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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. THURSDAY. JUNE 16. I860 . s MEDFORD, MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. THURSDAY, JUNE 18, A 7 n Next to our own local corn, this is the best! How about hot buttered corn for supper? Arvin California VS. i'im .uiiii!fjjj'BwW 5 DOZEN l Ok nn nr n r Low, low prices ... plus Thrifif Green Stamps! 6th and Grape Big Free Parking Lot SUMMER STORE HOURS: OPEN Every Night Until 9:00 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK GROCETERIA PRODUCE for wide variety - top quality - fair prices! y . MILD ONIONS Dry, yellow new crop What li a Picnic or Cookout without onion bt It Stoak or Burgan. Local Bunch Baby Beets or Tender Turnips 2 Bunehe$ 6-. SUNDAY, JUNE 19th, IS FATHER'S DAY- TDBTflT HIM his favorite foods- and bring home: big savings, Wonderful for greens YOUR CHOICE JO l-L GREEN ZUCCHINI SQUASH How long has It been since you've enjoyed" some squash? Red, Ripe WATERMELON Warm or cold, Whole or Halves GUARANTEED RIPE! sMfHHSl fittVit MM BIRDS EYE FROZEN FOOD SALE! THIS IS THE PEAK OF THE LOCAL CROP! tlx ' M BOD o Birds Eye FROZEN FOOD full r..j at a A cups t'l i n II Check our crate prices !! O N Birds Birds Birds Birds Birds Birds Birds Birds Birds Birds Birds Eye CUT WAX BEANS Eye CUt CORN 9-ox. Eye MIXED VEGETABLES .10-or. Eye CUT GREEN BEANS 9-oi. Eye FRENCH STYLE BEANS. 9-oi. Eye BUTTER BEANS 10-or. Eye CHOPPED BROCCOLI lO-oi. Eye FRENCH FRIES 9-oz. Eye TURNIP GREENS 10-oz. Eye CHOPPED SPINACH 10-ox. Eye LEAF SPINACH 10-oi. pkgs. 00 Worth 100 FREE Thrifty Green Stamps Clip this coupon and redeem at GROCETERIA with any purchase. Offer good Friday, Saturday & Sunday June 17-18-19. (One coupon to a customer) Name Address FROZEN PEAS or PEAS Cr CARROTS 10-oz. pkgs. nnpinrinnrmpannDaDaDODaD If you're Not Shopping at the GROCETERIA You're Paying Too Much! Birds Eye Asparagus Cuts 10-ot. pkg. 43c 2 for 79e Birds Eye Asparagus Spears, 10-ox. pkg. 51c 2 for 95c Birds Eye Brussels Sprouts lO-oi. pkg. 37c 2 for 65c Maxwell House Instant COFFEE fO-oz. 39 jar 1 Kiwi's Tomato Sauce 8 Ounce Cans SUPERBA GARBANZO BEANS Wonderful in Summer Salads 15-Ox. Cans SPICE ISLAND 10 ounce Red or White Wine Vinegar BOTTLE 1 0-ounce Tarragon or Garlic Flavor BOTTLE Del Monte Salmon Fancy Pink No. 1 Can Lucky Whip Dessert Topping 9V4-oi. Can STEINFELD'S Relishes Hamburger Hot Dog or Sweet Pickle - 11-oz. Jar , Reg. 27c s. too! Sgj Birds Eye 1 frozen food Birds Eye PEACHES ; 10-oz. pkg. 71 I Birds Eye RHUBARB '. .16-oz. pkg. iCIL J Birds Eye STRAWBERRIES 10-oz. pkg. PL' I Birds Eye ITALIAN BEANS 10-oz. pkg. I Birds Eye SMALL DMAS 10-oz. pkg. pkgS. K Birds Eye FORDHOOK LIMAS 10-oz. pkg. ' li Birds Eye BROCCOLI SPEARS 10-oz. pkg. ff I Birds Eye SUCCOTASH 10-oz. pkg. i I llll J Birds Eye BLACKEYE PEAS 10-oz. pkg. II Birds Eye ONION RINGS 10-oz. pkg. M 89 Viirds EyTNNj FROZEN M , Orange Juice CoLRFil Su Wli Yes now you get double savings when you shop at Southern Oregon's favorite supermarket. In addition to famous Gro ceteria cash savings, you now get the bonus of Thrifty Green Stamps! Now more than ever we say: "If you're not shopping at the Groceteria you're paying too much." 1. Thrifty Green Stamps can be redeemed for either cash or premiums 2. Thrifty Green Stamp re demption store is just two blocks south of Groceteria at 26 South Grape Street 3. It takes only 40 pages to fill a Saver Book 4. Redemption store offers a wide selection of premiums. . 5. Over 8,000 merchants give Thrifty Green Stamps throughout 11 Western States. (If you are taking a trip you can save them all along the way). 6. Thrifty Green is the fastest growing stamp, plan on the coast. With 4 Cans of Concord Chunk Tuna W U.S.D.A. 2mrjf ff CHOICE "pk jj Blade Cuts . . . Beef m POT IH M fl fTrT m PI 1 J n I I KoundDone... Th sS-ST . FREE CANS $100 Thrifty Green Stamps 50 FREE with 1 AEE.. DC M 4-KOII B Cm Packs U 50 Thtr FREE NYLONS WITH 2 PAIRS PENNEBAKER Supermarket Frozen STRAWBERRIES 10-oz. pkgs.-Reg. 2 for 45c (o) (0) I SAVE 24c Spring Lamb Sale LEG 0 LAPvlB Ask about lamb for your freezer. Small Size LOIN CHOPS Try 'em charcoal broiled U.S.D.A. Choice BONED and ROLLED lb. U.S.D.A. Choice Cut as you desire 89 !b. Young and Tender Liver Good and good for you! Rogue Gold Bulk Cheese MILD CHEDDAR vyy u Fresh Fry Reg. Price 79c ingl CRESCENT TOPPING 2 for Snider's or Jorgcnsen's FOLGERS COFFEE a T7 FLAV-R-PAK LEMONADE 5iSSc 12-Oz. Cant Frozen Reg. 23c can FROM OUR BAKERY DEPARTMENT ORANGE CHIFFON CAKE SMALL SIZE Plain 59c Iced . . . 