Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, December 21, 1943, Image 6

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    T H E R E G ISTER -G U ARD
Page Six
EDITORIAL PAGE OF
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
(PubtUhcd trtry Evtolnf and StuxUyl
O1T0R AND PUBUSUKB Alton 9.
MANAOlNO ED1TOB ....... WUUun H.
NEWS SERVICE AMOeUUtf PrtM. Unltd
MEMBER ....... Audit Burvau sM CUcuIaUoo
Entered at Um Part Ottfc at EuMam, G-ragoa. a wrnM
elua mattar.
Tha Rcflatar-Guard'a policy la tha aotnplat ud Impartial
publication in lta nawa paga of all oawi and aUtaroanta
on nawa. On thla paga tha adltora of Tba Rtglstar-Uuard
of far thalr oplnlona an avtnaj of tha day and mattar of
Importance to tha community, andeavorlns to ba candid
but fair and helpful n tha daveioomaol of aopatrucUva
community policy.
"ALL ISS OXZITEMENT, YESS!"
One of the newspaper classics of the year
Is Henry J. Taylor's amusing account of his
efforts to interview the German ambassador,
Dr. Hans Heinrich Dieckoff, on so-called neu
tral ground in Spain. Mr. Taylor's breezy
story reminds us a little of the time a Register-Guard
reporter interviewed William Jas
perKerr, In Corvallis, jn 1932, on the Zorn
Macpherson bill The "R:G reporter had
slightly better luck. He did get to see
William Jasper Kerr. And be did pry loose a
statement, of a kind. '
Nobody but an American reporter would
have thought of attempting to see Dr. Dieck
off.. Nobody but an' American (or perhaps
one of the British cousins) could have seen
the immense humor of the situation created
by this unconventional call oh the represen
tative of a nation with which we are at war.
Nobody but a bunch of goose-stepping Nazis
could have been quite so pompously absurd
as the flunkies and secretaries who 'passed
Mr. Taylor from hand to hand for hours and
finally ushered him out Into the cold,
r ' (McGurk butU In to ask: "Have you ever
tried to get through to some of our upper brac
ket New Dealers in Washington, D. C." The
question is irrelevant, irreverent, and for the
. moment, out of order).
The story has a certain psychological sig
nificance. The Germans, conditioned by
generations of bureaucracy were simply
flabbergasted when an American appeared
to ask for an interview. Somebody may ask:
What would happen if a German reporter in
Madrid were to try to see our American am
bassador? We think either one of two results equally
probable:
1. The Nazi would be thrown out on his ear
by the first guy he met, or
2. The American ambassador would Invite
him in for dinner (depends a good deal on
who's ambassador).
Anyhow when it comes to ACTION, you
can usually get it fast out of those who have
. grown up in the good old democratic way,
.which Adolf Hitler used to denounce as so
inefficient. A German has to wait for Hit
ler. 1o think. A Yank will usually start
swinginV The British cousins are a good deal
the same way. ' . '
During the last war (1915) there was a
wild-eyed Irishman working for one of the
Hearst papers. On a dare, Tom went into
the British Club of Rhode Island (textile
workers) and yelled (just to see wha,t would
happen):
"Hoch der Kaiser!"
Tom said he never knew what hit him.
Of course only a wild Irishman would do a
Ihink like that . (Wait till we get to Tokyo!)
A Free Press has many faults. It com
mits many sins. It is impertinent. It doesn't
know the meaning of "less majeste." It is
a very good thing!
have helped to bring the problem to a head.
Sooner or later, editors and publishers
are going to have to decide how far they shall
permit amateurs in political office to con
trol their news columns, to make fools of
them with their readers, to stifle the work
ings of enlightened democracy.
Co-operation is fine. Newspapers will
continue to co-operate. But they don't have
to co-operate blindly, slavishly, supinely.
Even In wartime the most expensive thing
about an auto is a speed cop.
WASHINGTON LETTER
By PETER EDSON
Register-Guard Washington Correspondent
WRONG WAY PROTEST
Developments suggest some elaboration
of the recent criticism against the way news
about the Cairo conference was handled by
American authorities.
OWI Chief Elmer Davis is indignant be
cause Reuters, the British agency, broke the
story, "prematurely," thus "scooping" the
American press. He has, accordingly, sent a
note of protest to Brendan Bracken, British
minister of information.
In our opinion Mr. Davis is off on the
wrong track. The way to protect the Ameri
can press against being "scooped" is not to
reprove the press of other nations. It Is to
permit American newspapers to. print news.
