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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1925)
' PAOE FOUR MEDFORD MATT," TRTBTTNR- MP.DFOUTV ORKfiOX. ftATFTmjY- JITXfi .1.1. 1 02." siedford Mail tribune AM IWnFPFKIlRNT NEWSPAPER fCBUBUKD EVERY AFTERNOON KXOIPt SUNDAY, BT TUB - 1IEDFORD PRINTING 00. Th Medford Sunday Morning Son 1 furoiintd Mbacrlbers dtairlug th ereu-ij dlly hwi Office: Triltne Building, SI-S7-S9 Hortn fit atrcet. moos 70. A oonulldation of th Demorrttio Timet, tha Bedford Hail, the Uedrord Tribune, Uta ttouU trn Orcgonian, tha Ashland Tribune. ROBERT W. RUHL, Editor, fl. SUMITER 8H1TH, Mtimgor. Rt Ukfl In Advanca: Dallj, with Sunday Run, year 97.60 Dally, with Sunday buii, month 7b Dallv. without Sunday Sun. fear 8.60 Dally, without Sunday Hun, month . .. .601 Weekly Hall Tribune, on year 1-00 Sunday Sun, on year 2.00 BY CARRIER In Medferd. Aahland. Jockaon Till. Central Point, Phoenix, Talent and on Ulghwaya: Daily, with Sunday Bun, month t .76 Dailr. without Sunday Sun. month..... Pally, without Sunday Sun, one year... 7.60 iHily, with Sunday Bun, one year..... 8.60 All term by carrier, caab in advance. Entered as aecond-otosa matter at lledford. Oregon, under act ol March a, i7B. Official paper of tbe Olty ot Med ford. Olflclal paper of Jaukaoit Comity. Sworn dally ver.a ctrculatton for all months ending April lat, 8060, mora Uiau double the circulation of any other paper pub- iianeo or circulates in jaeaaon uouncy. UEUBKRH OF TF1K A!W1civrm TRES8. The Aaaoclnted I'tphu la exclusively entitled to the uae for republication of all newa dis patches credited to It or not otlierwlae credited In tula paper, and also to the local newa pub Uahed herein. All righta of republication of apedaJ dla pa'.cuea herein are also rcaerred. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Ferry. "On rode the noble GOO," ,has been adopted hh the official Humdinger. Inc., HtoKfin for the Crater Luke trip. I flay colored underwear for men Ih Die hit est decree of fUHhlon, but It won't show when they cross their leva. An everybody ox peeled, the Nation al AIuhIc convention In session . at Portland has reported "Improvement In music." The musicians are Ketting along ns well as could be expected. A few of the fur-seeing politicians of Oregon have niudo graduation day speeches. ... O'DAfJS FIMCK DKMATj (Itoscburg; NewH-Kmlew) .... Our prosperous farmer Jerry O'Duie Is taking advantage of the high price, of wheat and is dis posing of his last your a crop. , Another grand Jury , has fulled to Indict for the crime known as cherry pie. Mm, Mary Defiant, aroused by the policy war on jaywalking, penetrated to tho contei of the Main Htem Kr'l. Then retribution overlook the well knotwn local woman, and nho sneezed. She has been a confirmed user of legal Intersections all her life, up to the time of the tragedy. School election Monday, and not a shotgun off the kitchen wall. The Ktork called on, Mr. and Mrs. Chewier Woodpecker last week In the usual efficient manner. Chester wears tho smile that won't come off, and set up tho worms. ... Tho slate. commisHion for beauty doctors Is now ; functioning. There are more doctors than beauty. The Jacksonville Chamber of Com merce urgoa more gold In circulation. Tho. public never sees a 120 gold piece except on a watch chain. The weeds on vacant lots show no disposition to cut themselves, an atti tude peculiar to fauna and flora of these parts. HIKIIANDS (MarMliflrltl News) L, 1j. 1'iissagu , of Wostlake, returned to his, home last night after a day spent in shopping 1 hero with his wife. (Kaunas City Star) In a short timo I had learned lots but largely that my husband was better at pouting than any one I'd ever seen, spending three weeks out of four at such enjoy ment. Kven If I went to see a sick neighbor, ho pouted. UK AT 'Tls hut comparative, this thing we hold Intolerable today. Next season's snow Is hiding In the cloud banks like n fold , . . Of timid sheep uncertain where to Ko. An the red sun rolls laughing through the sky Tho stars wink back in merriment, Man's curse Lay on the long, hard winter; lot him try To find which of tho two Is really worse! Tho great Inverted dome of hluo whlto fire Quivers, Intense and silent, but shot through With arrow-shufts of breeze, while , the entire Range of tho torture hours are but a few. Compared to all the long und golden days, The harvest autumn and the blush t of spring, 'Tls hut tho dipping In the lowered