69c LARGE SIZE Plain........'.. 98c Iced $1.19 Investment Firm Sees Nation's Best Economic Decade Ahead By ELMER C. WALZER UPI Finsncial Editor New York - (UPD - Domin ick & Domlnlck, 90 years old, looks ahead to Its and the na- jP"-"""""! 1 1 o n's best q e u a ae ue- t w e e n now and the firm's centennial in 1970. The in v e stment banking and b r o k e r age firm has pub lished a ten Elmer WiIm year Invest ment forecast which was re leased on its anniversary Wednesday. It looks forward to these ten years as a time when vol ume on the New York Stock Exchange and other exchang es will nearly double and the number of investors Increase even more rapidly. The firm is taking its own projections seriously and pre paring for the increasing busi ness in stocks by training personnel, adding equipment, and Increasing space. It is making greater use of electronic data processing and record keeping equipment. Also it is expanding its se curities vault to provide space for investment clients' secur ities. Noting that common stocks have been the correct invest ment instrument of recent years, the firm holds that steady growth and prosperity are favorable for their con tinued demand-but with care ful selection. "The gross national prod uct appears to face expansion at an annual average rate of at least 3 per cent, or 40 per cent when compounded over the next ten years," the firm says. Industries Favored During this period invest ors should allocate most of their equity funds to indus tries which face a growth in sales of at least 80 per cent. The firm warns that cy clical fluctuations are inev itable, but adds that for those able to assume the risks, the period purchase and sale of characteristically cyclical is sue is a reasonable course. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF- "T GUESS we're going to have to eat out tonight," a gas-i- tronome told his friend. "My wife just phoned to tell me our dinner had been badly burned." "I hope you didn't lose anything else in the fire," said the friend. "Oh, the fire wasn't at our house," explained the gastronome. "It was at the delicatessen shop." No conformist is Dams Edith Sitwell, aeaaoned English poet and bellwether of London literati. "The reason I am called eccen tric," she explains carefully, "is that I refuse to be taught my job by a lot of pipsqueak literary critic. and lecture managers. I will not allow people to bore me. I am more alive than most. I am an electric eel In a pond full of flatfish." Ray Barwood Insist, that his golf game Is Improving. He now ahoot. In the low hell, and damns. C1M0 by Bennett Cut, Distributed by King IT sutures Syndicate Wall Street Chatter New York-WTD-Despite the recent sharp market rally, the balance of 1960 could con tinue to be a disappointing period for those who have overdlversified their hold' ings, the Investors Advisory Institute indicated this week, The Institute said that while the Dow - Jones Industrials didn't reach their peak until January 1960, the shares of many key Industry groups had been experiencing price erosion for more than a year. The institute blames the distortion on the fact that the D. J. industrial average Is not truly representative of a broad ly diversified portfolio but is somewhat more Influenced by the behavior of a smaller group of individual and often high-priced stocks that move on the basis of independent factors. Church Training Deadline Passes Reynolds St Co. says that with all due respect to the ac complishments of Barnes En gineering's management, the stock seems generously over priced in relation to current earning power. Salem - (UPD - The deadline has passed for filing for' a re hearing of a Supreme Court decision permitting release for children from school for outside religious training. The Salem school district failed to ask for the rehearing. The Supreme Court clerk's office said the deadline was p.m. Tuesday. Earlier school district of ficials indicated the rehearing would be requested. The court ruled in favor of Salem parent who contend ed a law allowing him to have his son released for religious teaching was constitutional. The school district contended the law was unconstitutional. Inflation which has been "a paramount market