TV
6 A
THURSDAY. AUGUST 22. 1963
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORLGON
Pohce
Ready' As labor lay Week
Eno
Hears
Delay Possible on Tax Revision Bill
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON
Seaside, Ore. - (UPD - "If
they- come we'll be ready for
them." .
. Those are the words of Ken
Healy, Seaside's new police
chief and a veteran of 30
years' experience with state
police.
Healy's "they" does not
mean the thousands who flock
to the beaches for summer's
last holiday - the Labor Day
week end Aug. 30-Sept. 2.
It means the young people
who might cause trouble, as
was the case last year when
Seaside grabbed headlines in
a way it didn't like - as the
scene of rioting broken up
by club-swinging police.
State police and National
Guardsmen were called to this
coastal resort town last Labor
Day week end when rioting
went on for seven hours on
Saturday night. Windows
were smashed, rocks and beer
bottles hurled, street signs
uprooted and fire hoses cut.
The local jail was overcrowd
ed. Police broke up a group
of young people on Sunday
by use of force.
1 A
D3Cf SfUmi
ji mi
HUGE STURGEON - Boatswain's mate 3c Ray Hauptman
displays the dinner he just caught for his mates aboard the
attack transport USS Tulare. Hauptman, of Barstow, Calif.,
was idly fishing off his ship, which is in San Francisco for
repairs at China Basin, when the huge sturgeon hit his bait.
After almost an hour's struggle, he brought in the 220-pound
fish-on 30-pounds test line. Hauptman weighs 150 pounds.
The sturgeon measured 7 feet 7 inchehs. (UP1)
n
5 II
"IV
S9
IT'S YOUR LAW
ftnpict ft law MaVn Dwirwrety lrr
Editor's note: The following
article was prepared by in
Oregon Slate Bar as public
service and is not intended to
be legal advice. Persons hv
ing a legal problem should
consult an attorney.
YOU AND YOUR AGENT
What if you paid Johnnie
to mow your lawn and he
mowed down and ruined your
neighbor's hedge? Do you pay
for Johnnie s act? Most likely
Or suppose you want a loaf
of bread for dinner and ask
a friend to take your car and
get it. On the way to the store,
suppose he runs down old
Mrs. Higgenbotham. Are you
responsible? Again, most like
ly, at least in part.
Why is this? Didn't you tell
everybody to be most careful?
In both cases, you got some
one to act for you. Under the
King Warns of Race
Riot in Birmingham
Chicago - (Wll - The Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr. said
Wednesday there may be "a
terrible race riot" in Birming
ham, Ala,, unless persons re
sponsible for recent bombings
are brought to justice.
"There have been 48 bomb
ings since 1946 and nothing
has happened to bring any
one before the bar of justice,"
King said at a news confer
ence before a scheduled
speech to the National Insur
ance association, an organ
ization of Negro insurance
men.
The home of attorney Ar
thur Shores was bombed in
Birmingham Tuesday night,
bringing 2,000 angry, rock
hurling Negroes to the scene
Shore, a long time court bat
tier in Alabama integration
cases, guided the admission
of two Negroes to the Unl
versity of Alabama.
"Unless thia bombing is
solved it will encourage mob'
iters and other to continue
the same kind of acts," King
said. "I would say that in the
' very near future there could
be a terrible race riot in Bir
mingham.
The thing that concerns me
a great deal is that Birming
ham has become the center
of the greatest history of un
solved bombings in the Unit
ed States."
law, what he did, you did.
You were responsible for
what he did since he was your
"agent."
Why does the law make
you, as principal, responsible
for your agent s acts?
Must Trust Agent
Well, agents do most of the
world's business. And for our
affairs to go forward, people
must trust your agent as if
you yourself acted. "Third
parties" - other people doing
business with you or your
agent-have a right to expect
you to stand behind his word.
