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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1955)
p Vi) Monday. August. 22. 1953 gI3t MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE O O O O -By CLAY R. POLLAX- AMI MAR 22 utu yi Your Daily Activity Guio' According to tht Stars. To develop message for Tuesday, read words corresponding to numbers S-PT. 23 rfr OCT. 23 iif w 7QJ 8X7B C30BB 2" o 572-84-891 of your Zodiac birth sign TAUtU 31 Lovt SCOWIO rv-T -if J Jti APR 21 0 o o o o o 0 O , MAY 21 i n i) .6-63-81-91 GEMINI VY 22 i-5-30-85 CANCEt I JUNE 23' 1 Tr,p 2 You 3 Son- Look 5 Sot 6 Ally 7 Keo 8 You 9 Don't 10 Tno 11 Things 12 Moy 13 And 32 We.l 33 Special 34 These 35 Restlesi 36 Are 37 A 33 Asset 39 Moy 40 Trt 41 6;ow 42 Aod 43 So If) 2-12-20-35 r 47-58 49 14 Unexpected 44 Be 15 Yourself 45 You no JUf 24 2 AUG 23 c i j no id - I . 1 H'17'JI 'J r otI S' 3J-04-0J-OI VltGO MA SErf 22 0)10-13-31-43 Sl. 4.4.7(1 16 Over 17 Conf.de 18 You 19 Cear 20 Good 21 End 22 Could 23 Feel 24 Of 25 With 26 V.sitt 27 Your 28 In 29 Element 30 Luck 46 Don't 47 And 43 Tendency 49 Who 50 Favored 51 To 52 Wrong 53 Contribute 54 Emphasis 55 Your 56 Con 57 People 53 Moody 59 To 60 Lift (pGood (Adverse 61 So 62 Help 63 Easily 64 Your 65 On 66 Soc at 67 Todcy 63 Hes.tate 69 Today 70 Happiness 71 Argue 72 Way 73 Life 74 Mislead 75 Is 76 Or. 77 Sidetracked 73 Indicated 79 Your 80 Solvoge 81 To 82 Is 83 For 84 Concerning 85 Items 86 Confidence 87 Finances 88 Phoning 89 Finonces 90 Promote J23 . Neutral NOV. 22 7-19-24-37 fill La-59-71 U SAGITTARIUS NOV 23 , DEC. 22 f -3 33-54-65-66 173-75-78 CAPRICORN DEC 23 JAN. 20 9-17-28-40 fl 4 152-57-67 AQUARIUS lis) 1 S FEB." l.n.76.36l 9-61-82-88 PISCES MAR. 21 ZA 6-15-25-3441 Li9.60-79-86M QufOFMElYoODS, Oat First Lumbermen ... The first lumber manufactur ing operations by white men in the Pacific Northwest were orig inated and managed by the Brit isiXCaptain John Meares and the Yankee Captain Robert Gray. pEach sawed wood and built a fin ship, literally hewing-it out of the wilderness. The Meares schooner, proper ly christened Northwest Amer ica? was launched on Sept.- 19, 1788, in the waters of Friendly Cove, Nootka Sound, on the 'southwest side of the great island that was to be named for Captain George Vancouver. Just two days earlier Gray had sailed in0with his 90-ton ship, the Lady Washington, on his first voyage to the North Pacific from Boston. Cray and - his crew heartily pitched in with the British and the Chinese of the Meares expe dition to aid in the launching and to help celebrate it. The little schooner, fir-beamed and cedar-planked, "rode the waves like a dream. Bobert Gray carried the dream a purpose and a plan back to Boston. How Maaret Got Rich ... John Meares had been well prepared for his shipbuilding venture when he sailed from China in the fall of 1787 reach ing Nootka in May of 1788. He had not only stowed the frame for a ship and the tools to con vert the big firs and cedars into masts, spars, planking, decking and superstructure, but he car- O Fund Given To Study Witness Testimony ashineton (U.P.) The Fund for the Republic announced to day it has given $25,000 to the School of Law, Stanford Univer sity, to study and analyze the testimony of leading witnesses on Communism. The study will be part of the Fund's continuing examination of civil liberties in the United Robert M. Hutchins, Fund President, announced the gift in a rpnort on the activities of the privately financed organization. Tt received S15.000.000 in De- 1952. from the Ford foundation to study civil liber tip Hutchins reported that "the atmosphere" for civil liberties is somewhat improved over five years aeo. But he said" violation