msk Sets
BO'SjBWBS ...
RECONCILED typewriter heiress Gamble Benedict Poium
boanu ana ner estranged nusuana, Anurei, nave reconciled in
Zurich. Switzerland, their lawyers have announced, and have
gone on a second honeymoon. (UPI)
Grants Pass Council
Presented Petition
Requesting Inquiry
CHAN IS PASS the Giants
Pass City Council last night was
presented a petition bearing
approximately 2.0(H) signatures lortn specific recommends
requesting that an inquiry be . tions" regarding "administra
m a d e into city personnel lion of the city's personnel pro
practices. I gram."
Circulation of the petition , It is reported to have no con
came about alter the recent i nection with the controversy
dismissal of Capt. John Smith j over Capt. Smith. Money for
from the local police depart-' the study was budgeted last
ment. Bui it did not ask for May. and the contract for the
Smith's reinstatement. j study was negotiated in Novom-
A second group of petitions, j ber. Capt. Smith was not dis-
with about 40 signatures, was
presented by persons expressing
support for the dismissal of
Smith and the city council's al
titude in the matter, the conn
cil. at a special meeting lasl
last !
Friday, passed a resolution
which described the dismissal
as "justified."
What will happen ncsl as a
result of the petitions which
were presented last night was
unclear.
Study Being Made
City Councilmen and other
city officials told members of
the audience llial the local serv
ices division of the State Civil
Service Commisison is making
a study regarding city em
ployes. Limited Skiing May
Start on Ashland
ASHLAND - Some type of
limited skiing may start al Hie
Mt. Ashland Ski Area shortly,
it was learned today.
The main T-bar lift equip
ment at the area will be tested
tomorrow by the State Indus
trial Accident Commission, the
regional foresl service engineer j
and an engineer from the t G. ;
Constam Company, manufactur-
cr of the lift.
After tests have been com
pleted, it is expected that some :
type of limited skiing opera
tions will be announced shortly,
according to Alex Murphy, man
ager of the Mt. Ashland Corpora-
lion. The development is subject
10 "P?'J'.1e (rl;
ice ot public use ot loiman
Creek Road to reach the area,
however, he added.
The main road now being con
structed into Hie area is not
expected to be ready for use
until at leasl Jan. 10.
CAPE KENNEDY (UPD
The 5.000-mile flight of an ad
vanced M I n u t e m a n ICBM
Wednesday night was the fourth
successful firing of America's
mighty long-range rockets with
in 21 hours.
SVrWjBRBS
VIMS PROM J
JOHNSON SIGNS MANPOWER TRAINING ACT
WASHINGTON (L'PII President Johnson loday approved
a hill establishing now programs In train unskilled youths and
unschooled adults as pari of the fight againsl uncmploi ment.
The President signed legislation amending the Manpower
Training Act nf 12 lo pour o27 million in now federal spending
inin new joli (raining courses.
FIRST WEST BERI.INERS CROSS W ALL
BERLIN (CPU The first Wesl Brrliners to cross the Com -
mtinisl atiti-relugee wall since its erection 28 months ago went
into East Berlin today on Christmas holiday visits.
SUPREME SOVIET APPROVES BUDGET
MOSCOW (1111 The Supreme Soslet today ipprnvrd
Tremirr Nikita fi. Khrushchev's budget and economic plans lor
the next two years, wnicn are
nroduclion. solving the farm
come and homing lor the Soviet
HEARINGS SET ON CIVIL RIGHTS BILL
WASHINGTON (CPU Chairman Howard W. Smith. Ulidw
pressure fron lh W hitr House and librrai airnibrrs of Congress,
hit ,nmn'ti kt fll M4 IImw Aaltt lMUitifc btumw
jb, 1) on iht coll l iglns II
mis sludv. however, is a no-
sition classification and salary
survey" designed also to bring
missed until early December.
Thus it was uncertain whether
the Civil Service Commission i
study would satisfy the petilion- j
ers seeking an inquiry into city
personnel practices.
Statements. Discussion
Much of last night's council
meeting was taken up by state
ments from persons in the audi
ence regarding the Capt. Smith
dismissal and by discussion be
tween Mayor Robert Martin and
members of the council.
A majority of those who spoke
voiced support for the cily
council, for City Manager Roy
Eames and for Police Chief
Phil Averill, who dismissed
Smith. A number of former city
councilmen and a former mayor
were among this group.