Suppose your agent docs
what you told him to do, or
even suppose you let third
parties think ho is your agent
when he is not. Then you may
well have to make good on
any deal he makes in your
name. He is either your agent
or your "ostensible agent."
This is all the same when it
comes to paying the bills, or
repairing the damage.
Agents For Each Other
In most ways partners are
agents for each other. What
one does can bind the others.
One day you and your partner
may decide not to buy any
thing for more than $100 un
less you both sign the con
tract. II your partner goes
ahead anyway and buys an ar
ticle for more than S'.OO with
out telling you, your private
word with your partner won t
protect you from recovery by
the salesman, if the salesman
did not know of it.
Because our business world
is so complex, the law of
agency bulks large today. For
it defines and enforces the
rights and duties of principals,
agents and third parties.
-tfat'J Cnjf. One, j
I
! SMPPY
ITOPS IN QUALITY!!
BMC HEAD DIES
London (UPD Lord Nuf
field, president of the British
Motor Corp., world's fourth
largest automobile producer,
died Wednesday at his home
a Huntercombe. He was 89.
imitations(k i
i I FOR THJ 1 JEM 1
I I UTTil POO jsasssg I
J IOW IN PRICE j
Mayor Mauriece P y s h e r
said they were "planning to
take over the town." The trou
ble finally stopped after riot
ers were herded to the beach
area and danced the twist.
Some 125 arrests were
made.
There were verbal threats
that "we'll be back." An air
of tenseness prevailed during
the M?morbi '"'ay and Fourth
of July week ends this year.
But nothing serious happened.
City officials don't expect
anything serious to happen
over the upcoming holiday
either, but they are prepared.
Tough new ordinances,
which forbid even sleeping on
the beach, have been adopted.
Heavier penalties are provid
ed. There is a larger police
force. And, officials say,
there have been more arrests
here this summer for minors
in possession of alcohol than
ever before.
Slate Has Emergency Plan
State authorities are ready,
too. H. G. Maison, superin
tendent of state police, said
there are "no special plans
and points out his force can
not go into a municipality ex
cept on order of the governor.
He says trouble is not antici
pated but adds "we are not
unmindful of the possibility,
and we do have emergency
plans for all situations."
A spokesman for the Ore
gon Liquor Control commis
sion in Portland said more in
spectors wo"" he here to help
local law enforcement person
nel. The ordinance on rioting
says, in part, that . . . any
use of force or violence, if
accompanied by power of
execution by three or more
persons, acting together and
without authority of law, con
stitutes a riot."
Beach Sleeping Illegal
Another section says no
hotel or motel owner shall
permit occupancy for lodging
purposes of any room by
more occupants than there
are beds available. And, city
law now says it is unlawful
for any persons to use any
vehicle or trailer for lodging
or sleeping purposes on the
streets or the beach, or to
sleep on the beach.
Penalties have been in
creased to a maximum of 180
days in jail or a fine of $500,
or both.
Mayor Pysher said officials
have been pleased with the co
operation of business people
to the new ordinances.
Again, officials point out
they don't expect a recurrence
of last year. But it happened
once, and they are ready now.
Get the best cooler!
y CREAM (jffj
Washington - IUPI) - Final
action by the House Ways
and Means committee on the
tax cut and revision bill may
be delayed until after Labor
Day, congressional sources
said today.
The committee is expect
ed to meet Monday to consid
er newly drafted language
for a section, tentatively ap
proved earlier, imposing high
er taxes on heirs of big
estates.
Informants said there
would be no vote on the bill
itself that day, and the time
table for final action proba
bly would be pushed back
until after the holiday.
The committee last Friday
completed all major policy
decisions on the bill, one of
President Kennedy's top pri
ority legislative programs. As
tentatively drafted, it would
slash individual and corporate
income taxes a net $11 bil
lion over two years.
The panel still must vote
on the language of a final
draft.