It appears that when Reuters did report
the Cairo conference, without interference
by British or other censorship, Mr. Davis
was powerless to move ahead the release
time on the American announcement. His
hands were tied by orders. From whom?
Only one man can give such binding orders
to Mr. Davis. That is Franklin Roosevelt.
So Mr. Roosevelt, having hired a news
expert to hold the bag, gives hard fand fast
orders and then goes off, leaving 'fs expert
all the discretion of a grade-four clerk in a
minor city government.
The fault was not with the British for
telling their people the story. It was with
the Americans for playing with the news
like an old-time theatrical press agent stag
ing a stunt.
There will be much argument about the
Bayonne (N.J.) Times' action in deliberately
violating the release time on the OWI an
nouncement. We think that a strong case
can be made for the Times. The paper's ac
tion was unorthodox, but in logic and in lay
ethics it was justified by all the circumstan
ces. American ' newspapers have submitted
themselves to what Is laughingly known as
"voluntary" censorship. It is voluntary on
the "or else" basis. The Bayonne Times may
WARTIME RAILROAD PROBLEMS
(Second of two articles on the railroad pay
- . situation)
Just as in the present war, there were numer
ous demands by railway labor groups for wage in
creased all through the first year of World War I.
All through the summer of 1917, encouraged by the
gains made through the Adamson eight-hour law,
railway labor unions made further demands for in
creases. A few were granted on some of the roads,
but there were no general wage increases.
On Nov. 1, officials of the four brotherhoods
and the switchmen threatened strikes, and on Dec.
28, 1917, the government took over the railroads
anyway, Secretary of the Treasury William G. Mc-
Adoo becoming head of the U. S. Railroad Admin
istration. One of the principal reasens for the seizure was,
of course, the bad railway labor situation. But as
all railway wage disputes now became issues be
tween the government and the unions, and one of
McAdoo's first acts was to name a Railroad Wage
Commission to study and to recommend. Secretary
of the Interior Franklin K. Lane was named chair
man. Increases Granted
On April 30, 1918. the Lane commission reported,
recommending flat increases of $20 per month for
all employes making less than $46 a month and slid
ing scale increases of from 43 per cent for those
making $47 per month to no increase at all for those
making more than $250 a month. The increases
amounted to $3,80 million a year, based on Decem
ber. 1915, wage levels.
The railway unions yelled because the 1915
wage bnse meant that some of the workers would
get less of an increase than they had already been
promised which is the case today.
But the Lane Commission's work was done, and
the next step was to .create another mediation out
fit also similar to the present wheels within
wheels duplication. This new body was the Board
of Railway Wage and Working Conditions, organ
ized in January, 1918. It made various adjustments
bringing the average railway wage of $78.06 per
month in December, 1917, up to $115.78 per month
by January, 1920. '
All through the latter part of 1919, labor groups
made additional demands, but on Dec. 24, 1919,
President Wilson announced the roads would be
returned to private hands on March 1. 1920, thus
passing all wage disputes back to the railroad man
agements. ( .
Before the transfer was made, however, Con
gress, under pressure from the unions, created a
nine-man Railway Labor Board. This board in
July granted about 60 per cent of the wage demands,
gave an average wage increase of $25.78 per month
per employe and brought the average rail wage to
$141.58 per month.
Rates Raised :!
These wage Increases and other increased oper
ating costs brought a demand from the railroads for
rate increases, which were finally granted to the
tune of over $1.5 billion a year. But then towards
the end of 1920, after a year of temporary boom,
numerous strikes and much uncertainty, deflation
set in. Many railway workers discharged, the op
erators demanded wage reductions. ,
The railways combined revenue picture for the
six-year period was thus mad! to look like this:
Number Pay- Gross Net
Tear Employees Rolls Income Expense Profit
(Figures in Millions of Dollars)
$1,506 $3,691 $2,426 $1,058
1,782 4.115 2,906 950
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1,700,814
,785,893
1,841,575
1,913,422
2,022,833
1,659,513
1,626,834
2.813
2.843
3.681
2,765
2,650
4,985
5,250
6.310
5,632
5,674
4,071
4,498
5,954
4,668
4,509
646
454
12
601
769
In June, 1921, the Rallwav Labor Board made
famous Decision No. 147 which reduced rail wages
by an average of $17.29 per month, saving the roads
$378 million per year. In October the board made
a further cut of approximately 5 per cent, bringing
the average monthly pay back to $118 for 1923.