of civil liberties "are still such a to give cause for alarm." O Declassified Research Results Released Washington (U.R) The gov ernment is releasing to the pub ffc 961 declassified research re ports on the industrial use of atomic energy as a part of Pres ident Eisenhower's atoms-for-peace plan. Commerce Secretary Sinclair Weeks0 said yesterday that a third of the reports have had only limited circulation up to row. Henceforth, they will be freely available through the Commerce Department's office of technical services. Weeks said release of the doc uments is the forerunner of a fcmarlpr nrosram in which the Atomic Energy Commission will give the Commerce Department !Parrh reDorts as auickly as tiey become available, for gen eral distribution. i CivI Defense Aide Repairs Flood Damage Titusville. N. J. 0J.R) N. Mitcliell Bannerman. who work ed in the state Civil Defense Control Headquarters on New Jersey's floods since Friday, to day was repairing flood damage home. He returned X tinA his front lawn washed igvay and his cellar full of wafer. v 1 GDead line for Sunday Classified ried 20 some authorities say 50 Chinese loggers, whip-saw yers, carpenters and shipwrights as Dasseneers who were to be his lumbering and shipbuilding force in the North Pacific wilderness. The Chinese skilled workers had been well picked. They were eiants of their race, young and powerful. The way the: whacked the big trees down a-thundering on the steep shore was a wonder to the natives. The work went on so well through late spring and summer that the ship was all but readv to be christened North west America and launched by SeDtember 17. Meares had "bought" water front, property from Nootka Chief Maquinna for a couple of pistols and a chisel or two. The Srjaniards took the Meares head- auarters bv force, also the fine, new Northwest America. In the final settlement John Meares took the Spaniards for $210,000 in gold. He was quite an enter prising lumberman. Grav's Adventure ... The Columbia Redivivia. 220 tons, sailed on her econd voyage to the North Pacific on beptem- ber 28, 1790, with Gray in the captain's cabin. Young Bob Has- well was mate, and was slated for command of an auxiliary schooner or sloop, that was to be built on the shore of Clayo- auot Sound, south of Nootka.. Oak ribs and keel for the sloop were in the Columbia's hold. So were manv saws, broadaxes and shipwright's tools. Haswell kept a record of the building of the sIood. On Sept. 21, 1791, Haswell and a work party landed on the Clay- oouot Sound shore to build a log house and clear ways for the shinbuildine iob. Bv October 3 the keel was laid. Chief Wickan- anish and two brothers paid the camp a visit on Uctober iz. House and shops were then up. The work was going on. Haswell wrote. I am daily visited by some one or other of the chiefs, who express great ad miration at our artisans. The sawing of plank, the smith work, and the dexterity with which our oeorjle cut down and hew trees strike them with wonder. The Adventure was launched Feb. 23. 1792. Bv the first of May "Captain" Bob Haswell was taking her out to trade for furs and was able to sail rings around the Columbia herself, the young builder and skipper proudly re ported. With both Meares and Gray, lumbering and building got off to a fine start in the North Pa cific wilderness of 1788-1792. And thus the fame of forests of the region as a source of building materials was carried around the world. Worthwhile Reading ... for your whole fomily in the world-famous pages of The Christian Science Monitor. Enjoy Erwin D. Canham's newest stories, penetrating national and in ternational news coverage, how-to-do features, home making ideas Every issue brings you helpful easy-to-read articles You can get this interna tional daily newspaper from Boston by mail, without extra charge. Use the cou pon below to start youi subscription. The Christian Soence Monitor One. Norway Street Boston 1 5. Mass., U. S. A. Please send the Monitor to me for period checked. I year $16 6 months $8 3 months $4 Q (name) (address! 