But the statements and dis
cussion appeared to accomplish
little, other than to underscore
the complexity of the political
situation in Grants Pass. Sev
eral conclusions which were evi
dent included Hie following:
Reiterates Refusal
There is a definite schism
between the mayor and all but
one of the councilmen. Mayor
Martin last night termed Fri
day's special meeting, at which
limn thn .nlnr.il nsttnrl llin
v 0 cf.confidcnce rcsolu,i0n
..(.owardly-. and shabby."
tpitprallJ tha. h. had '
fused to call thai meeting.
: Three members of the council
call it. One councilman, Roland
j Stearns, last night voiced sup
port for the mayor's remarks,
even though he had voted in
favor of the Smith resolution on
"U.C mayoTiorh, sta i
lilt III.
Any effort to reinstate Capt.
Smith has apparently subsided.
Mayor Martin, although critical
of ihe council, said he thought
the dismissal of Smith was
strictly a police department
matter.
Persons on both sides of the
controversy feel that Chief Aver
ill is an innocent victim of un
fortunate circumstances. Sever
al suggested last night that "the
entire City of Grants Pass owes
the Averill family an apology
AROUND THI OlOU
aimea at increasing inousirtai
crisis, and providing more In-
peoilc
Senate Rejects
Attempt To Trim
Foreign Aid Bill
Adjournment
Possible Friday
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Senate today rejected attempts
to trim Us $3.3 billion foreign
aid money bill and moved to
ward a final vote on the meas
ure late today and possible ad
journment Friday.
The Senate first rejected 55 to
28 an amendment by Sen.
Wayne L. Morse, D-Ore to cut
$80 million from "supporting
assistance," which backs up
military aid.
Another Slash Beaten
It then voted down 53 to 34
a follow-up move to slash $30
million from the same item.
The Senate Appropriations Com
mittee recommended $380 mil
lion for supporting assistance
and the House voted only $300
million the figure Morse
sought.
The aid bill, which provides
actual funds for another year of
economic and military assist
ance, still must go to a House
Senate conference committee
for final compromise to be
worked out. The $3.3 billion
Senate total is $500 million
more than the $2.8 billion voted
by Ihe House.
Eye Friday Adjournment
Congressional leaders still
were hoping for adjournment
by Friday night. The Senate
nict three hours early to move
ahead on the aid bill.
Morse's proposed cut in sup
porting assistance went down
after short but heated debate.
The Oregon Democrat
charged that the money was be
ing wasted on "indigenous
armies" such as those of Na
tionalist China on Taiwan (For
mosa) and in South Korea.
"Ynu could lick most of them
with ten Bov Scout trooos."
Morse declared. "It is a false
assumption that such armies'
are any good."
But Sen. Frank J. Lausche,
D-Ohio, contended that "a cut
here is to cut at a place where
it is most unjustified." Sen.
John O. Pastore, D-R.L, floor
manager for the bill, said it
would be "chaotic" and a
"crying shame" to trim the
supporting assistance fund.
Grants Pass To Call
For Bids on Sewer
GRANTS PASS The Grants
Pass City Council will call ta
bids, probably during January,
on construction of a sewer sys
tem for an area within the city
south of Ihe Rogue River.
An engineering report on the
project was presented by rep
resentatives of Cornell, How
land, Hayes and Merryfield,
Corvallis engineering firm, at
a meeting of the city council
Wednesday night.
There are three proposed sec
lions in the sewer system.
Schedule A would serve sever
al hundred acres within the
cily. Schedules B and C would
serve several hundred addition
al acres outside the city lim
its. Councilmen agreed informal
ly that work on Schedule A
should proceed, with an eye
toward advertising for bids in
SVU7 Mer 'ko
Eames suggested that the fcasi
bility of financing construction
of the other two links also be
considered.
In other action at the Wed
nesday meeting, the council
volcd to retain the landscaping
consultant services of Mitchell
and McArthur to proceed with
park development plans within
the city.
