MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
IF YOU'RE NOT TRADING AT THE GROCETERIA YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH!
SWIFT'S PREMIUM BRAND
SHORT SHANK - SMALL SIZE
FULLY COOKED
Thursday, April 11, 1957
MKCKT
U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER - SLICED
BEEF LIVER
U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER'
BEEF TONGUE
nccs
4S:
37
U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER - AGED TO PERFECTION
BONELESS
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
GROCETERIA'S OWN -FRESH MADE, LEAN
SAUSAGE
COUNTRY STYLE
Its Delicious
SWIFT BROOKFIELD BRAND-THE IDEAL LENTEN FOOD
CHEESE
Full 2 Pound Package
77"
OLD FASHIONED SLICED OR PIECE
BOLOGNA
37'
GUARANTEED
FRESH CAUGHT
PACIFIC
red
APPER
Meat Prices in This Ad Good Through
Saturday, April 13
1
(4-t SERVINGS)
1 ouncm nuarenl
U cup Fit
K cap tloar
leapt milk
2 apt IK pamd) pf
1 tnspom salt
2 cms tans Dill, dftimd and nakat
M cop dioppad naihfOMt
H cap dioppad grata ptpptr
K cap chopptd ltd pimiwit
K cap chopped MriM
Vi cap ehepptd dint
K cap com Hikes
Cook macaroni 20 minutes in salted boiling water, drain. Melt FlufTo in
saucepan, blend in flour, add milk and cook until thickened, stirring con
stantly. Stir in salt and cheese until melted. Combine remaining ingredients,
except com flakes, with macaroni. Place in 2-quart casserole which has
been rubbed with FlufTo and top with corn flakes. Bake in a moderately hot
oven (400F.) about 25 minutes.
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Hvm .h
I -
Porter Brand Macaroni 14-oz. pkg. 23e
Kraft Mellow Cracker Barrel Cheese, 8-oz. 39c
White Star Chunk Tuna No. Vi can 29e
Dawn Fresh Pieces & Stems Mushrooms, 4-oz. 33c
Lindsay Chopped Olives 41-oz. can 10c
Fluffo Shortening lb. can 37e
PEACHES and CREAM
DEL MONTE
Sliced or Halves
CLING PEACHES
2Vi Can
c 87
Cans m
SAVE 12c
3
DEL ROGUE
Halves Freestone
PEACHES
2Vi Can
3 . 87
SAVE 12c
j m ' Si i " tin aw iUm i itinii naai iiiriim m kimm'mmmA'imlffr9!l,!'i mm liitaj
WAVING $128,000 IN CHECKS, Robert Strom, 10, accepts plaudits of New York televi
sion show audience after answering abstruse question on electricity. (International)
Rob Strom Faces
Problem on Taxes
Washington (U.R) Ten-year-old
Robert Strom, television's
latest brain child, could save
$21,532 if the government lets
him write off . in two years his
$160,000 winnings to date.
But the Internal Revenue Ser
vice isn't ready to commit itself
definitely on the tax puzzler.
A spokesman said the ques
tion never has come up for a
formal ruling and, as usual there
are two sides to the coin if
not to the $64,000 questions the
bright-eyed youngster has been
answereing.
Rob, a science whiz kid from
the Bronx, N.Y., 'created the
stir Tuesday night when he ten
tatively boosted his earnings to
$160,000 on TV's "The $64,000
Question." It was the largest
paypff on a single program.
Hal, March, the show's master
of ceremonies, assured young
Strom that, for income tax pur
poses, he could write the $160,
000 off over two years, March
said the youth would get his
money at $80,000 a year.
An Internal Revenue spokes
man said it's not quite so simple.
But he "obviously was getting
more good advice from tax ex
perts."
Until the matter comes up for
formal ruling, the spokesman
said, the subject is "up in the
air."
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Spruce Up For EASTER With A
HOME PERMANENT
TONI
PROM
BOBBI
LILT
CHARM KURL
S00
plus
LZ3 tax
Pressure
Can
Whipped Cream
Quip
Whipping Cream tlSs
Vi Pint
53c
33c
GROCETERIA BAKERY
Tasty Fresh Rolls Pastries Cakes Donuts Pies and Cookies
Baked Fresh Daily In Our Own Bakery
MARSHMALLOW FILLED PASTRIES
Choice of Chocolate or Butterscotch Icing
for
BOSTON CREAM PIE
gg)c each
WHITELAW'S
PERSONALIZED CHOCOLATE
EASTER EGGS
Your Child's Name Written On Each Egg
89 Value
Only
4ic
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A
POUND CAN OF BOYD'S COFFEE
SOCIETE' EASTER CANDIES
S3GIETE GUM BUNNIES
14-oz. Big
39'
SOCIETE MARSHMALLOW CANDIES 39'
SOCIETE MARSHMALLOW EGGS 12 oz. FkE. 39c
SOCIETE MARSHMALLOW EGGS 1VM 59'
SOCIETE JELLY BIRD EGGS Found Pkg. 39e
PTA Supports
School Supports
Pendleton '(U.R) The Ore
gon Congress of Parents and
Teachers, in its annual session
here, Wednesday adopted a reso
lution calling for increase of
basic school support funds from
$80 to $120 per year per school
census child.
