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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1958)
This Week's Best Buy At Safeway lender - sweet-meated, pan ready rui n FRES Servo your family a heaping plaher full of sizzling fried chicken ... here's a real invitation to good eating. M-m-m-m crusty brown, outside . . . tender, juicy, rich flavored inside. It takes good chicken to fry up so tempting and Safe way's got 'em. In fact this is the, only kind of chicken that Safeway sells. We start by selecting just the top quality poultry. Then keep it properly refrigerated so It reaches you at its very best. It's so good we guar antee it 100. From 2 to Vk lbs. Dressed and Drawn Fresh Cut-up Fryers lb. 45c Full Half Fryers .. ...lb. 39c Fancy Young 'n Tender "USDA CHOICE" Saffeway lamb Sale Popular-with mashed potatoes and scalloped tomatoes BREAST 0' LAMB . . lb. 25c Grand with Lima Beans and Currant Jelly SHOULDER ROAST ..... lb. 49c Tender and meaty, grand for tasty weekend menus WHOLE or FULL HALF lb. 49c Tasty with mashed potatoes and spiced fruits LAMB LEG ROAST.. lb. 69c Grand with broiled pineapple rings and mint jelly Large Lamb Loin Chops or Rib, lb. 79c Ready for your oven! Grade 'A7 Turkey s These turkeys are from the nation's leading flocks. With plenty of good eating meat. Now you can pick your favorite fryer parts at Safeway. Mealy Breasts Thighs and Drumsticks Chicken Wings Backs and Necks L I. Duckling 4Tetod5erib, Round Steak ES2! lb. 79c lb. 75c lb. 35c lb. 25c ib. 59c ib. 79c Rump Roasl l'ZAc"l. 79c Ground Beef 3Gdsfi r59Meat Loaf 55c Fillet of Sole ?'s lb. St c Puro I aril Grand for H cooking, OQ rlire LaiO Baking & frying 2-lbs. w3U 10t 14 pour) '.V 49 18 to 22 pounds Ib. 39 Another Grand Value on Tender Beef Liver Look at this special price on tender beef liver 39 "r 35 Slices lb. Just arrived! Beautiful clusters of vine ripened California , GRAPES Plump meaty grapes radiant with freshness and sweet meat: They're specially selected in the vineyards by our expert buyers, then rushed cool and clean to Safeway di rect. Take home a bag full to day . . . you'll be mighty glacl you did. Ib Fully ripened, extra-fancy APPLES JONATHANS Schoolboy ill- $l.89 lb 10c RED DELICIOUS ,-lb.poiyggc 5c RED ROMES . Regular 24-lb. $0 IQ Size box Hand Picked Oregon Russet No. I Potatoes 15b 49c Here's a real savings on No. 2 Potatoes 25D 69c Mild medium size Yellow Onions 49c Rich, green-garden fresh Broccoli 0D. 19c Grand for salads or fresh eating Crisp Celery 2 Bch. 29c Plump Oregon grown Ocean Spray Cranberries l-lb. bag 39c Save at Safeway on Squash Your choice of delicious Hubbard or Marblehead Special Price Per Ib. Ccurl Records MUNICIPAL COURT Joseph Edward Railton, disobey ed traffic sing, $5. Mable Marie Wertz, disobeyed signal, S3 . Charles Edward Bruner, disobey ed traffic signal, S3. Jerry Eugene Leach, disobeyed traffic sign, S5. Ira Ellis McDonald, violation basic rule.' $10. Myrtle Ethel Denton, violation basic rule, $10. Robert Andrew Campbell, no front right fender, S5. Lenny G. Dowson, disobeyed traffic sign, $5. James W. Straus, disobeyed traf fic signal, S3. Gary James Fields, violation basic rule, $10. William Henry Moore, improper left turn, $3. Mahlon Edward Sprague. operat ing vehicle on wrong side of street, $5. Donald George Ramsel, violation basic rule, $10. George Elmer Smith, violation basic rule. $10. Orval Jesse Thomas, 'Improper lane usage, $5. i Patricia Ann Jarman. operating on a permit without licensed driver, $3: violation basic rule. $10. Joseph G. Durren, failure to op erate on right side of rodaway, $5. Milton Alvin Loros, left turn on red light, $3. tveiyn Jean James, disobeyed traffic signal. $5. Edward Guy'er Burgess, disobey ed traffic sign, $5. Alan Leroy Huff, no operator's license in possession, $10. Milburn Cecil Adkisson, Improper right turn, $5. . Gertrude Lucylle Lorton, dis obeyed traffic sign, $5. Russell Davis Semond, disobeyed traffic signal, $3. Charles Clark Reel, violation basic rule, $10. Otto Warren Wirth, violation basic rule. $10. John Garner, disobeyed traffic sign, $5. Lester Pearl Scott, disobeyed traffic sign. $5. Barbara Sylvia Lane Oakes, viol ation basic rule, $10. One and a quarter billion dollars' worth of toys is re tailed in the United States each year, more than six times as much as 20 years ago. Is That So? By OLGA BURNS If you suddenly find your self being bitten by fleas, don't start blaming a pet dog or cat. Quite possibly the real Star Farmer of America Chosen Kansas City, Mo.-UPD-Jim-mie John Jarnagin Jr., 21-year-old farmer from Han ston, Kan., has been chosen the . 