Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 29, 1963, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGES 1 to 8
MEDFORDtJTRIBUNE F?
Your Money's
Worth
MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1963
Dennis the Menace
By SYLVIA PORTER
Copyright, Hall Syndic, Inc.
SECTION B
1
1 """
OKAYt OKAY! I'll. TAKE 'M Off
Court Records
DISTRICT COURT
Ralph Edward McClure, (ailed to
yield right of way, Sio.
Larry Dean Clement, overload,
12.
Adolph Carl Ulrich. overload,
160.40.
Robert John Bohl, overload, $15.
Alfred Lee Erwin, overload, $52.
Fred Pettigrew. disobeyed traf
fic signal. $15.
Claude LeRoy Sullivan, disobey
ed traffic si en, $15.
Gople Lewis Parker, overload,
Twila Maurice Schmucher, vio
lation of basic rule. $10.
Gary Ronald Burns, improper
change of lanes. $15.
Donald Francis Maddox, truck
speeding, $10.
Alvin John Paudois. overwidth.
S10.
Lloyd Allen Lovell, violation of
basic rule, $10.
Robert Franklin Brown, truck
pceding. $10.
Donald Calvin Hanlon. overload,
$10.
Alleen Frederick Harris, over
load. $14.
Floyd Bud Parazcro, failure to
punch salmon and stcelhead fee.
$25; angling with prohibited meth
ods. $50.
Lyle Vernon Doty, no operator's
license, $5.
Emil Edward Cody, violation of
basic rule, $15.
Scott Bruce McDonald, failure to
top. $7.50.
Jerry Glenn Oliver, 24, nf 23fi ;
South Columbus ave., Medford,
reckless driving. $150.
Franklin Glen Patrick, four in
driver's seat. $5.
Grant Joseph Metlernick, no
tixed load parts, $5.
Verne Benningfield Wilder, no :
operator's license. $S
Emit Becker, angling without
license, $5.
Gerald Allen Hough, violation of
uniii iuic, sill.
William Lee Robinson, violation
of basic rule. $10.
Roger Duane Copley, violation
ui ict3ic ruie,
Harold Richard Gartin, overload
$5fi.
Darrell Wayne Whitman, over-
Cecil Loren Johnson, overload,
Jimmie Lee Burg, truck speed
ing. $10.
James Calvin Gilbreath, no bind
ers. $io.
Dave J. Schclenbaum, overload,
$98.
Robert Jay Van Duker, expired
vehicle license. $5.
Gary Leon Stockton, insufficient
DraK.es. $10; disobeyed stop sign,
Roy Allen Jenkins, disobeyed
stop sign. $5.
Robert Benton Zeigler. failure
JodrWe on right side of highway,
James A. Clark, violation of ba
sic ruie, 5 m.
Kermit Gordon DeHsas, no oper
ator's license. $5.
Judith O Council Allen, violation
of basic rule. $10.
Clinton Richard Phelops, truck
speeding,
Jerry Gilbert Runey, overload,
S7R.
Ranee Eugene Champion, viola
tion of basic rule. S2.V
Charles Evelyn Berckel, violation
of basic ruie. $25.
Lewis Sylvan Mason, failure to
aim ngnts, sin.
Everett Myers Doolln, na vehicle
license, s.i.
Need vacation money?
WHAT IS GATT?
"It's come almost to the point now that we better start
taking care of the United States first and last, said Secre
tary of Commerce Luther Hodges the other day, and the
blunt-speaking government official warned our top compe
titors in the world trade markets that the U.S. is not going
"to stand by in a namby-pamby way" when we negotiate on
new tariff cuts at the GATT meetings next spring.
As Hodges was putting it on the line, President Kennedy's
chief trade negotiator, Christian Herter, was on his way to
GATT headquarters to discuss preparations for the "Kennedy
Round" of tariff cutting in 1964 so called because these
negotiatons will be the first' under the 1962 trade act giving
Kennedy power to slash U.S. tariffs by as much as SO per
cent if through GATT we get similar concessions from other
nations. At GATT's offices in an 18th century villa in Geneva,
experts were making elaborate arrangements for the talks
which, many believe, may be the most important trade nego
tiations m modern history.
What is GATT?
While it has been in existence since 1947, its activities
have strongly affected all our lives, and SO nations ranging
from the giant U.S. to the tiniest African country belong
to it, I'll wager few of you have the slightest notion of what
it is.
GATT stands far "General Agreement on Tariffs & Trade,"'
and here is the tale brought up to date.