The parallels of today's situation with that of
World War I are that existing mediation machinery
repeatedly failed to bring about agreements.
Whether or not there will be a similar post-war
deflationary movement is, of course, something for
the future.
OLIVE BARBER'S OBSERVATIONS
ABOUT THE BLACKBERRY
Locally, the wild blackberry Is our blessing and
our affliction. In early summer, Uie people turn
out en masse to pick the fruit. Yet all year 'long,
Uiey do Uicir best to destroy the vines. They chop
ana dig and burn, though to do so
is as futile as would be efforts to
hold back the tide.
Tliis morning I had it in mind
to deal violently with a clump
growing in the corner of the yard.
Arriving at the spot, I nearly
changed my mind. For you should
have seen those vines! The sun
was lust ud and dcw-soaneled
spider webs were a scarf of silver chiffon thrown
over the entanglement.
Some of the leaves were still green: some deep
red and some an earthy brown. A little breeze
came along, puffing out the more tightly woven
webs like fairy sails. The pendant drops of moisture
scintillated in the sun, little flames of red and blue
and gold.
Even the vines themselves had claim to beauty.
Wine-red and chocolate-brown, they were, swirling
and sweeping over and about each other in wide
arcs of inflnlto grace.
Right In their midst grew a sword fern. The
vines had not only protected it but their shade had
kept the ground moist. Falling leaves had enriched
the soil. So the fern had grown larger than most
of its kind and now rose above the blackberry
thicket, the delicacy of its plumes a direct contrast
to its brlary host.
A trio of song sparrows fluttered out,' bright
eyed with alarm at my presence. I was not sur
prised to find a nest at the baso of Uie vines. It had
been many weeks deserted, but I doubt not had
once held Uie three still loitering about the home
site.
All this I saw and considered turning bock but
I had vowed to Frank at breakfast time that this dnv
I'd deal with that bit of briar patch. Yet 1 remem
bered they'd given me several pies in July; they'd
protected Uie song sparrow family and made pos
sible Uie fern sword. And then the webs of silver
to grasp with fairy threads at the passing breeze.
They d Imprisoned the fire of the sun and given it
back to me in multicolored drops of dew. I had
little heart for the task before me.
But now my fence corner is as I'm told a fence
corner should be; a tidy, lifeless comer; a trim and
ci?n.".r j 1,ould Pleasure In tho change.
Funny, but I don L
Notices
Out For
Club Dance
By MARIAN LOWRY
MOTICES are out to Assembly
club members regarding the
annual New Year's eve dance.
The party, to be given at the
Eugene hotel, starts at ten o'clock,
and a supper will be served at one
o clock. The notices out warn
members to have their reservations
for the supper mailed In Thursday
or this week to Rogers W. Kimber.
ling. On the committee for the
party are Mr. and Mrs. Kimber.
ling, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn S. Mc
Cready, Dr. and. Mrs. Melville
Jones. ,
-
VISITORS HERE
Mrs. Charles Lynn Clarke -of
Seattle, Wn., is here for over the
Christmas holidays as guest of
Mrs. Peggy Averill. She stoDDed
here from a trip to the south. Her
nusDand, Lt. Charles Lynn Clarke,
is with the American forces In
Italy.
Other guests of Mrs. Averill re-
cently were her son, Rex E. De-
Long of Portland; and Mr. and
Mrs. J. Stuart Lowery of Whit-
tier, Cal., all of whom visited here
last week.
. . ' .
FROM SOUTH
Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. William
son of Eureka, Cal. are guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Perry H. Wallbridge,
Sunnyside Drive, having come at
the week-end and will remain
"here until Wednesday when they
will leave Tor Tacoraa, Wash., to
spend Christmas with Mrs. Wil
liamson's sister, Miss Alice Harris.
GETCHELL CLUB ..
Getchell club of the Royal Neigh
bors of America met recently at
the home of Mrs. J. Kunl in Cres
well, with Mrs. G. N. Donnah as
assistant hostess. Christmas games
and carols marked the season.
Names of "silent sisters" were re
vealed, and new names drawn for
the year. Next meeting of the club
will be January 21 with Mrs. Leon
ard Oswald, 1325 Olive street.
EXCHANGE GIFTS
Gifts were exchanged bv
twenty-six members of the Wo
men of the Moose, who met Mon
day evening at the home of Mrs.
Allie Clarke for a Christmas din
ner and party. Games were played.
