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CRAB
MEAT
5 POUND SEALED
CAN
each
$365
NO SALE TO DEALERS
LIMIT 2 CANS PER FAMILY.
FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL -U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER
Prime Rl
RO
AST
Short Cut,
Waste Removed
Aged to Perfection
YOUNG TENDER MEATY FRESH, NOT FROZEN
SPARfc RI
Ideal for the
Barbecue
FRESH MADE
IHAM and VIAL
Good for Frying
Ideal for Baked Loaf
LEAN FRESH MADE - COUNTRY STYLE
AUSAGI
2
U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER
RIB
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691
5Jl
731
IT.
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39?
WD BEEF
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SWIFT PREMIUM BRAND
Table Ready Meats
Bologna Head Cheesa Lunch Tongue Pickle and
Pimento Macaroni & Cheese Olive Loaf & Savoy Loaf
7C
each pkg.
Meat Prices in This Ad Good Through Saturday, June 15, 1957
GIFTS F
OR
FATHE
Leather BILLFOLDS
Wide Variety of Styles
Name In 24 K
gol4 a no
extra cost
$150 SOQ
and yi
$2 Cigarette Lighters
T Medico Pipes
MEDICO
T Tobacco Pouches
9w
59
59
Also a wide selection of Dad's favorite brand of Cigars, Cigarettes,
Pipe Tobaccos, Tobacco Pouches, Pipe Racks, Ball Point Pens and Box
Chocolates for the man who does not smoke.
Paper Mate Gold Capri
WITH PIGGY BACK REFILL
IN PLASTIC $095
GIFT PKG. $5.00 VALUE JL
A FINE GIFT FOR FATHER
Schick "25" Electric Shaver
NOW
$ n 75
Reg. $2950
Vi PRICE with
no trade in.
FILM
DEVELOPING
and PRINTING
in by 10 a.m. out by
5 p.m. same day
in LARGE MUG 10c
Root Beer atc
A A I REG. GLASS 5c
UC3 bOia LGE- GLASS 10c
Ice Cream Soda Double 25
Thick Milk Shakes 25
F,esrawberry Shortcake 25'
Ice Cold Watermelon 25'
GROCETERIA
FOR FATHER
Decorated
Chocolate Cake
2 Layers
Creamy
Chocolate Cake
$1198
FRUIT AND NUT
Upside
Down
CAKE
Le- Giant
35e 75'
l iy:i i
hgt. Giant
35e 75e
VMCM 2c Off Deal
Reg-
mtiJitA Six
89
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Liquid Detergent
(Mfgs. 10c Off Deal)
Most Effective Flood Control on
Rogue Would Be Levis Creek Dam
The most effective flood con
trol program for the Rogue val
i ley would be a high dam at
Lewis creek, the Rogue Basin
Flood Control and Water Re
; sources was told here Monday
night at the Josephine county
courthouse.
Ross Hatch, directing a Rogue
; Valley flood control study for
the Army corps of engineers,
! noted that the plan originally
j proposesd by the bureau of rec
lamation, or a possible alterna
tive of three dams at major
tributaries on the upper Rogue,
would offer the best flood con
trol protection.
Opposition to the high dam,
known as Plan A, was express
ed in a letter from the Jackson
county chapter of the Izaak
Walton league. It stated the
chapter would be "unalterably
opposed" to a high dam at Lew
is creek, even if recommended
by the Army engineers as the
only logical means of flood con
trol. Not Only Solution
"The Lewis creek dam is not
the only solution being consid
ered by the Army," Hatch said.
But he added that such a high
dam would mean "just that
much less water to come down
stream" when flood conditions
again develop.
According to Hatch if protec
tion was provided only for the
small floods that occurr in five
or 10 year cycles, people would
return to the danger areas.
Urban and suburban areas
urrtnlH not ho KonofitoH f nnlv
i small floods were eliminated,
j leaving these areas still vuln
erable to the "disastrous" floods
I appearing in 50-year cycles, said
i Hatch.
j The Army engineer reminded
association directors that the
project must be viewed primar
ily from the flood control stand
i point, indicating that power and
1 irrigation aspects of the project
would get secondary considera
tion. j Hatch and his assistant, K. D.
! Kerr, both from Portland office,
j outlined two "fundamental"
principles which will guide the
corps' of engineers in all aspects
of the Rogue study.
Benefits Exceed Cost
First, benefits must exceed
cost of these projects, Hatch
said. Second, if surveys indicate
either of the two proposed pro
jects will be feasible, engineers
must recommend the one with
lesser cost.
Hatch declared that a series
of low dams, along tributaries
of the Rogue, would not be fea
sible from the flood control
standpoint, becaust the rapid
fall of these streams preclude
adequate water storage areas
Army engineers will devise
the "best apparent plan," bu
that If people of this area do
not want it, "we will not build
it," Hatch said.
He told the directors the as
sociation must prepare to work
energetically on behalf of any
project finally approved and
recommended to congress. Con
gress will ignore the report un
less there is organized support
for the program, he said.
