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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1958)
GO MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Thursday, July 24, 1958 ! Thos Week's Best Buy is Sweet Meated Mfo) SPECIAL PRICE NOW AT SAFEWAY! LJ LJ Wl V-X LJ I 1 W Jk-f f 0J, r .Herd's the perfect answer to a delicious cool summer dessert, tasty salads or for a . hearty breakfast. Every melon is solid and guaranteed perfect. For an extr,a taste treat, top them with SNOW STAR ICE CREAM in 4 flavors: Vanilla Chocolate Strawberry Neopoliran (Vanilla, Chocolate,-Strawberry) for only 49c a quart and 89c a half gallon. (Green (Beans Grand for canning! $noo 15-lb. box $1.69 2 lbs. Crisp Cucumbers New Keel Potatoes Local Grown, perfect for tasty summer salads 20 Luscious Golden Milky Kernels w Annirann -n its ni Hfcfel G Northwest, field grown U.S. No. 1 grade 10 3S "SHfel ohh Fresh from the Yakima Valley. Look at this . low price. 10 ""49 Fancy Bananas Golden Yellow Special price 2 29 Reg. $2.77 Value on Pure Granulated wn cab Ripe Tomatoes mK"'"9 , 19' Head Lettuce Local, large size Fancy Peaches Red Havens 2 25' ,b 19' sugar The finest that money can buy. Get set for canning and freez yW-. wjg Illy anu aavo iiiuic ai gaicvraji. T)E-lb. $149 A J bag Z $ CANE See How You Save on Del Monte Pineapple Grapefruit Juice Enjoy the delicious full fruit flavor of these sun-ripened juices. , Reg. 37c ea. value 3 46-oz. tins $ 00 Reg. 41c ea. Value-!-Save 23c on 3 Hawaiian Regular or Golden Punch Your choice of these two refreshing fruit flavor punches Another big Safeway valuel 3 46-oz. tins $1100 More Items to Help You Save on Your Family Food Bill lucerne 3.8 Homog. Milk Half gal. 47c 36 Whipping Cream Vnt 59c On. Wright's Bread iTSf 29c Sandwich Bread Skylark rj. 31c Date Coffee Cake SV 29c Donuls Se73F37' ,d Fashioned HAo, 30c Snap Cookies SrMo Cake Mixes 4 Pkgs. Baby Foods Rej, 10 for Mo 10 Tins' 89c Gerber's Strained, Fruits and Vegetables Hi-0 Orange Drink SSS," 4 ST $l Fril-lels'"' ..pkr 29c Small Shrimp 5taT"der P4'4i!S.Tto 39e - Frozen Pies T&'g; 689.c,. ples 59c Ice Cream 89c 49c SaBad Pressing i Ripe lives Dress up summer salads with Piedmont brand Town House brand. Fancy quality from Sunny Californ , 4 r 3.31 est lies' Cocoa m!" SS in ramiiy size pKg. Fresh Butter Lucerne AA cubed, made with the finest sweet cream 8-OZ, pkg. Swans Down white, yellow Devil's Food, Butterscotch. . , Starch !icIiquidstarch 2 45c larrh See how you save on White OQ OldlUl Magic. Reg. 49o Half gal. WC The Finest Processed VELVETTA CHEESE SPREAD Dial Soap Dial Soap cS&JX. Potatoes SSi'"?"- 2 Sf 29c 2 ts 39c 6?i-oz. pkg. 33c Reg. 89c Save 10c on this KRAFT producf. 2-lb. pkg. TV Reg. 79c VAN ZEE brand Cheese Spread 2 Pkg. 65 i Here's Terrific Savings on NUCOA MARGARINE Reg. 31c value Save 14c on 3 pkgs. at Safeway! Dalewood Finest Margarine 3 W 2 Z 79' Prices in this advertisement are effective through July 26th at Safeway in Medfffrd. We reserve the right to limit. All items Safeway sells are guaran teed 100. This Week's Roxbury KID'S CANDY COUNTER Features: Jelly Strings, 13-oz. Licorice Mix, 8Vi-ox- 30 count pops, 6-oz. pkg, 29 See How You Save MORE on IflFEKfflV COFF Whatever way you like your coffee . . . Safeway's got it.; From vacuum packed regular or drip grind, to- fresh whole beans you grind yourself to suit your particular taste. And look at these new low prices. A blend of the world's richest ctfffees EDWARDS ft"'?' &5flj13 tin fl V 2-lb. tin U 4-lb. bag NOB HILL 77 AIRWAY 75 & s-ji 49 Id 2-lb. bag U Wakefield Safeway Instant Airway Instant Aromatic , flavored coffee! Another grand value! Reg. 82c Mb. bag Reg. 77c Mb. bag The coffee that tastes As good as it smells R$V $1153 2-lb. bag II A mild and mellow blend of fine coffee For the thrifty buyer. Vacuum packed. Reg. or drip It's new! Real coffee flavor. 10c off. Mb. tin 6-oz. jar. 75 $JI5 Another great coffee valuel 6i" 99 BRINGING LUNCH, one youngster (left) takes no chanc of missing Princess Margaret as she visits Veterans' Hospi tal in Victoria. With Princess is Dr. C. A. Watson, medi cal superintendent of British Columbia institution. The Family Council Editor's note: The Family Council consists of a Judge, a psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers. Each article is a summary of an actual report. The Family Council does not give advice; it merely reports on problems that have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. Mrs. F. E. Loraine is too shy. Loraine E. I don't feel like going out anyway. Mrs. F. E. I want to help my 16-year-old daughter who is having boy trouble or maybe I should call it lack- of-boy trouble. Most girls of her age have gone out quite a bit, but Lor aine has only had two or three dates in