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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1963)
9 Locals Rummage Sale Pvthian Sisters lodge will conduct a rum mage sale Friday and Saturday, Sept. 6 and 7 from 9 a.m. lo's p.m., at 114 North Front st. Rummage Sale The St. Anne's Altar society will spon sor a rummage sale Friday and Saturday, Sept. 6 and 7, at the St. Mary's school gymnasium, West Uth and South Holly sts., from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. . Friday Sale Chrysanthe mum circle of the Neighbors of Woodcraft will hold a rum mage sale Friday, Sept. 6, at the former Gibson's Saddlery shop, 225 West Sixth St., from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. '. Three Car Collision A car driven by William M. Sammons, 42, of 155 Terrace St., Ashland, touched off a three-car collision at Siskiyou blvd. and Main st. Monday, Ashland police report ed. Sammons' auto struck the rear of a second car, knocking it forward into a third. Drivers of the other two cars were Mil Ion Leroy Schweppe, 26, of 901 u Iowa st. and James David Ham ilton, 19, of 1 Corral lane, both Ashland. Permits Issued The Medford building department has issued permits to Stan Hall to erect a S12.000 residence at 1877 Brook hurst St.; to Robert H. Kline to erect a $1,300 hangar at the municipal airport; and to Jerry Heiken to remodel a residence at 403 De Barr ave. at an esti mated cost of $1,000. Traffic Claims Three in Oregon By United Press International J Traffic accidents in Oregon; Wednesday and early today claimed at least three lives two in Douglas county. . A man identified as George Wesley Fisher, 31, Scappoose, was killed in a two-car crash on U. S. Highway 30 a mile south of Scappoose early today, ac cording to the Oregon State Po lice. Accidents in Douglas county took the lives of Willis Lee Ben ton, 52, Sutherlin, and David Ray Watson, 20, E u g e n e, Wednesday. Benton was killed when his motor scooter collided headon with a car driven by Eddie Mar vin Gibson, 57, of Roseburg on a curve one mile north of the community of Wilbur. Watson died in a Eugene hos pital of injuries suffered Monday when his car went out of con trol and hit a highway divider on U. S. Highway 99 three miles south of Roseburg. EndsTONITE i mi in ON AT 8:15 pm & 12:45 am The true story of Lt. John F. Kennedy's incredible - adventure in the South Pacific! A band of men left for dead In a flaming sea and their epic of heroism and survival! 2ND HIT ON AT 11 P M IsianD oFiove I: ' ' a'T Mm 9 IT'S the frm PLACE PL WHERE X! L k they y y ff invented! -xAW ITI IrJ RAIN IX SOUTH-Rain, that infrequent visitor to southern Cali fornia, shines on the streets of Los Angeles as freak showers and thunderstorms hit the area. The weather bureau said it was the first time that measurable rain had been recorded on a Sept. 4. (UPI) Subscribers To rtnort improper or non delivery of the Mail Tribune in Medford, phone 772-H141; Ash land call at 416 Brirtcc st or phone 482-3(101!; Yrcka, phone Victory 2-28.18 before B;4.r p m. daily And 10:30 a.m. Sunday. If regular delivery arrives shortly after you call please notify office, thus eliminating special messenger trvice. Grants Pass Council Awards Contract Grants Pass The Grants Pass city council last night awarded a contract to Gary Bailey, Grants Pass, to remodel the Community building. His bid was $3,910. ine remodeling project is puii in me jruna tinu I euicdliuil improvement program. Other buisness trans acted during the quiet council session was to adopt an ordinance cre ating a tax lien against proper ty owned by Omcr Tracy. The lien, $206.25, was for the cost to the city of removing a ?oa demned structure on the prop erty. The building was dam aged in a fire last year. WHO'S BITING HOH' MUCH OUT OF T1IK INCOME PIE? Today, you, an employee in the U.S., get more than 71 cents of every SI of our total nation income the highest ratio ever. While the speed at which you're increasing your share of the nalional income pie has slowed in the last couple of years, the percentage going to you in the form of wages, salaries and