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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1963)
MDDFOHD MAIL TRHIUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON THURSDAY, SEPTEMIIER 19, 1963 PIGGLY WIGGLY IS Chuck Boned and rolled beef chuck roast from slowly-aged U.S.D.A. Choice lean beef. lb. DUBUQUE PUllMAN STYLE Canned Picnics 1,89 3 to 4-lB. AVERAGE NORBEST Hen Turkeys b 49c OPEN-FIRE FLAVOR Armour Star Frocks 49c DEI MONTE Sausage Rolls, 39c 31.00 U.S.D.A. CHOICE BLADE CUT Beef Pot Roast 59c gSB 11 M IPIGGLY AVIGGLYBMHH'HM I I! ! DEMONSTRATION ! w-?iV-.. llsf FRIDAy 10 a.m.-Sp.m p Roast " " I i . mm "H I stamps! ,f U.S.D.A. if M Choice Beef I f f jH ' 1 ib., L.JU l 0 c v i nj,i tswa r'- i v i i Rsaa nm i . . v "r""v Pure, fresh and lean ground beef J Af tVv for hamburgers or meal loaf. V, T U.S.D.A. Choice Round Bone Swiss Steak .b 69c U.S.D.A. Choice Boneless ;'.' Beef Cubes lib 69c U.S.D.A. Choice Full Cut Round Steak u, 89c U.S.D.A. Choice Boneless . ,( Top Round Steak ib 99c U.S.D.A. Choice Cube Steak .u $1.09 U.S.D.A. Choice ,. Rump Roast I lb. 79c Whole ........... Fresh Fryers Ib 39c Fresh Fryer Backs & Necks ib 10c Legs, Breasts or Thighs ... Fresh ' Fryer Parts : 59c Medium Sharp - U Cheddar Cheese 69c Medium Aged ,. Longhorn Cheese ib 69c Ocean-Fresh Red Snapper ..I n, 45c Smoked ' Finnan Haddic ,b 69c Kippered . . ,. Salmon Tips 69c DUNDEE Whole Apricots No. Vk Tin 5 $100 tins I CASE OF 24 $4.75 DUNDEE. Sliced Beets No. 303 Tin 6 .79c CASE OF 24 $2.95 DUNDEE Fruit Cocktail No. 303 Tin $100 tins I CASE OF 24 $4.75 HUDSON HOUSE Pineapple Juice 46 Oz. Tin 3 tins 95 , CASE OF 12 $3.69 DUNDEE Grapefruit 303 Tin 4.- $r tins I DUNDEE Tomato Juice 46 Oz. Tin $100 tins CASE OF 12 $2.98 V - f Your Money's Worth By SYLVIA PORTER Copyright, Hill Syndicttt, Inc. DUNDEE Apple Sauce No. 303 Tin 6 .$100 CASE OF 24 $3.95 4 ,is.00 - Ml CASE OF 24 $5.80 CASE OF 12 $2.98 PsFJl DUNDEE . DUNDEE DUNDEE " ! ' 1 (."JT"' QUJ QUEEN Whole Kernel or CroamSlylo" SWEET -4 J 4 k pJ BEANS C0RH ' flS i Si M.'S".' 'U1 4 No. 303 Tin No. 303 Tin ' ' ' Xl ' ' ' '-f jf&N. I .T-'J No. 303 Tin rV'v'V V--'-' 1 589 6tins95 MS - db -fl y CASE OF 24 $2.40 CASE OF 24 $3.69 i '" " 5fF? T-L CASE OF 24 $3.90 . Jl jj ' TAX HILLS TOP ECONOMIC MEASUKE SINCE WAIt The SU billion tax reduction bill is the most impoi'tf. it domestic- economic measure to come before the U.S. Congress in 15 years, says President, Kennedy a claim which at first glance seems highly exaggerated but which, after study, turns out to have surprising validity. Of course, in the foreign economic field, there's no disputing lliat Congress has passed legislation of revolutionary significance since World War 11. Already in a secura "place in history are the grandiose laws Congress passed between 1!W8 and 1963 to spur and finance the rebuilding of war-devastated Europe (the Marshall Plan), to pro vide foreign aid on an unprecedented scale, to develop the econo mies of underdeveloped lands, to give the President great powers to slash tariffs; By these laws the United States has shaped the free world as we know it today. It has helped hold the West together, fought Russia successfully in a prolonged cold war, laid the foundations for an era of Unity as well as competitiveness among ireeciom-ioving peoples. ' But in the domestic economic sphere a careful review of legislation passed by Congress since the late l!M0s underlines the fact that what we have been primarily doing is extending, broadening, refining laws put on our statute books in the lllillls a generation ago. In retrospect, astonishingly few breakthroughs have been made on the bread-and-butter front at home and most of these break throughs are still on a tentative, comparatively minor scale. To be specific: .. There have been major laws expanding and extending Social Security benefits far beyond what was originally dreamed but the initial Social Security law was passed in 1935. In 1950, 1952, 1954, 1956, 1961, Congress passed laws broadening Social Security to the point where it is fundamental in the retirement plans of lens of millions of Americans. But the heart of the matter is that none of this has been "new" in the sense that this tax reduction bill is new. ; . i ... There have been important laws expanding and raising the minimum wage also far beyond what was originally dreamed but the initial Wage & Hours Act was passed in 1938. In the years since then, the minimum wage has been hiked from 25 cents an hour to 40 cents to 75 cents to $1 to $1.15 and to $1.25, and the law covers many millions of workers now. But the heart ' of (he matter again is that none of this has been new in the sense that this tax reduction bill is new. In the postwar period, Congress has passed housing, farm and unemployment legislation which has had a crucial impact on our economy. ( You need not agree with the aim or form of the legis lation to recognize its impact.) Yet, once more, the heart of the matter is that the basic agricultural, housing and unemployment legislation goes back as far as 1916 