At lh end of World War II, the Iradt markets of the
world were in chaotic condition. Whtn a tariff-cutting deal
was made, it was between two countries only and these
two would maintain higher barriers agaimt all other na
tion!. The tariff structure was utterly befuddling and the
high trade walls each nation maintained against its com
petitors were drastically limiting world commerce.
It was the objective of the United States then, as it is
now, to expand world trade, and we urged that the nations
shift bargaining to a multi-nation and most-favored-nation
basis meaning that when one nation granted a tariff cut
to another, it would grant the same cut to all others. Under
our leadership in 1947, 23 nations signed a treaty in Geneva
agreeing to negotiate tariffs on this basis, setting up a code
of trade ethics and ordering the establishment of an Inter
national Trade Organization to regulate trade among the
nations. The treaty was named the General Agreement On
Tariffs and Trade and GATT was supposed to be just the
name of the treaty after the ITO came into existence.
But then our Congress vetoed U.S. membership in the
ITO. To prevent a return to chaos, GATT was transformed
from a "treaty" into a permanent organization which in the
years since has been of crucial value in expanding world
trade, settling tariff disputes between nations and setting the
stage as it is now doing in the Kennedy Round for
worldwide tariff reductions.
Through GATT, there have been five worldwide tariff
negotiations to date, reducing tariffs on over 64,000 products
and involving tens of billions of dollars of trade. As a dra
matic illustration, the average U.S. tariff today is around 11
per cent compared with an average of 50 per cent before
World War II.
GATT has been primarily responsible for this. Its con
tribution to the prosperity of the Western trading nations
has been enormous.
Nor it tariff-cutting the only achievement of GATT's
imall staff at Geneva haadquariers. Every year it holds
conferences it which the member nations solve trade
problems. At all times, the GATT council on which each
member nation has a representative is ready to settle
disputes between members.
It is facing its biggest test of its life in the Kennedy
Round next spring, for,, because of fights about tariffs on
farm products and France s stiff attitude, experts are worry
ing out loud that the scheduled talks may fail, and if so
GATT itself might crumble. We must not permit .thls.rfor- it
would be a disaster to the free world.
Racial Disturbance
In Brooklyn One of
Long Bitterness
Get an HFC Traveloan
Wishing won't take you places . . . but an HFC
Traveloan will! So take that vacation now. Borrow
confidently repay sensibly. Phone or come in.
Thrt tabt shows sample
loan plant. You can bor
row any amount up to
$1500 and arrange
monthJy payments to fit
yovf need.
Ch MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS
YmM 24 2d 12 6
X tfsymti tsimti Psimts Pay ml,
$100 8 5.90 S 6.72 S10.05 S18.46
JOB 11.81 13.41 20.09 36.92
300 17.71 20.16 30.14 55.38
500 28.86 32.97 49.64 91.66
10(10 53 89 62.21 95.64 179.56
1500 77.87 90 38 140 57 l .36
imi K'l n a in tit t.-to. -
thml tari a.m f iOO tJ mat
ttit i:VO. tns 1 om tmy rtmmindm.
HOUSEHO
FINANCE
128 East Main St., 2nd Floor-Phone: 773-5301
Horn Mo. lira TW. 10 It JJO-Fri. II H 1 K M.
ID
By AL KUETTNER
UPI Correspondent
At the corner of Clarkson
ave. and Lenox road in Brook
lyn. New York City, one of
the most dramatic skirmishes
in the civil rights battle is
being waged.
The immediate issue at
stake is the alleged discrim
ination against Negroes in the
employment of construction
workers. The crux of the mat
ter appears, however, to be
part of a long-standing and
simmering bitterness against
what Negroes call the North's
"segregation in fact."
Thursday saw "chain-ins"
Introduced to the New York
racial struggle. Negroes lock
ed themselves together at the
Brooklyn site where a new
hospital is under construction
next door to the basic sciences
building of the downstate
medical center.
Bolt Cutters Used
Police separated the demon
strators with bolt cutlers and
hauled them off to jail. At
2 p.m. Thursday, the count
was 532 arrests for the week,
a record not matched in
many places in the South,
Demonstrators lie down be
for moving traffic on Lenox
road. They have halted a num
ber of huge cement mixers
carrying fresh concrete to
the new building which has
its steel griders up. Some
have narrowly escaped being
run over.
In the tree-shaded Brook
lyn neighborhood, a mixture
of frame private dwellings,
the chain-ins have provided a
strange commentary on the
race issue. It is an area-ap-parently
picked for this reason-where
there is a large lib
eral vote in every election.
