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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1963)
6 B MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 13 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MELTOnD, OREGON Theyll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo I The Finest Turkey Available! l"JE WILL BE CLOSED U.S.D.A. GRADE 'A' BROAD BREASTED... THANKSGIVING DAY! . ...... iVi fXteZrF&h On this traditional feast day you will want to serve the finest turkey obtainable. Perfect in every way and popping in succulent juices when you bring it from the oven at dinnertime. This can come only from a Grade "A" bird. Insist on it. Get the very best!- UL w team SWIFT PREMIUM - SHORT SHANK If A ft -LB. SIZE.... BROAD BREASTED TURKEYS 39 8 to 12 Lb. Size LB. Shank Half Pound. The Most Famous Name in Meats Whols Ham, 16 to 18 lbs. Pound" Suffed Turkey Filled with Pepperidge Dressing and ready to pop into the oven. So easy to cook and truly Kfi delightful to eat. Extra bonus on Armour Star F '1 Itilffarl TnrLaui lnc unil !-, tUo ,11. ...Ill Y.A V" ........ feaWWI una on ineie lurneys ana Armour will send you a Silver Oollarl ...... FRESH T Swift Premium-" A" Grade All Sizes -10 to 22 lbs. f For Those Who Prefer a Bird That Has Not LTT'aa seen Frozen Mwhs Buff Lftftfa illJp Half ' M wJI . Pound ....... nJf uM . 6 to 12-lb. Average .. Pjk mjr ana r. wm UftlEYS teA ''r'""; ''Hi hr-i t ii : j 'f r "A n Vi Vf i I 1 1 winir nisi ii r Miawii i i RMOUR STAR JUNIOR TURKEYS FOR THE "ITSY-BITSY" FAMILY-4 TO 8 LB. SIZE 4 c lb FROM THE ICY OCEAN WATERS FRESH PACIFIC OYSTERS - 2 Ounce Jar ST PISM LONG RUM NCHINOS 4 M Spotlessly Cleaned - They're Delicious-4 to 6 lb. Averaqe oc lb TAR GEESE Another Traditional Thanksgiving Food LB. f.waw w w.T,'iy,wtwwiWMiiawiii CHICKENS Fresh-Not Frozen, Locally Processed With a Money-Back Guarantee for Flavor and Tenderness-S to 7 lb. Sizes LB 4! ARMOUR STAR-"THE KIND THE BUTCHER TAKES HOME" SLICED BACON 2 . fh Bakery Specials Westgate Bakery Only 0 Regular 59c, 69c Cherry Mincemeat Pumpkin Lcrccn ftleringue LL J -i A t. ' In Foil Tins. i!cai and Serve . . RAISED DON UTS- CHOCOLATE CAKES Cinnamon Nut BREAD zed & Sugared.. 111 DEL MONTE Cream or Whole Kcrnal No. 303 Tins r iffl t? r b s DEL MONTE No. 303 Tins F 0 R CUT GREEN BEANS DIAMOND -303 Tins (0U01C R FRUIT COCKTAIL DEL MONTE No. 303 Tins 4 F YA Sunbeam. Regular 33c pkg. JASK-0-LANTERN, No. 303 tins ......... 89 SA ft P' 1. iii 3 i yiilllljBlw,iWWlwy..?ly, m J i.im in,, i itlll) n in in i 1 1 ii i f ...; .JU.:,...1. fJjA JW. , ,M t f, "lir MEDFORD-Westgate Center MEDFORD-13th and Central V tM.tliva Thru W.dneidn. No. 27 '"j '!, " , yV"WW'a''lwilieiiiMiiiv'i iwwiiimmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimnmmmA' FIT I I II..! I I II, "II IJI l.-l-HIIIW... . . ,mm HIMI.I..L . iii wn m in.,... , j.i.j.......... ,tl.. lMy) j t Minn mi mmm iim in )DRE KRAFT'S MINIATURE IGV2-0Z. Pkgs. E Ocean Spray Whole or Strained COTTAGE mm 4 CH.B. 3 for 89 6 for ' 99 2 for 49 ..No. 303 19 . . Quart 33 . . Quart 39 HI WINTER mVi t PI 9 to 3 p.m. IXED UTS TOM SCOTT 13-oz. Tins RAISINS MARKET DAY 2-lb. Pkg. a a a 49C 419? OL MONTE BELLO GEM Tall Tins 4 F 0 R kiM(iMiBMaBA ORJUv&fg New Crop California Sunkist Navels CAULIFLOWER Extra Large Snow White , Heads Tops In Quality Hi (OK EACH 29 BRUSSELS SPROUTS CELERY CRANBERRIES Oiant Siie Stalk For Thinktgivlng Planning ....... Sweets & Yams For Thanksgiving, you'll want the finest you can possibly buy-uniform size, washed and waxed. Smooth skinned AAA No. 1 extra fancy. Freih Green ' Eft Young Tender Sprouts Ik. .29 TopQuIlity lO Jm II MiAT Powdered or Brown N ALLEY'S 28-oz. jar 1-lb. packages COTTAG &UWh Snider's . . . i2 gallon Oregon . . pint Del Monte. . No. 303 tins 16 NO ARDEN QUART 5fc PupkiuD Pies SOUR CREAM PINT 8-Inch Size 59c WHIPPING CREAM PINT 59c forsjiN MEDFORD-Westgate Center MEDFORD-13th and Central Wt R.itrvt Tht Right To Limit Prleei Etfcctlva Thru