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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1959)
yrs4ay, Junt II, 19S9 MAIL TRIBUNE, MrtferJ, Or. 7 IF YOU'RE KOT TRADING AT THE GROCETERIA YOU'RE, PAYING TOO MUCH! Young Heavy Breasted 1959 Fresh Frosted Let's Give FATHER the Bird On His Day. Tha$3 Are Extra Fancy No. I At This Low Price You Can not Miss. - II II 1 II V" . - , , II II - . - i 'ii as' . ' I 1 I If 1 lllk Ifff , Meat prices in rt?s V J J J J M XSmkZ Ad good through . ) Ly UUJn KJpS Saturday, June 20, wirr- . f ., , .V. 1959. V " . Swift's PREMIUM .BRAND SHORT SHANK FULLY COOKED Luscious and Sweet REPEAT SPECIAL ARMOUR'S STAR BRAND OLD FASHIONED 2 lb. 0 HQ C n n Pkr. rt) u THICK SLBCEID) n 2 H EXTRA MEATY - SMALL SIZE - FRESH CUT Spare ink - U.S. GRADED CHOICE STEER mm 3Sv -Vj- ''..jgB : Groceteria Bakery FISHERMAN'S DELIGHT. MORRELL'S PRIDE - FULLY COOKED J CANNED 1V4 Pound of Table Ready Eating Pleasure M 49 M each DECORATED FATHER'S DAY CAKE $2.00 UPSIDE DOWN PICNIC CAKE 69c EACH DATE-NUT DANISH COFFEE CAKE 59c ' FRESH CAUGHT - Ocean Troll - Chinook ill HEAD OF Sold or Whole HOME CANNER'S SPECIAL Groceteria FOUNTAIN LUNCH BAKED HAM DINNER Toasted Cube Steak Sandwich with Pickles and . w wm j Potato Chips.... 0j) With Sweet Potatoes or Mashed Potatoes , Vegetable . Apple Sauce Soup Bread and Butter Coffee, Tea or Milk mm WHERE YOU SAVE EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK! n r (OJ Vine Ripe - At MID-SUMMER PRICES High in Enjoyment-Low in Calories - JUMBO 27 SIZE NO. 1 MELONS NOT nds OR REJECTS otiit mm ' FROM WHEELER RIDGE CALIFORNIA XTRA LARGE WELL FILLED EARS. Try some, you will be glad you did. ZUCCHINI and SUMMER SQUASH mm ii i 0 M. - I Red Bluff Tilton Apricots Now, In The quality is good, the price is reasonable. The crop is . abut two weeks early. Don't wait too long. SUNKIST LEMONS aW Bags Nothing Can Match The Flavor of A Fresh Lemon Cojmmander off Wavy tPOane Dn SecDusDon; : R robe pushed Tokyo-(DP5-The U.S. Naw spirited Lt. Cmdr. Donald R. Mayer out of sight today while it conducted a secret investigation of the com munist MIG attack on his pa trol plane Tuesday. Identity of the attacking plane was not known but the Japanese, newspaper Asahi Evening News reported that one of the crew members pho tographed a MIG while it was attacking. TJ. S. Navy headquarters' at Yokosuka said "officially" it knew nothing about any pic tures. A spokesman said if there were pictures they would have been sent "direct to Washington for evalua tion." Asahi quoted Mayer as say ing one photograph was snap ped but that it had not been developed and it ws not known whether the nation ality of the attacking jets could be determined. "; There still was no official explanation about the discrep ancy between Navy state ments here on the useless guns aboard the plane and the P e n t a g o n explanation they were deliberately re moved. Rear Adm. Frederic S. Withingtoii,, ' commander of U. S. Navai forces in Japan, Foreign Aid Bill Untouched; Heads For House Vote Washington - QJPD - A $3, 842,600,000 foreign aid bill headed for House, passage to day untouched by repeated at tempts to inflict deeper cuts in President Eisenhower's pro gram. Chairman Thomas E. Mor gan (D-Pa.) of the House For eign Affairs committee said he was determined to win ap proval without losing another dime. Morgan said the bill al ready had met and won its toughest tests. The House beat down at tempts to slash military aid Wednesday , but one amend ment which would have sliced off another $140 million lost by only a slim two votes. The tally was 103-101. The unsuccessful amend ment wasjtintroduced by Rep. Alvin M.Bentley (R-Mich.). Bentley argued that more countries should be buying arms from America instead of getting them free. ; Earlier, the House defeat ed an amendment by Rep. George S. McGovern (D-S.C.) to chop an additional $200 million from the. program. Proposal Trimmed Eisenhower requested a $3,- 909,400,000 aid program for the , fiscal year starting July 1, but the Foreign Affairs committee trimmed his pro posal by $267 million, includ ing $160 millions in military aid. . Morgan mustered his sup porters today to fight an at tempt to cut 100 million dol lars from the development loan fund. ' ' .' Rep. Armistead Seldoiytt)- Aia) proposed to limit tne fund to 700 million dollars, the amount requested by the President. The Foreign Af fairs Committee voted " an extra 100 millions. Also on tap today was ac tion on an amendment by Rep. Leonard G. Wolf (D-Iowa) to include a 10-year "food for peace" program to send farm surpluses overseas to hungry people. Six Persons Killed As Autos Collide Auburn, Mass. - (DPB - Six persons, were killed on the rain slicked Massachusetts Turnpike Wednesday night when a car carrying six fish ermen collided with the auto mobile of a vacation-bound family. Three others, including two childrao, were injured in the worst accident on the toll road since it opened two years