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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1957)
i an pi hi i i I j If YOU'RE HOT TRADING AT THE GROCETERIA. YOU'RE PAYING. TOO MUCH! Roasting Young Tender Fresh Dressed liy TURRETS 10 to 13 lbs. average Swift Oriole Brand Sealed Cello Wrapped Swift Premium Brand or Pureta Brand Cello Wrapped The Holiday Special Skinless Valley Packing Co. Cascade or Armour's Star Brand ' 1 k- ntk Boned and Rolled They are tops because they are fat free and fully cooked. Swift Premium Brand Vacuum Packe d Assorted Table Ready $00 Young Tender Extra Fancy Fresh Dressed Pan Ready SWIFT'S PREMIUM FULLY COOKED' M n SMALL SIZE 12-14 lbs. Avg. Shank Half hole ams linn ii iiiiiiiiiif i Beef will be ready for cutting next week end. To assure yourself a roast and some steaks or the cut you wish, orders are now being taken. Meat Prices in this Ad Good Through Saturday, Aug. 31st "I " II 'Hi wkhiiimii. LIM WATERMELONS Fresh and Juicy Red and Ripe Quality I I Heally eaSM Luscious x: WSfffu AVERAGE WEIGHT .15 ot 18 POUNDS LOCAL - SLICING ATOES 2 1 1 9e Mi rfSl O U At FANCY LOCAL SLICING Cucumbers 12 Thompson Seedless GRAPES 15 lb SUNKIST LEMONS Yeiiow Onions Sweet Spanish Type At the Groceteria FOUNTAIN Hreade Cutlet P d Veal Soup Salad Roll and Butter Mashed Potatoes Vegetable Coffee, Tea or Milk snoo ...You'll Like ; NALLEY'S LABOR DAY PICNIC? Take your pets and plenty of tffW "home-style DOCS-E'STU M I 10e HEW! (SSfe rRG'59e SAVE 3 Big Bags in 1 Sturdy Box ioc Thursday. Auguit 29, 1937 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN Mi' 1 iVo At Si BRINGING INTERNATIONAL INTEREST to the trial of William Girard, American sol dier in Tokio, Japan, for the death of a Japanese woman are District Judge Yuzo Kawachi, left, who will preside; defense counsel Itsuro Hayashi, center, with noted San Francisco attorney Melvin Belli, right, observer at the triaL (International Soundphoto) Several Events Included in Labor Day Jubilee in IV 'Cave Junction Souvenir pro grams ' for 'the Illinois Valley Labor Day Jubilee are off the press and may be obtained from Don Adams, general chairman. Starting at ' noon Saturday with .a pee wee baseball game and a barbecue at ' the VFW grounds near Cave Junction, the celebration will continue three days. Children's bicycle races and lumber contests are sched uled. , . Queen's Ball ' At the Queen's ball Saturday, one of seven princess will re ceive her crown from last year's queen, Jeanne Tycer. In a close race for the title are Jean Knight, Linda Deaton, Ronine Rausch. Myrna Gibbons, Bertha Champney, lelba Jordan and Fern Mickey, each sponsored by one of the organizations which go to compose the Illinois Val ley Jubilee association. The children's parade, planned by the local Chamber, of Com merce, is set for 1 p.m. Sunday at the VFW grounds., ' , . i A log bucking contest at 3:30 and a teen-age dance at 8 on the VFW outdoor floor will end Sun day's festivities.. ; Parade Scheduled The Labor Day parade, which will form at 11 a.m. Monday, will be one of the major attrac tions of the Jubilee. With floats from most organizations and many valley stores and churches, several riding clubs, music, an-, cient cars, and a number of surprise entries, the parade will start at the north end of town and will end at the VFW grounds. Horse racing and a horse show are set for noon . Monday, and a watermelon eating contest and other children's games will fol low at 3 p.m. From 3:30 until 4:30 p.m. logging contests and a ladies tug of war are planned. The Jubilee dance at the Le gion hall will climax the week end celebration Monday evening. Negotiations End For Natural Calgary, Alberta, Canada-W Negotiations have been, com pleted for the purchase from Shell Oil company of a substan tial part of the natural gas re quired for a proposed 1,300 mile pipeline from Alberta to California., Sponsors of the planned 330 million dollar pipeline and offi ials of. Shell made the joint an nouncement Wednesday. The gas will be purchased for Pacific Gas and Electric com pany of San Francisco for distri bution in the California, market, according -to Jack K. Horton, president of the newly formed Alberta and Southern Gas Com pany, Ltd. ' Paul L.