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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1957)
O O 0 o s o o o U YOU'RE HOT TRADING AT THE GROCETERIA YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH! SWIFTS ORIOLE BRAND SEALED CELLO-WRAPPED iced to SUPER PORK SALE! 4 TfMPES, LEAN AND MEATY . PORK LOIR ROAST 53 : AU, klAN RIB HALF OR WHOLE PORK LOIN 49: LEAR C2MTER CUT o PORK LOIN CHOPS 87- YOUNG TENDER Pork Loin Rib Cut Chops W ARMOURS STAR-FULLY COOKED, READY TO EAT L ft CAMMED PICNIC s239 ARMOURS STAR BRAND U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER Smoked Beef Tongue 39 U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER-AGED TO PERFECTION IP The Roast of Distinction You should put one or mors cans in your freezer. This may be the last time this season at this Low Price. Prime Rib Roast Meat Prices in This Ad Good Through Saturday, March 30, 1957 69' EXTRA FANCY DEEP WATER PACIFIC 5 SEALED $65 Lb. CAN u GROCETERIA FRESH PRODUCE O SMALL GREEN TENDER . . . WITH BUTTER SMOOTH FLAVOR G Aromatic Full Flavored CELERY 0? jDnly 82 Calories Per Pound Fancy Pack Small CARROTS Tender Sweet 1 ONE POUND PACKS Field Grown TOMATOES SALAD SIZE Packed with Vitamin C IF IT It AVAILABLE AND OF GOOD QUALITY YOU CAN BE SURE THE GROCETERIA WILL HAVE IT! Reg. 2 for 63c -Save 26c Li mm ! 4 v I ll'-'iJ with your name and address tot K-C, J num.w P.O. Box 7565. Chicago 80, Illinois ! KOTEX surttBuriiB 2 BOXES 17 85 Thursday, March 28, 1357 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN Ill I II IKMm1 fey if 22 Lu E ROOSJ-Ten-dayld Mary Pat Ryan (on mom's lap, gets ner 5 phCr fT m 1116 Cleveland home. Mary Pat was bom March if to rie?Th,S rf S6at Vi6-WS 1116 family Set toSether- are, left rhrinhTS 13-mns Danny 30(1 De. 12, Timothy, 10, James, 9, Sean, 7 and Cpher3. Mary Pat was a surprise package as all hands of the RyaTaew ex- Reports of Cattle Losses Mount Today In Blizzard Areas By UNITED PRESS Reports of cattle losses in the blizzard - swept Great Plains mounted today, and observers said some small ranchers prob ably will be forced to quit. Late information from Color ado and New Mexico indicated j extremely heavy losses, and in Texas it was estimated that up to 3,000 head of cattle perished in the snowstorm. Although the losses were not regarded a major disaster in re lation to the overall livestock supply, they were tragic to many individual stockmen who had hung on through seven years of drought. Loss of Weight Officials said many of the cattle that survived the storm Save 26 ALLSWEET MARGARINE 4 lbs. $400 II Standard Oil Ups Wholesale Price Portland (U.R) Standard Oil Company of California upped its wholesale price of premium grade gasoline .4 cent yesterday but no immediate effect was in dicated on at-the-pump prices. A spokesman for the company said that the price hike to dis tributors was in line with recent upgrading of the octane rating in the gasoline. A spokesman for the Oregon Gasoline Dealers association, Sheldon Baker, said the price cutting has become fairly general in many sections of Portland and the wholesale price increase may be a long time in effect before it is ever felt by the motorist. Power Company to Start Generator Installation Portland U.PJ Pacific Pow er and Light company will start work this summer on installa tion of a third 45,000-kilowatt power generator at its Merwin project on the Lewis river, ac cording to E. Robert De Luccia, vice president and chief en gineer. Completion of the work will bring Merwin's peak power ca pacity to 150,000 kilowatts. Mer win project is located about 40 miles north bf Portland in Wash ington state. Kaiser Aluminum Plans Processing Plant . Oakland, Calif. (U.R) Kai ser Aluminum and Chemical cor poration announced today that it will build an aluminum foil processing plant to cost in excess of $2 million including equip ment on a 30-acre site at Belpre, Ohio. The company said 175 persons would be ultimately employed. Foil for processing will come from Kaiser's rolling mill at Rav- enswood, W. Va., about 40 miles down river from Parkersburg. The plant was expected to be fully completed in 1958, but in itial operations will commence in. September. New Jobs Keep Month's Employment Above '56 Salem (U.R) New Jobs in trade, government