Money for Survey
State Rep. Ray Bristol, Grants
Pasl, noted that the Oregon Wa
ter Resources board had been
appropriated 520,000 during th
legislature's recent session for
a comprehensive survey of the
Rogue river and all possible
water utilization from the
stream.
The state board is expected
to work closely with Army en
gineers in its survey, but will
have veto power over any pro
gram recommended by the
Army, Bristol said.
"But if the board approves
the Army engineers' report, this
will be a guarantee there will
be no state opposition to thj
flood control plan," according
to Bristol.
Later, members of the group
authorized William Jess, assoc
iation president, to write Rep.
Charles O. Porter, (D-Ore.), of
the fourth district, thanking
him for his interest in the pro
ject. Porter announced he has
plans to introduce a bill which
would embody most of the orig
inal Plan A.
The Oregon congressman has
indicated he will amend his bill
to include the full program as
recommended by Army engin
eers, when their survey has
been completed.
Hatch pointed out any bill
Driver's License
Of Wrong Variety;
Judge Levies Fine
Houston, Tex. HP) It cost
George Willis. 24. a Negro,
$65 when he handed his driv
er's license lo Traffic Judge
Wallace P. Kelley. Willis was
charged with driving without
one.
The worn piece of paper he
handed Kelley read:
"This is to certify that the
person herein named has
passed all tests for nervous
ness and has been licensed to
irritate, annoy, criticize and
otherwise disturb the operator
of the car. Back seat drivers
must carry this license on per
son or otherwise must keep
quiet while vehicle is in mo
lion." Willis, who can't read, said
he got his license in a barbershop.
without approval by the corpn
of engineers probably would
face a presidential veto, even if
it were acceptable to congress.
He cited as an example th
which did not have army en
gineers' recommendation and
was vetoed by President Eisen
hower. The association will hold its
next meeting Monday. July 8,
in the Jackson county court
house, Medford.
Plane's Prop Wash
Fatal To Paratrooper
Ft. Bragg, N.C. M A
medical investigation board has
ruled that a young paratrooper
who dangled helplessly for three
hours outside a flying troop car
rier plane was "drowned" in the
plane's prop wash.
The board of Army and Air
Force doctors said that Pfc.
Wayne H. Flugum, 23. of Leland,
Iowa, suffocated when he was
unable to breathe because of the
motion of the flowing air.
Flugum remained conscious
for more than an hour and a halt
but died when crewmen of the
C123 troop carrier were unable
to pull him back into the plane.
Another board of investigation
is seeking to determine how Flu
gum became tangled in dangling
static lines as he and 35 other
paratroopers leaped from the
plane Tuesday over Ft. Bragg.
Portland Woman on
Stand in Fraud Trial
Portland Uti A Portland
clubwoman tqok the witness
stand in her own defense here
Wednesday in the trial of a mail
fraud conspiracy against the U.
S. government.
The government charges that
promoters of the Mount Hood
Hardboard and Plywood Co-operative
had milked the organiza
tion of between 5250,000 to 5550,
000. Mrs. Helen A. Davenport, 77,
took the witness stand before U.
S. Judge Gus Solomon. She was
preceded on the witness stand
by Circuit Judge Charles W.
Crawford and Municipal Judge
J. J. Quillin, who testified to her
high reputation in the commu
nity. Other action In today's court
proceedings saw Judge Solomon
dismiss the case against Richard
Williams, 60, retired Milwaukie
state police lieutenant, because,
"we don't want to endanger any
body's life."
Williams became ill on the wit
nes stand yesterday while testi
fying in his own defense. Wil
liams has had three coronary oc
clusions before.
Godfrey's Property
Yields Stolen Bonds
Miami Beach Mi Arthur
Gorfrey's oceanfront property
has yielded a 5100,000 "hidden
treasure" of stolen bonds and
jewelry which police said two
convicts had buried in the sand.
Detectives using a rough map
drawn by the convicts now con
fined in Mobile, Ala., on robbery
convictions led detectives Wed
nesday to three strong boxes
buried together in a shallow hole
covered with sand.
Officers said Godfrey knew
nothing about the cache on his
property.
Police said the bonds,
in non-negotiable war savings
certificates and upwards of 525,
000 in transferable utility stocks,
were buried 200 yards north of
the Kenilworth Hotel, owned by
the television star.
Rebels Ambush Bus
In Western Algeria
Algiers n Rebels am
bushed a bus in Western Algeria
Wednesday and killed the only
two European passengers aboard,
French authorities announced to
day. The bus was halted by a band
of 15 Algerian nationalists while
on a regular run from Tlemcen
to Eugene-Etienne. Tlemcen is
about 30 miles from the Moroc
can border and was the scene bf
a major rebel attack last week.
In other parts of the territory,
French troops killed 35 rebels
in separate skirmishes. In the
biggest clash, 19 rebels died in a
French ambush north of Perre
gaux, 30 miles east of Oran.
Algiers, where six persons died
in violent anti-Moslem rioting
Tuesday, was calm.
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