'mm: It..--.. 'JL i You can't iudee a book by its cover. Neither should vou iudge food savings by week-end specials alone. Thrifty shoppers know that the way to real savings is to shop at a store where every price is low all the time. It's the total that counts. And . . . the total is less when ' every price is low. Compare the prices listed here! We believe you'll agree that you save more on your total food bill by shopping regularly at Safeway. Peanut puuer- Beverly Brand So Creamy d Smooth. 18-Oz. Jar 5? coidbrook MairgaroTO 5 89 Tang Salad Dressing qt. 3f)e Salad Dressings Tn; 39c T 35' Desoro...sbop F,uff-i-t Extra Frh and Fluffy K " Celjo Packed to I I I WnahfJ Whit, or Whole Wheat TS Fresh Bread lS(c F"'e,,Q,"f''-S"2c.n,KhlMf J I Check this group, for More Money-Saving Prices at SAFEWAY! 3.8 Milk iST 3.;243c- 43c Friskies Dog Food 225c Hi-C Orange 46 ox. 250c Cascade Salad Dressing Quart 35c Pineapple Juice LaLan. 46-oz. 245c Devils Food Mix Betty Crocker Pkg. 29c Honeybird Cherries Cherries can 2 25c Grape JuicewESTFAm Spaghetti Franco-American Tuna Fish Sea Trader, Chunk Nob Hill Coffee 24-Ox. 25c i ISVa-Ox. Can 15c LISTERINE Antizyme Tooth Pastt 79c Each Tube Vi Can 25c it 84c it' 1.67 Mb. Pkg. 82c 1.63 db 89c S :.l 77 Treat Your Family to Delightful Summer Salad How! , .Vine-ripened tomatoes from Yakima are so juicy . . . full-flavored, too. Try some in salads . '. . looked dishes too, then you'll know Safeway 's the best place in town to buy produce. Sweet Meated Vine Ripened Cantaloupe Seedless Grapes Peaches Sweet Corn f Red Haven , Beauties LB. Fresh, From Yakima 17-lb. Flat u. V 229 25c Osas Lb. 49 Thompson's Sweet Meated. LB Sweet Kernels rom California U. S. No. 1 Fancy White Shatter 10-Lb Bag Potatoes 45c - 69c 4 to 9 oz. DOZ. EARS U. S. No. 1 Fancy New Red Potatoes 10 33c Airway Coffee Edwards Coffee Crisp Tasty CrackersTimaer.i-Lb.kg.29c Guaranteed Meat Buys Boiling Beef PHILLIPS Milk of Magnesia i2-ox. yior Bottle twt GILLETTE Blue Blades 49c Pkg. 10's Tender plate-cut of Boiling Beef. "U.S.D.A. Choice" cuts, aged for Flavor. All cuts Guaranteed to Satisfy, or Your Money Back. VEL . Mild Detergent 73c V FAB Fast Working Detergent V,:- . 73c CLOROX Household Bleach 29c Vi Gal. 100 Pure Ground Fresh Ground Beef b 39c "USDA Choice" Boneless Cuts of Beef Stew . 69c "USDA Choice" Tender Juicy T-Bone Steak lb.1os "USDA Choice" Boneless Top Sirloin Steak n, 1 Standard Pack Sliced Bacon l: 49c Manor House Chicken Pies 8 p'. 29c Captain's Choice Fish Sticks 'X: 45c 25 Here's a new taste treat in sliced Lunch Meats. Try Somerset ... 7 Varieties Lunch Meats M.C.P. Pectin For Summer Jelly Making 3'2-Ox. O OO- Pkg. Blade Cut Pork Steak : 49c 3 to 5 lbs. MVA'AVAVAV AVAVA'tVA. 5:-:r-VXy-: Spare Ribs n, 59c Captain's Choice Breaded ' Shrimp . 59c Grocery prices in this d 't " effect through Wednesday, August 24, at Safeway in Medford. We reserve the right to limit quantities. No sales to dealers or their representatives. CRISCO 100 Pure Shortening 85c 3-Lb. Can FLUFFO All Vegetable Shortening c' 87c Spic 'n Span Household Cleanser 5' 87c JOY Liquid Detergent 31c 7-0. Can DREFT Powder Detergent 5f-73c Ocean Spray Cranberry Sauce N,r 22c BEEF STEW Delicious Dinty Moor 43c IVORY SNOW So Mild and Gentle "rff- 30C DUZ e Washday Detergent T 73c OXYDOL Washday Detergent ; . 4,4- 73c o at noon Saturday. O pi