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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1957)
Thursday, October 10, 1957 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN IF YOU'RE NOT SHOPPING AT U.S. Graded TO MP Boned and Rolled No Waste to Buy Young, Tender, Fresh Cut, Lean Meaty SPAKE Armour's Star Brand. Sealed MED Swift Premium Brand. Sealed mm Swift Premium Brand. Fresh Pack. New Type Skinless mm, U. S. Graded Choice Steer. Cut Lean Tender Rib Cut MStlHIltfiCBl Meat O Groceteria Fresh Produce Helps You FANCY PACK Celery Hearts Keep a pack handy for salads, cooking, snacks. It is tender and sweet. PACKAGE CARROTS Top Quality. Brittle tender. Good any way you serve 'em. Dackage 1 -lb. or over Sweet Bell PEPPERS 2 P0UBd525 Try Stuffed Peppers For Dinner Tonite Choice Steer ST o Cello Wrapped. Enough to Cello Wrapped short waste removed. Prices in this Ad C n TOAST CHOPS Adds Variety To Your Meals THE GROCETERIA Aged to Perfection serve 4 persons. 3X5 Extra-Fancy . . Large Meaty Type REPEAT SPECIAL - SORRY WE RAN OUT LAST WEEK CUT UP PAN READY-39' lb. Good Through Saturday, Oct. 12, 1957 (p)c 2 . Enjoy Home 2 1 BRUSSEL SPROUTS Pounds YOU'RE PAYING Whole Pork Loins Cut in Chops 49c lb. Live Better For Less O FANCY GRADE Newtown andor Ortley Apples Pound Plio Bag Made Apple Pie or Sauce. EXTRA FANCY YAKIMA Double Red DELICIOUS Bibs. The Pinnacle of Apple Eating Pleasure FOR THOSE COOKIES AND CAKES WE HAVE New Crop CALIFORNIA DATES WALNUTS ROASTED PEANUTS 25' TOO MUCH lb lb 79i Made from this fine fruit. Pound Pound If,! mi w, 3-2 2 PACK 39 39 At Least Si Blamed on As Disease By UNITED PRESS Health officials today counted at least six new deaths blamed on Asian flu in mounting out breaks of the disease across the country. , Milwaukee's flu epidemic hit its peak and was expected to continue another three weeks be fore declining. But in New York a flu , epidemic appeared on the wane. Three of the latest deaths be lieved caused by flu or flu-induced complications were in Michigan, two of them in Penn sylvania and one in Utah. Nurse Among Victims Among the victims was Pa tricia Longo, 18, of Pittsburgh, a student nurse. Dr. Jonas Salk, developer of the Salk polio vac cine and an influenza expert, was asked to conduct tests to Ralph Weise New Dislrict Ranger at Butte Falls Post Ralph Weise, district ranger Summit district, Mt. Hood Na tional forest, has been promoted and transferred to the Butte Falls district, Rogue River Na tional forest, effective Oct. 20, according to Lloyd R. Olson and Carroll E. Brown, supervisors respectively for the Mt. Hood and Rogue River National for ests. Wiese has been district ranger on the Summit district, which includes the Timberline area, since April, 1 953. His first em ployment with the forest service was as a fire prevention guard on the Summit district in 1946 and 1947. - He graduated from Oregon State college in 1948 with a de gree in forest management. He received his permanent appoint ment on the Clackamas River district, Mt. Hood forest, in 1948. The next year he Was transferred to the Glacier dist rict of the Mt. Baker National forest, where he served as a re creation guard and district as sistant. ' Promoted," Transferred ' In 1952 he was promoted again and transferred to the Mt. Adams ranger district of the Gifford Pinchot National forest as assistant ranger, where he served until he was promoted to district ranger on the Summit district in April,-1953. W i e s s- received avalanche training at Alta, Utah, in 1950. He was in the armed services from 1941 to 1945, serving in the ski troops. He also was a member of - the Air Force, per forming dog team rescue work in northern Canada and Lab rador. Wiese replaces Britt Ash on the Butte Falls district, who left Aug. 26 for Ketchican, Alaska, Brown said. Wiese is a member of the So ciety of American Foresters, the Wy'east climbers, the National Ski patrol and the Mt. Hood Lions club. He is also an active radio ham. Ralph, his wife Eleanor, and two children; Ralph '"Jr. and Pamela, expect to report at Butte Falls about Oct. 21. Jel Trainer Crash Fatal To Two Men Silver City, Iowa OP) Two Air Force officers on a training mission from Laughlin Air Force Base, Del Rio, Tex., were killed Wednesday night when their T33 jet trainer crashed in flames near here. Officers at Offutt AFB, Omaha, Neb., identified the dead as Capt. Leslie L. Lundberg, 36, San Bernardina, -Calif., the pilot, and Maj. Dan E. Baker, 40, Wenatchee, Wash. Both men were married. Lundberg had two children and Baker a daughter. They had been living at Del Rio. The burning wreckage was spotted by Bill Berry, Crescent, Iowa, who was piloting a private plane to nearby Omaha. He cir cled the scene until highway patrolmen arrived at the wreck age. Officials at Offutt AFB at Omaha said the jet was attempt ing an instrument landing when it went