ways O? nature's ever active. beattnt; wing. Hut liian poor, stupid beast has much to learnt Jlcnt is a school as needed us the rest. And one by one hi lessons come turn. lie p0'fttt most who studies each one best: yu'y.) WARREN S. STONE, HORATIO A MODERN Ilorntio Alger is iiectled to xlo jtibti(!i to tha ca rreer Si Warren S. Stone, which emleit so abruptly in Cleve land yesterday. Modern, because Horatio himself was an incorrigible sentimen talist, and in his series of juvenile stories dealing with thtf general theme of "rags to riches" hud no concern whatever with the real ities. As a matter of fact, he was a spinner of fairy tales, with the sensational economic development of the United States instead of the enchanted forest, ns a background. If he had taken Warren S. Stone as his hero, the young farm lad would have 'been born of poor but honest parents, supported his 1'ged mother through his school days, lifted tho mortgage, by get ting a job firing a locomotive, saved the life of the railroad presi dent's daughter and ended his career by marrying the. beautiful girl, and becoming the opulent president of the C. K. and 0. There would have been no logical development of the story, no suggestion of cause and effect, and of course, no picture of Ameri can life as it actually existed. . Nevertheless, the career of Mr. Stone, was in reality far more amazing than the old-fashioned Alger conception would have been, far more interesting, and move illuminating in the way of showing the romantic possibilities of our American Golden Age. Mr. Stone was not born of poor parents. His father was a fairly prosperous farmer. He enjoyed a good school education and grad uated rom college.. He wanted to be a surgeon, his father pre ferred the law, and in the ensuing deadlock, young Warren took the first job at hand and became a later to the position of engineer. For twenty-four years Stone sat at the throttle of an engine, and then proceeded to rise from grand chief of tho International Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, to promoter, bank president, capitalist, and one of the most widely respected and powerful lead ers of orgauized labor in the United States. ' , In that sensational rise from rags to riches, a modern Horatio would find the true epic of American life, and the final answer to those alarmists who see a red twenty years. From worker to labor leader to There is tho answer to the Bolshevik QUILL It is ft queer situation when an effort to seem more respectable. Ours is a queer language. Tlie conservative doesn't always mean Only the true reformer's temperament enables you to know that the man is guilty before the evidence is introduced. A headline says the law punishes' innocent men ,but the story doesn't tell where on earth it finds that kind. Uncle Sam's appeal for payment might have seemed more elo quent if he hadn't just confessed to u $100,000,000 surplus. , . Correct this sentence: "Madam," fjaid the man in the white pants, "let me change that lire for PUTS IN DIRECT i ... . . , , , . TO NBW YORK. Juno 13. (A. P.) June IB bus been not tentatively for tbe Innueumtlon of the fliHt toleKia lhlc land wlro communication direct bat ween New York and Mexico city. TMh will bo exctiiHtvuly n prow wire Installed by tho WeHtern Union Tele Kiaph company uftor munthu of nego tiation with tho Moxicun government. H wilt curry the ditmutchett , of the AhhocIhUmI 1'rcHH to Hh member iiowh puportt In the Mexlcun capital and brinn to the United KtatcH the news of Mexico uKHemhlcd at tho Mexico City bureau of tho news organization. Dr. A. O. Montero, Mexican director of comiminlcatluiiH, who hatt been modernizing wire facilities und meth LONG THE SPAN of life increases, the learned physicians cry; mid voters and their nieces arc not apt to die; for Sci ence, health's defender has made old ills surrender, some tri umph, in its splendor, each morning greets the eye. The future generations will live two hundred years, as from the happy u tions the mierohe disappears; fair Science daily seizes a hunch of dread diseases, from them tho life she squeezes, and lays them on their biers. Shesays, iu language weighty, strange things will soon he seen, when sprightly lads of eighty will gnmhnl on the green, and girls of ninety .summers will vamp the village plumbers such prophecies are hummers, and will come true, I ween. 4 Hut there's the Hook that teaches this les son to all men, that one is through who