DEER VS. CAR
Madison, W i s. lUPD Last
year, the Wisconsin conser
vation department recorded
4,483 deer-auto collisions.
Union Pacific Asks
$21,695 Judgment
Portland -(UPD- The Union
Pacific Railroad Co. has ask
ed a judgment of $21,695 from
the Vale Irrigation District
on grounds that seepage from
a canal has harmed the rail
road's bed and impaired its
performance.
In addition, the railroad
asked the court to restrain
the district from allowing wa
ter to seep from the canal
above the railroad's branch
line at Little Valley, between
Vale and Harper.
The railroad complained it
has had to relocate its tracks.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 22. 1963
Norwegians Descendants of Once Fierce Roaming Vikings
A 7
By ANNE MARIE PEDERSEN
United Press International
Oslo -(UPD- Norway is the
home of tall, fair-haired and
blue-eyed descendants of the
fierce Vikings who roamed
the seas in search of adven
ture and the spoils of war.
Today, the Norwegian peo
ple are peaceful. But for two
centuries, from 850 a.d. to
1050 a.d. the Vikings terror
ized France and the British
Isles.
Norway makes up the west
ern part of the Scandinavian
peninsula. To the east lies
Sweden. To the north is Den
mark, where Norway has a
common border with both the
Finns and the Russians. Also
to the north lies the Arctic
Sea. The Atlantic Ocean lies
to the west, and the North
Sea and Denmark are to the
south.
Because of the Gulf stream,
which flows alongside the
jagged, 1,646 - mile western
coast of Norway, it is possible
to grow potatoes north of the
polar circle, where about one
third of Norway lies and
where the mean temperature
during the year is about 35.6
degrees fahrenheit.
Norway is 1,091 miles long
and has an area of 200,704,-
559 square miles. It is about
the same size as the state of
Montana. It has a population
of 3.6 million persons in 20
counties, with a population
density of 11 persons per
square kilometer. The United
States has 19 persons per
square kilometer, Sweden has
17, Denmark 106, Britain 215
and Belgium 300.
About two - thirds of the
Norwegian people live in
rural districts. In the capital
of Oslo, there are 480,000 in
habitants, but only 48 per
cent of these were born here.
Norway lays claim to the
northernmost city in . the
2 Eg
world - which was destroyed
by the Germans during World
War II and was completely re
built, was first settled in 1787.
The island group of Spltz
bergen, which is near the
North Pole, is also part of
Norway. About 3,000 Nor
wegians work in the coal
mines there, where the Soviet
Union also has mines.
At its widest point, Nor
way measures 273 miles arid
only four miles at its nar
rowest point, near the city of
Narvik in the north.
Sea-Faring People
Norwegians always have
been a sea-faring people. Nor-
POP
CANADA DRY
LOW CALORIE
No Deposit Bottles
MAYONNAISE 39c
PORK & BEANS
Vtn Camp's No. 2 Tint 5 for
99c
CHEESE LOAF
Chef's Delight 2-lb. Pkg. 59c
DOG FOOD
Purine- Meal 10-lb. Bag
S1.29
LIQUID GLEANER
Gentle Fels Napths Quart
39c
WAX PAPER
Kitchen Charm 75 Ft. Rolls 2 29c
EVAPORATED MILK . , 8 99c
AA W
2 Dozen
o
0)c
GOLD MEDAL 10 Lb. Bag
Bely Crocker.
6 elicious Flavors
WHEATIES, CHEERICS, FROSTY Os
TRIX Reg. Size Pkg
Flour
Frosting Mix
Cereal
Instant Coffee
Coffee
Tree Tea
3
for
for
M.J.B. 10-Oz. Reg. $1.39
M.J.B. 3-lb. tin 1.45
All Grinds Lb.
2 Lbs.
48 Count Ba$ t Pkg.
89
89c
99
97
49
syrup
COTTAGE
21 -oz. Bottles
29
Planters 18 oz.
Creamy or Chunk .