Wednttday, Nov. 27 LT- ( SHE SAID WEST POINT) ( SHE DESCRIBED MIM E,, 1 "Vo-ruAT-rucX WAS AFTER MIM'-J-' VAS AVOUNGISH CASH Tcn AT.JrioA I A6 TO r RANT-BUT TALLER 7 rP&J Tf SaSSKlS'1 "rAR3T X--N0 SMOOTHER, t SElooks6uke AJ( i T2JiEj? iJI'lyl ( well, he Tlnvi v. FEEBLE FlNk C ,ipp I Um&5ZZt TALL-AMD HE'SWSM in in need of rn rrm r muststndfm I notevem r X) ftiWiilSm fr ' ' oiRL fresmwan's been , UWi M "s 4a' BRASOING ABOUT KlnrFwtuMSynat.lne.ilti-1'UtialithtrJttTiit . ... ' iail News Abouf Servicemen IN GERMANY Airman First Class Henry A. Wojciechowskl. brother of Mrs. Quentln Lewis, 1200 Leland Ave., Meatord, nas arrived at Hahn Air Base, Germany for duty, as an administrative specialist. He arrived in Germany from Lin coln Air Force Base, Neb. DECORATED T. Set. Norman R. Benn. snn of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Bean, 2194 Houston Road, has been decorated with the U. S. Air Force Commendation Medal while serving at VanHpnlwo Air Force Base, Calif. Sergeant Bean was awarded the medal for his meritorious achievement while serving as a munitions production control supervisor at Benguerir Air Base, Morocco. SECOND LIEUTENANT Eldon G. Francis, husband of the former Linda R. Hatcher, Butte Falls, has been commis sioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force following graduation from Officer Train ing School at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. Lieutenant Francis is being reassigned to Barksdale Air u orce Base, La.j Untold Thousands File Past Bier of President Kennedy WASHINGTON (UPI). Through the cold night and into the day they kept moving upon the Capitol to pay. their re spects to the fallen President lying in state beneath the dome of the great rotunda. At' 8:25 a.m. EST, police formed a cutoff in the long line at a point about two blocks east of the Capitol. This meant that some thousands who had ABOARD SHIP Boatswain's Mate Third Hnss Kenneth B. Boyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Boyd, 1354 Bid die Road, and Machinist's Male Fireman Apprentice Dennis E. Henderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Henderson. 1532 Terrace Drive, are Karvino nhnnrH tha dock landing ship USS Montl- ueiio wnicn recently completed two weens oi ampmmous exer cises in the Pacific. ' ' PROMOTED Marine Cnl RnnalH R roe. per, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Casper, 1287 S. Peach St., was recently promoted to his present rank while serving as an aircraft hydraulic mechanic wun neaaquarters and Mainte nance Squadron 24, Marine Air craft GroUD 24. a unit nf I h Second Marine Aircraft Wing Dusea ai marine corps Air Sta- nun, uierry point, N. U, BIG LIFT Armv SnfiP. S Ijiannra a Fox. son of Mrs Ruth W. EViv Jacksonville, and other mem bers of the Third Armored Divi sion acted as a mock aggressor force during the second phase of Operation Big Lift in Ger many at Frankfurt. ABOARD TRANSPORT Englneman Second Class Wil liam L. Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Evans, 1425 Lawnrldge St., is serving aboard the attack transport USS Cal vert which recently completed two weeks of amphibious exer Documentary Is Slated by Bank "rWemhpr 7 Tinv nt In. famy," the second of six docu mentaries aeanng wun me ma jor events of the century, will be Dresented Dec. R at 7::ill n.m. over KBES-TV. 1 he hour - long documentary sponsored by U. S. National Bank makes wide use of Japa nese film nrpviniifi.lv nnrfilpnsnH in this country, revealing Ja pans war ioros plotting weir strategy of world conquest, and showinc of American lenrlprs in the decade preceding Pearl Har- nor. "December 7 Day of In famy," like others in the U. S. Natlunnl ftnrlpR nf hnnr.lnnn una. clals, Is edited to present a lull account oi ine iriumpns and tragedies that shaped Uie world of today Through special arrangements with United Artists TV, ine bank win present other exclusive Wolper Television documentar ies Including "Ton Knn.in That Shook the World 'the Story ot the Atom Bomb"; "Benin Kaiser to Khrush chev": "The RIh anil Coll at American Communism"; and "ine American Woman in Uie 20th Century." Building Permits Rise During Month Building permits increased in Medford in October, 1963, com pared to October, 1962, the University of Oregon Bureau of Business Research has reported. In October, 1963, the total was $569,734 compared to $432,433 in the same month last year. In Grants Pass permits for last month totaled $219,000, up from $188,925 for October. 