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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1957)
Thursday. March 21. 19S7 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN IF YOU'RE HOT TEADIHG AT THE GROCETERIA YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH! SWIFT PREMIUM BRAND FRESrt DRESSED LARGE PLUMP Tender Grown PAH READY VALLEY PACKING CO. CASCADI BRAND OLD FASHIONED JUMi F RANKS POUND BAG YOUNG-TENDER-SMALL SIZE FRESH 13. A IS SPAKE Q) Q(. 47! SWIFT BROOKFIELD BRAND COOKING,MILTING r SANDWICH In Ifs Delicious POUND LOAF 73c LfciiTWCJUSE BRAND FRESH PACK PACIFIC PINT YOU, TENDER, UUM-&MAU IIZI LOOM RIB or WHOLE We Will Cut in Chops For You M v SWIFT'S PREMIUM BRAND FULLY COOKED, TABLE READY -SMOKED SHANK HALF or WHOLE thit frico la This Ad Good Through Saturday, March 23 ROCETERIA FRESH PRODUCE o f t seas cstA 30c eS fi&iifLM fer these J "yS&S awy make snacks ALlPIIIlA S SNOBOY Prewrapped Vacuum Cooled Caulifflower Retains the garden fresh flavor. CREAMY WHITE TIGHT CLUSTERS lb. Texas Ruby Red GRAPEFRUIT 6 for 35' 19 for Extra Heavy with Sweet Juice Eat Plenty and Keep a Slim Waistline FRESH SPRING SWEET AND TENDER - LOW IN CALORIES if u vj Bunch 1aj. liitM tm s 1 . Cotiimsitl Suf lom PHILIDELPHIA SPREAD 1 (1 ei.) pkg. (nam Own 1 phg. Upton Onion Soup kfix V2 pt. (ommtrtiol Sour Croon SH,Upt.0-io.H,iMi.M i 5 .Ch- ."" B$ri J w,M from . pockog. int. W Uplo. Onlo Soup M, ,g COM. Cream and bW lt.wooahly. U o. I ham the pockaa. and Sour Cr.a. dip for poloto chip,. Crocker, or I lload well. U a. . tprood for cmck. .Ibo toou. I " ' tawrt wafw- Quontrriot of tour croon i obow roelpe. oy be orW to lodividool torto. Thi. rwrtvr. b porUhobU and ould bo eovd and tforod e refnoomto. wMI toned. uiMfi ihould nol bo ined oalooi odf rWrnorotion. LIPTON PEA SOUP LIPTON NOODLE SOUP 2 pkgs. 29c 3 pkgs. 39c NBC CHEESE RITZ FRESH LOCAL RED BIRD SPINACH For Salads, For Cooking c Pkg. 19' SUNKIST LEMONS Peps up those Lenten Meals c Doz. 29 NALLEY'S Potato Chips Freshest and Best 3 Sizes 25' 39 - 59 Minute Maid JL "00 St,v- Orange J UICG Frozen 6-oz.canaie O for I 21c Zee Toilet Tissue 4 Roll Pkg. 6c Spaghetti American 15-oz. Can 2 for 25' ! 5c Holiday Margarine 5 lb. I00 Skippy Dog Food 12 can, I00 sr Hersheyr Chocolate 39' sr Choclate Bars SSt 39-3 l00 si7c' SF Port Director Doubts Job Given Through Teamsters San Francisco (U.R) Charles Tait says he is sure that his appointment as San Francisco port director is the result of his more than 35 years of experi ence in shipping rather than through the "influence"' of the Teamsters Union. Tait made this statement Wed nesday at a press conference in which he commented on testi mony given in Washington by West Coast Teamster boss Frank Brewster. Contributions Denied Brewster told Senate investi gators that he interceded with Gov. Goodwin J. Knight to get the $18,000 a year post for his friend, Tait, a former Seattle stevedoring firm executive. Brewster also said his union had contributed to Knight's cam paign. Knight promptly issued deni als to Brewster's testimony." Through his secretary, he said: "We have no record of any financial contributions by the Teamsters' Union to any of my campaigns. All labor activity in my behalf was handled by groups within labor itself. "The appointment of the port director of San Francisco was made by the Boards of Harbor Commissioners and I had noth ing to do with it." Study of Withholding State Taxes Tackled By Taxation Group Salem (U.R) Study of a more realistic method of with holding state taxes got underway here yesterday at a hearing be fore the House Taxation Com mittee on House bills 8 and 234. House bill 8, sponsored by Rep. William "Frenfell Jr., Port land Democrat, provides for withholding state income taxes according to a system of grad uated salary brackets. House bill 234, drawn up by the State Tax Commission, pro vides for withhol "ing on either a straight percentage basis or on a bracket basis. It follows fed eral withholding law. Should consider Employee Tom Scanlon, representative of the Oregon State Labor Coun cil, told the committee that in Around Hollywood Oregon Classroom TV in Assured By $200,000 Grant Eugene (U.R) Oregon's first experimental classroom project in television teaching Swas as sured today following announce ment by the State Board of Higher Education of receipt of a $200,000 grant from the Ford Foundation. Chancellor John R. Richards said the grant would make it possible to start classroom tele vision on three state campuses next September. The campuses are Oregon State, Oregon and Oregon College of Education. Live Telecasts Course work will originate at Oregon and Oregon State and live telecasts will be received by classes