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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1956)
r Good Eating on it's Way From fin mi Plump Tender Young Fryers At a Very Special Price Fresh, Cut-Up Pan Ready Per Pound Dressed & Drawn 2 to 3 lbs. LD Q) 11 li Loin Rib End . Loin End Roast lb. 39 Whole or Half Loin . lb. 43 Pork Chops S lb. 65 Pork Sausage - lb. 39 Pork Steak " lb. 39 Full Pork Side "rib. 29 CHICKEN PIES p"-4$100 Manor House Frozen 8-oz Also Beef and Turkey Pi GROUND BEEF 3 100 Pure Beef Single lb. 35c $100 for Yorkshire Brand Sugar Cured Lb. CANNED PICNICS Morrell's Pride Smoked, Tender Can "USDA CHOICE" GRADE BEEF Round Steak T-Bone Steak Top Sirloin Beef Rib Roast Beef Pot Roast 209 Boiling Beef 39 U.S.D.A. Choice Beef Tender Juicy Slices U.S.D.A. Choice Beef Tender, Flavorful Choice Boneless Steak Trimmed before Weighing Choice Standing - The King of Roasts Round Bone Roast lb. 49 Blade Cut U.S.D.A. Choice Beef From The Same Beef As Our Steak SALE lb. 65 lb. 89 lb. 98 lb. 65 lb. 39 lb. 15 Shop Safeway for the Best Produce in Town! Arizona Marsh Seedless (SIMM .ssss Vtl U ULrvl U Ld jjgj Pound lavel 0 ranges Large Size Fancy Seedless Approx. 35-lb. box $2.89 lb .1 0" Crssn Lettuce Garden-Fresh, Firm Young Heads, for Salads or Sandwiches lb. i 4 APPLIES Large one Fancy Red Romes lb. 24-Pound Box 1.98 Emperor Large, Red Beauties From California Sweet and Juicy Grapes BananaS Fancy Quality Ripe Cabbage Firm Medium Heads Carrots Snappy Crisp Cauliflower snowy White Fancy Yams From Louisiana Potatoes no. 1 Netted Gems Potatoes Medium Select lb, 19 lb 10 lb, 227 lb. 25 Jb, 15 10-Lb. Bag 59 10-Lbs. 85 High Court Hears Arguments on Power Surcharge Salem U.R The Supreme Court heard arguments in a case yesterday testing whether Pa cific Power and Lieht Comnanv should refund a 20 per cent sur- i charge imposed on consumers in the winter of 1952-53. - No decision has been reached in the case which was first filed against Mountain States Power and Light Company. Since then Mountain States has merged with Pacific Power. Affects Other Cases Two other cases now pending against Portland General Elec tric and PP&L which involve about $4,000,000 will be affected by the decision. Representing the appellant and asking a refund for all Mountain States consumers was Portland Attorney Walter H. Evans. He claimed the sur charges were over-charges which were illegal. Previously he was turned down in Lane county Cir cuit Court. Francis Hills, also of Port land, represented Pacific Power and Light. He argued that ihe Oregon Public Utilities Commis sion had approved the sur charges in 1951 when power companies had to switch to more expensive steam generation due to a water shortage. Not Legal Procedure Evans said, however, that the letter from the PUC granting permission for the surcharge was not legal procedure because the company filed no new rate schedule and held no hearings. An interested observer was State Sen. Monroe Sweetland of Milwaukie. He has announced that the power issue will be part of his campaign as the Demo cratic nominee for secretary of Sjtate. Woman Determined To Sell To Negro; Cross Set Afire Dallas, Tex. (U.R) A cross was burned last night' on the lawn of Dr. Cosette F. Newton's home which has been offered for sale to a Negro. The 6-foot high cross, wrap ped in gasoline-soaked rags and set afire, was doused with water by the fire department before any damage was done to the home or to a backyard pavilion ship which set off the bitter neighborhood feud. Dr. Newton offered to sell her fashionable Highland Park home to a Negro after losing a battle fought to the Texas Supreme Court to keep her ship which neighbors called an eyesore. Vandals Suspected Police Chief W. H. Naylor said the cross burning may have been the work of vandals. But Dr. Newton said she be lieved the burning was done by one of her embattled neighbors. She' said she feared the incident may be just a preliminary to burning down of the house, the insurance for which has been cancelled. Dr. Newton said .she has had several offers for the $40,000 to $60,000 house, including one from a Baptist minister. She said she will sell the property to a Negro even if the house is destroyed. Thursday, January 28, 1958 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE Crew of Wrecked Train May Be Asked To Take Lie Detector Tests Los Angeles (U.R) The district attorney's office said to day it will. try to give lie detec tor tests to the crew of a Santa Fe train to determine what caused it to upset, killing 29 persons. The train's engineer said he caused the crash by blacking out. The fireman, Homer Smith, 42, refused Wednesday to see Chief Dep. District Attorney Adolph Alexander who sought Around Hollywood Hollywood U.R) Holly wood usually laughs at its silent pictures but one great master of the screen, producer - di rector Cecil. B. DeMille, pro poses movie town dust off its classics and bring them back to the theaters. . . All t h e Aline Mosby younger gen eration knows of the silents are the misleading satires on TV or in the movies showing hammy characters moving jerkily about. It took seasoned old-timer De Mille to