Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1957)
t ivy This Week's Top Meat Value! A Sensational Low, Low, Price... A f vi b in p WW AM .ym&SST piece to save! nn v Somerset Brand 1 io 5-lb. Pieces Also commonly known as large bo-, logne. Regular price 39c lb." You save 10c on every pound. Buy a large piece today give the family a real sand wich treat or how about a cold plate tonight? That's always a welcome change! lb, Ground Beef Pork Liver Ground Fresh Daily Finest Tender Slices Shopping trip offer shopping trip you'll discover everytime that Safeway's your best place to save. Top quality meats at low, low prices mean perfect eating at prices you can afford. Lean and Meaty Regular 550 lb. Now Only . . , Fresh frozen spare ribs from top grade young porkers. 4 Now a special low price you can't af ford to miss. b. o)nr Somerset 7 Varieties Lunch Meat SLICED lAi-lh.V'Vfc ftSi rKg. Tk.ll Mile Ydu Hungry fr Sindwich Somerset Polish SMOKED A Country Fliv.r thjt't Sur t PImm Sausage ih BEL OK IUi Your Best Place to Save on "U.S.D.A. Choice" ound Steak USDA Choice Beef Aged for Flavor and Tenderness ump k ot R oitin oos oast USDA Choice Beef Guaranteed Perfect Eating Every Time g Beef USDA Choice Beef BLADE Tender and Flavorful CUT Round Bone Roast .lb. 55e PER LB. USDA Choice Grade from the Same Beef as our Fine Steaks Beef 69l l Sib- SAFEWAY'S YOUR BEST PLACE TO SAVE ON... B 6 K 9 U.S. No. 1 Grade Netted Gem F V Clean, smooth, shallow-eyed, ond delicate flavor! Everything you'd want In o potato you'll find in these U. S. number ones. Uniform size and shape make for easy handling. And, you don't have to cut away deep down eyes or odd knobs, so there's practically no waste. And of course these potatoes are money back guaranteed. . 10-lb. Paper Bag Crf3f rOtS Crisp and Sweet 3 19 BrOCCOll Butter tender stalks lb. J LiCttilCC garden fresh heads lb. 21 Cauliflower snowywi.. Ib. 18 Rome Apples 2,. 25 Fancy Bananas . 19 FANCY UAUTY SUNKIST NAVEL 35-ib. S059 Box Med. size Ib. U Bag Oranges Lunch Size Navels 5-lb. Bag f 1 59 SAFEWAY'S your place to save ! Thursday, January 3, 19S7 MESFOAD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE Carol Burnett Looks to New Territory In Night Clubs When 'Stanley' Finishes By WILLIAM EWALD United Press Correspondent New York (U.R) Carol Burnett, who got her first big break playing Buddy Hackett's girl friend in "Stanley," will lose her new job in March when the show folds. But she's already zeroing in on new territory she's working up a nightclub act and is scheduled for a spot on the Ed Sullivan show this Sunday as a comedienne-singer. "Actually, I can't help feel anything but gratitude toward the 'Stanley' show," said Carol today. "You know, it's the re verse of the sort of part I usually play I do slobs and sloppy characters and this has given me a chance to do a different kind of thing. "Another thing is the tremen dous experience you get in play ing a 'live' show particularly with someone like Buddy Hack ett. He doesn't like to be pinned down by the script, so I have to listen to the sense of what he's saying instead of just waiting for cues. "Whatever the critics have said about this show, I think there's one big thing to its credit we're attempting live situa tion comedy on TV, something no one else is even trying this season." Helping Hand Carol, a brunette from San Antonio who was raised in Los Angeles, set out for New York when a benefactor handed her a $1,000 check after watching her do a singing bit at a party. ' "I did a scene from 'Annie Get Your Gun' with the fellow who later became my husband, Don Saroyan. Well, this fellow asked Don and me what we wanted to do. We said break into show business in New York. The next day he sent each of us $1,000. "He gave it to us on three conditions he was to remain anonymous, we were to consider it a loan to be paid back in three years and we had to promise to help someone ourselves later on." Carol eventually broke into one of" the bigger hostelries in the borschl belt as a singer and comedienne and then served a 13-week stretch on the Paul Winchell TV show. "I played the girl friend to -his dummy," she recalled. i This past summer, Carol again clowned and sang on the borscht circuit where Max Liebman, pro ducer of "Stanley," spotted her. "I remember I was just sitting down to dinner on a Tuesday in October. I got a call asking me to read1 for Liebman and 'Stan ley.' I hate reading, but Buddy Hackett put me right at ease. I got the job on Oct. 22;" Since that time, Carol and Don, a TV director, have been saving their money. "Both of us want to pay back our $1,000 loans. And the way things have been going for me, there's a good chance, I hope, that we'll have it all for him well ahead of schedule." At one point the two dogs were running up and down the colonnade joining the west wing of the White House and the cen tral part of the residence. Backstairs: Animal Life At White House Press Secretary James C. Hag erty had other and quite strong ideas on the subject, however. He supported and won a policy under which all information me dia of the country, newspapers, magazines, TV and radio net works will be permitted to cover the Sunday ceremony in the East Room of the White House. Because of space limitations much of the coverage will have to be on a pool basis and the word "private" will mean simply that official Washington, for the most part, will not be permitted to jam into the East Room. The guest list, outside of reporters, photographers and sound engin eers, will consist mostly of mem bers of the Eisenhower family and the White House staff. By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press Writer Washington (U.R) Back stairs at the White House: All sorts of curious animal life is showing up around the White House these