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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1968)
7 8 LOW. LOW, LOW DISCOUNT PRICES Play "Deck O' Money s Win up to $1,000 fijursd THE BATTALION ^ Thursday, March 21, 1968 IT Page 4 (College Station, Texas | 1 J Bacon Frys Crisper Every Time! AND YOU ALWAYS GET TOP VALUE STAMPS Serve 'N Save Sliced ■■ U.S. Grade A Fresh Fryers Boneless Hams Serve Your Family the Finest Ham! Bar S Fully Cooked Whole Ham Lb. Quarter Pork Loin Sliced Into Lb. 69 Bar S Boneless Fully Cooked Half Pork Chops Fpes-Shore Breaded Perch & Catfish Steaks ,0 c 39 c U.S. Choice Tenderay Beef Swiss Steaks - 69 c Bar S Hams Bar S All Meat. Wieners Trio Farms Whole Hog Sausage 12-Oz. Pkg. ' ' I Cufiady Gem Smoked v ••• V mm. 1-Lb. Bag 99 c 49 c 69° r •'™^ort, n Frozen*** Boneless Beef Roast U.S. Choice Tenderay Brand Jp Add Flavor to Those Vegetables Season With Bacon Squares! Bacon Squares Fruit Pies Apple- Peach - Coconut Boston Rolled r Roast U.S. Choice Tenderay Beef Boneless Sirloin Strip Steak u U.S. Choice Tenderay Beef Boneless Rib Eye Steak u. $ p 8 U.S. Choice Tenderly Brand I English Rolled X Roast <89° ||o. Lb. I U.S. No. 1 Russet Rib Roast 99 Semi-Bone ss E-Z Carve . . Lb. ALL KROGER TENDERAY BEEF and the plants where it is packed are U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED Potatoes Vine Ripened Tomatoes 12 ing plants of meat. ALL KROGER TENDERAY BEEF IS USDA CHOICE GRADE that the beef has been < — your assurance that the beef has been ex amined by U. S. Govt, experts and has passed their rigid standards for beef quality. Tenderay takes the guesswork out of buying beef 69 59 Artichokes 2 ... 29 Fresh Fancy Meats Bar S Salami Bologna Summer Sausage Braunschweiger ' ! ! " 1 Kroger ||f Saiiines Great for Soups and Snacks! % 1-Lb. Box ilfc CHICKEN NOODLE SOB# • » yk tfc « Campbell Soups ** jetable m By the Chunk 69 Chicken Noodle, Mushroom, Vegetable Til i •“I Limit 7 ■■MMZ Sugar Loaf Fresh meapp ’’ipe and Juicy Sweet Pineapple Northern Assorted i Towels 4 Aurora White and Assorted Tissue 4 Gold Soap Palmolive §fa MelloriiTe All Popular Flavors! Big Rolls 2-Roll Packs Reg. Bath 2 for 45c Bar $-|00 $|00 15 c Kounty Kist Shoe Peg White Corn All Purpose Mazola Oil Del Monte Pineapple Juice C 12-Ox. $100 Cans •? Limit2 with coupon & $5 or more purchase excluding beer, wine. or cigarettes. 1-Gal. Can VISIT YOUR NEW TOP VALUE REDEMPTION CENTER LOCATED AT 911 TEXAS AVE. soTxtm' 50 TOP VALUE STAMPS With the purchase of 3 Lb*, or more Fresh GROUND BEEF Good March 21-23, 1 50'IxfRA TOP VALUE STAMPS With the purchase of 2-Lb. Pkg. of Sea Treasure Breaded .Shrimp Snacks. SGood Morch 21-23, 1968. No Limit! Incredible Value! Cecelia Nylons Buy one pair.. . Get another Free! Yes, buy "first" pair at our regular 88c price . . . recefoe "■ictrnd" Free! TOP VALUE STAMPS WHb Purchase of 2 Cans KROGER NUTS I March 21-23, 1968. GydJI No Strings Attached! No Limit! This amazing vat we eafy becease we're changing our package design — nothing's changed bat the price! Buy Now . . . Save 50%! Stock up now for Easter and Mother's Day gift giving . . . You'll be glad Select from a complete hosiery wardrobe • Seamless • Stretch • Full Fashioned * Antiseptic G3* New Low Price Maryland Club COFFEE m Satisfaction Guaranteed UP TO 1000 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH KROGER’S TOP VALUE BONUS CARD MAILER START THIS WEEK GET BONUS BLOCK WEEK NO. 1 STAMPED WITH A $7.50 PURCHASE OR MORE. 1 oqer u ^ B LOOKING OVER “MENU” A literary cat peers over the top of travel literature in a booth at the Chicago Boat, Travel and Outdoor Show, perhaps hoping to hitch a ride to where some of the good fishin’ is advertised. (AP Wirephoto) Elf and i thro: peps main in 1 aroui Rei durii abou seme glad the 1 “k feat gran than note noui stitu teacl sors pers “1 Scientific Devices FindGold LOS ANGELES <•£>) _ Elec- Ironic devices that can “sniff out" invisible specks of precious met als in ordinary rocks are quietly revolutionizing the world’s search for gold and silver. In the past few years two ma jor gold strikes and a silver de posit which reportedly could rival ] the Comstock lode have been found with space age techniques that enabled man to test the 1 moon’s soil without setting foot on it. regu es,’’ out. & the coni supe fere oogi spea 600 A teac ren lian men 3-28 M inst will and the Gee the Dey L han wee Government agencies and min ing interests in the United States, the Soviet Union, Africa and Aus tralia are systematically survey ing broad areas for precious met als with these new tools. L THE RUSSIAN effort report edly is far greater than this coun try’s, with a 10-year head start Latest available reports indicate I the Soviets are making more than seven million samplings a year compared with about 150,000 in | the United States in 1967. I prt sns foi tie Sh en The electronic soil testers de tect the presence of various kinds of metal by measuring the distinc- tive emissions each gives off when the rock is subjected to heat and other radiations. Mobile laboratories—converted trailers—take the equipment to prospecting sites and make analy ses on the spot. A miniaturized soil-testing de vice using somewhat similar “ra diation signature” techniques was carried to the moon by Surveyor spacecraft and determined the lunar surface was largely basaltic like that of the earth. THE GOLD “sniffers” are so precise they can find particles only a few microns in diameter, scattered as widely as four parts of gold per billion parts of rock. A micron is forty-millionths of an inch. With today’s giant trucks and power shovels, gold can be re covered profitably in open pit mines where the yield is as low as $2 a ton. U. S. Geological Survey reports indicate two recent strikes in Ne vada are averaging a third of an ounce of gold per ton. That seems a small amount, but at $35 an ounce the gold yield is well within the profit-making range. OPERATORS estimate one of the deposits, near Carlin, Nev., may contain more than $100 mil lion in gold. If true, this alone would be twice the current annual U. S. production. The United States consumes $350 million worth a year for jewelry and in dustrial uses, leaving a $300 mil lion deficit to be imported. The California Division of Mines reports two new silver strikes near Barstow, each esti mated to contain 25 million ho 50 million tons of ore bearing one to four ounces of silver per ton. If the higher estimates turn out to be right, this would amount to 400 million ounces extracted from the old Comstock lode hear Vir ginia City, Nev. With silver bringing about $2 an ounce, the lower estimate of only an ounce per ton would at least pay expenses with modern techniques. The new finds are not in the quartz veins of legend but are throughout large masses of rock, particularly silstone and sand stone, which exists in vast quan tities in Western desert and mountain regions.