fringe benefits has continued to climb steadily throughout the entire postwar period. Most- spectacular has been the upsurge in your fringe benefits, particularly insurance. In 1948 your fringe bene fits accounted for 2.6 cents of the national income pie. Now they account for 5.9 cents. Today you, an unincorporated businessman or professional, get only 8 cents of the national income pie, the lowest ratio since tile depression years of 1929-33. The squeeze on you, the small businessman, has been relent less and your retreat would show up in an even more chilling light if the government separated your income from the professional man's, for the income of professionals has risen in recent years. Today, you, the person receiving interest on a savings ac count, bonds or other investments, arc in the best position since prc-Wotld War II. Your share of the nalional income pic is up lo 5 cents, against 1.(1 cents in 1948. During World War II, inter est rales plunged and then were frozen at extraordinarily low levels to help the U.S. Treasury finance the war at the cheapest feasible rales. But since 1950 interest rates have increased sub stantially. Who's biting how much out of the national income pie? The Department of Commerce has just issued its annual re port on the national income, disclosing that, of 19fi2's total $453.7 billion, employees got $322.9 billion, unincorporated businessmen and professionals got $36.5 billion, receivers of interest got $22 billion. But the dollar figures arc so nuge tney aeiy comprcnen sion and the story comes through only when translated into per- 1 centages. To continue: i The share going to corporation profits before taxes is down 1 to 10.4 cents against 14.7 cents during the Korean War boom. Today's profit share is slightly higher than in 1958. though, and there are signs that the squeeze on corporation profits is easing. The share going to the farmer has sunk to a slarlingly slim 2.9 cents of every $1 compared with 8 cents as recently as 15 years ago. The farmer's relative loss of the national income pic is the worst of all groups. About the only offsetting factor is that many millions have abandoned farming, so there are fewer to divide the dwindling slice. The person receiving Income in the form of rent has Inst, while the person receiving Income in the form of dividends has gninril. The share going to rental income is down from 3.3 rents in 1918 lo 2.6 rents. The share going to dividend income is up from 3.2 In 3.7 cents. The major gainers obviously have been the employee, the receiver of interest and, to a lesser extent, the receiver of divi dends. The big losers clearly have been the farmer, the corpora tion, the unincorporated businessman and, to a lesser extent, the receiver of rents. The saving grace for the losers (and the winners) is that Ihe income pie is so mum larger inai even a relatively smaucr slice can "feed" millions satisfactorily. The pie's size has more than doubled since 1948 from $223.5 billion to $453.7 billion. Here's a table showing who has been biting how much, in per centages, Wage Sal. Fringes 63. lr. mr; (Il'i 70 0r 70 ft"-. Non-lnc. Bus. Prol. 10"r 9.7"V !).2r fl.l'. R.R'i nr; ntr; Farm Owners 8r Year 1MB 1030 1HS2 1354 ll'.'ifi Vt l"M) 5B"r h.2"r 4.2'; .ir; .T7' 2 !T- 1, "O 2.T Dividends, of course, come I; Farmers Holding Grain Off Market Corning, Iowa (UPI The militant National Farmers Or ganization, which last summer staged a five-week market re bellion on livestock, today launched a holding action de- Ttlep feed 8rains off The action was ordered Wed nesday by NFO president Oren Lee Staley, who said it was aimed at "cutting off the life line" of grain, livestock and daily processors. I Efforts of the new boycott were not expected to be felt immediately. The NFO will concentrate first on soybeans, and move to other crops as they are ready for harvest. The plan calls for members of the 19-statc farm organiza tion to withhold soybeans, corn and grain sorghum from mar ket until the NFO signs con tracts for higher prices with processors. ioney s Worth By SYLVIA PORTER Copyright, Hall Syndicate Inc. Net Int. 1.9"- Rent Inr. 3.3 3.7 .1.5 r; :ifi' 3 1 3 3 2 9 2.6 Corp. Prof. Bef. Tax 138 14.7 129 11.2 12 fl'i 10 1 107 1(14" DIV Ine. ,1.2 . .18 .11 .1.3 35 3.4 3.5 3.7 2.:r; 2 4r; .in'". 