High on the priority list of
future park improvements are
j ,he road systcm wjth idvcrsidc
City Park and tne development
I of Croxton Memorial Cemetery.
j Soviet Militiamen
Manhandle Ghanaians
; MOSCOW (UPI) - Soviet mil
itiamen guarding the Ghanaian
Embassy todav shoved several
African students back into the
snow when they tried to force
their way into the building
A group of 30 Ghanaian stu
dents had tried to enter the em
bassy in search of more infor
mation on the death of fellow
student Edmund Asarre - Addo.
trhnA VwK ua found frozen
j m ,he snow alonBside a railroad
, trac( north of Moscow last
Tnursday.
llis ,jrath had caused a dem-
ionstratinn in Red Square
, Wednesdav, in which an esti-
maied 400 Ghanaian students
paraded with banners protesting
alleged Soviet mistreatment of
Africans
II tPOUT DENIED
PORTLAND (LTD - Robert
W'ebb, publisher of the Portland
.Reporter, denied Wednesday a
'ri-Oo broadcast report Dial the
W(Bcr's yie was mini oeni
tase for
Regional Edition
Medford
44 Poges Four Sections
Three Arrested
For Extortion
AttemptCharge
Allan F. Perrv, manager of
the Medford Branch of the U. S.
National Bank, was threatened
with extortion Wednesday morn
ing, and early lasl night three
suspects were arrested by city
police, ending a manhunt in
which city, county, state and
federal officers and the U. S.
Treasury Department had par
ticipated. Arrested were Walter Dale
Bella, 10. Hotel Grand, Medford;
Steven Joseph Paradiso, 18, of
335 '.b W. Second St., Medford;
and Robert Gray, 19, of 616 W.
11th St., Medford.
Each is charged with attempt
ed extortion. Bella and Gray
were lodged in Jackson County
jail and Paradisu is confined to
city jail.
This morning Bella and Para
diso had signed statements ad
mitting the extortion attempt
and had implicated Gray, offi
cers said.
Prominent Valley
Physician Dies at
Home in Ashland
ASHLAND - Dr. Charles Al
bert Haines, 67, prominent Ash
land physician for many years
and an avid sportsman, died un
expectedly Wednesday evening
at his home, 1407 Tolman Creek
Road, Ashland.
Dr. Haines established medi
cal practice in Ashland in 1025
and continued in his practice
there continuously until 1054
when he went into semi-retire
ment in Vista, Calif. He re
mained there until 1062 when
he returned to Ashland to make
his home on the Tolman Creek
Road property.
Born in Kingfisher, Okla.,
March 12, 1806, Dr. Haines was
a student at the University of
Kansas. At the beginning of
World War I he left the univer
sity and enlisted in the Army
as a member of the 35th Infan
try Division. He served in
France and was wounded in the
conflict there.
Returns to U. S.
He returned to the United
States and entered Reed College,
continuing in school there for a
year while recuperating from his
war wounds. He later entered
the University of Oregon Medi
cal School and graduated there
in 1H24. He interned at Good
Samaritan Hospital before com
ing to Ashland.
Dr. Haines was married in
Portland April 15, 1921, lo Mil
dred Zehrung, who survives.
Also surviving arc a son, R.
Keith Haines, Central Point, and
a daughter. Mrs. Kenneth
(Cara) Lee Braa, Edmonds,
Wash., and eighl grandchildren.
He was a member of the Ash
land Elks Lodge; the American
Legion: Ashland Lodge, AF and
AM: Siskiyou Chapter, Royal
Arch Masons; Malta Comman
dary, Knights Templar; llillah
Temple of the Shrine and the
Jackson County Medical Society.
Funeral services will be held
at 11 a.m. Saturday at the
Ashland Mortuary Chapel with
the Masonic Lodge officiating.
Committal services will be pri
vate. The body will li? in state j
at the Ashland Mortuary from
noon to 9 p.m. rriday and
friends who wish lo pay tribute
to Dr Haines may call during
those hours. Donations lo the
American Heart Association or
the Cancer Fund will be accept
ed in memory of Dr. Haines.
CHRISTMAS SEllSI'jMTBand
other RESPIRATORT DISEASES
4f -
SHOPPING A
I
niome
The demand (or $5,000 was
made by telephone to the bank
official with the claim that his
wife was being held as a hos
tage. It came in two calls, ac
cording to Lt. Lylc Perkins of
the Medford police.
The first call instructed tin
banker lo "Listen carefully.''
The conversation continued with
"This is no joke. We have your
wife as a hostage. Sit at your
desk and you will gel another
phone call in about one minute."
The bank official immediately
told an assistant to get on an
other line and asked the switch
board operator to open the two
lines when notified.
