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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1958)
MAIL TRIBUNE, MadforJ, Oregon, Thursday, August 7, 1958 7 IF YOU'RE NOT SHOPPING AT THE GROCETERIA YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH! Meat pricM in this ad good through Sat., Aug. 9, 1953 Li I' PICNIC f mtr mii SWIFT PREMIUM BRAND Short Shank Family Size FULLY COOKED O TOP FLAVOR! O TOP VALUE! OCEAN FRESH BONELESS SWAPPER LET 2T SWIFT ORIOLE BRAND -SEALED CELLO WRAPPED SLICED bacon REPEAT SPECIAL Sorry We Ran Out Last Week Tender Meaty U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER SLICED BEEF LIVER 5T U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER -AGED TO PERFECTION T-BOWE STEAK EXTRA LEAN -FRESH MADE k u n II ll ll N D N D $11 .19 lb. 3C FRESH CUT NOT FROZEN spabe .ribs SMALL SIZE Ideal for the Summer Barbecue Groceteria Fountain Lunch WJ Special swiss steak dinner Mashed Potatoes Frozen Green Peas Salad Roll, Coffee, Tea or Milk Choice of Soup or Dessert 1 $11 00 SS I FRESH I I FRESH " I For Sparkling Fresh Produce Shop ' Your Groceteria! Sweet, Golden, Meated CANTALOUPES Jumbo sizes 36, 27, 23 Your Choice Vlb. i Like something different? Try cantaloupes chilled and filled with seedless grapes. Mmmm fruit salad a cool treat! Or serve a tropical fruit salad. SEEDLESS GRAPES lb. 8" We have local tree-ripe peaches by the box or the pound . . . for freezing, J canning or slicing. Only top quality no rejects. J OSC Gets 510,000 Grant for Research On Air Pollution Corvallis A new phase of research on ways to reduce th amount of smoke and cinders given off by the tepee type wood waste burners used by sawmills and plywood mills will begin this month at Ore gon State college. A $10,000 air pollution re search grant has been receiv ed from the U.S. public health service to continue work start ed last year with a $12,000 grant. Studies the past. year by the engineering experiment station showed that great re ductions in smoke arid cinder discharge are possible with minor burner design changes and with improved mainte nance and operation of burn ers. , ble for excessive smoke and cinders often does not prove out, Popovich noted. Poor operation and design are big problems. Changes in burner design and operation recommended on the basis of the past year's study would not have to be extensive or costly, he stressed. Major recommendations to date include repairing the burner to eliminate air leaks, revising the method of over fire air inlet, keeping grates clean, and keeping the door closed at all times when the burner is being operated. Copies of the first year report will be published in Septem ber by the engineering experi ment station. Best Size Burner This year, the OSC engin eers will run tests to deter mine the best size burner for various size mills and to study different aspects of overfire and "underfire" air entry and requirements for best burn ing. Milosh Popovich, assistant dean of engineering, is proj ect leader. Working with him are engineering staff members Martin E. Northcraft and George E. Thornburgh. A teDee-tyoe wood waste burn er has been built near the campus for the trials. Little information is avail able at present on what size burner is needed to handle different volumes of wastes, Ponovich said, and the new OSC study will provide such a guide. It also is expected to give more information on burner operation that will cut air pollution and boost burner efficiency, he continued. The usual conclusion that "too small a burner" is responsi- Court Records MiBiiBifT rnnnT James Loring Martin, no epera- Hoy Yost, operating forest equip- Tnhn n Trnuillo. oDeratine for est equipment without a permit, $30. Virgil L. Hayes, failure to make traffic stop, $10. Jesse C. Snow, no operators li cense. iu. - Albert J. Brayn, failure to signal honaldiD. Forsyth, violation of Basic ruie, ... Robert D. Flannery, failure to make traffic stop, $10. Rudolph R. Kuss, passing with Jack 1J. Ivicoy, ovenoaa. rionaia 1. I'enweii.- overwiuui Margaret C. Neger, no operator's license, iu. .... . Wanda Lee Norwood, failure to yield ngnt ot way, iu. Harold R. Tartin,' overload, $117 and $59. . , Charles u. Wilson, no operators ii e Richard Sokol, violation of basic rule. sis. Merle E. Harper, failure to sig nal, $10. rirAthn 7. 1W C&TI vs. De Mont E. Call, divorce decree. MARRIAGE LICENSE ADD! ir a Tin v Victor Basil Robb, Medford, and Thundershowers Sweep Kansas By United Press International A band of thundershowers accompanied by strong winds swept Western Kansas Wed nesday night with one-half-inch of rain reported at Good land and winds gusting at 65 miles per hour at Garden City Elsewhere, the weather was quiet with only sprinkles of ram reported from the lower Great Lakes to the Central Plains and in Florida and the Northwest. The rains were generally light although Akron, Ohio, reported nearly one-half-inch. The showers extended from the Plains Region into the desert Southwest but rain fall amounts were described as negligible by the Chicago Weather Bureau. Temperatures were report ed little changed in the past 24 hours. Blythe, Calif., re ported a ready of 95 early on Wednesday night and Frazer, Colo., reported a cool 35. Marijuana Garden Results in Arrest Van Nuys', Calif. (UPD Charles Edward Blalack, 24, and his 19-year-old wife, Eve lyn, were arrested Wednes day on charges of growing a garden of marijdana. Police said the couple ad mitted growing the herb, dry ing it and making cigarettes because they "like to smoke to relax." "Well, we don't drink. So we smoke Marijuana to re lax." arresting officers quot ed Mrs. Blalack as saying. Police said Blalack's gar den contained 18 stalks five feet tall and 45 smaller plants. Mrs. Blalack went free on bail but her husband was jailed. Their 9-month-old daughter was placed in the custody of her grandmother. Uk 9i w Jew fa &w WONDERFUL NEW RECIPES . For Making UNCOOKED, LOW CALORIE JAMS AND DESSERTS WITH LESS SUGAR! Using Amazing NEW M.C.P. low Sugar ' PECTIN The Only Pectin That Makes These Fine Low Calorie Fruit Products Trv ThMR Delicious Low