The National Association
for the Advancement of Col
ored People and the Congress
of Racial Equality have heavy
membership in that section
of New York.
The predominant goal is
this: Negroes and Puerto Ri
cans, often in competition for
jobs, have joined forces In a
battle for more jobs in the
building trades. The Brook
lyn hospital project was se
lects because of periodic
chaigcs of discrimination
there.
The demonstrators are de
manding they be hired under
a formula of 25 per cent
Negro, 25 per cent Puerto
Rican and 50 per cent other
races on jobs financed by
state or city funds.
Rejects Formula
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller,
whose New York City office
has been regularly picketed
over the issue, holds that the
demanded formula la un
workable. "We cannot abandon the
concept of giving equal op
portunity to all by giving
special privilege to a few,"
the governor said of the pro
posal. As for the city's 122-union
building trades council, a
spokesman insisted there is
no discrimination in. hiring.
But the council recently has
proposed a new central board
to review Negro applications
for apprenticeships and jour
neymen advanced jobs.
"The barriers are invisible
and will take time to remove
them," Rockefeller said.
The arrested pickets in
cluded ministers who broke
into the strains of "We Shall
not be Moved," an often-
heard hymn at the integration
rallies in Dixie Negro church-
es.
The fight of the Negroes
was for more of the good jobs. !
A top grade construction
worker can earn almost
$11,5000 a year in New York
for 40 hours of work a week, i
Birth Control Data
To Be Distributed
Salem -JUPU- A planned par
enthood group which will dis
tribute birth control infor
mation will go Into operation
in Portland Sept. 1. the Stale
Public Welfare Commission
has been told.
Rep. Grace Peck CD-Portland
said she had been in
formed of the plans of the
new private program and
wondered what the state com
mission's policy toward it
would be.
Members of the commission
took no stand on the question
pending futher information.
Paraguay's Gran Chaco re
gion has a climate much like
that of Florida.
CAKE M I X DUNCAN HINSS, Reg. 39c 25 C
S HO RXEN IMG STANDBY, Pur Veget.ble 3.lb.T!n 57 C
PAPER PLATES PURITY, 9" Wh! 100 Count Pkg.
PEAS OK MONTI 0MMN. N.. Ml Ita 5 I" 99'
MARGARIN E ......... 6 89e
CORN PAYETTE VAUEY, Crom or W- Kam.l, No. 303 tin 8 99
ORANGE JUICEr... 599c
SALAD OIL WESTERN CHEF ..24-Cu. M 39
TUNA WHITE SPRAY, Ugh) Chunk ..,... 4 99
CORNED BEEF . 39c
BISKIT MIX FISHER'S .. 40.Oz.PkS.29C
TOMATO JUICE n. 4 0,99
Strawberry PRESERVES v 9C
DUST PANS HOODED COPPER ,ch 49
BANDAGES JOHNSON JOHNSONv R.g. c v.tu. 63C
FREE
DRAWING
Saturday, Aug. 3rd (p.m.)
far ft mom I rather Stwini Machine.
Ha PiiKhut Necnury
You Do Not Hrrt to I taunt te Win.
REGISTER NOW!
1 Sir
and
mm
WIN
UP TO
$3,000
Absolutely no pur
chase required to
obtain your free
punch. Every card
guaranteed lure
cash winner. '
Have Your Supermarket
Sweepstakes Card Punched Now!
For !ho of you who have missed some
punches on your card we will punch one back
date, after current week is reached, for each
additional visit to our store, tn order to win
you must have all 13 free punches by August
3, 1963.
This Week Get Frea Punch No. 13
WESTGATE
BAKERY
'Ours Fresher
FRIED
CINNAMON
ROLLS
PERSHINGS 6 For29C
CHOCOLATE
Marsh ma I low
ROLLS
39
TOWN 4 COUNTRY
BREAD
19
IS oz
CREAM
PUFFS
6
EA.
leaf ftoart
WISS
Chuck
ALL CUTS USDA
CHOICE r
Biede, 7-Bone, .
Round Son
Round
Bone
Stealc
OMATO
1
Red Ripe for
Those Summer
Salads
Radishes & Gr. Onions BU. 5c
CARROTS I lb?Cilo Beg 2 For 19c
CUCUMBERS U 9s1ir 3 For 29c
Prices Effective
Through
Wednesday
We Reserve
The Right
To Limit
Quantities
MEDFORD-Westgate Center
MEDFORD-1 3th and Central
ASHLAND-Gateway Shop. Center
We fctune The Rtjhl Te Un.
fiktt EffKttre thro Wteneiar, July Jttt
n