3T: 4 0'- 4 4'; 4 it; out of corporate profits. MEDFORD FESTIVAL PLAYS Tonight: "Henry V." Friday: "Merry Wives of Windsor." Saturday: "Romeo and Juliet." Curtain time is 8 45 p.m. Bus leaves Medford hotel and Jackson House in Med ford at 7:30 p.m. Obituaries JOK MOORE Funeral services for Joseph first ;li(i ' however, officers said. C. Moore, 78, of 1219 Woodrow i Police checked three other ve lane, who died Wednesday, will ; hide accidents in Medford Wcd- be held at U a.m. Friday in ncsday. Two drivers were cited Conger - Morris chapel. Bishop j and no injuries were reported. T. Gerald Huffman of the I Jnmcs llov Freeman, 111, Ash Church of Jesus Christ of Lat-1 h!nd; as .c:'cd ,for 'ailure to ler day Saints will officiate. Committal will be in Central Point cemetery. Mr. Moore was born Sept. 26, 1884, in Condon, Ore., and had lived most of his life in this val ley, where he was employed as an orchard foreman. He was married Feb. 28, 1910, at Yreka, Calif., to Margaret Cornell, who j survives. Other survivors include a son, Clifford Moore, Eagle Point; two brothers, Robert Moore, Medford, and Ruben Moore, Prospect; three grandchildren, seven great grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews re siding in the valley. Pallbearers will i n-c 1 u d c Wayne Wakefield, E. P. Vilas, Kenneth Ccarley, J. E. Owens, Ernest Redington, and Henry Owens. FRED RUPERT SNYDER Fred Rupert Snyder Sr., 46, of Richmond, Calif., died Aug. 31 at a Richmond hospital. A native of Victor, Colo., he was a member of Medford Elks lodge, boilermaker's union local of Oakland and was a veteran of World War II. Mr. Snyder was a resident of Medford for 14 years attending Medford High school. He was a graduate of Oregon State col lege and was employed by Cali fornia Oregon Power company in Medford. Funeral services were held Wednesday, Sept. 4, at the Civic Center chapel in Richmond, with interment at Golden Gate National cemetery, San Bruno, Calif. Survivors include one son, Fred R. Snyder Jr., Stockton. Calif.; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rupert M. Snyder, Rich, mond, and one sister, Mrs. Helen E. Owen, Richmond. AMOS A. CASEBlEIt Amos A. Casebicr, 67, of San Jacinto, Calif., died yesterday in a local hospital. Funeral ar rangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. Morse's Chickens Rouse Capitol Hill Washington ( UPI ) Cackling on Capitol Hill? With a cock-a-doodle-doo yet. Ben Graham, an Oregon Col lege student who works in the Capitol post office, was asked by Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) to get some prize poultry from Morse's Maryland farm ready for showing at a fair. Graham crated the chickens Monday, loaded them aboard a truck and drove to work, park ing the truck in the Capitol lot. Early Tuesday morning area residents were roused by a roos ter's strident crow. They were kept awake from then until Gra ham left for work about an hour later by the clucking of the truckload of fowl. Said Mrs. Lawluit Wolfe, "it was the most amazing thing lo hear a rooster crowing on Capi tol Hill." Village Variety Itl tebl SSlOP Next jfW Notebook j, 1 fitter? MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. Two Hurt in Two Car Accident on Interstate 5 Two persons were slightly in jured in a two-car collision early today at tnc Interstate 5 Barnclt id. interchange, according tu j Medford city police. An El Sobrante, Calif., resi- j dent, Henry Klinkhammer, t3. j was cited for driving the wrong : way on a one-way street. His ; car collided with a vehicle driv en by Bobby Paris Medcalf, 22, , of route 3, box lt!