influence in recent years is losing its force and a decade of relativ. stability may be expected, uominick & Domlnlck says. "The skill with which mon etary and other control. avoided excesses and kept the past decade free nf serimi. re cession, should Increase with experience," it holds. Rising Consumer D.m.nd In the coming decade the investment bank sees rising production and demand for consumer goods which In. turn will call for more pow er, better machines, and ac companying business expan sion. New drive must be.added to the economy, the firm holds, looking for this change from two major sources-greater spending for research and more rapidly changing pat terns of our people and their income. Research by 1950 was below the $3 billion mark, the firm notes. It anticipates a $15 billion rate within a year or two and ?35 billion for re search by 1970. "The accelerating scientif. Ic effort of the country." save D o m 1 n ic k & Dominick, "should bring a , substantial addition to the stream of new discoveries which obsolete old products and processes, a. mey Bring new ones to in crease sales, reduce costs, and Improve efficiency." Larger Labor Force Sustained growth, reaulr- ing increasing production and production efficiency is ex- pected to come from a 15 per cent larger labor force and an increase of 75 per cent in the machinery investment per worker, plus at least a doub ling of power to run the ma chines. Changing patterns of popu lation are expected to add substantially to the consumer markets of the country, "but the increasing wealth of the families of the United States more powerful force." says the firm. It looks for an average family income of $9,500 by 1970, and a faster rise is look ed lor in discretional income which is the amount left over after the family pays for es sentials. "The people in the United States (212 million of them, by 1970) already have the highest living standard in the world; and this standard will rise higher and higher," say. the firm. e- Growlh Firms Llsl.d The booklet lists Industrie. which the firm consider, of superior growth possibilities. And an investor should not hesitate to buy a stock selling at 25 times earnings when earnings of the company are expected to increase rapidly, it says. Among the groups listed a. representing growth possibil ities are electric public util ities, electronics, computers, chemicals and plastics, drugs, metals, construction and de fense. Also It lists a group of stocks under the general heading "for better living"- the so-called leisure group. ' Winslow, Cohu & Stetson believes that Utilities It In dustries Corp., the former New York Water Servici Corp., Is an attractive pur chase with slight risk on th downside, The company plan: an aggressive program of ac qulsitlons and Investments ii Industrial companies, Wins low says. Court Records DISTRICT COURT Edwin A. Brown, failure to dli play declared weight, 8. Richard L, Kexer. angling In pr hlbltcd area, 930. Albert P. 1. Borde, tnadtquat brakes, $10. Herbert C. Smith, violation c bailc rule, 925. Robert William Slrader, failui to dim llghti. 117.30. Troy R. Spaur, fallurt to itop fc light, 910. James William Ball, fallurt t top, 910. Daniel L. Gambia, fallurt to dim light. 97.A0. Matthew 3. Wlnnlngham, InauN flclent aafaty chalna, 910. CIRCUIT COURT Margaret Ann Harding va. John L, Harding, dlvorca complaint, Catharine Jennings vi, Forest R. Jennings, divorce complaint. Barbara Jean Mccormick vs. Charles Everett McCormlck, di vorce complaint, Alzlna Leavetl vs. Herbert C.Lea, veil, divorce complaint. Cnarleen Dlckerson vi. Charley Bill Dlckerson, divorce complaint. Gall Reld Hammond va. Larry Gene Hammond, divorce complaint. C. Floyd Moffett vs. Sarah AN vlra Moffett, divorce complaint. MARRIAOR LICENSE APPLICATIONS Dnvld Rush Carter, 730 Broad it., Medford, and Patricia Eleane Kld- Harley Virgil Dressier, 414 Ar ea din it,, Medford, and Helen Marion iamperi Johnson, 733 Hazel st., Central Point. Daniel Ray Hargls, Portland, and Joanne Florence Roohr, route 4, box SI, Medford. Ronald J. MiKenna, 104 Florence ave.. Medford. and Mary Catherine .am a.-. '. Q. What do you mean CLEAN.., CLEAN...CLEAN? A. WE MEAN THAT THE CRISPEST, DRIEST MARTINI UNDER THE SUN IS MADE WITH CLEAN-TASTING fUlSCHMANN'S OIN $3.90 45 QT. ICE CREAM Vacuioi 7f G rumba ch, 309 Portland tve Med- wmui mit mm ttm . n m iuikuwh mm m.tamta lord. o o o o o