Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 18, 1956, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Thursday, October 18. 19SS
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
IF YOU'RE NOT TRADING AT THE GROCETERIA YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH!
GROCETERIA SUPER
MEAT SALE!
Thur. 3p.m., Fri., Saturday
PUR ETA BRAND
READY
TO
GUARANTEED FRESH MADE-LEAN
GROUND BEEF
39
lb.
3 $1100
Lbs.
U.S. GRADED CHOICE or ARMOUR'S STAR
GENUINE SPRING
Waste
Removed
Leg-O-Lamb ROAST
ARMOUR'S STAR BRAND Old Fashioned Style
SLICED BACON
U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER
BEEF LIVER
Sliced
47i
LIGHTHOUSE BRAND-FRESH PACK PACIFIC Ideal for Stew
or Frying
Pint
OYSTERS
49e
U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER
Prime Rib Roast
AGED FOR
GOODNESS
SAKE
77i
YOUNG - TENDER - LEAN
Pork Loin Roast
Rib Vi or Whole
We Will Gladly
Cut in
Chops for you
MEAT PRICES IN THIS AD GOOD THROUGH SAT., OCT. 20, OR
UNTIL STOCKS HAVE BEEN EXHAUSTED
EAT
Smali Size
PICNICS
BE SURE TO GET ONE OR MORE
AT THIS LOW PRICE!
Guaranteed Fresh Caught Deep Water Pacific
Kea snapper
Fillet
20 lb. Box 3
1200 lbs. only on this sale So Come in Early '
Positively No Sale to Dealers. 20-lb. Limit Sale
p 16
n, ' FACIAL QUALITY
CNCAM
on LOTION
ODORLESS!
GIVE
NOW TO THE'
United Medford
Crusade
GROCETERIA
Sno Boy Fancy Oregon
Cranberries
Good with Any Meat Xtra Good with
Ham. Check Ham price in our Meat Dept.
2 one a (fyi
CELLO CJLlS
'ACKAGES ifTLJj
HARVEST
FRESH
Fancy, Tender, Sweet
c CELERY
CELLO PACKAGED Crunchy Good Earing
PRODUCE
BRUSSELS
SPROUTS Lb.
19'
OREGON GROWN
PARSNIPS .....
2 ibs.29
FANCY LARGE RED
DELICIOUS APPLES . .
2 ibs. 2 9
DANISH BAKING
SQUASH Lb.
5'
mm
Close Out
SALE
JEAN KNIT
FINEST QUALITY
NYLON
HOSIERY
60 GAUGE
15 DENIER
" Reg. Price
$1.49
CLOSE-OUT PRICE
C Pair
GAUGE
DENIER
Reg. Price
$1.29
CLOSE-OUT PRICE
Pair
98
of HEADACHE
NEURALGIA NEURITIS
"FAST,
MLIEF
with
Tk wy thvsfid of
physicians mi dantlttt nMonniMrf
HtUrt WHY . . . ArtocU h Ilk oWl
xctcriptioA. Tkaf h, Anocin tontoint not
jut! but combltotie) of mvdicolly
proved acttv rngrdrnH. No Hr prod
uct given foitr, rongrtottng rlif from
potn of Kodach, nouritn, ticurolgto
tkon Anocin TobUn. Buy Anocin today!
r-LOWEST PRICES!-,
tik or n-)i iu IF CBi
12 TABLETS H SO TAKFTS 03
30 TN.tTS Hj 1XTMLETJ30
I F
CITIZENS
TRAFFIC
COMMITTEE
fjjwFMAM
modern coffee "creanwr"
GET
COUPON
HERE
3f
speoais
SCOT TISSUE TOILET PAPER
h!,e 11 Oc ROLL
uniy
SGOTKINS NAPKINS
Reg. Size
Pkg. of 50
2 for 29
SCOT TOWELS
BIG ROLL
250 Sheet 33c
2 for 59
i
GUTRITE WAX PAPER
f
125 Ft. Roll
27e
2 for 49
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
SGOTTIE'S FACIAL TISSUE
Pkg. of 400
29c
4 forT
WALDORF TISSUE
4 ROLL PKG.
33
SOFT WEAVE TOILET TISSUE
2 PLY SUPER SOFT
Assorted Colon
49'
4
rolls
Today and Tomorrow
By Walter Lippmann
Waiter LisDinua
Suei and Eisenhower
The Suez affair has now been
brought to the condition which
prevailed at the other danger
spots Ko
rea, Formosa
and Indo
china that
of a statelmate
without a set
tlement, that
X JfTdLm of the accept
ViSrSff ance, not in
principle but
in fact, of the
status quo.
The President has once again
been the peace-maker in the
sense that he has vetoed success
fully a recourse to arms, and
once again he has had no posi
tive policy of his own which
seized the problem, and opened
up the prospect ol a decent future.
On Thursday. Julv in Secre
tary Dulles told the Egyptian am
bassador that the United States,
which had been neeotiatine with
Cairo for some months, was
withdrawing its offer to help fi
nance the Hieh Dam at Aswan
The next day, Friday, July 20,
tne British government followed
suit This was a major stroke at
Nasser s eovemment. and it was
carried out by Mr. Dulles with
me accompaniment of a sharp
attack on Egypt's financial cred
it. It was most improbable, in
deed almost inconceivable, that
Nasser, a dictator who denenris
on prestige, would not react with
some counter stroke.