(i3. Medcalf was slightly injured, 1 as was a passenger in the other j car. Mrs. Marie Lhzabeth Klink- j hanunnt ISO N!i,ithi- i,uini.ivl jifiu me UK"' way auur ins car collided with a vehicle oper ated by Vernon Edwin Craft, 31, of 178 Winema Way. The mishap occurred about 11:40 a.m. at Fifth and Ivy sts. Vehicles operated by Owen John Harkin, 42, of 1046 Easy st and Edward Junior Berge son, 33, of 423 North Grape St., collided about 8 p.m. at Colum bus ave. and Main st. Mrs. Elaine Hazel Harkin, 40, com plained of a neck pain but did not require hospitalization, offi cers said. Bergeson was cited for violation of basic rule. George Edward Brownell. Ash land, reported to police that his motorcycle was damaged by an unknown vehicle about 2:55 p.m. while it was parked on Fir st. between Sixth and Main sts. Postmistress Files Plea of Guilty Portland (UPD Mrs. Louise I. Hughes, the postmistress at Antelope, Wednesday pleaded guilty in Federal District Court to embezzlement of $1,344 en-1 trusted to her care. The 41-year-old woman was accused of converting the mon ey to her own use by failing to place the Post Office money in a treasury depository. The charges said the embez zlement occurred over an 11- month period which ended in August. airs. Hugnes waived ner rignt to have the case presented to the grand jury. Federal Judge John F. Kilkenny set Sept. 25 for sentencing. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Variable cloudiness tunicht and Kmliiy. Chance of Ihundcrshnwcrs over the mountains this evening. Low tonight bu, high Friday 5. Western Ori'gon: Fair through KridHV. cxccpl lute night mid morning log or low clouds along the const and north interior vnl vcys. Chance cit a few thunder storms over the southern inmin tains this evening. Low tonight jl!-58. high Friday 80-90. ti7-7a along the coast. Northern California: Fair through Friday except scattered thuudcrshowers in northern sec tion this evening. Warmer Friday. I. til Al. DATA TEMPERATUHE: .Mean yester day 7ft: above normal 10. Record high this date 13 in 1941 Record low this date 40 Ju l!l."i4. PRECIPITATION : 'J4 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to l:j a.m . none. Total this month none, .01 inch below normal. Total since Sept, 1. none, .01 inch below normal HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday lllcli 4:0'l CITY Ycstrr- a.m. br. day Low I'rec. l!r;. highest this a in. 73',.. Brookings 71 Grants Pass .. fi.'i VI Howard Prairie . 11.1 41 Klamath Falls 117 .18 .MF.IJFORD !in (HI Portland 8li .in Seattle Spokane .. VI Yakima . Eureka Red Bluff fill in.1 Sacramento . . . H i San Francisco .. . li'l l.ns Angeles . 70 Phornpt .. 87 Denver B'J Chicago Miami Beach New York .. Washington. D. bli fi:t .17 3 Wl itt.il rtM to Piggly Wiggly . . . OREGON The Medical IS . ' I'olu'Ylhrniia I .."r, 'i.. , ,i ro.j munia "cyte" means cell; 3H,I "h. mia" means blood, so polycy themia is a dis- ease in wnicn i ttWS yj olooci mere are . Jlr j perhaps six or - seven "v-3 tell mi n or even million red ; iff it lis instead of , llip nnrm:i1 fiio ! Idd&Sljf ! in i U ion. The Willi' I II C 3 I 1UI1 IS, "Why did so many extra cells come lino ine nlood?" In Peru anyone who has to live in the mining-town of Cci ro de Pasco, which is at an altitude of some 15.000 feet above sea level, will develop polycythemia. He needs extra red blood cells to carry more oxygen from the thin air coming into his lungs at that altitude to the tissues of his body. In these cases it is a compensatory mechanism, and a needed one. In most of the cases of mild polycythemia that I have seen, the patient began as an asthmatic, or a victim of emphysema (with dilated lung-sacs). Like the men of Ccrro de Pasco, these persons needed more red blood cells to carry enough oxygen from their poorly functioning lungs lo their body cells. One form of polycythemia is known as erythremia, or Va Qiiez's or Osier's disease, or rubra vera. The cause is nut known. The patient may have a reddened skin, due to the ex cess of hemoglobin (red blood pigment) in his arteries. He has also more than the usual volume of blood in his body, and this blood tends to be thick and sticky. Usually he has a large spleen (on the left side of his abdomen). Found ill Heart Defects Another type of polycythemia is known as Ayerza's Syndrome, and another tvpe is found with congenital heart defects. Some forms of the disease resemble leukemia