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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1955)
It. Thursday. June 30, 195S MEDFORD tOHEGOH) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEM h happy day! GAFGVJAV'C featuring OPEN Monday '0 Crisp and juicy.. .guaranteed ripe! 0WN SUNDAY nil Vim ' P.m. i f T T I ZJ v (IIDGHPGIEID WATERMELON By THE PIECE LB. Ever taste summertime itself? Bite into a cool, crisp slice of one of these sweet, red watermelons and vou've cot it! For these are melons at their finest. Selected by our own critical melon- r. Safewav. 51 - Each and every one thumping firm. Crunchy. L '2C Delicious. And look at this low price: III c New Potatoes Cantaloupes Graoes u Seedless Tomatoes Jojicy Lemoos U. S. No. 1 White Shifter. Perfect for potato salads. These are clean and extra nice. Sweet - meired, vine - ripened Calif, cantaloupes. Heavy net, full slip. At their peak of good ness and flavor. Here they are. These grand California seedless grapes you've been waiting for. Summer salads take on a bright-f 3"0Z ei hue when you include toma toes. Shop Safeway for the fillip finest. ' UIUB Hot weather time means you'll be needing eitra lemons for lemonade, fish, iced tea. lb. 10c "39' 19 19' More Granc Garden Room Favorites Honeydew Melons. 1 5C Yellow Onions Lb 31 9e Crenshaw Melons lb 1 8C Plums Lb.25e Cucumbers Lb Ipc Apricots . 25e Crisp Lettuce Lb. 15c Peaches Lb. 29s Sweet Corn 4 r,rs2Sc Oranges Lb. I5e Gr. Onions ZdishiS L. 1 5e Nectarines Lb. 25e UUUaiu - - . flash j.. k Tnai . i. ,e nven-reaay ui. iMA and These are .u-j - fter they T 2, frozen and flav0r. mey .-- W.Thm is grand eat- I E ft 'SLSTh crowd at just a tew AJ 'ntsoer seeing. And don tror- - . i repzer: get your nuu iMlTOCl IHldDUSSE Fresh Frosted, Cut-Up-Ready For the Pan Wonderful, wonderful Manor House fryers!! There's noth ing like them for tenderness and flavor! Here's a maximum of good eating with a mini- i-g N mum of muss, fuss, and both- I VL LSw lO)C er. Just pop them into the fry- omfm . J irig pan and start licking your ' ... chops! - 2 lbs. to 2 lbs.-2 ozs. 2-2Vi Lbs. CO Fresh Fryers prU Whole Fryers Fresh and Young Per Lb. 2-2'a Lbs. Per Lb. 55c No Holiday Picnic Is Complete Without or -SOMERSET.' Skinless Franks Mb. .rfYe You'll enjoy these top quality all meat franks delicately seasoned, with their own secret blend of choice herbs and spices. try U SOMERSET "Company Quality" LU&CM MEATS Spiced Laneheon Loaf Cooked Salami wmi wiivive If l Minced Ham - )J(( )1C Pickle-Pimiento Loaf Combination Loaf Old-Fashioned Loaf ft.117 Olive or Luxury Loaf pQ Variety Loaf . i mi Uort Shanked a tamny h"-""- I Whole Ham or KOq run JIW Full Butt fiQftl ulf Lb. www Armour's Boneless Canned Hams Canned Picnics sZl 6U-Lb. Can $6.49 "USDA CHOICE" Beef... AGED to eating perfection by Safeway Safeway starts with the beef grade that offers you greatest value ... "USDA CHOICE." Then Safeway makes this fine beef even better by aging it just the right number of days to bring out peak tenderness and flavor. And Safeway meat men trim all beef cuts closely before weighing, as in the T-Bone sketch shown here, so that you get less waste and MORE good eating meat for your money. Yes, Safeway is tho place to buy beef. 3ct11 52.19 Whole or End Piece Lb. Slab Bacon Ci:J 1) Sugar Cured OIIUwII UdUUII Std. Stick Bologna Polish Sausage 53c Layer Pack Somerset Somerset Brand Centers Lb. Mb. Pk9. 