at the two schools as well as OCE. The courses will be beamed on channel 7. The board has author ized award of contracts for a tower and station to activate channel 7 at Corvallis, with work expected to start before May 1. Dr. Richards said it is intended that kinescopes of the lectures will be made available to other state supported schools. Courses Scheduled Dr. D. Glenn Starlin, head of the Oregon speech department, is head of the intercampus TV experiment. Courses definitely scheduled so far are histdry of. the U. S. and general chemistry. The his tory course will originate at Ore gon and be taught by Dr. Wen dell H. Stephenson. The chemis try course will be beamed from OSC with Drs. W. H. Slabaugh and M. B. Williams teaching. Kn --- --- - SP Planting Trees In Haystack Burn Owen H. Thomas, Medford, has been awarded a contract to plant about 40,000 three-year-old Douglas fir and Jeffrey pine seedlings on Southern Pacific timberland in northern Cali fornia, the company has an nounced. The planting will be done on a portion of private timberland destroyed in the Haystack fire in September, 1955. Location ot planting is in the Barkhouse creek area in Siskiyou county and covers about 2,900 acres, company officials said. Because of the limited supply of trees available, planting at this time will be on only 55 acres, Kermit Cuff, chief fores ter for SP, said. A total of 150,- 000 acres was affected by tne burn, Cuff pointed out, but only 2,900 acres was denuded of tim ber, most of which was beyond natural reforestation. By ALINE MOSBY Hollywood U.R) Shades of gray hairs, but Luana Patten, the little girl of "Song of the South," 1 has followed Natalie Wood into the ranks of the grown up film beau ties. Like Nata lie, Luana was a child star who dropped out of sight for Aline Mosby a few years during that all-knees-and-elbows stage. She had starred in Walt Disney's "Song of the South" with Bobby Driscoll (who re cently applied for a marriage li cense), "Fun and Fancy Free," "So Dear to My Heart" and oth er movies. ' This season Luana made her comeback in a Universal-International teen-age musical, "Rock Pretty Baby," and Disney brought her back to his studio for "Johnny Tremain. Young Kathryn Grayson Luana, 18, has big blue eyes and a tiny waist. She wears her long, blonde hair in a pony tail. She looks like a young Kathryn Grayson or Wanda Hendrix. And she is one ex-movie moppet, who does not regret having worked during the years when other children were going to school and helping mother with the dishes. "I did a few television shows and then decided to get some ed ucation during the awkward age," she said. "Yes, you miss a lot when you re a child actress It's a strain on a child to work. You don't lead a normal life. You don't play with the kids in the backyard after school and so forth. Experienced Traveler "But I feel it s all been made up to me," she continued. "I've been more places and seen more things right now than 90 per cent of so-called normal 18-year- olds. You miss less as a kid star than if you work in pictures dur ing high-school years. Then you don't get to go to dances and football games. After graduation from Long Beach High school, Luana moved from her home in that city to live in' Hollywood near the movie studios. However, Luana soon moved back home to live with her parents. "I just didn't like living alone in Hollywood, the shy, sweet- faced actress said. "But I'm on my own when I work. Before my mother and a social worker al ways were with me and mother took care of everything. Now I do it all." setting up realistic withholding, first consideration should be given to the employee. He fav ored a graduated system rather than a percentage system as tie- ing more accurate. However, he said that if taxes were withheld on a percentage basis, the percentages should be set on the side of overwithhold ing rather, than with under withholding. Fraternity Bill Tabled Grenfell said that under his bill large periodic payments of taxes would be avoided. David J. Wied, Jefferson farmer, told the group that with holding on a bracket basis for farm laborers, particularly berry and bean pickers, would be ex tremely difficult. He said the present withholding of straight percentages was better. Railroad Representative Bruce Pickett said he favored House bill 234 because it would give an employer his choice as to the easiest method of withholding. Six Measures Passed . The taxation committee passed favorably on six, relatively minor tax measures and tabled three others. One of the tabled bills would exempt fraternities and sorori ties from payment of personal property taxes. Another tabled bill would have set up tax conservation and supervision