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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1958)
. o Q 1 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Tbirsaay. Jue 12, 19SS 7 o ri so fin tuna A lara mw c? Jjleat Prto? Ik 4 0-4 AT TMI GtOCITItIA FOUNTAIN IISI STEAK DIN H in $oug talad 9aViSr SviM Steak Irom Cftoic Graele leef Masrd ototo Irown Gravy (SrMrt o lot anl Iwtter Coff, Ta or Milk GROCETSlA flM 20c A LA MODI -i 25c STRAWBEgfT fHOfTCAKI, with Whipped Cream ...25c re 0 On WIS So tf-Sundoy, June 15 . - . Roilaft Cigaro Tpkg. of 5 49c Gillette Super Speed Razor ei ff WITH FREE FISHING KIT r E I ' 2.75vilui- U Groceteria BAKERY Special MIC CAKES Chocolatg. f Vanilla Orange Lemon Clerrf Caramel Bahejii ia Pil fraft Aluminum Pan To (fretack Cake pieni. Alsa keapi g n meisr. (GIMCriE YVw8h Saturday, June 14 LUNCH CARTON SI. 85 $1 Cut OCEAN FRESH - u $ CH0JCE STEER-VERY IF U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER f v u CUT FROM AGED DAISIES-IT'S FRESH MAQE WITH LOTS nloDini SWIFT'S PREMIUM BRAND-VACUUM SEALED-LARGE ASSORTMENT Table leodl v ILtairaelh U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER Same Delicious Franks You Bought So Many of Last Wek-end For the FRESHEST Produce, Shop Your Groceteria Crispy, Solid, Fresh Head lettuce MILD IN FLAVOR WELL TRIMMED NO WASTE COUPON One Cello Package of Fancy Carrots FREE WITH THIS COUPON AND ANY PRODUCE PURCHASE GOOD JUNE 12-13-14-15 ONE TO A CUSTOMER U.S. GRADED CHOICE Steak! ouna Thick or Thin Your Choice BONELESS TENDER y - - IDEAL FOR THE OUTDOOR a r- . w n rai si THE FINEST OF HAM di V(5l - CUT SHORT 2 BLENDS WELL IN MOST ANY VEGETABLE SALAD Sunkist Lemons Valencia Sweet Oranges Cantaloupes, Watermelons, Peaches, Plums, Grapes, Raspberries, Papayas, Bean Sprouts, Salad Mix, SLICED OR PIECE BARBECUE BONED n rat I U7 Ar -r i V J l Medford Meat Co. SKINLESS MRS I Garden Fresh Local Red Leaf Lettuce BUNCHES Yellow 29c::: Dry doz. Crisp, 5 bag 69C (?Vi3ry "eather Open 7 Days a yveeK unrn " p.m. Sixth & Grape Streets w 2! 3f AND ROLLED -NO WASTE eoft 5! 27 7& TASTY BRAND U.S. No. 1A CALIFORNIA LONG WHITE Potatoes POUND VENT VIEW BAG 2, bas $H $1100 Bermudia Sweet 0 Onions 4 -25c Sweet Stuff celery sticks a hot 17c treat Lb. Fresh Citrus Salad and Many More. In Fact Ve Have Over 65 Items For You to Choose From Movie Newcomor Loarns Role Brings Forth Many Personal Acquaintances Editor's note: Movie newcomer Earl Holliman writes about his experiences as a wide-eyed picture fan who suddenly Becomes a ceieo rity in his own right. By EARL HOLLIMAN Written for UPI Hollywood (UPI) Until I got my first job in pictures, I had never seen a real-life movie star, in the flesh, but I wasn't filled with any over whelming curiosity, either. To me, the category 01 movie actor was the opposite of Burgess' purple cow. I would rather be than see one. But apparently, I was in the minority among the kids my- age. One fellow I went to school with in Oil City, La., became quite a celebrity be cause on a summer vacation trip to California, he had ob tained James Cagney's auto graph. He could have swapped it for almost anything in town, from a genuine, part-Airdale Jimmy Burdick owned to a Louisville slugger bat that was the mainstay of our after school . baseball. But he pre ferred to keep it. And no one blamed him. Gets First Taste This desire to see, ia the flesh the familiar shadowy figures of the screen appar ently hasn't abated in recent w Sacramento Man Soon To Realize Lifelong Dream By DeVAN L. SHUMWAY UPI Staff Correspondent Sacramento, Calif. (UPI) Herb Kurtz, a 45-year-old Sacramento civil engineer, is a man who does something about his lifelong dreams. ' In about a year, he will