slap Hollywood's wrist for ignoring its silent classics in his speech when he was given the Screen Producers Guild Milestone award at a banquet this week. Consideration Deserved The great classics of . the screen deserve better treat ment," he told the younger pro ducers. "They remain not second rate, but first rate specimens of the motion picture art." DeMille said the . classics should be presented to the pub lic on special projecting machin es, running at 60 feet a minute instead of the present 90 that makes great artists jump about George Lends Backing To Rigid Supports Washington (U.R) Sen. Walter F. George today put his powerful support behind a con gressional drive to restore rigid farm price . supports on basic crops. George's statement followed predictions by Democratic and Republican members of the Sen ate Agriculture committee that a rigid upport bill will be sent to the Senate floor. " The Georgia Democrat said the nation's farmers need im mediate financial relief. He ex- j pressed confidence that Congress will provide it by voting for a return to rigid price supports, The Eisenhower administra tion has proposed a farm pro gram featuring a soil bank . to aid the price-squeezed farmer. But the administration wants to keep price supports flexible. George said the soil bank "has some good features," but its benefits would be mostly long' range. Douglas McKay's Wife Has Emergency Surgery Washington U.R) Mrs. Doug las McKay, wife of the secretary of interior, was recovering in Walter Reed hospital here to day, after undergoing an emerg ency appendectomy operation Staurday. Secretary McKay was away from the capitol on a speaking engagement in Wyoming when Mrs. McKay was stricken. -ASTORIAN NAMED Washington (U.R) Presi dent Eisenhower today nominat ed Neil J. Morfitt to be postmas his approval for the test. Con ductor George R. Spickard de clined to take ..the test "on ad vice of counsel," Alexander said. Blackout Told - Engineer Frank Parrish ac cepted responsibility for the ac cident Sunday. He said he black ed out before Sunday's derail ment and thought he was seeing orange groves in the 'railroad yard. Dr. Marcus Graham, coun ty jail-physician, examined Par rish Wednesday.. By ALINE MOSBY United Press Correspondent like Woody Woodpecker. "This industry will not come of age until it makes a deter mined effort to .. keep its own great . classics alive and to pre sent them regularly to the public in a manner worthy of their mer it," De Mille said. "I have wish ed many times we and the public were more aware of the dramatic riches we have - stored in our vaults." Complaint Voiced He complained because such films are called "reissues." "We do not say the next time you go to the Louvre you see a reissue of , the Mona Lisa," he explained. - The celebrities burst into ap plause : when DeMille credited the late silent pioneer director D. W. Griffith as being "the teach er of us all." He also lashed at producers who make films only for money, use "vice" plots or "yield to the ridiculous demands of pressure (censor) groups." ' "Parrish appeared to be per fectly rational and well-oriented," Graham said. "I am con vinced there is no psychiatric problem but a physical one could be i n v o 1 v e d. It is go ing to be quite a job to figure out exactly what happened." Graham said it would take several days of tests to deter mine, if there was a functional or-organic disorder which might have caused Parrish to imagine seeing orange groves in the rail road, yard. The engineer said he saw the groves none of which are within miles of the accident scene just before the two-car diesel' train overturned on a curve while traveling 71 miles per hour. . . Believes Fireman . Smith, the fireman, has insist ed he yelled to Parish to pull the emergency brake but noth ing happened when he did so. Graham , said that Parrish was confused about putting on the brake "but is willing to believe what his fireman has said." r Builders Supply QUALITY BLOCKS Bricks. Flues Drain Tile ' 727 . W. McAndrews Phone 2-4107 Air Search Launched For Fishing Vessel Seattle (U.R) An air search was launched this morn ing for two Oregon men aboard the crab boat "Albert H." re ported missing since last night somewhere off the mouth of the Columbia River. Aboard the boat were Albert Hauke, Warrenton, fOre., and George Shaw, Astoria, Ore. Coast Guard headquarters here said- ordinarily the boat left Warrenton early in", the morning and returned at sun set after picking up crab pots near the mouth of the Colum bia. The boat did not return to its usual stopping place, the Seaside Cannery at Warrenton, last night. Dead line Sunday Classified Is at at noon Saturday SPECIAL SALE! MARKET Friday & Saturday Specials! 7T BEEF ROASTS Shoulder Cuts lb, 29 PORK LOIN Whole or Half lb 39 Pork. Shoulder ROAST lb, 27 CURED BACON Piece or Sliced lb. 37 Many Other GOOD BUYS Nor Listed! We reserve the right to limit. If you desire a large order we would like to have a little extra time to fill it. MeANDREWS ROAD 2 blocks north and three blocks west of Jackson School PHONE 3-1666 Help metoo ' Mm W MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE ter at Astoria, Ore. ;