in that they are due lo an abnormal activity in the ; 00ne marrow. This causes the marrow to make too many red cells sometimes as many as 13,000,000. The symptoms of a definite polycythemia are likely to be headache, dizziness, ringing in the ears, visual disturbances, shortness of breath, a sensa tion of fatigue, a weakness, bleeding from various parts of Ihe body, perhaps distress in the abdomen due to a large spleen, and perhaps swelling and pain in the legs. Some times an experienced physician will make the diagnosis from a glance at the man's red face. The liver is often enlarged. When the patient is much dis tressed, the logical treatment is to bleed him, perhaps twice a week, taking away each time at least a pint of blood. After the man's blood has thus been thinned down, he is likely to feel much belter. Sometimes many of the blood cells can be destroyed by injecting into the vessels radio-active phosphorus. Fortunately, from lime to lime, the disease may let up by it self, and remain dormant for six months or a year. Erythema Nodosum Occasionally, an anxious moth er wants to know what is ery thema nodosum, and why her daughter has it. The condition is characterized by red and lender nodules, (about as big as a silver dollar) usually on the front surfaces of the legs, below Ihe knees. These swell ings never break down or ul cerate. Usually, they clear away after some weeks, hut they can return. When lliey are present, they may be associated with some feelings of illness, per- D ft ft 771 STEWART AVENUE Knitting Worsted 45 Beautiful 7Ji it it .rfn -. a. . -IV We Have a Complete Line Of "Dorsey" Baby Products Seo tho beribboned itratch pottirinnti ind stretch tighti, plailic lined. Barbie, Midge nd Kan Inyo wardtobe selection. Have Ihe belt dressed doll in town. Roundup Emeruui Con.ult.int In Mullein Mjyii runic ttntrlfui rrnfeskur nf Medlcln Mavo Clinic (lletiMSr lid Trltiuna Syndicate, 1963) haps with pain in a joint or two. or a little fever. ...., mvl.ilpa are a ou.., -- - sien of some low-crade infec. lion or an intolerance of the oerson's tissues to some drug Thev have been observed in in one cubic1 persons who had rheumatic fe I m i 1 limeter of j ver, scarlet fever, tonsillitis, tu- uerculosis, catscratcn lever, or infections with streptococci i tiny nigniy nueciious germs), The nodules may appear after the taking of sulfa drugs, 10- flwlps. nr hromidos. The condition seldom needs I clllj illltll wioilllt-nv ulv : by itself, it tends to disappear. t Cleft l'nlale or Lin , ' Aernrriine lo a recent article by Dr. Richard C. Webster, one in 1.000 babies is born with a cleft palate or cleft lip. All such infants must be operated on. A child with a cleft down the mid dle of his palate cannot suck, and so he has trouble taking his milk. Food taken into his mouth tends to escape up through his nose. Tlie operation to repair the cleft must be followed up by work by an orthodontist, and perhaps an oral surgeon and perhaps by an ear, nose and throat doctor, a pediatrician, a speech therapist, a psychologist, and in some cases, a psychia trist. If you arc approaching men opause, you'll want lo read Dr. Alvarez' informative booklet "Menopause and Hysterecto my." To obtain your copy send 2o cents and a large, stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request to Dr. Walter Al varez, Dept. MMT, Box 957, Des Moines, Iowa, 50304. Over-the-Counter Western Stocks llv I'niled Press International Bank of America bti'j tin Boise Cascade Cal Pnc lltil Con Freight Cyprus Slines Equitable S&L . .. 1st National Bank lantzcn .. 27'. 111'. 21', 3.V, . 74 23 . 311 'i . 4', 3V, I . 2H1, . 28 ' i . n:p, .. 241, . 31 25- 377, 77 , 23 'a 321, .1 37 i I'l 311 30 H R7i, ZSi 33 Morrison Knudsen . Mutt Kennels N W. Natural Gas . Oregon Metal PGK PPM. VI. S. National Bank West Coast Tel Weyernaeuscr Investment Funds Noon quotation! on itlccted tricks: 1 11 nd Hid A Ml .Ml Bullock i4 in i,v:m Clicniicnl Fund 17.10 Ui.SJ Colonial Emu 1.90 1-i.lO KftliMi Ilowjild Slk .. 14. JO 15.U.1 I'ldplMv Ui.Hi) 1B.2H Kiuirifunciil.il Invent. 