commissions in all Oregon counties. Committee members felt the state was not ready for such legislation until a thorough study could be made. Queen Mary Sails Despite Strikers London (U.R) The Royal Navy eased the liner Queen Mary out to sea today in defi ance of warnings by striking shipyard workers 'and tugboat men that the action- would spread their walkout. Union leaders sailed around the Cunard Line's luxury ship in launches as Admiralty tugs nosed it out of its berth and set it on its way to New York. The union men shouted that the strike situation would be come "very complicated" if the Navy tugs helped the liner. The tug crews ignored them. Southampton tugboatmen went on strike Wednesday in sympathy with 200,000 shipyard workers who walked out Satur day and the tug crews refused to handle the Queen Mary. Industrial sources said the Navy's action could spark a tug boatment's strike throughout the nation and cripple the shipping industry. This brought more gloom to government quarters here where Labor Minister Iian MacLeod has been trying all week to avert a strike of 2.5 million engineering workers. Richmond, Va. (U.R) The cjty personnel department has decided to change tne woraing of an advertisement for a man to collect live and dead animals. The earlier ad, which got no response, advertised for an "ani mal collector, dead or alive." ' Daily's U-Drive Medford Airport New Process Saves Fluoridation Money Washington (U.R) The Na tional Institute of Dental Re search has- reported to Congress that a new process can save cities money on fluoridation of their drinking water to reduce tooth decay. The new process uses a com mon chemical, fluorspar, in place of more costly fluoride com pounds. Dr. Francis A. Arnold Jr., in stitute director, told a House Ap propriations. Subcommittee that Baltimore, for example, could save $54,000 a year by using the new process. "Comparable savings could be obtained in other cities, depend ing upon the nature and size of their water systems," he said. He said the new process had been proved practical in field tests. 4 CLUB "M NEWS TRS Sawina Club The TRS Sewins club met March 19, 1957, at the home of Mrs. Myers. It was the first meeting for some time because of so manv members being sick. We made needle cases as our first project. We played games. The refreshments were served by Anita Pierce. Barbara Penninger, Reporter Newsweek, Time To Raise Magaine Prices New York U.R) Newsweek and Time magazines announced Wednesday they will raise their single copy prices from 20 to 25 cents because of rising paper and production costs. The Newsweek increase takes effect with the April 1 issue which will go on the newsstands next week. Time will raise its price with the April 15 issue. Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Donald Raymond Rice, drunk in public. S10. ... Helen Louise Stacy, drunk in pub lic. $10 , , Herman Cecil McGivney. drunk in public. 10 day entence in city jail to be suspended upon payment of $10 fine. ... Mary Sue Monteltn, taiiure to pop at stop sien. $5 Laurel Elmer Krause. failure to stop at red light $5 . Don M. i-navis. vioiauon oi uaa.u rule. $10. , Charles Edward Murray Jr., viola; tion of basic rule. $10. Douglas Lee Randies, failure to stop at red light, no license driver permit, 10- . . Tommy joe Menon, vio.auon oi o sic rule. $10. . . Charles Russell Williams. violaUon of basic rule, $10. Vance Lewis Vincent, violation of basic rule. $15. John F. Loyd. dispiayea expirea operators license, $5. Elvin Lvnn Pierce, failure to stop at red light. $5. William W. Prouty, failure to stop at red light. $5. . Kosario mancuso, vioiauon oi uiw rule, $10. , ., Muriel Lorraine Burns, failure to stop at red light, $o. Arthur Vernon Hardy, tauure w stop at red light. $5. Kenneth Rvder Severson. failure to stop at red light. $5. George W. Kellington. violaUon of basic rule. $10. ... William Lee Evans, violation of basic rule. $10. William A. Grossman, improper right turn. $5 D. Mvron Johnson, violation of basic rule. $10. DISTRICT COURT Gerald Keith Anderson, one license plate '10. bail forfeited. Bob G. Stumbo. violation of basie rule. $17.50. bail forfeited. Rodnev Arnold Perry, overload. $53. Llovd Joseph Mvnott. overload. $101. Ore'n Weslev Rhodes, one licens plate. $10. bail forfeited. Orval Kermit White, vagrancy. $30. Gerald Richard Fanger. improper muffler, $10. bail forfeited. carl bamuei addduu, uvci iubu, Harold Eugene McGrath. overwidth, $10 Kenneth Wayne Shoe Id ey. drivin without lights, $5. Lois Mary Lamoureaur, drunk on public highway. $15. CIRCUIT COURT "Patricia Jane Gundlach vs. Jack Byron Gundlach. divorce complaint Betty Jean Eatherton vs. Jay W. Eatherton, divorce complaint. o