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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1959)
IF YOU'RE NOT YoungTender mm ROAST shank Vi or XjU11 Meat Prices in This Ad Good Through Saturday, Oct. 31, 1959. ALSO PLENTY of?te44er OREGON GROWN This contest won oriconiah ontT Ground Beef 3 lbs. S1.15 10 $?75 lb. pkg. OXNARD NO. 1 MT(Q)ES Medium Size for Slicing ' or Salads X SWEET BELL Sweet and Mild For Tasty Stuffed Peppers SNOBOY yf SNOBOY V SNOBOY , Texas Fancy I c .VI VI EXTRA FANCY YAKIMA If SUNKIST W RUBY RED (orInges apples ( lemons (. mm ) Tha Revr crop of nuts is now coming in. You can depend on your Groceteria to have the best quality available. .,1 ... TRADING AT THE GROCETERIA whole leg TH,S NEW 1960 FALCON OVER 50 OTHER BIG PRIZES ENTRY BLANKS AT OUR STORE llthis fryerA I OREGON Fresh Made LEAN $jrfA HALLOWEEN GOODIES Spiced Gup Cakes PahLia Decorated bOOKieS Halloween Cake Donuts 59c Raised Donuts Crullers Maple Bars, etc. 6 1 C U SJ lb. V mm -grain fed o)(fiPFf small sixe lb. Caveman or Tasty Brand Skinless U.S. Graded Choice Steer T-Bone Steak Swift's Premium Brand Sliced Bacon Swift's Premium Brand Bologna U.S. Graded Choice Steer Chine Bone Removed Prime Rib Roast from Groceteria Bakery 35 I for d.z. 6tr 3? 65- 6 , 35' UfctOKAItU HALLOWEEN CAKE GROCETERIA FRESH PRODUCE If it's Packaged Ready for Freezing for Year-Round Use YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH! BUTT Vi Franks Aged to Perfection Well Trimmed Cello Sealed Old Fashioned Smoked Chunk Style Jumbo Sil 98 U a fresh fruit or vegetable TAKE A NEVi LEASE OH LIFE WITH FRESH FRUITS They keep your weight down . . . and your steam upl OCEAN SPRAY For Gay Color FailCy! j-'p . and Flavor Magic Vy"" 3 c 3 U1 JC 1 .49' lb. Full Pound Pkg. 8c 3i)c Buy It ii the Piece and Save Short Cut Championship Game District 5B ST. MARYS vs. MERRILL Sat., Oct. 31 7:00 PJVL Med. High Stadium we probably have it! London ay It Br GREGORY JENSEN United Press International London 4DPD The Germans bombed London in a hap hazard, piecemeal way. Plane, buzz bombs and V-2 . rockets indiscriminately peppered the sprawling city with destruction. London is being rebuilt in the same way - haphazardly and piece by piece. Architects shudder at many of the new buildings. Civic planners are appalled. Build ings are springing up with no overall plan and in architec tural styles that defy descrip tion. . The rate of construction in London today Is greater than at any time since the war. And the job is far from fin ished. London's ordeal began Sept. 7, 1940. On that Saturday the German. Luftwaffe set out to destroy what was then the biggest city in the world. The attacks came almost daily un til May 11, 1941. Later in the war, pilotless M and V-2 weapons renewed the destruc tion. Germans Failed The Germans failed to crush Londonbut the damage was tremendous. Fire took a greater toll than high explosives. One incendi ary attack started a fire which gutted an area a quarter of a mile square in the heart of London. Firefighters often had no choice but to let fires burn themselves out. Reconstruction had been going on for 15 years, but even today ruins ean be found in almost every section of the metropolis. Bombsites gape in the busiest of business sec tions. Yet, the amount ef re building has been staggering. In all of Britain, 3,245,678 new houses and apartments have been built since the war, and a big chunk of them we in London. New office build, ings have risen, too, in every part of the city. Nearly all the new build ings are variations of the box. Critics deplore their lack of originality, of experiment, of esthetic solutions to architec tural problems. 'Ancient Modern' Diverse building codes, tra ditional British conservatism, the need for haste, the scare-, ity of materials and money -all these have contributed to an architectural style which some call "ancient modern" and others "conservative con temporary." ' There, has been little or no civic planning. The concept of residential areas integrated with shopping centers and playgrounds has been neglect ed. The London County Coun cil, the city's only over-all ad ministrative body, has built dozens of low-rent apartment developments. But only one of its nroiects could be caiiea the product of "city plan ning." This is the Barbican project, a multi-million-dollar plan to convert 35 acres of rubble be hind St. Paul's cathedral into a "dream" neighborhood. The Barbican project is in sharp contrast to the rest of London's rebuilding, it is architecturally daring, and it is carefully planned. But there's one thing wrong with it Barbican exists only nn naoer. No ground has been broken for it, and officials say it may be years before woric can be started. Search Abandoned For Three Miners Tonopah, Nev.