days. Several weeks ago three big cats were, roaming the White House grounds. This week, to the amazement of White House police and staff members, two apparently unattached dogs es tablished themselves inside the fenced south grounds of the ex ecutive mansion. One dog is a brown and tan coon-hunting type. The other is black and white spotted animal, apparently having gome connec tion with the Dalmatian breed. The two dogs were first notic ed playing around probably the most sacrosanct golf green in America Mr. Eisenhower's practice green outside his office. Small mice and som'e not so I small black rats about the size of squirrels have been seen in increasing numbers around the White House grounds, particu larly at night. Holt En Route to Korea for Children Portland (U.R) Harry Holt, the Creswell farmer who has de voted his life to bringing Korean orphans to this country, was headed back to Korea for an other group of children today. Holt said he planned to remain in Korea for about a month but hoped to send children back in the meantime with other escorts. The deadline for admitting the children to this country was slated to expire with the end of 1956. President Eisenhower has given assurance, however, that the deadline will be extended until the end of January. Sen. Richard Neuberger said yesterday that he will introduce legislation in Congress this week to set up a five-year pro gram for the admission of orphans to this country. His pro posal is that 10,000 additional orphans be admitted to this country for adoption by Ameri can parents. No Decision Reached On Job, Hall Says Washington (U.R) Republi can National Chairman Leonard W. Hall said Wednesday he has made "no final decision" on whether to keep his job. ' Hall said he will discuss his "future plans" with President Eisenhower shortly. He said un til he talks with Mr. Eisenhower he will have "no further com ment to make." The statement, released by GOP national committee head quarters, made no reference to published reports that Fred C. Scribner Jr., general counsel of the Treasury Department, has been picked as his successor. Administration sources re fused to speculate on who the new chairman might be. They said, however, that Hall will re sign some time after President Eisenhower is sworn in for a second term on Jan. 21. Bogarf Recovering From Throat Surgery Hollywood (U.R) Actor Humphrey Bogart said today that he feels fine in his battle to regain his strength following an operation for throat cancer last winter. The 56-year-old movie tough guy has recovered sufficiently to receive visitors at his home and sit with his wife, actress Lauren Bacall, for a time in their living room each day. Wednesday night Bogart even sipped a drink while entertaining movie director Wil liam Wyler and Mrs. Wyler. ' Bogart, however, has been un able to regain the weight he has lost since the operation. He weighs only 115 pounds, 35 pounds under his normal weight. BLAMES SPIKED EGG-NOG Detroit (U.R) Johnnie Walk er, 37, Royal Oak Township, who was sentenced to 2Q days Wednes day for drunk driving told the judge: "somebody spiked my eggnog." Increasingly cold weather ap parently is sending the mice and rats from their normal bur rows in the White House shrub bery toward the executive offices and buildings. Not long ago a courageous and apparently, in quisitive rat tried to take a nip at the heel of a White House policeman. . On these cold nights the police stationed around the grounds in sentry booths keep their doors tightly closed to prevent mice from trying to share the warmth of these booths. The weather may be having its effect, too, on the once-banished White House squirrels. They have been showing up in the driveway leading to the Pres ident's office in increasing num bers. Recently one squirrel ac tually got inside the White House, but was promptly shooed out. Some of Mr. Eisenhower's as sociates at one time thought that the presidential oath of office, to be taken on Sunday, Jan. 20, should be completely private with no television or radio cov erage. The theory was that the ceremony would be duplicatea the next day in the capitol plaza as the main part of inauguration day hoopla. GOP to Challenge R.I. Court Ruling Providence. R. I. U.R Re publicans planned today to chal lenge the court decision wnicn reelected Gov. Dennis J. Roberts. They said they would appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court Roberts was declared victor In the gubernatorial race when the Rhode Island Supreme Court in validated absentee and shut-in ballots. These ballots had given the election to Republican Chris topher Del Sesto. The Rhode Island court ruled that a statute enacted in 1953 and signed into law by Roberts which allowed absentee ballots to be cast "on or before" election day was unconstitutional. William W. Gosling, former town council president of Mid dletown, said he would take an appeal of the ruling to the U. S. Supreme Court on the ground that the court ruling violated the Constitution's 14th Amendment, dealing with the rights of cit izens. HORSES MAKE COMEBACK Chicago U.R) Horse drawn vehicles are making a comeback in Chicago. City Collector Wil liam T. Prendergast said licenses issued to horse cars in 1956 climbed from 72 to 73. FOR FARMERS and THEIR FAMILIES! JOHN DEERE DAY Tues., Jan. 8 FREE LUNCH Served by the West Side Ex tension Unit before the show at our store 11:30 a.m. till 1:00 p.m. FREE SHOW STARTS 1:30 P.M. AT CRATERIAII THEATRE 6 COLOR MOVIES! , . featuring an outstanding Hollywood cast in "Heaven to Betsy," a new Tom Gordon Hit and other fine films. - FREE TICKETS - HUBBARD WRAY CO. 25 South Riverside EVERYTHING it FREE! Hubbard Bros. MAIN AND RIVERSIDE Will Be Closed Thursday & Friday JANUARY 3 & 4 For Inventory In Case of an Emergency PHONE 2-6189