Planters 13 Oz. Tin Reg. 89c.
43
69
Peanut Butter
Mixed Nuts
Margarine re- 5 , 99
Margarine 3 , 99
Potato Chips .,...,.,, 69
Welchade 399
ouves
TRI MOR
BROKEN
PITTED
NO. 1 TALL TINS
TENDER -TASTY -JUICY
MOUTH WATERING-SUCCULENT
BEEF S7EACCS
HERE IS YOUR
FAVORITE KIND,
HO MATTER
WHICH YOU LIKE
THE MOST!
ROUND RIB
STEAK STEAK
SIRLOIN T-BONE
STEAK STEAK
SIRLOIN SWISS
TIPB?el!AK STEAK
98- 69
Hamburger OUR USUAL
STEAK FAM0US QUALITY'
EVERY STEAK
3Ck c GUARANTEED
lb TO PLEASE YOU
CHUCK
STEAK
&9i
PORTERHOUSE
STEAK
CUBE
STEAK
GR. ROUND
STEAK
66
AT MEDFORD STORES ONLY - Win Super Specials Below by Hirtin the Disc
Showing the Value - Pay the Price Shown on the Disc. Each Adult Customer
Gets 5 FREE DARTS to Throw at the Discs. Nothing to Buy to Participate.
PAY FRIDAY
& SATURDAY
Between
10 A.M. to 6 P.M
fift r kicrtAi 1
GOLD MEDAL
10 lbs.
Cheerios or Wheaties Vsl
I I Regular Size ijS
x oerry wrociter x .."r.-. w
rriBEEE mi
mm ..
m
Wffi
mm IV ByCOTT
gWIM7 WIENERS
SBLUE BELLJN.
POTATO
M CHIPS U
It's easy to play just
stop by get your 5
FREE Darts ... hit the
item and get it for a
low, low price! Nothing
to buy to get a chance
at these values.
! rocker
FROSTING
MIX
41c Size
i l d....i.. i ia mmm
11 41 S' Ml "s" f
Tree Tea V
U TEA W
WESTGATE 'OURS FRESHER BAKERY
CHUNKY CINNAMON
COCONUT LAYER CAKE
Pull Apart Garlic Bread
29
WITH NUTS
Regular 49c
7 INCH
15-Ounce Loaf.
Glazed or Sugared
DONUTS
49'
Dozen
PLANTERS
PEANUT
BUTTER
gular
( COFFEE
CANTALOUPE
1-Lb. Tin
r1 Regular 69c Size i
1 Creamy or Crunchy j
nk m
MEDFORD-Westgate Center
MEDFORD-13th and Central
ASHLAND-Gateway Shop. Center
Wi Reserv Tht Ritht To Limit
Prices tractive Thru Sunday, August 23
mrnmim
iurM f ALLS
GRANTS Mil
LAKfVtfW
U.S. No. 2
10 lb. Bag
I i I
SPUDS W7
I U.S. No. 2 l I
ADE
GRAPE DRI
QUARTS
PLANTERS
VllXED Y
NUTS
w -7 1 I
BLUE BONNET
Margarine
. Picas. ll
L13'2 Oz. Tin fj
Regular 89c I
il ilT.fi mJ
fe
1 lb
" i
5". v" .'..,..
EXTRA LARGE JUMBOS
THICK MEATED
MILD-MELLO FLAVOR
Red Ripe Slicers
Loaded With
Fresh Picked Flavor
Large Sweet Juicy
California Valencias
TOMATOES
ORANGES
BANANA SQUASH
HEARTS
Wonderful New Exotics
A Real Taste Treat
lbs.
lbs.
Any Size Piece
Wonderful Baked lb.
Fresh Packed
Only the Tender
Crisp Hearts pkg. U'
lb.