-flJM - Search was abandoned for three men buried 13 days ago by a cave in at the Silver Peak mine No. 3, about 90 miles west of Tonopah. The miners, presumed dead, were Gene Roberson, 33, of Mina, Nev.; Samuel Sickles, 45, of Tonopah; and William Delorme, of Redding, Calif. Nevada Mine Inspector Mervin Galagher halted res cue efforts "with reluctance" after meeting with 50 rescue workers and Sam L. Levine, president of the U.S. Milling and Mineral Corp.. . ; , . ; PUBLIC HEARING SET Washington-MUPD The Fed eral Power Commission Wednesday set a public hear ing for Dec. 7 on controversial fish facilities at the Idaho Power Co.'s Hells Canyon and Oxbow dams on the Snake ri ver of Idaho and Oregon. Vancouver, Was h. (DW Tony Fernandez, former city councilman of Longview and a Cowlitz county lumberman, was found innocent "Wednes day of morals charges brought by a 15-year-old girl. - - Being Rebuilt in Was Bombed-Haphazard 6 REBUILDING PROGRESS This panoram- mans bombed London in a haphazard, piece- ic view, from St. Paul's Cathedral, shows meal way. London is being rebuilt in the the progress which has been made in re- same way haphazardly and piece by piece, building parts of London which were badly damaged during World War II. The Ger- (UPI Telephoto) 8. ' NAVY HELICOPTER This is the first copter. The turbine powered aircraft is now photo released of the Kaman HU2K, the undergoing flight tests by the manufacturer navy's new high speed, all-weather heli- at Bloomfield, Conn. (UPI Telephoto) Quotes From the News By United Press International Chapel, Hill N.C. President Sekou Toure of Guinea, asserting that his young African nation considers the dis tinction between "free and colonial people" more important than the difference between East and West: ' , "You can't ask a poor man to choose between the gold and diamonds he finds in New York or Moscow. He must take them where he finds them and do the best he can." Knoxville. Tenn. Edgar Steel Corp., explaining that he signed a separate agreement with the United Steelworkers Union to avoid sending strikers back to work under an injunction: "I don't want an arbitrator or a court to do my business, Chicago John D. Southworth, son-in-law of missing Fed eral Judge W. Lynn Parkinson, speaking of Parkinson s mysteriouns disappearance: 1 ' "What makes it so bad is that he was a man of such routine that you could set your clock by him." Washington President Eisenhower, : expressing . dismay over Cuban Premier Fidel Castro's bitter attacks on the United States: : ' " "W.r ic 11 eaunirv that vou would believe, on the basis of our history, would be one Former Ambassador Said Critically III Washington -' (UPD - Waller Bedell Smith, retired four- star general and former am bassador to Russia, is report ed critically ill at Walter Reed Army hospital. A hospital spokesman said Wednesday the 64 -year -old former diplomat and military leader was "critically ill from pneumonia and lung abscess." He was admitted to the hos pital Oct. 13. Yo - ho - if it's a bottle of Snider's SnnnaD(Eno5s WHEREVER GOOD FOOD IS SOLD! Tho'rsdaV, "Oct. 29, 195 i v 1. K. Kaiser, president of Kaiser of our real friends." Great Books Group To Meet Monday The Medford Great Books discussion group plans to open its second year of meetings next Monday," Nov. 2, at 7:30 p7m. at radio station KMED. The meeting will be for or ganizational purpose's, and to discuss and lay plans for the 1959-60 year. . Anyone inter ested in the Great Books pro gram is invited to attend. ' Last year, the group varied betwen 10 and 30 persons in ho ON XL j MAlC TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.- Same a j , mm, i 1 OODflnn- 1 --!?jS Wall Street Chatter New York -(LTD- The vision of good things to come in the 1960s remains undimmed in the investment mind, says W. E. Hutton & Co. Nearby and intermediate uncertainties resulting from the steel strike, tight money and other situations are re garded widely as being mere ly temporary restraining fac tors, Hutton notes. . Stock Trend Service recom mends sale of Chrysler and Container Corp., and pur chase of Martin Co. . Reynolds & Co. says the sudden interest in Sheraton Corp. is due to belated recog nition of the company's im-. pressive past record. "Total assets are now 5350 million and by the end of the present fiscal year may be qjose to $400 million." The Fitch Survey cautions investors to adopt "an in creasingly selective" approach for investment purposes, with commitments urged only, where "sound statistical det erminants" are present, and where values have been tem porarily deflated by the . im pact of recent unsettlements. ; Spcaf & Staff advises jpu& chae of Hagan Chemical, White Stores. Gillette, Ameri can Electric Power, American Machine & Foundry, Marine Midland, and Monsanto Chemical: '