pack up his gear, his wife and his son and head for the South Pacific to live "the way nature Intended us to." They will go to a little is land about 800 miles north of New Zealand. It's one of the Kermidck Islands "an'd this particular one is two miles wide by four miles long. It is going to be their home from then on. Kurtz hopes to take "three or four couples" with him to make up a "nice little col ony," do some trading, some surf diving and grow some produce." Kurtz looked over the is land during a 10-month is land-hopping trip from which he returned recently. He had Tahiti in mind first. Later he decided to look over other spots. No Nudist Altogether, he traveled a total of 22,000 miles by any routes possible, including small boats, fishing craft and canoe, in an effort to find his promised land. When he stumbled on the. Kermidck Islands, he knew he'd found his place. He emphasized that he isn't planning to start a nudist colony. . "I want to get back to na ture." he said, "but not that far back." Living won't be entirely primitive on the island, ac cording to Kurtz, because there will be some modern conveniences. As a civil en gineer, he'll be well qualified to plan a quiet modern com munity. Each recruit family must have about $3,500 to get them to the location and buy the necessary materials to start living there. The colonists will need a variety of first aid necessities, tools, guns, fishing gear and other odds and ends, plus a lot of love for nature. Detroit (UPI) Dr. Frances J. Schultz, a dentist who be lieves in picking teeth, has in vented a double-purpose tooth pick of "finest cedar." At one end is a match. The other end is carefully shaved and peppermint-scented for picking teeth. be sure... r GH ccane sugar years, but the attitude of the public towards the perform ers has changed radically. I've just gotten my first taste of it and it's a little bewilder ing. By that I mean I've just been on my first personal ap pearance tour for Hal Wallis new Paramount picture, "Hot Spell," which stars Shirley Booth, Anthony Quinn, Shir ley MacLaine and me. It's a little frightening to discover there are so many people who feel they know you personally. If anyone who had ever acted even briefly in a motion picture had appeared in my home town of Shreve port, La. (a highly unlikely situation) we would have gazed on him as though he were Julius Caesar returned to earth. Not so, today's movie fans. They look upon all act ors as sort of "personal ac quaintances. Describes Strange Feeling , It s an odd feeling to walk down a strange street and have someone you have never seen before in your life wave a hand at you and cry, "Hi, Earl! I liked your last movie. Keep up the good work, boy!" At the same time, it gives you a wonderful, warm feel ing. Before I broke into pic tures, I can't recall a time in my life when I had more than a dozen good friends. But now I seem to have literally' mil lions, all over the country. It's an additional reward that comes to an actor, I guess, and one I never antici pated. But it's a wonderful bonus and whatever has caused the change in my fans. I'm glad it happened. THE PERFECT GIFT FOR FATHER a. -world of O entertainmerig . . . poolceVsize So tiny it fits even your purse. The Companionall transistor personal radio performs where ordinary sets fail. Remarkable "big-set" tone quality plus hundreds of hours of enjoyment on only one low-cost bat tery. Sturdy, smart plastic case. $49.90 complete with battery Leather caw and tarphom , ttighl extra cost. Give Dad a RECORD ALBUM OF HIS FAVORITE TUNES! Choose From the Largest Selection in Southern Oregon PimUCKER MUSIC HOUSE "Your High Fidelity Center" 111 No. Central Ph. SP 2-5702 Lr Ski'