down. Membership Meeting Of Safety Council Set The October membership meeting of the Medford Safety Council'will be held Friday, Oct. 11, at noon in the Jackson hotel. A budget report and appoint ment of a nominating committee for the. annual election of offi cers will be conducted by Coun cil President Aubrey Loper. Committee reports on special safety projects will be given. EX-CHAIRMAN DIES Bayport, N.Y. OPI Julius Liebmann, 89, former president and board chairman of Lieb mann Breweries, Inc., died Tuesday. Deaths Asian Flu Continues determine the exact cause of death. The disease continued to rage through the South. Louisiana health authorities reported 300, 000 flu cases since July 14 and a total of 51 death blamed on influenza and complications. But the outbreak there was believed to be on the decline. An Asian flu outbreak in Ken tucky hit an estimated 1,000 per sons and forced the closing of all schools in Trigg county on the Tennessee state line. Other Schools Hit Other schools were forced to close down in Michigan and Pennsylvania, including two high schools in Detroit;- high schools in Saginaw and Mani stee, Mich., and about 12 schools in the Pittsburgh area. Flu also hit a number of col legiate football camps, includ ing the University of Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind., Ind., where three first stringers and a reserve were sidelined and four other players were restrict ed to light workouts in prepara tion for the Army game Satur day. Other flu outbreaks struck football teams at Moravian, Lafayette, Montclair, N.J., State Teachers College and Rutgers University. The Lafayette-Delaware and Moravian-Juanita foot ball games this -week end were cancelled. 'Outer Space' Said Not Proper Usage Washington (W Stop saying "outer space" in connection with such near neighbors as Sputnik. "In proper usage," the Na tional Geographic Society says, "outer space means the incred ibly distant reaches among the stars and galaxies." The Geographic said space is divided into three regions: Interplanetary, "the' local space in our solar systems;" in terstellar, the space among the stars; and intergalactic, "the countless trillions of miles among galaxies such as the earth's own milky way." The Russians say they put Sputnik in orbit 560 mles up Earth's nearest star neighbor is nearly 27 trillion miles away. Some people think "strato sphere" means "out yonder." It doesn t. It s a layer of the earth's atmosphere and its ceiling is around 20 miles. Higher layers of the atmos phere may extend for as much as another 1,000 miles. Only beyond that is "space proper." Ike Apologizes To Minister of Ghana Washington (IP) President Eisenhower personally apolo gized to Finance Minister K. A. Gbedemah of Ghana today for the refusal of a Dover, Del., res taurant to serve him Monday be cause he is a Negro. The incident prompted Eisen hower to have Gbedemah come to the White House for break fast with him this morning. Vice President Richard M. Nix on, who visited Gbedemah's home during his tour of Ghana last March, also was present at the breakfast. Gbedemah later told reporters that Eisenhower expressed an apology for the restaurant inci dent. , "He (Eisenhower) was a little worried that it happened," Gbedemah said. "But to think that he invited me to breakfast made up for all that I went through the other day." JORDAN HONORS YANKS Amman, Jordan OP) Ameri-H can servicemen wishing to visit Jordan will be permitted to enter the country on their' mili tary identity cards without pass ports, tourist department sources said today. American service men are the first foreign troops accorded this facility, the sources said. rs the BALANCE of 'mgtetS ents in baking powder that gov erns its leavening action. Orrty when these are scientifically balanced can you be sure of uni form action in the mixing bowrf pi us that fin at, balanced rise to light and fluffy texture in the oven. fammbir r GIRL I raumomi Ballot Title Approved For Portland Election Portland (IPi The city coun cil Wednesday approved a ballot title for a proposal to change the government here to a city manager plan, clearing the way for an initiative campaign to put the issue before voters next May. A total of 27,807 valid signa tures is needed by Feb. 24 to put the issue on the ballot. REDS EXPLORE ANTARCTIC London (IP) Twenty-seven Russians are headed into the snow-covered Antarctic wastes OP a 1,000-mile expedition to set up a scientific base near the South Magnetic Pole, Moscow Radio said today. . . so good its remarkable ?5t WHISK? THAT?51 .CCKV WHISKIES fAKC" . Kentucky , Whisky ""nun Early Times is so good that Kentuckians themselves over whelmingly choose it over all other straight whiskies. Try Early Times yourself today. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY EARLY TIMES DISTILLERY COMPANY. LOUISVILLE 1, KENTUCKY 86 PROOF. "r- 1 I m C 1