The same resolution called for
a revision in distribution .prac
tices of state aid but "to provide
that no district shall receive in
1956-57." The resolution did not
specify the method by which
such ant allocation could be
achieved.
The controversial key, district
plan for allocating state funds
did not go before the convention
Wednesday.
Mrs. Clyde Gideon of Port
land .state legislative chairman
for the Congress, said Gov. Rob
ert Holmes had told her the $120
figure could be achieved "if we
work for it."
I suppose you have been read
ing about Queen1 Elizabeth's
visit to Paris. (Prince Philip
came along . for the ride, but
since this is a visit of state, he
gets only casual mention.)
The visit is quite an affair.
More than a quarter of a million
Frenchmen jammed the Champs
Elysees to view the official pro
cession down the historic street.
They started out paying the
French equivalent of five dol
lars in American money for a
place to stand but so great was
the pressure of the throng that
the price for standing room soon
rose to ten dollars.
The queen is making a great
hit. In a broadcast in PERFECT
FRENCH, she described Paris as
a home away from home for
Britons, and the crowds cheered
until the windows rattled.
There's a hint there for our peo
ple. If we're going to run the
world, we'd better learn to
speak the languages of the world.
THE highlight of the day was a
visit, to the Palace of Ver
sailles. Elizabeth was to have
lunch there. She used Marie An
toinette's bedroom in the famous
palace to change to her lunch
eon outfit which is described
as a gown of light blue corded
silk with a matching coat trim
med in mink.
VfTHAT pictures that brings up
" out of the past! .
The Palace of Versailles was
built by Louis XIV, one of the
great spendthrifts of all time.
Versailles was his crowning ex
travagance. What it cost in taxes
IMPROVERISHED the French,
and out of their impoverish
ment arose the HATREDS that
resulted in the bloody uprising
of the French people that put an
end to absolute monarchy in
France.
IT DIDN'T all come of course,
in a day. It was the 14th
Louis who laid the foundations
for France's bankruptcy. Poor
little Marie Antoinette came out
of Austria to become the queen
of the 16th Louis. It was she who
made the famous crack about
bread and cake.
Told that the people of Paris
were in an ugly mood, she asked
one of 'her ministers why. "Be
cause they have no bread," he
replied.- Marie is reported to have
responded: "Why, the silly
things. If they have no bread,
why don't they eat cake?" .
The historians aren't certain
she actually said it, but at any
rate the tale spread over Paris
and hastened the day when first
her royal husband, the 16th
Louis, lost his head under the
keen knife of the guillotine and
a little later Marie lost hers in
the same way.
VLTE COULD go on with the
" the memories.
There was the field of the
Cloth of Gold, back in the 16th
century, when Henry VIII of
England and Francis I of France .
came together in the Valley of
Andren in' northern France to
cook up an alliance against
Charles V of Spain, who was get
ting too powerful to suit Henry
and Francis. The green of the
valley was turned to gold by the
silken tents and the banners of
the two kings and their follow
ers. It was a great occasion, and
the money squeezed out of the
taxpayers of Britain and France
was spent with a lavish hand.
llfHY has the ovely young
' queen of England come to
Paris?
I suppose that in its way, her
visit is similar to that of Henry
VIII. Britain and France want
something. They have the feel
ing they must work together to
get what they want.
Otherwise, why spend all this
money when neither Britain nor
France has any money to spare?
Chemist Seeking
New Timber Uses
' Mt. Pleasant, Mich. (U.R)
A retired chemist is conducting
a research program at Central
Michigan College here, seeking
new uses for low-grade timber.
Daniel I. Elder, Farwell, who
has been attending classes here
since 1954, said:
"This project is an effort to
use low-grade timber as a chemi
cal raw material, other than for
paper pulp. .'
"The obligation imposed by
employment and the welfare of
my family, precluded experimen
tal work on this project in ear
lier days, but retirement pro
vides the leisure time necessary
for devoting more entire efforts
on it."
Elder retired in 1945 - as a
chemist for a cement company.
During World War I, he devel
oped a special cement for use in
gun emplacements.
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less than half as much as hamburger . . . less than
a third as much as canned dog food!
Special Introo jtory Offer! For free sample, send
name and address to BURGERBITS, Box 7,
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Another Fine Product
Of Standard Brands li