her whole life. She is a nice-looking girl, but she lacks confidence and is much too shy. I tell her she must speak up and she should not be afraid of approaching boys and talking to them, but she seems to hang back like a child when she meets boys. There was a particular boy she liked and I told her she should go right over to him and start a conversation and hint there was a particular movie in the neighborhood she wanted to see. She came home in tears and said he did Goldfine Delay Irks Probers Washington (UPD Some members of the House influence-investigating subcommit tee today chafed at the delay in voting to recommend a con tempt of Congress citation for Boston millionaire Bernard Goldfine. Rep. John J. Flynt Jr. (D-Ga.), said he "can't under stand" what is holding up subcommittee action against Presidential Assistant Sher man Adams' gift -giving friend. Rep. John B. Bennett CD Mich.) said Goldfine should be cited promitfly. He said the subcommittee has "noth ing left to do" in the case but vote. Subcommittee Chairman Oren Harris (D-Ark.) excused Goldfine as a witness last Thursday after giving him a final chance to answer 23 carefully worded ' questions about his involved financial dealings. . , ' Goldfine replied as he had repeatedly in the face of con tempt citation threats that the questions were not rele vant to the subcommittee's investigation into his alleged influence-for-favors relation ship with Adams. Machete Wielder Much, Much Wiser Mobile, Ala. OJPIW-Machete wielder Carl H. Watson in flicted more damage on him self than on the swarm of wasps he encountered. Watson, forester for the lo cal school board, was survey ing a wooded tract where the county plans to build a school. He was using a ma chete to trim away branches. The heavy knife slashed through a wasp nest and the angry insects attacked. Watson fought back, swing ing away with the machete. Finally he broke free. He was released from the hospital Wednesday, minus quite a bit of blood and the tip of one finger but; as he put it, "much, much wiser." Elephants are driven by their ears, says the National Geographic magazine. The ma hout, or master, sits on the beast's neck arid conveys his orders by pressing with knees, toes, or heels on the elephant's ear fans or shoulders. Using no words at all, he makes his mount amble forward, wheel right or left, pick up things, go into reverse, break off an interfering branch, kneel, sa lute, stop, look, or listen. not pay the least attention to her. Loraine E. I'm never go ing to pay any attention to Mother again. She tells me to do the craziest things. They don't work out the way she says they will. This boy looked at me as though I was crazy when I suddenly stalked over to him out of the blue and started blabbing about this movie. -I am getting so sick and discouraged about this whole thing I just don't feel like going out, anyway. I know I freeze up when I am with boys, but I can't help it. If they don't pay any attention to me, I'm not even going to look at them. It doesn't do me any good to talk to Mother about my problems because she starts yelling at me for being shy and backward. Then I hate myself for it, but I go on be ing the same way. - The Council- Mrs. F. S. can help her daughter by try ing to be a bit calmer and more detached about thjg problem. Out of love for ha daughter she is going ove board and sharing all tke girl's own emotions. She is hurt, humiliatedaahtfe angry that Loraine's encoun ters with boys are not succe ful and she intensifies thsjfe feelings in the girl. Because she is so identified with Loraine's problems, Mrs. F. E. tries to act out various situations as she imagines they ought to be. She would like to walk up to that boy herself and take charge of the siuation from then on. But she can't do that. Lor aine has to do it out of her own impulses and in her own way. She makes mess of such a situation because she is acting a role that doesn't even come out of her own imagination. If Mrs. F. E. will take a step back and look at the problem, she will see things are not so terribly serious. Loraine shows she wants to meet boys and is merely go ing through some of the dif iculties of finding her way in a new country. Some girls .seem to know the right routes almost from birth. Most have to learn them and some nev erj do, but a girl who wants to find it as much as Loraine appears to will eventually have some success. In the meantime, Mrs. F. E. should try to get Loraine to calm down and to join clubs and church groups where she can . meet boys in a relaxed atmosphere. She should be encouraged to be active in everything that interests her. Gradually she will find herself making friends without even thinking about it. (Copyright 1958, General Features Corp.) 'gamy' f$$t Pot