
There reportedly have been
differences within the Admin
istration on the question.
(Copyright I960, Congres
sional Quarterly. Inc.)
mrnmmmmmmmmm
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NEW MACHINES A set of four electronic
bookkeping machines, featuring "memory"
recording on magnetic ink strips, were in
stalled recently at the First National Bank
of Oregon, Medford branch. The machines
will be used for posting checking accounts
at the bank and will increase efficiency
many-fold, according to Manager J. A.
Moore. Above, Bookkeeper Sandy Maddox
tries out a machine on display in the bank
lobby, while Moore looks on. The four ma
chines, made by National Cash Register co.,
replace eight older type units, Moore said.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Q
Monday, March 14, 1960 A
Baby zebras have browtn .
stripes, which turn black as
the zebra ages.
pt.
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