250 Attend P-TA
Program Friday
Frances Willard P-TA 'held Its
meeting Friday evening, two hun
dred and fifty parents and friends
attending. i '
Winfiled Atkinson, principal,
manned We parents for the co
operation given him. He is leav
ing for military service. Mr. At
kinson introduced Erwin Juilfs,
who will serve as principal, also
Mrs. Juilfs. ,
Children of the first, second, arid
third grades presented a toyland
play. The fourth, fifth, and sixth
grades gave "The Christmas
Story." The Willard choir sang
carols. Third grade mothers serv
ed as hostesses for the social hour.
Today's Recipe.
RNA Election Is
Held Recently
Royal Neighbors of America
have elected officers for the new
year, as follows: oracle, Mrs. Frank
Bowers; vipe oracle, Mrs. C. A.
Bonney; chancellor, Mrs. Lester
Read; recorder, Mrs. Allie Clarke;
receiver, Mrs. R. A. Denney; mar
shal, Mrs. H. H. Peters; inner
sentinel, Mrs. Ross Godard; outer
sentinel, Miss Laura Tryon; man
ager, Mrs. W. E. Barker; physician,
Dr. Harry G. Talbot.
The appointive officers are: flag
bearer. Mrs. Lottie Meek; musi
cian, Mrs. Frank Hyland; faith,
Mrs. Charles E. Smith; courage,
Miss Joann Parsons; modesty,
Mrs. Herbert Jackson; unselfish
ness, Mrs. John Parsons: endur
ance, Mrs. Leonard Oswald; spe
cial auditor, Frank Bowers.
Installation of officers will take
place at a public ceremony in
January, Mrs. E. C. McPherson
serving as installing officer. Men
of the order will form the enter
tainment committee for the next
meeting.
EFG Board Gives
Added Filbert Money
Board of directors of the Eugene
Fruit Growers association has ord
ered an additional payment of 10
cents per pound to be made to fil
bert growers at this time, this pay
ment in addition to the 12 cents
received by the growers at harvest
time. It is estimated now that
when the final payment is made,
returns to growers will be better
than 25 cents per pound, an ex
ceptionally fine return on filberts.
For several seasons, filberts
brought 12 or 13 cents to growers.
FLOWERING Camellia plants for
Christmas at Tommy Williams
Flower Shop at 2086 East 15th.
fBv NEA Service)
QT your "homey" Christmas
dinner there will) of course be
nuts and raisins, crackers and
phM 'cnmA irinfl of rnnriiriT nil
as part of the dessert, But try
to include an old-fashioned plum
pudding, if possible. Here is a
rpcina from nlir nlH frienrf Fylith
Barber, noted for her good Amer
ican recipes.
Christmas Plum Pudding
One cup sifted ' flour, 2 tea
spoons salt, 1 teaspoon baking
powder, 1 teaspoon baking soda,
1 teasDOon cinnamon. 1 teasrjoon
allspice, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 1
pound raisins, 2 cups sliced figs, 1
cup ground carrots, cup ground
orange peel, 1 cup ground citron,
1 cup ground suet, 1 cup brown
sugar, 3 eggs, well, beaten, IVt
cups coffee, H cup orange juice,
2 cups fine dry bread crumbs.
Mix and sift flour, salt, baking
Dowder. soda snd'Rnipps AH4 .,,
fruit and oranpA neel tn finui
mixture. Mix suet and brown
sugar. Add beaten eggs. Add cof
fee and orange juice to bread
Crumbs, combine with suet suoai
and eggs. Add flour and fruit
mixture. Blend well. For 1 large
pudding, fill a' 2-quart mold to
within 1 innh nf fan On? anA
steam 5 hours. Mixture may be
piacea in d or e smau bowls, cov
ered tightly and steamer! for 9.U.
to 3 hours.
At the end of steaming nerinri
remove covers and nllmi, in hi.
main in uncovered steamer 10 to
15 minutes until tops are dry. Re
move from molds, cool thor
oughly, return to molds, recover
and place in. refrigerator until
ready to use. . Yield: v About - 3
pounds.
NOTE: The mirtdi nn will Vjun
a number . of weeks without re
frigeration. If a layer , of paraf
fin is placed over hte. puddings,
they will be Drotectivl frnm r,nM
Drenching with brandy will also
yivvcnt morning.
Any Drooortinn nf cllj ,
and raisins desired may be used.
Suet is an inexpensive form of
shortening. Use carrots in reni-.,..
some of the fruit usually used.