-Kartzke, vice; presi dent of Shell Oil company, Cal gary, estimated his company would be. able to supply 200 mil lion cubic feet of natural gas per day to the new transmission system. , Tipster Expected To Turn Herself In . Mexico City (IB Confidential tipster Francesca de Scaffa was expected to turn herself in to immigration authorities today, while she can still choose for herself where she will go when she leaves Mexico. , t The Hollywood blonde, for mer wife of actor Bruce Cabot, has been ordered to get out of Mexico by 5 t.m. Friday. Immi gration- officials said" if she does not do so she will be deported summarily to the U.S. Her present whereabouts are unknown.; Mexican plain clothesmen are watching two houses where she is- known to have stayed, so far without un covering a clue to her present Youth Visiting iir Valley Collects Snakes As Hobby By EVALYN P. WATSON Shady Cove-Trail The title of "Snake Boy" is one that can well be applied to Dan Milligan of Whittier, Calif., who started collecting snakes as a hobby when in the fourth grade. He first became interested in snakes through the stories his grandmother. would tell him of the "whoppers" in her home state of Oklahoma. Dan has been spending three weeks vaca tioning at the Rogue River lodge at Trail with his mother, Mrs. Rex Milligan, and broth ers. John Timmy. .While here he has collected 40 non-poisonous snakes, garters and blue racers throughout the hills, packed them in boxes and shipped them back to Whittier where he sells the common ones to pet shops, snake farms,- and to colleges for experimental pur poses. Keeps Rare Ones y He keeps the rare ones for his own enjoyment having' a snake cage approximately six feet square in his home. He does not collect poisonous snakes al though he has killed three rat tlers while here. His rarest snake to date Is a coral king snake which he got at Yosemite but he is buying a five foot boa constrictor from Florida. Besides the snakes he also has another unusual pet, an alligator which the Milligans keep in their yard. In order to keep the snake hobby from becoming too costly the Milligan's raise rats and mice as feed for the snakes. Occasionally one of the snakes gets out somewhere in the neigh borhood to cause consternation among those who do not know of Dan's hobby. Dan swapped experiences in snake collecting with Carroll Watson of the Treasure Trove who is an old hand at the hobby having had a snake pit at his home in 1934 selling them to zoos and various places through out the country.; Five Enlisted Men Face Court-Martial Fort Carson, Colo. (IB Five more enlisted men and their company commander face court martial on charges of mistreat ing recruits. The charges, filed Wednesday at Fort Carson, are similar to those brought against three non commissioned officers of the same outfit Company I, 39th Infantry Regiment -r- last Mon day. In the new charges the fol lowing men either are accused of striking recruits or issuing unusual forms of punishment, or both: Sgt. Jack Riley, 27, of Bruns wick, Ga.; Sgt. Harkules Kleles, 23, of Dover, Del.; Pvt. George Fields Jri, 23, of Chicago; Pvt. Udell Williams Jr., 23, of Chi cago, and Sgt. Edwin Knuston, 28, of Altoona, Pa. Their company commander, Capt. John Webb, was charged with failing to enforce and obey certain regulations, and -. with "causing the mistreatment" 'of three basic trainees. The enlisted men will face special court-martial after the trial of Sgt. James L. Hobbs, 26, of Gunnison, Miss., which begins next Tuesday. , , . Hobbs was charged Monday with two other men of similar offenses. They are - Sgt. First Class Alexander Brown, 26, of Warrington, Fla., and Specialist Second Class Robert F. Neely, 28, of Pelzer, S.C. Government Slicks To Shot Suggestion Washington , Ut The gov ernment said today it is sticking to its recommendation that one shot of preventive Asian. flu vac cine will do the job despite a Pentagon decision to use two. A Public Health service spokesman said the PHS "medi cal personnel and scientific ad visers believe one shot will pro vide substantial protection for approximately one year." The armed forces announced Wednesday that it will give men in uniform two shots of the new vaccine as an extra precaution. That appeared to mean several million civilians will have to wait a little longer to get their shots. "' " ' ' ' Surgeon General Leroy E. Burney estimated earlier that stepped-up production will make it possible to inoculate between 80 to 85 million persons about half the U. S. population by Jan. 1. -. , v - - - However, . military., officials now say that the Pentagon wants 7,230,000 one - cubicrcentimeter doses compared with an original estimate of four million shots. Public : health officers con ceded the single shot might be somewhat less effective than vac cines for older strains of flu virus which are about 70 per cent effective. BEWARE or IMITATIONS LOOK , FOR THt HAPPY umt COO- TOPS IN QUALITY! LOW IN PRICE be sure..- V7! .7' JUL. J. sasar fr ike twMCAtfeMim . . fiTT! I . 1 . living arrangements. 3