1-Lb. 12-Oz. Ring 59c 45c 39c 55c Standing Rib Roast lb. 75c Blade-Cut Pot Roast lb. 45c Round Done Pot Roast lb. 59c T-Done Steaks lb 98c Boneless Top Sirloin $1.09 Plate Boiling Beef lb. 15c GROUND DEEF 100 Pure Lean Beef lb. 39c SPARE RIBS ItrSE: lb. 35c 2.. - .v.v. v.; Safeway's money-back guarantee means just this. Should any item you purchase at Safeway fail to please you in any way, we will cheerfully refund every penny you paid for it without fuss or quibble! Prices in this advertisement are in effect' today through Sunday. We reserve the right to limit. No sales to dealers or to their' repre sentatives. STORE HOURS: 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. REFUSING TO SIGN COMPLAINT against wife who bopped him on head with antique glass lampshade, Assemblyman Charles E. Chapel, Los Angeles, forgives her lustily at police station. Gash, above ear was closed with 31 stitches. (International) Around Hollywood By ALINE MOSBY United Press Correspondent VP l Hollywood U.R) A bright, young comedian that Hollywood calls "a new George Gobel" will be unveiled on his own tele vision show tonight but Johnny Carson already is un happy about that label. "Because Gobel and I are both young and low pressure types, people compare us, but in style and de- yPP: livery there's son." 1 Carson insisted ftoday. "It really isn't fair." Carson's hu mor that view ers will see on CBS-TV is best described as Aline Mosby brash and clean-cut, according to a pre view of the show. Like Gobel, Carson is a mid westerner with a wife and three children who goes in for re laxed,, offbeat humor. Carson's show also has a girl singer and a family skit which he casually walks into, as Gobel has done on many a Saturday night. Not Like Gobel . Carson, however, does not be have like the Gobelish home spun "little" man. One columnist wrote that Johnny Carson will be next year s George Gobel. I wrote back that 'George Gobel will be next year's George Gobel' ", grinned Carson. The slender, pug-nosed com edian has his chance to become a big TV star because Red Skel ton hurt his back a year ago. Carson had an informal show on the local CBS station and net work big-wigs hustled him over on a few hour's notice to replace the ailing Skelton. Johnny dreamed up his act while driving to the studio. After the successful show, the network signed him. 'Ever since I've been working on the format for my own show. It's loose and flexible," the new comic explained. "I'm also help ing write the show. ' TV Product .. Carson thinks he may be the only comedian who's strictly a product of TV. He began his ca reer, fresh from the university of Nebraska, on an Omaha TV station. The Norfolk,- Neb., boy also did magic tricks at conven tions and fairs. "I've got two. strikes against, me," he grinned. "I went to col lege and din't have to sell news papers in the Bowery or stand in line to see George MA Cohan. I've led a normal existence." During our interview, at the Brown Derby, the 29-year-old Carson beamed while well-wishers gave him "good luck" greet ings for his debut tonight. It was one of those moments in show business before either a star is born or a hopeful defeated. "I'll know a half hour after the program, from the reaction, if I went over, he said. Then he added, "In fact, Til kow when I walk off the stage if I'm in." the rest MILK mm m w m .a i mm m m m. HI - mm fgm j W Festival Player Finds Companions Ashland Richard Jones, one of the featured players in this summer's Oregon Shakespeare Festival, received a pleasant sur prise in the second week of re hearsals. Coming to Ashland for the first time from Little Falls, N.Y., the veteran actor-director ex pected to find himself lonely in a strange country. And he was until someone in troduced him to W. Bernard Windt, and 'he discovered that he had known the festival musi cal director 30 years ago when they were freshmen . together at Ithaca college in New York state. Jones began to feel even more at home when he found that the Rev. Jack Thompson of Trinity Episcopal church was a former classmate and a close friend of his own minister in New York. Jones will, play the lead, in "Timon of Athens," Bottom in "A Midsummer Night's Dream," and Duncan in "Macbeth" in the festival this summer. , Dead line for Sunday Classified to at noon Saturday sSsIgS: Seven Days a Week .