Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1959)
o 9 . e oe qO o O O Oo e O i i i j 3 IF YOU'RE NOT TRADING AT THE GROCETERIA YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH! e i -I -Ml I : 0 Young Tender Grain Fattened BONED AND ROLLED MK1 NO WASTE TO BUY! 4 to 6 lb. Average Mil MEAT PRICES IN THIS AD GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, OCT. 24 tariffs Premium Brand Sealed Cello Package unless Franks FULL POUND PACKAGE U.I. Graded Choice Steer Bound Steak Cut Thick or Thin YOUR CHOICE 8C Shift's Premium Brand It's Boneless, Waste-Free 3-LBS. . solid eating Pwlly Cooked roady f eat Picnics pleasure If Guaranted Fresh Pack Pacific Oysters FULL PINT m JAR U.t. Graded Choice Steer Sump Roast Boned and Rolled lytra Fancy" No." t - Large Meat Type Whole Bodied" Frying Chickens f ogue Valley Full Flavored Mild Cure Cheddar Cheese U lb. Armour's Star Brand THICK uged rn UV Old Fashioned Smoked BAG Package FOU THRIFTY MEALS THAT TASTE JUST RIGHT ,2;,b-W Sealed ' ;Jsj Package b2f - FirsBn -Produce- . BAKE. &L& j j FRY, BOIL .;. Xjppfr ': . or MASH 'EM ' . . i . . . RED RIVER VALLEY U.S. No. I Dryland RED SKIN reTMiis IF YOU HAVE NEVER TRIED THEM YOU ARE IN FOR A TREAT. IF YOU HAVE TRIED THEM YOU KNOW THEY CANT BE BEAT. vy ibs. in Mesh Bags or Bulk-Your Choice Loophole Described In Justice Overseas ! VOCADOS fippLEs , s! jft i ST" .LtW L) Vakim, . Idaho Local ; W$S APPLES . For eating, cooking, salads big ones, little ones QQjJUitiMH Zucchini Squash Z"---" 39-;., ; 9;,n (p)c -JLM for "trick on treat" : "" pep yams Wt- ROASTED v : REYAMSre PEANUTS 3, lls f ! .53-? A g) c I tf 35c lb. Z lk - L Washington -UPD- The jus tice department told the Su preme Court today that a 1957 ruling on courts-martial has allowed civilians to go un punished for crimes commit ted overseas with the armed forces. Government attorney Oscar Davis gave this report to the high tribunal as arguments began on four cases dealing with the power of the military to try civilians abroad. He said there just isn't any "ac ceptable alternative" to the military trials. Show Keen Interest " Chief Justice Earl Warren and several of the associate justices showed keen interest in Davis's statement and ask ed for details. The 1957 ruling held that in a capital case a service wife accompanying her hus band abroad is not subject to trial by court-martial. The de cision was reached in the cas es of two wives convicted of murdering their husbands. Justice John M. Harlan asked Davis if the armed forc es had gone ahead with trials in non-capital cases since the high courts' ruling. -:, 'Davis said the answer was yes but that the military had been "exhibiting a great deal of restraint." In 1956, he ex plained, there were 121 over seas courts-martial of depend ents and other civilians, but the number dropped to 76 in 1957 and to 34 in 1958. Offenses Increased "The number of offenses has increased, however," Da vis said. Warren asked if those not tried by the military were brought into any other court. "No, they were not tried at all," Davis answered. justice Fo 1 1 e r Stewart wanted to know if these peo ple committed "the less ser ious offenses." Davis said in general this was true, although some "min or larcenies" may have been included in the unpunished group. But he added that "no capital cases or homicides" have gone unpunished. Kennedy Acts 'Very Much' Like a Candidate : Portland (DPD Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.) was in New York City today after a busy two-day visit to Oregon in which he acted very much like a presidential candidate although he' said he had not yet decided whether to seek the nomination. Kennedy, 42, who plans another visit to primary-conscious Oregon next month, says . he'll announce in Janu ary -whether - or not he will seek the "Democratic nomina tion, A ; He made several speeches in Salem' and Portland during his two-day .stay on topics ranging from India and Red China to home buying. , : i . 'At his final public appear ance Wednesday he urged be fore t h e Portland Realty board an increase in the fed eral mortgage guarantee lim it and expansion, of the urban renewal program. : . v He said today's $22,500 mortgage limit was not com parable to the $16,000 limit of the early days of the Federal Housing act. He said it denied benefits of the insured mort gage system to many home buyers who would have been eligible in the early days of the act. TR'S FRIEND DIES ' New York (UPD Carl Run gius, 90, an outstanding wild life painter and former hunt ing partner of President Theodore Roosevelt, died Tuesday of a stroke. Thunday, Oct. 22, 1959 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or, 1 .- O f iff U IPli 8 ' J? KILLS BEAR Mrs. Georgia Wilson, of Sardine creek,. i shown with the 13Q-pound bear she shot and killed in W Sardine creek area. Mrs. -Wilson and her husband, iim, went deer-hunting recently, and Wilson went deeper imj the. woods, while Mrs. Wilson remained near the 'trail. Lit in the day she heard a growl, turned and saw the bear. Sfct shot it with her 30-30 rifle, then slit its throat and vtiwt for her husband to ' return. . Hunters in the Sardine crt area report a scarcity of deer this year. "They said iV ably is due to hounds in the area. Migrant Workers Die in Auto Craft e i . I f I i k Klamath Falls -ft!PD- Two migrant workers were killed 22 miles southeast of here Wednesday when their car missed a curve and crashed. Four other persons were in jured. Dead were William Turner and Willie Roberson. Police said their ages and home towns were unknown. Injured were Rudolph Mash,: Henry Marks, Andrew Wallace and Willie fori, driver and owner of tfi vehicle. Jones was tret and released at Klamath Vtl ley hospital. The other thr were held for treatment. The employment aervict office at Klamath Falfe stud Turner was believed rom Yakima; Wash., and Robtrson from Stockton, Calif. Home towns of the other men ;ere not listed. ' HUB mi saGcua? fisr? iksq gs o (zvx?x (50836 &m03i) OS (3CCB9 G&GG f i. I iwStr9ss B AND MATCHING BOX SPRINGS L o 310 firm, retifint coiH, pw ipeoot T j Za J balance center upprt! Pr-bt Mlg$ta j t wh borders yjj0gK - ' T Postwe is a PLUS WiA Ae , i: 'Ym- Posturepedic . - Vj?4nltjp EXTRA FIRM . . . fo help your pasture ' : HVv s!lrSftjTl3iS5 j w''e y s'eeP Des'9necf fr WeWf fc . , ; . jEg?Hpr': I fT-Zt-i jZrZP America's finest luxury mattress, the Seely Pourpedic , j 11 fl $&&ll0i'bni extra-firm support with supreme sleeping comfort. sags. Never slumps. That's why it helps correct mnd prevent . , backoche'. Sleep now wrrh spine straight -muscles relaxed. K "Vspwf J Ung-weorfng quality, price to sveJ Sj , Motctting Founclitton $79.d o 2 ssssssssssllsssssssssstsslsMBMMBBi OUR SPEOAL GIFT.. Come m amd Ewter Now . . . notlWrtg o bey. AU EXPENSE ONE WEEK VACATION FOR 2 AT THE FABULOUS FOUNTAINBLEAU HO?R BY DELTA AIRLINES DIRECT TO MIAMI FREE POSTUREPEDIC to b awaked o om of oof kicky cuitse LUCAS & IHIdDWAKED Furniture Hiway 99 Central Point Phone NO 4-1220