Figs unrationed. - Use orange
rind for thrifty pudding.
. : . i
Alleged Draft Evader
Taken at Mapleton
Lawrence Rnherf
Blachly, but lately from Califor
nia. Was arrfiSArl at HffnKli
Monday on a draft evasion
charge. He was brought to Eu
gene and placed in the county jail,
awaiting the arrival of a deputy
U. S. marshal from Portland.
The arrest was made by Deputy
Sheriff Claude Romaine and a
FBI officer at the mill where
Mason was employed.
DREAM CASTLES
Are Built By Saving!
SAVE and HAVE
A Hon
EUGENE'S
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSN.
148 Miner Bldg. Phone 1217
Quotarians'
Party Event
Of Sunday
CEVENTV-riVE Quotarians and
their guests assembled for the
clubs formal dinner and tradi
tional Christmas party Sunday
evening at the Osburn hotel. Chin
ese red- and showy, white ap
pointments made an . effective
background for the party.
Mrs. Paul T. Williamson of
fcureka, Calif., Quota club's gov
ernor for the fourteenth district,
was a visitor and brought greet
ings from the international, and
gave the Christmas message for
the evening. Mrs. Williamson is
a past president of the local
club. ,
Mrs. James V. Tlanlelsnn. nlnh
president, gave the greeting to
uwiuuers ana guests, miss iviar
Jorie Stewart, general chairman
for the evenlnff. nreciHiwI fni 4hA
festivities, and Mrs. Anne Gave-
memDers ana guests. - r
Stroll ino rarnlers n irmAik nf
enthusiastic Girl Scouts hrnusht
the 'Christmas atmosphere, with
we carois wmcn tney sang as a
tribute to their leader. Mrs. stew.
art. Miss Patricia Colerick gave a
reading entitled "The Waltz."
Mrs. E. A. Lundy and Perry H.
Walbridee staeed a dehsis m h
subject: "There Ain't No Santa
ciaus,- wmcn was speedily inter
rupted by the presenc eof not
omy me oia gentleman himself,
by "Mrs. Santa Claus" and "Santa
Claus, Junior," impersonated by
Mrs. J. c. Lamb, Mrs. Earl Black
burn, and little Frances Nettle
ton, Quotarian daughter.
Guests Of the Ollnlnria
' as follows: Earl 'Blackburn, Wal
ter Erickson, Mrs. Walter Erick
son, Miss Eva Smith, Mrs. Leone
Lefebvre, Miss Pat Gaveney, Mrs.
Greta Buckingham, Frank Hill,
Harold Jensen, John C. Lamb,
Mrs. Rachel Ward, Dr. and Mrs.
T. M. Lundy, Dr. Fred M. Miller,
Sam Mikkelson, Miss Ruth Mur
tha, Mr. and - Mrs. George Todd,
Perry Walbridge, John F. White,
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Newland, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul T. Williamson, Dr.
and Mrs. C. H. Michel, Miss Odel
ia Jungers, Mr. and Mrs. John
Simonet, Mrs. John T. Murray, and
Miss Bethene Hopson.
-. ' .
GIFTS GO TO PRISONERS'
LilSBOPJ. TW 91 tD rm i
Swedish steamer Embla left here
ior Marseille today with a cargo
Of Christmas mail fni. alliJ
, . DUIGU HOI
prisoners in German prison camps.
Miss Sether Now
4t Quontico, Va.
One of the women marines re
cently assigned to duty at Quan
tity, Virginia, was Private Eliza
beth A. Sether. duaihtar n-
; and Mrs. A. F. Sether. Eueen."
, Transferred to the Quantico base
i following completion of her in
! doctrination training at Camp Le.
j jeuhe, New River, North Carolina
! she is now a stenographer at the
, marine corps Echools.
j ine local woman is a graduate
oi university high school, Eugene
She attended the University of
wicguu, umjuring in ousiness ad
f ministration.
Garden Club
j Sprays for trays for the soldiers
;who must spend Christmas in the
hospital, at Camp Adair, will be
I made by members of the Eugene
I Garden club, Wednesday, Dec. 22
! in an all-day session at the ciub
, house.
' As five hundred of the sprays
must be made, all members are
urged to be present, each to bring
her lunch. Coffee will be served
Scout Bulletin Has
Good Will Message
Addressed to "men of good will"
the special Christmas issue of the
Wallamet Scouter, bulletin of the
Wallamet council, Boy Scouts of
America, delivered this week, fea
tured a special message to the 450
scouters and cubbers in tha
cil.