10 2.i .2'A Group Sec Avia-Klcc 7.04 Group Sec Com St k 13 ii;f Kcy.slono H-3 H(.7."i Keystone H-4 l().ir Kcv.slone K-2 ,r 4." 7.72 ' 15 14 18.27 1 1 08 3 .11.1 24.4.1 !4.!HI 1 7.0.1 4.11.1 H.42 11.08 SI. Oil 8.38 10.03 14 71 781 5117 7.78 1341 Keystone S-l '22 4 1 Keystone S-S Kt lid Keystone S-;t 1.) M2 Keystone H- l -I 41 Mnvh Inv Growth Stk (Ml: National Gruwth Slorks tV-l'.k'C .. . United AtM'nni Unllrd Inrolnr .. t'nitfd Sficni'C Valtir Line I lie Variable Wcllinutm, II .1 1 lll.'il 7(i!t 1.V22 12 111 7.13 .'. Hi .. 7 20 14 Oil Portland Livestock rorllHiid (UPH USDA C'Httlc '21. Not enough 5!ea lo establish IrndinR. Calves none. llous 2'i. Not enough siilcs to ei Ifibli'h IrarllnK Sheep none. t.i!,,.la'.i.i.in.i.ii!i:.'nj..wii;n iinlliMiittilt IHllll Ik . Itml. tin. SAFEWAY STORE 699 tail Jackion St. Mcdtord I HESSE 1 1 mm n Colors 87 4 nt. Skein . DOLLS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1WU The Family Council t.dltur'f no'e: Ttiv Camlly I'ounrtl ennsutt of t ludir. rhvr Hatriht, llirre rlericviiieii. tnrtr edllori and a wtnntn't rdllnr. l.rl a-lirlr Ik a Minimarv if a family dlsaKrtemtnt prntrd hi Ilia ' ouncil. T.i,.' Cuuni'll dral with pmulentft. ntanr and minor, ituntprd bv culdanre rnuntrliiri and knrlal work'H. Edited by Mlk. Alma Denny. ICopyrliht b Oeuril t'eaturef :orp.) Mae A. 1 say keep her at someone fails to appear when home no matter how hard it is. needed. Her position, then, adds Norman O. What h a p- pens if she tails down and no one's there? Mae A. My brother and I disagree about the best arrange ment for our mother. She's 79 and still in the apartment she shared with our father who died four years ago. A full-time maid assists her, and Norman and I fill in on the days off. Due to a mild stroke, she needs more nursing attention. That can be solved by changing the help ar rangement. iN'ornian G, What Mac has not told vou it that Mother and mniris rliin'f hnimnnio When! she's between maids, care of her is up to Mae and myself, and we each have our own fam ily responsibilities. Now that Mother mustn't be alone at all, the only safe place for her is a residence home for the aged. We must be practical, not sen timental. The Council: Perhaps a gen eration hence this problem will have an attractive solut i o n. Bright signs of what's coming may cheer the young, but the aged are caught in the lag. This leaves a big gap between the years added to one's life by i science, and the facilities for enjoying those years. One of the happy trends is Special Hous ing, such as Crestvicw Club in Toledo, Ohio, where 2000 apart ments are being sponsored by Flower hospital, and Meadow Lakes Village in Highstown, N. J., where 218 garden apart ments are being prepared. Be sides safety and medical care, these accommodations cater to individual tastes and offer var ied intellectual and spiritual treats ... At present, however, we agree with Norman that his mother's plight will be less pre carious, physically at least, in a well - equipped home. Unfor tunately, there is no ideal course. Mae's suggestion may work for a while, that is, until FRaNKSiNama ComEBiow v Your Horn U Starts Tomorrcw MATINEES EVERY DAY AT 2 P.M. BOX OFFICE OPENS 1:45 am JSk The Film aim W'f j BEACH ' ? . "il"3 -'-ivfmvisioN' . coujr : w-". bob CUMMINGS " dordiw MaiPNe ffw ' " "o.r.::.... Vi ..'I.- "M HALL, JU. ZmWJi IMM . -A 9 up to a postponement of the in evitable. Portland Produce Portland 1UPI1 Dairy market: Ecet lo retailer: AA extra larse la-jlc: AA larcc 15-40c: A large 41-tbi:: A A medium J7-42c: A imall 23-l!9c; cartons 1-.1C hifihcr. Bultcr to retailers: AA and A prints tide; cartons 3c higher: B prints tije. Cheese Imodium ruredl To re tailers: 46-4Bc: processed Ameri can 3-10 lb. luaf. 4U-48C. Portland (UPll Dressed chick ens No. I grade dressed lo re tailcrs: Fryers, whole irawn. 30- 37( 111 I on 111. II,. ih - hnn. light type, whole drawn '22.270 ."" ,vPe rat-llP. 24- -Be lb.: heavy whole 36-3!lc lb. Sffl That Brines Back The Bellv Laueh ,iiw- Wnttw 0-ftr Ifd ftOPRT YOUNGSON r B5: "1 aa-MaaiHMaaBaiHV SS! BEAUTIES! I IIS KWEST Ul MKT J,V FRICHTUtlHS 1IUI I I imUmtiJZZA S o CI O o o O o