WELCH
n
W M
Evaporated
mile;
WAX
PAPER
l 7
V
BORDEN'S X VSK S
II KITCHEN CHARM
Tall Tins VTX OT KOI. I
V at i ac VV 11 (fiic
va
11
MEDFORD-Westgate Center
MEDFORD-13th and Central
ASHLAND-Gateway Shop. Center
W Rcicrvt Tht Right To Limit.
Prices Effective Thru Sundey, August 25
way has the third largest, mer
chant marine fleet in the
world, topped only by the
United States and Britain.
Oslo has one of the largest
harbors in Europe. Every day
an average of 10 foreign ships
and 65 Norwegian vessels ar
rive here. In 1961, 27,500
ships loaded 4.2 million tons
of goods and about 360,000
persons left Oslo by ship for
other ports.
From the earliest days, fish
ing has been one of the main
stays of the country. Norway
ranks sixth in fishing behind
Japan, Peru, China, the Soviet
Union and the United States.
Norwegians have been the
pioneers in whaling, but the
Japanese and the Russians
have taken the lead In recent
years. As whaling expeditions
become less and less success
ful, Norwegian whaling com
panies turned more to carry
ing oil.
The working population ac
cording to the last census, in
1960 was 1.4 million. Of these,
320,000 were women. About
24 women out of 100 work in
Norway, which has the lowest
number of married women
working in Europe.
Industry Claims Most
About 35 per cent of the
workers are found in indus
try, while 20 per cent live off
agriculture, forestry, fishing
and hunting.
In northern Norway, there
are 20,000 Laps. Only 1,400
of these Nomads who move
with their reindeer flocks.
Much is now being done to
try to preserve their language
and culture.
There are two official lan
guages in Norway. One is in
fluenced by Danish and Ger
man and is the one used most
extensively. The other is a
Playing With Matches
Causes Eight Fires
Salem -IUPI)- Children play
ing with matches have
caused eight fires during the
past month, state forestry of
flcials here reported today.
The latest was a one-half
acre blaze Wednesday in the
southwest district.
A total of four fires on
state-protected property were
noted Wednesday, forestry
officials said. All were small,
and controlled.
mixture of dialects and its sup-
puriers try 10 Dreatne Hie Into
"good old" Norwegian words.
During the last 10 vaan.
suburbs have - sprung ud
around Oslo. Today, the ma.
jority of the capital's almost
nan mutton residents live in
the suburbs and pay about 40
per cent of the nation's in
come taxes.
The old face of Oslo is
changing rapidly, with tall,
modern office buildings scrap
ing the skies. Public transpor
tation is mainly by bus or
tram (streetcar). A subway is
under construction and is ex
pected to be in use by 1965.
As of Jan. 1, 1963, there
were 83,400 automobiles in
Oslo. The average for the en
tire country is a car for every
eight persons. Norway does
not manufacture automobiles.
Heavy Timbers Said
Safer From Fires
Chicago-OIPD-Heavy timber
buildings are safer from fire
damage than structures built
with so-called "noncombust
ible" materials, reports the
National Lumber Manufac
turers association.
Temperatures inside a
burning building can reach
1,700 degrees, often within
10 minutes. But wood beams
char to a depth of only one
and a half inches after a full
hour of that temperature, the
organization says, and char
ring is usually not sufficient
to cause collapse.
Court Records
McSr,nRD.MVN'.cF,,'Al' CVR1
iVnTsVoS" " Kmt 01 n
Darrell Eugene Stepheruon ex.
Pired vehicle llcene. ss
Ruby Brood Clllaspey. no 11.
eSv.i'.'! 6s!,"5' , u-pended.
ucSJ..."'?."' Sm"h' no 0Pral0,"
."?,b.. ;eRoy V.n Sickle, no
operator's license. 55.
Cicero Milton Medcalf Jr., vlo
latlon of basic rule. $10.
Craig Allen Honeycutt, dis
obeyed traffic signal, sio
Ronald Allen Wilson, improper
lane change. 10. ' '
..?.",rk ,p,u! c!nian, disobeyed
traffic signal. S7.J0.