"What better Christmas spirit,"
the messaee rends, "ran ha .
than that which is in the heart of
a scout that spirit of peace on
earth the very -spirit of the day
when we together celebrate the
birth of the Prince of Peace.
"To you to all scouters and
cubbers may the new year bring
its deep rewards and may you be
secure in the knowledge that
through scouting you are doing
your duty to God and your coun
try." The bulletin nlcn nxlnu
gestions for troop and pack activ
ities aunng im.
MAKE a record of your voice.
Clay Pomeroy. Phone 3610-J.
. RUGS CLEANED
Piano Tuning. Phone 4256-W. '
i I :
lrogram
land. Wer: trtST8'
11 Credit wl.
" J 'eatureof th.r1
Ing Tuesday mornf,ro,1','t3
Santa Clara CH
. "U"'B. 0 Mrs. E. G ,,T
...... . mac lunch. .. T
clock, it bin. .v.5M
party with exchsU..
business meeting ,,3
were fifteen
: fllw were Mrs. BertiO
MrsDohenyo.Mg
to the group onl. 01 W
Special Meetina oi
CnAAtHt ... .
"iing tor B ut m
chapter, O.E.S..U to hfi,
Tuesday evening, Dec. 2jllBt
24 as announced in Stm
paper. The nnK u .Tr?
Initiation.
9
GIFTS!
Special for thtf Holklm
Give her a cremi oil is.
manem wave. . . delist. i
fully soft wave that law
me nair ramantljr lovely,
CHARM
BEAUTY SALON
IN PAYLESS D1C0
85 WlUunette ni!H
Paracon, a new type of synthetic
rubber, can be used in gaskets,
hose, for molding intn ini.QtA
shapes, and to rubberize fabrics.
Its heat resistance ie uM in k
exceptionally high.
iikJ
lot
HI
m
Li PURE
Wd COLD
I i
n
D
Tnllv a Immaittv
gown it this gold
crepe N-w York
creation. The rim
pie dignity of this
dinner dreaa with
its gold beading
nn flia hl
vers and butloni !
make it perfect K
for al home or
dining out during
the coming holiday!.
i"l
M
4L
.1.. t r . '1
2 OAK The Bitty Littla StereFboM
WHOLESALE "AND RETAIL V:!t;ii
WISHING YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS
AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Eugene's Finest Selection of Fresh and Smoked
Meats and Fresh-Dressed Poultry
SUGGESTIONS FOR YOUR HOLIDAY
DINNER i
POULTRY
Choice Ben
Turkeys Lb,52c
Choice Tom
Turkeys i. 47c
Fancy ' '
Ducks Lb. 36c
Fancy
Geese u. 38c
Choice Colored Routing
Hens lb. 40c
Choice Colored
Fryers Lb. 44c
BAKE A CH0ICI
Bluebird HAM
for that Chrbtou Mats'
Per (i
Lb,
NO LIMIT.
Bacon
Lb"11 .hw - 3k
Canadian
Bacon u.
Sugar-Cared
Bacon T 26c
NO USUI.
"v. ftjj
a3)jn-iuuyj
COUNTRYMAN a WEBB
PRODUCE
Producers Public Market Bldg:.
PHONE 2765
SPECIAL PRICES
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY
LETTUCE.... 2 BEADS.. 19c
AVOCADOS ltc 10c
55c
- 5
65
ATMAime
naUWUUl.? Mb. bat
Fancy
Florida
Lb.
TANGERINES
ONIONS 10 ,b ,
GRAPEFRUIT ft !! 19c
ORANGES . . LXT 2M
CRANBERRIES
AND YAMS
" ' '
Frying RABBITS
CHOICE PORK
LOIN & LEG ROAST TRY THEMI i
FANCY LEGS-OF-LAMB Fresh . . .
SoZIo GroundBeepj
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Spare-Ribs p0rk Sausage 3oc
Fresh Pigs Feet pure perk
: Hog-Heads Link SausagejS
W hay a few nlca calendars for T00
Wa male our own lunch mobi right hn
Processed by skilled mm who hare JTfcjct
perlence. Wo also cur our own hamf ana o
Giro them a try.
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Mined Ham Spied Ham - Tonau Loaf -
Pork Loaf Roast Beef - Head Ch-
Lirer Sauiaao Braunchwlaf f
Blood Sausaga Genuine Chlck.n .Wi
Voal Loaf Bologna - Pickled Plat
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