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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1936)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1936 MEDFORDtffeTRIBUNE "E.eryoo la Bout hero Ongom BMdl Iht Mail Trlbiuw" Dailj Uscept Saturdaj Published by MEDPORU PRINTING CO. tl-lT-2 N. Fir BU Phon, tl. ROBERT W. HUHU Editor. ERNEST B. OILSTRAP, MtDftt-r. Ad Indap-ndent Nwsppr. Entered aa aeoond-cliM matttr it Med fer Orafon, under Act of March I. Utl, SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance! Dally, on year Dally, all month! .11 00 . a. 76 Dally, one, momn '" z. By Carrier, in Advance Madford, An land. Jacksonville. Central Point, Pbo.nl, Talent, Gold Hill W4 o bli hwaya. Daily, one year Dally, all monthe..... Dally, one month M All term a. eaata In advance. Official Paper of the City of UtdCord. Official Paper of Jackaoo County. UKMIIKR OF THE ABHOCIATKD PKU.B8 Recrlvloc Full l-tuifd Wire Kerice. The Aaaoclated Praia la aKClualvely en titled to the uae for publication of all newa dlapatchea credited to It or other wise oreditad In thla paper, and also to tbe local nawa published herein. All rlrhte for publication of apeelal dlapatchea herein are alio reaarved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRBBS MEMIiKR OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adrertlalng- Repreeentatlvea M. C. MOQEN8EN ft COHPANI Offlcea in New fork. Chicago Detroit San Frenclaco, Loa An galea. Saat'.le, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur perry. r i-nM SimdSV tO 72. -in liivn. j - causing the men to loosen vest button or two: the graas grow greener, and the bird, ilng swell, and women don't worry about rain on their marcel. Bad now., If true, drift down from upstate the Aatorla n'Sh school baaketball aquad may not reach the atate tournament. :taeem the alwaya flashy, fancy Finns ere. encountering trouble with the im, and the competition. It Is hoped they conquer both, for a atate tour nament without them would be sad. There would be aomethlng mining, and indefinably lacking with their ' absence. They alwaya brought color and Noree aturdlneaa, and when un der full ateam. aomethlng of eweep of the blue Pacific, by whose sand, they abide. They were a P1"ru" to watch, and never booed. The heartache, of their staying home U they do will not be confined w their home-town. If In the exlgro clea of competition, A.torla send, no quint, the tournament rule, that permit a "host team" should be atretched to provide for sub host squad. It would be a pretty sentiment, and financially profit able. s WILD LIFE IN KANSAS (Lyons, Kan.. News) A Kansas wild We society Is being formed at Wichita. It about time. We read yesterday ebcut a farmer's faithful old Fldo being caught In the pas ture helping two ooyote. eat the farmer's calf. With nothing fiercer than Jackrsbblta to hunt, and moat of them clubbed to death last yesr by Sunday school classes. Kansas sports men have turned to crowa and country house cats a1 predatory life that should be eliminated. With coyotes gone elssy and playing with our pups, the wild est species left In Kansas Is the taxpayer. ... Skepticism reared Its ugly head Monday. A cltlren whose mate cooks on an electrlo stove exclusively, ap peared, with a black eye, caused by a stick of kindling flying "P. audden-llke. t The esteemed Corvalll. Ossette Tlmes questions the faith of the esteemed Eugene Register - Guard, In It own editorial claim: "There Isn't a bona-tlde 'red' on the Ore gon campus." The Just as esteemed Salem Statesman, editorially wells: "Well. It la Interesting to learn there are no 'Red.' In the Dnlver students or fac ulty nothing worse than 'pink toothbrush'." Neveruileas. ana j and large, many laymen hold their are too many Communistic tricks and tracks around the campus, to be no Communists real or fancied at large. tn Texas, a patriot shot a fellow in rhm thlffh. to conclude a heated argument over the issues of the coming campaign, nm-irm-pered. gun-totlng voters should re member there are no polling places In penitent lsrles, snd they were just as mad In the last campaign about something they can t remem ber now. . "The Wales plan never has looked good to The Record editor. We have been told to mind our own printing buMneaa and leave engineering mat tera to the menfolk." (Merrill, Ore.. Record). Wherein an editor gets told. Dewey Hill, the valiant Prospect hillbilly athlete, came out of a baa ketball game last Sst. evng with only a sprained ankle, a smashed tinner, cula on the lett ear, and a lacerated left hip-pocket. The sides of the building stood up well. "Anyhow, the hrsln-trustere sgree that It was a great alphabet while It lasted." iBuffslo Courler-Ej-presa). Now slightly used. ... The ssddast snd most frequent rural Item these dsys reads: "One of the es1 things shout the smash wss the fsct the csr was new." . Economy hss started to show up on the country road. The economy was supposed to rage only on the rosd that run nv the other fel low's house, very witch repaired her. la glvsu the micrometer tub Jao. W. Johosoa, Editorial Correspondence LOS ANGELES, March 1. March not only came in like a lamb today, but like a lamb stew bubbling on a hot plate. All heat records for March since the 1920 'a were broken, and when we went down to breakfast the elevator boy remarked it was "perfect earthquake weather." Perhaps the heat had induced an argumentative mood. At any rate we opined earthquake weather was just another of those old wives' tales, the condi tions beneath the earth's crust could hardly influence the mer cury in the thermometer or vica versa. The elevator boy how ever stuck to his guns. He had been through a big quake a few years ago, it wasn't the heat alone but the stillness in the air, not a breath stirring as if all Nature had suspended it's activities, preparing itself for a catastrophe. (The latter wasn't the elevator boy 'a idea, but our own.) e e . Well the