Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1959)
NEW FROM THE MAKERS OF AD V r fy""""" Q MI k I A - ' U r-i J ' ; HANDSOME Dl now packed in every box of AD detergent START COLLECTING AD'S EXCLUSIVE "ROYAL MAYTIME" PATTERN TODAY. HERE'S HOW TO BUILD A COMPLETE SET. ! Inside every Home Laundry Size AD you will find all of these durable and handsome dishes. Cup and Saucer. Fruit Dish. Luncheon Plate. They are AD's exclusive "Royal May time" pattern. And, thanks to AD's concentrated suds power, you'll get a dirt-free, film-free, better rinsed wash a NEW KIND OF CLEAN! Inside every Jumbo box of AD you'll be delighted to find either a lovely Cup and Saucer, handsome Dinner Plate or Cereal-Soup Dish. Simple, dignified pattern. Double glazed. Exceptionally durable won't wear off. Will go with your other nice things. 3. Inside every Giant box of AD there is either a Cup or Saucer or Bread and Butter Dish or Fruit Dish and every one of them is durable, hard to crack or chip. ' Inside every Large Size box of AD you will find either a Salt or Pepper Shaker, Coaster, Ash Tray or Nut Dish that you'll be delighted with. Doubly delightcdT really, because you'll be using AD's concentrated suds power in your automatic washer! Also sugar bowl, platter, pravy Imat plus K oilier items. See otter on buck of box. A I). l!ie Vlvaiiccl Determent for Automatic Washers, by RayFreedmtm Enjoying her first piece of home made taffy, a Lyons, Kans., woman bit into something hard. It was the diamond from her ring which had fallen out as she was pulling the taffy. A sheepherder near Cheyenne, Wyo., deaf since World War I, was struck by lightning. When he regained consciousness, he found that he could hear again. In Capetown, South Africa, a woman killed her last turkey so the family could stave off starvation. In the gizzard she discovered eight gold nuggets valued at close to $100. Later she found where the turkey had been eating it was a bonanza! Fifty years ago an Omaha, Neb., resident was bequeathed an old-fashioned musket by his father. In dire need recently, he decided to clean and sell it. In the barrel, he found several thousand dollars. The wife of an unemployed salesman bought a cheap ring from an antique shop for her daughter's birthday. When the girl cut a neat hole in the window pane with her gift, the mother had it appraised. She sold it for $750. A group of New York women, gathered for a charity meeting, found they had $16,540 in cash they couldn't account for. The money, in $50, $20, and $10 bills, was discovered crammed in paper cups purchased at an auction. With no claimants, it was turned over to various charities in the city. A Boston detective, shot through the chest by a bandit, is alive today because his heart was on the right-hand side. He had never known it. ".vi , A blazing oil well near Moab, f ' A IT: 1 1 1 1 . , !i-1f uian, aDanaonea to Durn lisen out. was smothered when a workman accidently dropped a tubing head that helped cap the well. The freak capping brought the workman a handsome reward. Exploding ammunition served as a fire alarm which saved the lives of a young husband and wife and their three children. Their home caught fire and exploded a shell in the closet which awakened them. Fomilj Weekly, March 1, 1959