and small in dustries kept February's em- i ployment in the Portland-Van- : couver area about 2 per cent i above last year despite a slight i decline from January. ! Estimates by the State Unem- ployment Compensation commis sion showed 245,700 persons at work in the area, compared with 247,000 the previous month and 240,200 in early 1956. Oregon Highways Are Reported Free of Snow Salem (U.R) All Oregon highways were reported free of snow and motorists didn t have to bother about chains on any of them, the State Highway De partment said today. The Olds Ferry-Ontario sec ondary route remained closed at Malheur River bridge with traf fic being detoured via temporary have been without food for a prolonged period and probably won't be marketable this year because of loss of weight. Besides taking a heaw toll of cattle, the storm did little to ease drought conditions in Texas, Colorado and New Mexico. Most of the plains were swept clean or snow, and the winds . once again were raising dust in the area. Spring showers and warmer weather ranged across the Southern Plains today to help wasn away mounds of snow dumped by the worst blizzard in memory. Western areas hit hardest bv the 13-state storm were erad- ually recovering from the ordeal ana taking stock of their losses both human and property. 45 Storm Deaths Late reports to United Press showed at least 45 storm deaths since Friday night: .10 in Illinois. nine in both Texas and Kansas, five in Oklahoma, three parh in Nebraska and Indiana, two each m Missouri and Iowa and one each in New Mexico and Ohio. Rail and highway traffic was near normal, although in hard hit Kansas, highway crews still were wrestling with mountain ous arms on mam roads. At Kansas City. Southwest Bell TeleDhone Co estimated damage to its equipment at $3 million. Weathermen said the showers will continue today, possibly spreading into Northern Iowa, Illinois and most of Wisconsin. Lieht snow flurries were seen for Northern Minnesota. Doctors See Closed Circuit Telecast Here About 45 physicians from Jackson, Klamath and Siskiyou counties Wednesday night saw a live closed-circuit telecast on malignant and pre-malignant dis eases of the breast and colon at station KBES-TV. The telecast was the fourth in a series of Grand Rounds edu cational programs for doctors. The series originates at the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, Phila delphia, Pa and programs are presented by a group of selected physicians. Surgical procedures were also shown in last night's telecast. Medford is one of 54 cities in the United States in which the Grand Rounds series is received. Local sponsors are the Jackson County Medical society and the Upjohn company. India has about 266 million acres under cultivation and more are being added. Hearing on Request Scheduled Friday Portland (U.R) Hearing on a request by Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton that tape re cordings on which federal wire tap indictments have been re turned against racketeer James B. Elkins and his employee, Ray mond Clark, be returned to him by the FBI is scheduled for Friday. Thornton's motion for return of the tapes was filed some four months before a federal grand jury returned the indictments against the two men. In the petition, Thornton as serted that the FBI seized the tapes illegally from a bank vault where they had been stored after they were turned over to Thorn ton by the Multnomah county district attorney. "The smiling occkura of family and friends, ffxjf's your blue ribbon award when you 'depend opoa Clabber GuTs exclusive balanced double action for uniformr perfect c swhs. - wf ExctusrvnY ' I Known A Th M Baiting PowaW wM tm H BALANCED Doubi AcfiaaJ U ft Cmmntwd by it 2EL13 0 Jiffy Oyster Dishes BHBKS P0SSS1 I Taste just right with BLUE PLATE COVE OYSTERS Enjoy deticiotts oyster dishes every month of the year. Bhie Plate Canned Oysters are always in season. Fat and fine with that fresh sea tang you'll love. Packed in season when oysters are at their best. Enjoy them often in soups, stews, pot pies and patties. Serve them fried golden brown and good-tasting. Add them to scrambled eggs for a quick supper treat. Look for Blue Plate for oelttvated cove oystexs with the delicate sea-fresh flavor. 1- connection to U. S. 30.