A few minutes later the sec
ond call came through. The op
erator interrupted and the tele
phone was cut off. Within Ihe
next few minutes, however, the
same voice returned to the line
and the bank official was told:
"Put $5,000 in tens and twenties
in an envelope and take it to
a local restaurant and put it in
the trash basket in the men's
rest room."
Check on .Mrs. Perry
The police department call
was received at 10:40 a.m. and
officers immediately checked
and found that Mrs. Perry was
not a hostage. She was placed
under police protection, hov
ever, and guards were retain
ed until after the arrest of the
suspects.
The Federal Bureau of In
vestigation, Jackson County
Sheriff's officers, the. Oregon
State Police and the United
States Treasury Department
were contacted.
Seven and one - half hours
later the first two men were
arrested about 6 p.m. at Fifth
and Front .(reels and al 8:30
p.m., Gray was apprehended.
They were taken lo Medford
Police station for interrogation.
Thought Call Traced
When asked why they did not
go lo the local restaurant as
they planned, one told officers
they did not go (here because
they thought the telephone call
had been traced.
Prior to the telephone call
received by the bank official,
a local television repairman
was called to go to the Perry
home to repair the television
set, according lo the statements
given police.
The plan originally was lo
threaten the bank official with
the claim that the repairman
in his home would kill him if
he did not cooperate.
Balla. according to statements
to police, said he planned to
use the money to visit his fath
er during Christmas vacation
and to pay some bills.
Formal charges were lo be
filed against the suspects today
and arraignment, officers stat
ed, will be arranged later to
day, if possible.
Pro-Rate Payment
System To Be Aired
SALEM (UPI) -The contro
versial pro-rate payment systcm
for drugs, physicians and hos
pitals will be studied al Ihe Dec.
27 meeting here of the Stale
Public Welfare Commission,
Commissioner Andrew Juras
said today.
A progress report on the mcd-
ical aid to the aged program ai
' so will be made. Because of
! budget cutbacks, membership in
! the program has been frozen at
I 7.500 and near that number arc
now.
enrolled. The department
said it would not eliminate P
pie irom me iiukicjui am-i
i 7.500 membership level had been
i reached, but benefits would bc'jKT PILOT KILLED
reduced if enrollments topped FLASHER. YD. 'UPI) An
i that number. I Air Force F-106 jet fighter plane
! The pro-rate payment system i crashed in hilly ranching ler-
has drawn many 'protests, par-1 rain near here loday, killing the
ticularly from druggists who pilot.
; were added to the program in i r 1
November. l I WEATHER
Under tne system, wnen inc
' welfare department docs nol j
have enough money to pay all ,
bills in full, il divides (lie mon
ey available. j
Closing of Naval j
Shipyardi Studied j
WASHINGTON (UPI)-A Pen
tagon sludy group is going lo
explore the possibility of closing !
some of the government's II
naval shipyards employing near
ly 100.000 persons.
MEFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1963
i ' ' ' f-r:t. . i -
RUINS lNSl'UCIT.I) Deputy Fire Chief
Charles tjumlan and Sandra Hart, 23. check
a damaged painting on a gallery wall after
a $500,000 (ire which destroyed 35 Picasso
McNamara Talks
With Leaders in
South Viet Nam
SAIGON, South Vict Nam
(UPI) U.S. Delcnse Secretary
Robert McNamara arrived to
day for talks with South Viet
Nam's military rulers and a
round of intensive briefings by
top ranking American civilian
and military officials. j
In a brief statement at Sai-!
eon's Tansonhut airport, whore !
his special Air Force KC135
four-engine jet airliner arrived
from Paris, the secretary said
he had come here lo discuss
problems and progress of U.S.
military aid to South Viet Nam.
Earlier Mrrling Recalled
Asked the reason for his two
day visit, his first since the
Nov. 1 coup d'elal that toppled
Ihe regime of former President
Ngo Dinh Diem, McNamara
said: "some of you will remem
ber thai exactly two years ago
this week after a NATO meet
ing in Paris ... I (lew to Hon
olulu (or the first in a series
o( discussions of U.S. military
aid to Viet Nam. This is an
other of those meetings lo dis
cuss progress of the program
and find out what problems arc
involved and how to solve
them."
Arrives With Top Aides
McNamara (lew here with Ar
thur Sylvester, assistant secre
tary of defense for public af
fairs, and William Bundy, as
sistanl secretary of defense for
international security affairs.