ago. All of the dead were from Springfield. Killed were: Jerome E. Makara, 57, his wife, Cora, 49; Wilbur Handfield, 55, Richard Donaldson, 29, Ar thur J. Deveno, 38, and Mar tin P. Wilson, 27. BRILL . METAL WORKS ' Cammtrcial Industrial Residential Sheet Metal Work Stainless, Galvanized and Copper Fabrication 2287 West Main - PHONE SP 2-4440 told a news conference Wed nesday . the forward guns could not fire because they lacked some hard-to-obtain parts. The Pentagon said the top gun turret had been removed from the plane, a four-engine Mercator, . and the forward guns, dismantled to make room for reconnaissance equipment. A Navy announcement in Yokosuka hours later said the forward turret has been "par tially replaced by Special de tection equipment. Gov. Long Seen Ready To Lead State From Bed New Orleans - (UPD - Gov. Earl Long was back in Louis iana today after 18 stormy days in a Texas mental ward. State officials appeared ready to let him run the state from his .hospital bed. Long : was settled in the fifth-floor room at Ochsner Fountain hospital overlooking a bridge his brother Huey built. He returned to Louis iana Wednesday night in an Air National Guard plane from John Sealy hospital in Galveston. - , Glad lo Be Back Long was wan and halting when he stepped off the plane. All he said before an elevator whisked him and his entour age, up to his hospital room was: ; "I'm glad to be back." He apparently has taken over again as governor. Lt. Gov. Lether Frazer, who was acting governor under the law while Long was out of the state, said Wednesday that as soon as Long crossed the state line "he is the gov ernor." Frazer said he would talk with Long today. Responsibility Not Placed The constitution provides that when the governor is un able to perform his duties for any reason, the lieutenant gov ernor shall become acting gov ernor. But the constitution doesn't say who is responsible for declaring the governor incapable. It appeared doubtful that any members of Long's ad ministration would care to as sume that responsibility. Long told . a . reporter at Galveston before the plane left that he would be govern or "the minute I hit the state line." His doctors said he is suf fering from tired heart muscle, among other things, and his wife said he would stay at Ochsner hospital "two weeks or longer if necessary." The tailgun was n9t fired because of a mixup on the one-channel intercom system. Mayer ordered Aviation Elec tricians Mate 2c Donald E. Corder of Jacksonville, nicste 1 a. t i i uut vvA VJll U1U uut IW ceive the order because 1$ was using the intercom at the . time to warn of the attack.' - When the mixup was straightened out the MIGs had knocked out the tail gun and wounded Corder. Corder was reported in "very good" con dition this morning despite a fractured knee and 40 shrapnel wounds. The Navy said he slept well and ate a hearty breakfast. The Navy was working at a high pitch to untangle the reasons why the guns were not usable although the plane was only 45 miles from North Korea when it was jumped by Communist MIGs. Angry parents of thej crew said the men aboard fjert "sitting ducks." Navy headquarter main tained complete silenctjon the investigation. "My hands are tied," a Navy spokesman said. Hjwas asked whether Mayer had been sent to Miho, whejrejthj) crippled plane landed, or to his home base at Iwakuni. "We don't know -fhich place he's at," th Navy spokesman said. 0 San Jose Papirt jenic jiiiiv San Jose, Calif. - OTD - The San Jose Mercury and News', idled by labor troubles for 123 days, made-plans tolay to resume operation, A management spokesman said it was impossible to say exactly when the 108-year-old newspaper would begin- pub lishing again, but he express ed hope that it would be next week. The lengthy labor dispute ended Wednesday night when ment with the company..Th group was one of three in volved in strikes against the newspaper since it was closed down on Feb. 14. o ' The stereotypers were earn ing $113.05 a week when the strike began. Under the new agreement, they , will receive $4 : weekly retroactive to March, 1958; another $3 week ly retroactive to December, 1958; and an additional $4.05 weekly in December, 1959. That would bring their week ly salary to $124.10. PENNY SAVED Woonsocket, R.'" I.-flJPI-For eight years, Antonio Valols, an electrical contractor, saved zinc-colored pennies. The other day he took his hoard down to the bank for deposit. There were 102,000 pennies. for FATHER: o - - - i 2 LIFETIME TRANSISTORS CANT WEAR OUT... CANT BURN OUT! '0 4 Personal Portable Transistors and 7 Transistor Personal Portable Two-tone Shatterproof Case LargeVi' Alnico v Speaker Automatic Volume Control Earphone Jack Operates on 4 Penlite Batteries 90-Day Factory Warrant on Parts & Labor . . with Lifetime tig Sound! t i '3 W7 Terms MODEL 897P7 you can SI SUfff ...if rrt WeStiflghOUSC TROTBRIDGE G FLYflfl 214 West Main. Phone SP 3-6241 BIG Y APPLIANCE CENTER Phone SP 3-3052 .