and the 1930s. Our farm price support laws have deeply affected the economy of the U.S. The efforts of Congress to stimulate public and private housing via government loans, mortgage insurance, minimum down payments, etc., have been vital in ourposlwar prosperity. Our unemploy ment insurance system has been a key anti-recession cushion. But I he origins, I repeat, were long ago. Yes, there have been some breakthroughs laws author izing the spiMiiling at billions on highway construction, aid to behold construction, redevelopment o depressed areas, train ing uf the Jobless. And there was a large-scale lax revision law in 11154. , But there Is no equal to a tax reduction bill of this magnitude specifically designed to speed and sustain the nation's growth. Not ever has a President argued so strongly for tax reduction in the face of huge and persistent budget deficits. Not ever has across-the-board tax cutting been proposed as both a prop to prosperity and a weapon against recession. Not over have the White House and our Central Bank been so much In agreement on the urgent need for coordination of tax reduction and money-credit policies to accelerate the domestic economy and simultaneously safeguard the dollar's value. Tin's tax reduction measure does stand at the too ot oostwtar domestic economic legislation. Kennedy's claim can be documented. Surviving Dionne Quintuplets Reveal Unhappy Home Life Apple Juice 24-Oz, Bottle 2 49c NEW Y011K (UPI) -The four surviving Dionne - quintuplets have disclosed that their child hood was painfully unhappy and blamed their parents for failing to treat them as separate identi ties and expose them to ordinary experiences. In n bitter autobiography ap pearing in the current issue of McCall's magazine less than a week alter the birth of the Fischer quintuplets in South Da kola the Dionnes said their childhood was ridden with a sense of guilt inflicted by their parents. They said their parent al home in Corbcil, Ont., was 'the saddest home we ever knew." Annette, Marie, and Cecile are now married and have a to tal of nine children, and Yvonne is a nun. They are 29. In Scpariilc Category The famous sisters', who en tilled their biography "We Grew Up In Trouble," said their moth er was convinced she had been singled out by (Jod for a "mir acle" but feared the world would think of her and her husband as animals because of the multiple birth. Mrs. Dionne told them the first thing she said to her hus band after their birth Was, "They will say we are pigs." The sisters said their parents "behaved toward each other as though lliey had been partners in some unspoken crime, by bringing us into the world" and "drummed into us that the dis cord in which the family lived much of the lime was our do ing Dad and "Mom Dionne struggle of their father. Ollva Dionne, to wrest control of his daughters from Dr. A. R. Dafoe, who delivered them, and their sister Emilie's epileptic seizures darkened the later years lived with their family. "The family considered her (Emilie's) illness a shameful thing," they said. "From what doctors say these days, it is un likely that she could have been cured; but they say modern care can keep the seizures in check. Emilie had no such care." Names Selected for Portland Elephant PORTLAND (UPI) - The lat est addition to the Portland zoo's elephant compound will be named soon. (irade school children will make the final decision on three monickers submitted by the Portland Zoological Society, Mayor Tarry Schrunk and the City Council and the Portland Zoo Commission. The mayor and council sug gested "Pasha" which means "king" in the Thai language. The zoological society submit ted "Dino," short for dinosaur and the zoo society came up with "Tyee," a Chinook word for "big chief." Oracle schools can obtain bal lots by phoning or writing the Portland Zoo Society, 4001 S.W. Canyon Rd., manager Don Spie ring said. The 155 pound male elephant. Oct. S. Irealed their older children as j bom Sunday, will be named one tamily, the quints as a sep arate category. , "Wo were treated as five who ' really amounted to one, five of a kind so close and aliko that we j could not possibly have separate j identities o r desires," they i wrriie. ! "We were drenched with a ; sense of having sinned from the i hour of our birth ... we did not know any boys to be friends i with ... we had no training , whatever lor any kind of a ca reer. Early Veins Happiest The Dionnes said their happi est years were those early ones spent separated from their fam ily in the nursery built fur lliem in Coi IkmI. The long, determined Forrest Cooper Heads West Highway Group DENVER (UPI) Forrest Cooper, Oregon slate highway engineer Tuesday was elected president of the Western Asso ciation of Slate Highway Offi cials at the group's 42nd annual conference. MATTER OF KNOW-HOW NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE, Eng. land (UPI) Frederica Martin, 21, said today that cuddling crocodiles in her circus act was Just a matter of "know-how." "You have to hypnotize them first," she said. I 8 ' o