He was greeted at planesidc
by U.S. Ambassador Henry Ca
bot Lodge. Gon. Paul D. llar
kins. commander of U.S. forces
in Viet Nam. and Vietnamese
rWrnse minister Ma. cn
: Tran Van Don
I mil. I AVI flriJMHIHl ram '
tonight .lli1 Oi'iwts Mldav.
stiftir l"c anil Miiokr in In'
allrs l.iju Inntcllt 33. High
1imI.iv i'l
Irnip
Hisl'"l rvlrifl.t "
lnwrst llHi Moftiliic y
I'rti , In in a i" I "dv Hi
Our Skies Tonight
Xlllurt trillav
III i m
Millrr t'l
7 : Hi m.
11:111 1 til
IIM . !.!
Mm, n.
ti.iiiKht
Hrst uiMftir
Innlchl llii- til-ntH. miiiiii. i
lirars In hr follow inn tlf M"nl
IhMiinh llir kv: tiimnrriiw
niflit lh Moon mil appear to
hp tnlltiwlni HAtiitn. j
JoSiiisoii
Tribune
Pablo Picasso Art
Pieces Destroyed
By Fire in
DETROIT (UPI) Thirty-five
Pablo Picasso art pieces, in
cluding two valuable paiulings,
were destroyed early loday in
a $500,000 fire that swept a
downtown building.
The Picassos were being
shown in a second floor art gal
lery. The damage to the collec
tion was esimatcd al $150,000.
More Ihan 125 firemen and
pieces of equipment battled the
blaze in Ihe building which
housed a furniture slorc along
with the art gallery.
The fire was brought under
control within 50 minutes de
spite chilling 17-dcgrec temper
atures. There were no serious
injuries lo firefighters although
several received first aid for
culs and abrasions.
The paintings by Ihe famed
H2-ycar-old Spanish arlist, Pablo
Picasso, were being shown in
the Arwin Gallery on the sec
ond floor of the Robinson Furni
Grand Jury Refuses
To Indict Students
CORVALLIS (UPI) A Ben
Ion County grand jury Wednes
day refused lo indict three Ore
gon Stale University students on
charges of stealing furnishing
from a sorority house last No
vember. The grand jury returned not
true bills for Douglas A. Wilson,
III, Portland; Robert L. Caulield
III. Portland, and George G. Col
lins, 111. Dover. Del.
Earlier. District Court dis
missed similar charges against
two others.
The five had been accused of
burglary of Delta Delta Delia
sorority. They said it was a
prank lo gel Ihe sorority girls
to "put on a function" for their
Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Second Aftornev Barred
i j- u
rrom nuuu juiy cibe
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)-A
second attorney was barred
from federal court Wednesday
in connection with the jury tam
pering case of Teamsters Presi
dent James R. lloffa.
U.S. District Court
William E. Miller and
Judges
Frank
Gray Jr. ordered the disbar- bread.
ment ol Hurry Heard Jr., a The minimum si.c of letters
Lebanon. Tenn., attorney, men- on the label also is set by (ho
lioned in a Dec. 6 indictment low. All loitering, except the
relurned against '.. T. Osborn ;word "Balloon." must be mini
Jr. I mum of 3-16 of an inch if on
Meeting
58th Year Price 10 Cents
No. 234
paintings in Detroit, Mich. The fire damaged
a furniture sturc and the. second door gal
lery. Total loss in the gallery included 400
painting, ceramics and drawings. (UPI)
Detroit
ture. Co. building. Damage lo the
furniture slorc was estimated at
$11111.11(10.
Lesler B. Arwin. owner of the
Arwin Gallery, said Ihe ruined
Picassos included "Man In
Front of a Cabin," valued at
$36,000, and "Picador," valued
al $9,5(10.
Arwin said Ihe gallery, built
by Robinson .Furniture three
months ago for $20,000, is fully
insured.
The Picasso exhibit came
from New York and was lo be
shown here until Jan. 4.
Local Man Suffers
Three Knife Wounds
William Pcler Grotlc, 30, of
344 Mac St., Mcdtord was re
ported in good condition this
morning at Sacred Heart Hos
pital where he was taken Wed
nesday evening suffering from
three knife wounds.
Lodged in Ihe Jackson Coun
ty jail on a charge of assault
with a dangerous weapon short
ly after 7:30 p.m. was William
Willey Branscumb, 43, of a lo
cal hotel.