reaches his three score years and ten; he may hang on a little, and sit around and whit tic, with aching hones and brittle, but he's n relic then. This long established limit will doubtless always hold, though does may try to trim it, or stretch it manifold; we'll live in term ac corded, with noble aims or sordid, and then we'll be rewarded with fclecp as good as gold. Why should we wish to tarry when rest is what we need f Why should we ask to carry our bur dens till we bleed? To see old things paraded when all their bloom is faded, and we arc stale and jaded, from all illusions freed ? ALGER AND BOLSHEVISM' locomotive fireman, graduating revolution in the United States in bank president and capitalist! predictors 1 POINTS Russia must use Trotzky aRain iu right means conservative, but right. you." ods of operation throughout that country, in conjunction with tho Wes tern Union, conducted tho negotia tions for the press wire with the tele graph company. The , exact tlino of the opening of the news service awaits his pleusure. , Tho immediate advantage of the ntSws circuit will be the avoldanco of tho delay to which news dispatches have been subject at the bordor. .Under, tho present, methods the, messages of the Associated Press have been taken from the Western Union wire at Laredo and transferred for re-sendlng on the Mexican wires from Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. Thus instantaneous communication be tween these two Important news cen ters will replaco a transmission relay frequently occupying from 1 to 4 hours. The new wlro Is an automatic printer circuit, considerably faster than Morse operated wires and ex tends over 3760 miles. Only .press dispatches will be carvied though J. C. Williver, vice president of the Wes tern Union says that a similar devel opment in tho commcrcliLl business is possible. Articles inlaid In pearl shell are found In tbe ruins of Pompeii. LIFE. w CROSS-WORD 0 OUR 5 6 17 T W i v W W 5ST Sl 6 "j5?" i I 16 i 55" My 5-6-7-8 said today was 1-2-3-4 day, when our own .Red, White, nd Blue was chosen 9-10 be our very own Hag. My 7-12-18 own 1-3-13-19-24-29, mv grandpa, said that there was 4-10-15-21-25 to be a 5-11-16-22-26-30 this afternoon 3-9 half past two and if 17-23-27 of us wanted to go he would hire 22-23 automobile and we. all would ride out to the parade grounds 20-21 it. .. " We 12-13-14 peanuts on our way and Mother said we were very 16-17-18-19 to eat so many as they often cause pains. ( will wear my blue dress today as my pink one is at the 26-27-23-29 shop being dyed a dark red. . auswer TO bast Puzzle 1,2-4-6-8 (light), 7-9-12-16-21-2B (bright), 2-3 (In), 11-12 13 (lit), 15-16-17 (ago), 3-5 (no). 18-19-20-21-22 (baths), 13-1 7-22-ati (toss), 4-5 (go), 19-23 (as), 10-14-18 (fob), 11-15-20-24-27 (inter), 23-24-25-26 (seta). Copyright, lilts, by The International Syndicate Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY. M. D- -. siintd ittUn poruinirtf to parsonm nwith ana fiyflTMit. not to dlmi tflaflnotfi or trottoiMit. will bo aniwirod by Dr. Brady If a tUtnpod, talf addvMMd anvclopo it noloaod. Ltttor ihoiild"b brltf and wrltUn In Ink. Owlna to tha largo numbor of Itfttor roooWod, only iw van o Miwra nvr. no repiy dm d moaa to ojwnoa not OOnrominf to IMtruotlOM Addroti Dr. Wllllaai Brady, lr Cro of tola aowapapor. At'i'op A man who earns 45 cents an hour and has a family to support, says that If he. could only overcome his dread ol high places ho might earn 87 cents an hour and have 10 hours Instead of tight horus work dally. Think of what the differ ence would mean for his family, he says. But his acro phobia (fear of a height) literally keeps him down. If ho climbs above 10 feet on a scaffold or other structure, a trembling comes upon him and he breaks into a cold sweat lest he fall. He wonders whether some, exerolne or other rem edy might help him to overcome this dread. This abnormal or excessive dread of a, height Is. a common one for for really great heights it is instinctive in every one. Structural steel work era who do their dread stuff on sky scrapers and bridges have to learn by practice and determination to be a teo,se far aloft. Almost any of us might walk, without fear across a four Inch, beam close to. the ground. The beam is Just as wide two hundred feet above the ground. The diffi culty is to keep one's eyes and atten tion on the things nearby and off the, things far below. These struc tural workers have learned to