Daniel Charles Martlnec, Hie.
gal left turn, $10.
Calvin W. Summers, no opera
tor's license, $5.
. T.?m ,L,e . Newcomb, disobeyed
traffic signal, $10.
Steven Franklin Wilson, viola
tion of basic rule, $10.
Robert Eugene Chepln, exces
sive noise, $10.
Your Money's
Worth
By SYLVIA PORTER
Copyright, Hill SyneticMa, Inc.
WHO CONTROLS THE FAMILY PURSE?
If you are a typical non-working wife, you consider these
things and non-things necessities today: a car, a baby sitter
a TV set, a vacation trip, a dress for a special occasion.'
treats for the kids.
If you are this married woman spending money that you
yourself do not earn, you consider these things and non-things
luxuries: a maid, a string of pearls, a hi-fi set, a second car
liquor.
Assuming you are this non-worklne wife, vmi nslr vmi
husband for "his tacit and often exolicit
every expenditure." Some of you even ask vnnr h..hj
whether it's okay to have your hair done.
You do, though, try to build up a private nestcec which
you can spend as you wish, for anri nn vn...i j ....
likely you conceal the existence of this kitty from your hus
band. You create the secret funrl h . un
luxury foods or saving little amounts out of your week-to.
week household allowance.
While you don't work at a Job. vou acrent th.
working woman in today's society and approve of her "if
uci imiiiiv uuus noi sutler.
The fascinating argument about who controls the -family
purse in the United States in this affluent (80s)
decade of the 20th century goes on and on and the latest
to add sense and nonsense to it is a Chicago organisa
tion, Social Research, inc.. which has just completed
the third in a series of studies on "Women and the Dol
lar" for the Public Relations Board.
The research firm starts out with the weary statistic that
women spend 85 per cent of the family income and then
proceeds to demolish It with percentages indicating that
while "the American husband may have made the family
purse more accessible to his wife, his finger is still on the
string."
This slippery 85 per cent figure always has been suspect.
I started demolishing it myself years ago, and any additional
evidence is a contribution to the subject of woman's financial
role in America. Social Research's sample covers a small
number of women mostly in their 30s livine in the Chlcaao
area and spending incomes above the national average. Its
unaings arc persuasive, though, and you'll find it fun to see
how you fit into the suggested pattern - so here goes.
Item: The major financial hunger of the non-working
married woman is furniture, while the major male craving
is a new car. At all income levels, wives consider this male
craving "silly" and a "waste of money." The "wants of
women are often in complete opposition to the wants of hus
bands." Item: Family discussion of expenditures, even under $25,
is the rule in this woman's household and an overwhelming
majority consult their husbands on any purchase of $50 or
more. Although "women proudly tell us 'I control all the
money,' clearly what they mean is they channel it with
the understanding and approval of their husbands."
Item: A full SI per cent oi married non-working
women consider themselves "sensible" money managers,
but at the same time their comments about spending
(women in every class said "I love to spend money")
indicate that, "If 'saving' was a virtue a generation ago,
it has clearly lost ground to the national self-indulgence
of the 'sensible' woman."
Itemi In the lowest income bracket covered by this sur
vey - under $6,000 - the big financial worries are paying
off the mortgages and unexpected medical expenses - the
same worries our folks had generations ago. Older women
fret about the possibility of illness.
Itemi Not one woman interviewed put a "maid" in the
category of a necessity and only 17 per cent voted house
hold help as "desirable." On the other hand, 84 per cent
voted a baby sitter either necessary or desirable, under
lining the fact that, while they are willing to manage the
household by themselves, they Insist on time away from
the children.
Is this "you" or a reasonable facsimile thereof? It well
may be, but I'll confess it certainly isn't "me." About the
only pattern I fit is that "I love to spend money" too.
I
99
'I.