According lo Medford Police,
Grotte was injured on South
Riverside Avenue in front of a
local tavern. '
Oregon Bread Labels
Due New Look Next Year
I SALEM (UPI) - Bread in
Oregon will start the new year
I with a new look on labels.
The balloon bread law passed
by the 1963 legislature goes into
effect Jan. 1. It sets require
ments on bread and advertising.
Kennelh Carl of the Slate Ag
riculture Department said all
bakeries selling bread in Orc-
gon arc affected
He said most of the bakeries
have submitted their new labels
for approval
.Musi List Weight
The law requires that the
label have the minimum net
weight and the weight size, such
as standard loaf, standard large
; loaf, standard extra large loaf,
balloon, balloon loot or balloon
'Summit' Talks
Would Be Held
In February
Western Strategy
Future Reviewed
LONDON (UPI) - Secretary
of State Dean Rusk set tho
stage today for a "summit"
meeting between Prime Minis
ter Sir Alec Douglas-Home and
President Johnson in February.
He conferred with British of
ficials on ways to ease tensions
with Russia in the wake of a
Western Allied decision to let
Britain "carry the ball" whila
Johnson settles into office.
Rusk today reviewed with
Douglas-Home future Western
strategy on ways to ease East-
West tensions mainly through
disarmament.
Working Luneli
Rusk and Home met at a
working lunch with Foreign '
Secretory R.A. Butler and other
top Anglo American officials.
Earlier, Rusk talked for more
than two hours at the foreign
office with Butler.
Authoritative d i p 1 o m a tic
sources said the talks concen
trated on disarmament and
East-West relations. They said
other questions also were
touched on in a wide - ranging
review, but the dominant theme
was the need to find ways to
improve relations with Moscow.
They said the talks were an
important preliminary to tho
meeting Home will have with
Johnson in Washington.
Rusk leaves later today for
Washington to report to Johnson
on his talks.
Going lo Geneva
Butler plans to attend tlm
Geneva disarmament talks
when they resume late in .Janu
ary, and hopes lo meet Soviet
foreign Minister Andrei Gro
myko there.
The talks clarified Anglo
American views, but there was
no immcdnate official B r i t
Ish confirmation of reports that
London and Washington wero
I thinking ot ottering the Rus
sians a 10 per cent cut in mili
Itary budgets.
Informed sources said, how-
ever,, this was an old proposal
which could be revived at any
time.
Rusk hegan his meetings with
a discussion of the Indonesian
Malaysian problem with Com
monwealth Secretary Duncan
Sandys.
Fog Dispersed for
Mercy Flights Plane
Mercy Flights pilots seeded
Ihe dense fog which enveloped
Medford Wednesday moroing
and gained an opening which en
abled Ihe air ambulance plane
to take oft from the Municipal
Airport with two patients.
It was the fourth fog seeding
by Mercy Flights over the air
port litis season and each has
been successful and followed by
a flight from the airport and a
return landing.
The Wednesday flight was to
Portland and Yakima, Wash.
Bill Roberts of the Rogue
River National Forest, Prospect,
was laken to Yakima for medi
cal Ircatmcnt. 11 is the homo
cily of his parents.
Douglas Burrill, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Burrill ot Eagle
Point, was taken to Portland,
where he is a patient at Good
Samaritan Hospital.
The flight brought to 1,651 tlm
number of patients flown by
Mercy Flights since formation
of the air ambulance service.
SENATE CONFIRMS
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Senate today confirmed the nom
ination of Robert B. Roe to ha
postmaster al Gaston, Ore. lie.
presently is acting postmaster
there.
the sides or top of a loaf and
' of an inch if on the ends or
an attached tag.
Capital letters are required
for the words "Balloon," "Bal
loon Loaf" or "Balloon Bre id."
which ever is used on the bal
loon loaf. It must be in a con
spicuous place on Ihe wrapper,
with minimum heights lj inch
if on the top or side of Ihe toaf
and ' i inch if on the ends of
(he loaf.
Placard Needed
The unwrapped balloon bread
loaves displayed (or sale by re
tail bakeries musl have a pla
card next lo or with the loaves.
This placard must have bold
faced letters at least one inch
in height and be placed where it
lis cosily reaa ny customers.
Advertising is also affected by
Ihe new law. A newspaper or
radio advertisement of bread
that includes Ihe price, must al
so i n c 1 u d o the weight of the
loaf.
i )
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