1958 Star Farmer of America. . Jarnagin was presented the award together .with a $1,000 check from the Future Farm ers of America Foundation, Inc., at a session of the 30th annual national FFA conven tion here. Jarnagin, married and the father of a two-year-old son, raises wheat and cattle on a 1,000-acre farm in southwest ern Kansas.. He doubled his efforts after weathering the drought of 1955 and 1956 and in the following two years showed profits of more than $30,000. Three other FFA members were " named Regional Star Farmer American Farmers and received checks of $500 each. They were Ethan La brier, 21, Kenton, Okla.; Mal colm A. Niles, 20, Loleta, Calif.; and JamesjH. Speer Jr.; 21, Blairs Mills, Pa. source maybe a nearby, pig. That possibility is a very real one, but I became aware of it only in following out a line of thought suggested by a recent letter from Myrtle K. Nielsen, of Tacoma, Wash.' To appreciate the big con nection one must realize that while there are quite possibly 900 different kinds of fleas, only three are generally a pest to man. They are the so called human or common flea pulex irritans, the cat flea and the dog flea. Both the cat flea and doe fle regard humans as a de cidedly unsatisfactory substi tute. They tend to get on them only when living conditions become crowded on their host. Pulex irritans, however, is quite different: He seems to consider pigs and people pretty much the same, and while he does go on other animals it is apparently as the least satisfactory choice. ' Since he must be accounted MAIL TRIBUNE, MedforJ, Oregon, Thursday, October 16, 1958 IA The number of orphans in the U.S. has declined from 6.4 million in ,1920 to 2.7 million in 1958. as among the more intelligent insect s human fleas have made excellent circus per formers this is a matter of some regret. However, it is probably due to physical taste rather than social pref erence. The fact is no crea ture could be more blood thirsty than pulex irritans. From the time he gets out of his cocoon of flea silk he lives on nothing else but blood. As one would expect, he is a horrendous looking thing. He is a wingless insect with legs so strong he can jump 100 times his own body length, and his squat and ugly head is armed with a powerful bea"k by means of which he gets at his liquid diet. Others Responsible Though this creature, whose ancestors emigrated from Eu rope right along with ours, is host to the final stage of the tapeworm, which is most un pleasant for man, it is not known that he transmits plague, typhus or tularemia. So far as is. known, both he and the cat and dog fleas are innocent in that respect, and it is definitely established that other types of fleas are generally " responsible for 'transmission of those diseases. So if you are suddenly be set by fleas, don't worry about it. Get some flea pow der for your cat or dog. And if that doesn't seem to work, it may well be that it's pulex irritans, the human flea. In which case, take a look at any nearby pigs. Quite possibly that's where they are coming from. (Released by McClur Newspaper Syndicate) Free : By special arrange ment with the editors of the Encyclopedia Americana, my panel of judges will award each week to the reader who sends me the best true-life nature adventure, the best nature observation, or the best question on nature and wild life, a complete 30-volume set of this world-famous refer ence .work in a handsome Sealcraft binding. Each week new submissions will be con sidered. Sorry, I simply can't answer your many friendly letters. Please address your letter to: Is That So! co Med ford Mail Tribune, Box 1069. San Francisco, Calif. I Watch I for the 'Jackie' Coming October 17th Fun to do! Easy for you! An with the Extra-Convenience of King Size COKE! Indoor Pfcoid 5rl J l , glazed nam and yams. Spread canned ham with orange mar- Ji ' 1 imS hM malade, stud with cloves, bake until glared. Put canned yams - if 1 UK J?TJ in same pan, baste with drippings. With a "thirsty" dish like gf fffu JXJ ham you'll certainly want ice-cold Coca-Cola. Coke has the 1 ifiSjJ jtT Sf tingling sparkle that livens your taste makes the nex bite of V'V 5K5VS food more delicious! mi9. . . hi. on. snack that. A picnic standby second only to B . Coca-Cola! Coke actually freshens up your taste be- I tween bites, makes every mouthful more delicious. I No wonder Coke is a favorite with food. So treat I guests to the real refreshment Coca-Cola. "They'll I appreciate your good taste in serving Coca-Cola, . I ice-cold! I tuna SALAD rolls. Add diced celery, onion and capers to drained, flaked tuna. Moisten with salad dressing. Heap into split and buttered rolls. Let tuests help themselves to Coke, served in an ice filled piastie bucket (available at your grocer's). People do help themselves to the world-favorite, Coke, over 58 million times a day. Here's summer fun all year 'round ... a picnic right in your own home! Use paper plates and napkins," paper cups too . . . and serve up delicious picnic foods like the recipes given here. To shop for the makings, just check your grocer's. YouH find everything you need right in his store. Then, to complete the picnic, serve King Size Coke ... it gives you more of the real refreshment. Yes, the big, handy size adds such fun to the meaL To satisfy king-size thirsts anytime . . . buy cartons of Coca-Cola in big King Size. YOU'LL FIND ALL THE FIXINGS Al YOUR GROCER'S! PtCNic sticks. Place slice of American cheese be tween two slices of canned luncheon meat. Slice into sticks, fasten with picks. This easy "finger food" tastes so good with sparkling Coca-Cola. In fact, the cold crisp taste of Coke brings out the flavor of almost any diaa yon serve. Remember COKE and Good Taste go together! Y torn SIGN OF GOOD TASTE Bottled under authority of The Cecja-Cola Company by COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. of MEDFORD