A PPARENTLY, Mr. Dulles and
the State Department did
not expect one, and it is certain
that they were quite unprepared
for what Nasser did, which was
to seize the Suez company. The
time-table tells the story. On Fri
day, the day after he withdrew
American aid on the Aswan dam
project, the President, accom
panied by Mr. Dulles, flew to
Panama, where they stayed un
til Tuesday, July 24. On vthat
Tuesday, Nasser delivered a vio
lent speech attacking the United
States and charging that Mr.
Dulles had lied about the Egyp
tian company.
Where was Mr. Dulles? He
was in Peru for the inauguration
of the President, and he did not
return to the United States until
Sunday, July 29.
Thus for the first nine days
following the crisis which he had
touched off in his talk with the
Egyptian Ambassador, Mr. Dul
les was in Panama and Peru
siway from the State Department
away from his expert advisers
away from the Ambassadors in
Washington who could speak for
the countries most vitally af
fected. No doubt, he was kept
more or less informed by tele
phone. But By the time he got
back to Washington such a cris
is had flared up in London and
Paris that, having just returned
from Peru, he had to rush . off
to London two days later to put
out the fire.
rpHIS time - table goes ,far to
prove that the President and
the Secretary were not really in
touch with conditions in the Mid
dle East and that they had pre
pared no policy for what might
happen, once they had so abrupt
ly made their break with Nas
ser. This accounts for what has
followed. There were three pos
sible lines of policy which could
have been followed. One was to
coerce Nasser, as Britain and
France meant to, with military
and economic sanctions into ac
cepting international manage
ment of the canal. The Presi
dent himself vetoed the use of
force, rightly enough it seems
to me, since that would almost,
certainly have meant making
Egypt and the Middle East a
kind of enlarged Cyprus and Al
geria. But if Nasser was not to be
coerced, then there were only
two general choices left. One
was to let him have his way. The
other was to propose a new re
gime for the canal which would
have the support of so many
nations, including India and even
the Soviet Union, that it would
be very difficult for Nasser to
refuse it, very difficult for him
to violate it.
BUT the Administration had no
ideas about such a new re
gime. If it had had any, it would
have insisted at the first London
conference on a major effort to
negotiate for common ground
between what the 18 nations
wanted and what India was pro
posing. It is no use saying that
the Indian plan was not good
enough. For the prospects now
are very slim indeed of getting
anything better, indeed of get
ting anything as good.
Lacking any positive policy of.
our own for building a new re
gime at the canal, Mr. Dulles
round himself workine Drinci-
pally to restrain Britain and
France from following their
policy. This has caused deep and
dangerous resentment in London
and Pans. Instead of taking a
bold and independent line for a
new deal at Suez, Mr. Dulles
took a line of agreeing with Lon
don and Paris just enough to
hold on to them, and not enough
to support them. It was, to give
it its name, a tactic of frustra
tion which had as its aim the
avoidance of hostilities without
offering any real proposal of a
settlement.
rpHE Suez affair illustrates the
-- virtues and the limitations of
General Eisenhower as a peace
maker. ,
He is opposed to fighting
wherever and whenever it is av
oidable, and he is quick and de
cisive to say no to those who
might wish to fight. He reacts
peacefully when a crisis reach
es the point where war might
come. He does not react much
sooner. He reacts to what is hap
pening and does little to fore
see and little to prepare for what
is going to happen.
The result is that the solu
tions are stalemates in which
he accepts the status quo and
the accomplished fact, teaching
his countrymen to live in the
present with no serious concern
about the future.
(C) 1956 New York Herald
Tribune
Card for Free lee Cream
Baffling to Waitress
Memphis, Tenn. (U.R) A
waitress in a downtown depart
ment store couldn't figure out
when two well-dressed women
gave her cards that entitled them
to free ice cream sundaes.
The waitress called the res
taurant manager, who called de
partment store executives. The
word came down to give the
women the ice cream free.
It seems the cards, reading,
"Special sundaes compliments of
Lowenstein's Grill," were three
years old.
I
Westerners
are sweet on
t
i
t
i
i
Powdered Sugar jf
V SPRECKEIS
I
...'cause it's 50 finer
than ever before I Yep,
finer than any other
brand-for the smoothest,
creamiest, yummiestfrojt
ings of all I
tHBaanai
t
!
1
f
I
I
9
NEW HOT
CEREAL WITH
complete
WHOLE WHEAT
nourishment
Here's a cereal with the
complete nourishment
of natural whole wheat!
Nothing's "burned-out" of
this one-all the B vitamins
and all the active protein (the.
. . kind you can't get from
any cold cereal old or new)
are left Intact-sealed In by a special low heat process.
It's instant, too-ready to serve In
seconds! And your family will love Its
rich, nut-like whole wheat flavor.
Get come today!
CARNATION INSTANT WHEAT
AflOr Quo Ity Product or Cometron Coneony