1962. Statewide building permits for last month totaled $28,687,177. a seven per cent rise from last year. Halibut Quota in Bering Sea Reduced VANCOUVER, B. C. (UPD- Delegatcs representing the Unit ed States, Japan and Canada at the North Pacific Fisheries Commission voted Saturday to cut next year's halibut quota in Uie Eastern Bering Sea by more than 40 per cent. The combined quota will be 6,393,340 pounds, compared with a quota this year of 11 million pounds. The United States proposed a 5 million pound limit, while Japan entered bargaining talks asking for a 7.7 million pound limit. The International Pacific Hal ibut Commission, a separate U.S. and Canada commission, had recommended 5 million pounds. , x Student Is Member Of Hockey Team Lalne Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wilson, 1927 Tay lor Road, Central Point, is among members of the Linfield College, McMinnville, women's field hockey team which has just concluded its season play. Final activity of the year was competing at the Pacific North west Field Hockey Tournament at Central Washington State Col lege, Ellensburg, Wash. Miss Wilson played in the tourna ment. . endured the nr.frwln weather for hours would be dis appointed. . . . Thft rntnff was nuMMBMi ' ..MM UW.VW.IJ W assure that th. rntnnrla ivaaiM be cleared in time for John Fitzgerald Kennedy's last ride to the White House. Hundreds in the Canltol when th "utnff came continued to shuffle for ward to lite past the casket. As the last of th visitor. Dassed the flntr rir&ruwl a-nlr-l at 9 a.m. EST, Capitol Police imei unaries J. Sullivan esti mated that 250,000 persons viewed the casket nn It. ancient catafalque shrouded in main. Other, unofficial estlmalna hu . persons who had watched the crowds throughout the night put um ugure ai bdoui 14U,UUU In any event, it was a mas sive outpouring of affection and sorrow ior me assassinated young President. " Slow Line At midnldht anthnritiaa hod warned those at the end of the slow moving line almost 30 blocks long that they might not get a chance to get Into the rotunda. But still they came. Police repeated the warning a 2 a.m. and again a 3 and 4 and 5 and later. But still they came. Anions' the Inst In imiiu In reverence, heslrla th. hi. were former Vice PraslriW Richard M. Nlxnn. fh man Kennedy defeated for the pres idency In 1960, and his wife, Patricia. T h e y appeared at three minutes before 9 o'clock. The massive doors to the Capitol were closed prompt ly a 9. Those Inside the rotun da were flllnweri In fltn past the bier. By 9:05 a.m.. uoi, uie ibsi oi uie tens ot -thousands of ordinary mourn ers passed the bier. Kennedy Casket Bearers Named 1 WASHINGTON (UPI) - The servicemen who bore President Kennedy's casket today: 1 Army 1st Lt. Samuel R. Bird of Wichita, Kan.; Sgt. James L. Felder of Sumter, S.C., and Spec 4-c Douglas A. Mayfield of San Diego, Calif. Navy Seaman Hubert Clark of New YorH City, and Seaman Larry B. Smith of Ransom, Ky. Marines Lance Cpl. Timothy F. Cheek of Ocala, Fla., and Pfc. Jerry J, Diamond of Stow, Ohio. - , ,, Air Force S. Sgt. Richard E. Gaudreau of Ashby, Mass. Coast Guard Yeoman 2-c George A, Barnum of , Lake City, Minn. i Except for Diamond and Smith all of the men served as casket-bearers since the Presi dent's body arrived Friday night from Dallas. v We Can't Afford to Run PRICES TOO LOW! BIG Ad$ 7 PC. DINETTE SET lit. T.bL, i Chain j 1 Big Ad Price $89,55 Small Ad Price $69.83 yxm, HOME FURNISHINGS J OPEN SUNDAY! ;