Ignore the. .vacant space around them ond disregard the yawning chasm below them, ; , I Some intellectual acrophohlacu can scarcely mount a, few steps nb.ovo the ground level without suffering with dread. They, have made the mistake of boiiig. governed by their fears in stead of using discipline to master tho -fears., , If tsome individuals can by disci pline, practice and. by determination conquer . the fear of great heights which we all have more or less, there Is no reason why persons with acro phobia should not lessen their timid ity by similar means, that is to any, by piny, work or adventure at grad ually Increasing hblghts, even though it bo necessary to ' begin only an inch above the ground. It is by an anal agous gradually Increasing dose of exercise such us walking or hill climb ing that the heart muscle, weakened by disease, is developed and In effect a cure obtained in some cases of heart disease. In a good many cases of acrophobia a defective muscular development Is a definite factor, and this is usually the result of mere neglect of educa tion. If the physical education has been neglected, tho victim of the pho bia ought to do what he or sho can to remedy the fault of education. A suitable system ' 'of daily, exercise should he adopted and followed out faithfully for many, months. The Second llrndy symphony may bo used, and I should recommend by way of introduction and finale for tho daily rendition of the symphony a half dozen rolls. The rolls or somersaults help to break up dignity and dignity Is a very had habit for people who harbor phobias. QUESTIONS A X0 AXSWKUS The Crook a-XI the Xose. A year or more .ago I noticed in your column a positive statement to tho effect that' the shape or size of one's nose could not be altered by any appliance. I thought you were a little too positive about that. I have a regular poll parrot crook in my nose, and I bought a mechanical nose shaper and wore It faithfully it instructed by the Inventor of It. and I am now convinced that tho appli ance Is a humbug nnd the inventor a fake. I am ready now to look Into the proVositlon of having an opera tion on my nose. Lot me have com plete particulars ahout that. ( R. R) Answer. The "Inventor' trimmed the dupe, not the nose. Anyway, you still huve the crouk In your nuse, O w ( PUZZM2 STORV FLAG Imblu though the crook got away with your easy money. Why not try to recover at least the proportion of the spoils which, the . agent earned by recom mending the crook to you? I have no particulars to give you. Consult a surgeon about operation on your nose. .. ." - , ' . Twin Sisters and' Their Children ' It is a revelation and a delight to us, fho way you lay ghosts with your happy faculty of impressing the plain truth on a misinformed public. May I contribute a testimonial? I am a twin girl. My twin sister lives in South Dakota. We are 51 years old, tho first born -of a family of seven Umildren. I have given birth to seven children, three boys and four girls, one baby girl dying at the age' of 10 days. My twin sister has given birth to four boys, the second and third being twins, one of whom died at birth. We are therefore, H much amused by tho solemn assertions of some people that twin sisters are doomed to be sterile. (Mrs. K. M. A.) . " Answer. That's one of the things people with Billings trouble, know. As only one birth in each 9.4 in Ameis ica is a twin birth, , and .only about one-third of twins are girls, the neigh borhood astrologer has a pretty good chance of- springing the old myth. and escaping , detection as, a . fie.tioni.st. Thank you for your testimonial. Have n Druft, I How can one have fresh air in a! bed room without a draft? (B. D. I s.) , , . .... ! Answer. It is Impossible. But why worry your head over such a thing? Open a window or two' and let a good draft blow through. That's fresh air. It. is harmless. ' ,( . - 1 Popcorn. , How much nourishment Is there In pqpeorn popped? (N. It,) Answer. About the same as one gets in the same weight of corn meal or canned corn. ; Dr. Iiorles R. Krdman. " , , ', The control of tho general assem bly of the Presbyterian church in the - " United States of America passed from the funda m en ta lists to a coalition of con servatives and lib erals recently with the election of Dr.j Charles R. Erd man of Princeton Theological semi-j naryt as modera tor., A man who: loves' to play ten- nis and golf, to skate and to drive AtV.Oi-C 2 -ERoKUkN -his automobile and . IiIb motor boat, is part of Uio secular side of the new moderator,. In his adherence to his toric Presbyterian doctrines, he was presented , to the assembly in the nominating speech of Rev. Herbert Booth Smith of Los Angeles, as a "thorough agoing conservative." . Dr. Erdman's daughter was re cently married to a son of! the late President Cleveland. ' He has a son of his own who is a missionary in Korea. Kor twenty years he has been professor of practical theology at Princeton. For fourteen years before his appointment as profes sor he was a pastor near , Philadel phia and he Is now acting pastor of the First Presbyterian church. Prin ceton. He is S9. Ho was graduated from Trinceton university . in 18S6. nnd from theaiprincetotv seminary In 1891. I ... The best way to put Pasteur In- st it lit os nut ilhtiiMi,-isa 1 tn ripstt-nv useless doss, license and immunize the useful. I , Who's Who 5v M&m mm "Ther' linliit lio'sucli thing an-a ikt feet lumljun'i but jest cnii't rtificl tir kind tlmt links you what you've lieen clolll ull day lifter . you've jest told him. ' say Mra. Tllfonl MootK. What tills country Is Rlltlil' t' m-cd worsen' anything elms Is a lot o' good torcmlors. .(t'ouyiieht John P. Dlllo Co.) Timely Views on World Topics 'We WHI Have War ns Lou ns It Js Ijegal, Says Robins , Outlawry of wo, is the next .logical step in civilization, Raymond Robins, Chicago socialist and lecturer, said recently. , "We do not .half appreciate the menace, of the next," war. . For the first time In human history the scientific mind, the trained intelli gence of the chemist and the engineer has been devoted to the development of the most effective means for wholesale human slaughter," he said. "Each nation is being equipped with invisible nnd odorless poison gas that is -instantaneously deadly, with fleets of bombing airplanes controlled by wireless, and we are now able to de stroy whole populations ina night. There are no longer any non-combatants. . Old and young, women and littlo children, animals and the fruit ful eath itself, now suffer a common devastation and ruin under tho action of modern war.. The. last war left the nations of. Europe . bankrupt victors as well.aa vanquished. War hns be come national and international sui cide! ... ., , - 'What Is this .monster .war? . It is tho product of the legal . institution, the war system, organized and main tained In every nation of the earth. The war, institution is. today Just as legal as marriage or the home,, as the churc,h or the school., So long as the war-system remains, a legal Institution we will have wars. . Propaganda -is the organized lying of the war system and annexations fare ,, the organized stealing of. the war system. .. Urges Out If i wry of War "What, then, is the. answer? Hu manity is not helpless this Is God's worjd! We. can, outlay this, war sys tem, just as we outlawed slavery and the saioon. , We can make war a crime under the law of nations and substitute law for war In compelling tho settlement of international dis putes. .; . 'Institutions that are outlawed and their operation mado a public, crime die out of tho life of the world. That is the verdict of history. That ,is the answer to the supreme, problem and menace of war in our civilization to day. The war system and the war Institution must be outlawed by Inter national agreement. . . We demand the codification, of In ternational law to provide for the legal settlement oi all International disputes, and its codification on .the principle of equality , in justico and right between alt .nations .great' and small, and the establishment of an international tribunal with affirma tive Jurisdiction under a doflnlto In ternational code to hear and, deter mine all questions that may arise be tween the nations and that are, not settled by" conference oc arbitration, oach of these-steps to be. worked out in international conference and rati fied by the people of the nations par ticipating In such conferences." Summon for Publication., Equity No. 8077 tn the circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Jackson. Willis Raymond AVilkins, Plaintiff, vs. Dorothy uphria . Willtlns, De fendant. To Dorothy JCuphrla Wllklns, the above-named defendant: In the name of the state of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear in the above entitled court and cause and there answer" the complaint f the plaintiff on file therein against you within ten 10) days from the date of the service of this summons upon you if served. within Jackson county, Ore gon; or if served within any other county of Oregon, -then within twen ty (20) days from the date of tho ser vice of this Bummons upon you; or if served by .publication, or out of tht state of Oregon after an order forthe publication of this, summons, then on or before the last day prescribed in the order for the publication of the sum mons, -i . - l - ' ....!.. And you wilt please take notice that if you fall to so appear and answer said complaint within said time, the plaintiff .will apply to the above enti tled court for the, relief prayed for in the complaints to'-wit, that the bonds of 'matrimony. now. existing between ... iiiuwiiufiij niun.. cAisiiuy uwiween I flie plaintiff nnd defendant herein be totally and forever dissolved, and fori such other and further relief as to this court may seem just ana equitable. This summons -Is ; published under and In accordance with the order of date May 14, 1925, of tho-above en titled court and cause, requiring It to toe published In the Medford Mail Tribune, a daily newspaper published 4u-.Medford. Jackson county, Oregon, once a week for a period of six weeks, and requires you to appear and an swer the complaint herein, on or be fore the expiration of the Inst day prescribed in said order for the pub lication of said summons, whieh Inst day Is the' 27th day of June, 1925; The date of the first publication of this summons is the ltith- dv of May 19J5. REAM ICS & RKAMKS, Attorneys for Plnintiff Address: A? 2 Liberty Building, Med o:d, Oregon. ChiUlren's Pictorial , A ; Cross Word' Puzzle HOW TO SOLVE PUZZLE. ; The ords start in the numbered squares and run either across or down. Only one fc-tter is placed in each white square. If the proper words anv found each combination of letter in . the white squared will form words. The key. to puzzle the lirst word is given in the drawing. Below are keys to the other words. Running Across.; '.' Wor J . l,..,,T.tie.. Iftrge plftte in thft picture. v ' r ' '.' . Word G. , The. opposite of high. Woid 7. A grsat many.. .. , Word 8. To direct or point a weapon at a particular object. . , Word a. In your bible. . A high priest oi Israel, in whose care Sam uel was trained. Word 11. A large city in Can ada. Running Down. Word 1. One employed to steer a vessel. Word 2. ..Word 3. from. . , Word. 4.. man who Finn." . .' To change. .toward. . Wot away - The last name of the wrote "Huckleberry Word 6, Juliet's lover in one of Shakespeare's plays. .: ,.. .. Word 10. A biblical term mean ing look, behold, observe. - YESTERDAY'S PUZZtE ANSWERED. , Aa. long as man "and dogfllve to-. Kether the dog will occasionally blto the man. As. long as the man won't protect the dog . against rabies, tho , dog will vccaslonally send tho man to thy. Pasteur Institute , to i reflect over his neglect. .... '-'' iiWHW - - Notico to Bond Buyers. j , School District No. 49. of .Jacksda County, Oregon, on May 5, 1925, hav ing voted to authorize the issuance of One Hundred ' Elnhty,five ($185.- OOtl.00) Thousand Dollars worth of bonds for the construction of a hteli school building within said district; . . NOTICE . is hereby crlven. lhnt hliln will' rp- uolved for the purchase of the said is- ' sue of bonds up to and including July i, izo, at o o-ciocK n..m. All bids shall -be scaled and shall be accompanied by a certified check, pay able to the School District No. 49. for u per cent or tne orrcr mane, to be re turned In-the event the bid is not'iic cepted by the hoard. The Hoard of Directors reserves the riirht to relect - any nnd all bids. ... .,. Information in recard tn thin iRsim nf bonds will be'furnished upon applica- . tlon to the Clerk of the Board. Ad- . dress p.li communications to Clerk of. School District No. 49,. Medford, Orc-." gon...- .... ... . ... -. , ,. ... u Dated June 6, 1925. ' (Signed) P. D.. PHIPPS. i ' . '' . , Chairman. ' (Signed) HUTU MANNlNfi. ... ...p... , . ...... ...... . clerk. : DRINK MaidCTSko ' IT'S DELICIOUS ' Nevei? before could yon Duy; so mucn iruit in a small bottle, ...... .j Is mnrlfi fi-ivm TJnnl . OraHTeS and thnro nvo Tin Ti .7 ,., lu(?re aie 110. symnetic navors added. t l . ; , ...Close your e3'es and you can easily imagine 'you are "drinking" the fruit itself. t IA.11 our products are ffuar auteed to be pure and whole some, whieh is your protec tion. .... 'Jackson County . Creamery ..Jl. "IF3 b 1 kA. S .T. I i I E I 1- - I V I e 0