elevator boy was right. Returning to our room about an hour later, preparatory to meeting a Sunday dinner engagement in Pasadena, the ice in the water pitcher started to tinkle, then the bed quivered into a gentle shimmy, and yours truly started for sanctuary under the nearest door jamb, prepared for the worst. But nothing more happened. That was all. Having been through a real shake in El Centro several years ago, we decided this was nothing worth recording. How ever we will have to say this for the Los Angeles newspapers. When the first editions of the morning papers came ont, they all had the temblor on the front page, and the heat record also. Perhaps they are not such servile mediums of chamber of com merce propaganda, as we had supposed. The races at Santa Anita are over, and the auditors are n6w busy figuring out how much of the $25,000,000 taken in can be transferred to profit. Quite a tidy sum we imagine.- The state of California gets a cool million, and as (according to report) the stockholders paid for their investment out of last year's profits, with a 100 increase this year, there should be quite a boost in the sale of Rolls Royces, in Pasadena. Being imbued with the Boy Scout spirit, we threw our PERSONAL inclinations to the wind and agreed to chaperone a young mnn from the middlewest, to his first horse race on the last day. The young man happens to stand six feet four in his jocks, tjp the beam at around 225, and was an All American tackle this last year. He hails from the University of Minne sota, played in the East-West game at San Francisco and has just returned from Hawaii, where he lost his first football game in three years, to the Detroit Lions the pro team if we remember correctly. We might as well go the whole hog now and introduce him as Dick Smith incidentally one of the most attractive young men it has ever been our good fortune to meet. s ' In fact we could devote an entire article to Dick Smith and perhaps one of these days we will. In which case we shall dedicate the same to those sour-faced, jaundiced-eyed old boys, and girls, who spend so much time deploring the laxity and self indulgence of the modern youth, and thanks to its deca dence, see the entire world going to the demnition bow wows. Here is a lad who has .been a college and football hero for three years, with all that such a role implies, just as simple, un spoiled, clean cut, and modest, as even that Polyanna of juvenile fiction, the late Horitio M. Alger, could have envisioned, in his palmiest days. Nor will we concede he is the exception to prove the rule. No, ladies and gentlemen, modern youth is all right, all in all better equipped we believe to make a success in life than the generation that preceded it. If you doubt it, come down and meet Dick Smith. Our chief performance as chaperone for this All American linesman consisted in grabbing his eoat tail and letting him clear the way through the mass of struggling humanity, that packed the Santa Anita track on the final day of the meet. There was no resistance the crowd just melted away when they saw him coming. That and trying to determine without impairing our reputation as a great judge of horse flesh, just which quadruped he would put his money on provided he had any to put. Tor the boy had beginner's luck. He hadn't como to bet however, but to see the spectacle, and some of the best horses in the country do their stuff. His aunt had given him a couple of dollars to put on Ariel Cross for the big race because the odds were attractive. Dick studied the question and as the horses filed up the track looked them over carefully. He dis carded the racing dope and characteristically followed the technique he KNEW SOMETHING ABOUT that of the. foot ball field. The biggest horse', the most powerful animal, ap pealed to him. "Look at Whopper, what a running guard he would make!" So those two dollars went on Whopper, on the nose! And did Whopper win by three lengths and was lead ing the pack all the way. At that Aunty wasn't so far off, Ariel Cross came in show. e . . Well it was a great day, and when Dick returned home and gave Aunty her winnings, she proclaimed him a great horse race expert which of course he is. Anyone who can pick a winner is just that, and anyone who enn't is something else again. The' meet came near ending in tragedy. We happened to be at the starting line when the gong for the last race rang out. Eitfht horses jumped as one (incidentally one of the most inter esting things ahout race horses is the way they start like a shot from a gun, a lot of training has to go into that). Well, the horse oi. the rail, Mark Pal a Vanderbilt entry had been nervous all the time. Not two feet away from him we had observed his prancing and pawing with some interest, also the jockey who pink cheeked and frail, looked more like a little lioy taken out of grade school, than most of the jockeys do. As tlie gong sounded Mark Pal plunged forward, stumbled, went to his knees, got up, dashed on with stirrups flying on a bare saddle. The little jockey lay still in the dust I One of the handlers and a policeman rolled him over, picked him up, his arms dangled, like those of a rag doll. "He's dead" said the woman at our side, "see his back stiffen out, they don't do that, when thev are just knocked out." The horses thundered on, the crowd yelled, no ono paid any attention to the accident, they wanted to see how the race was coming out. No doubt the woman's remark was responsible like most horse women she was so positive, self assured we too thought the jockey dend, and wert unable to take further interest in the race. Just a school kid, done in, so this Roman holiday not the snort of an excuse for winning money the card, not more than 15 or devoted to getting ready to bet. betting, and cashing in on bets, or tearing up vour tickets! What fools we mortals be! Only one in a thousand wins, and 000 of the losers can't afford to lose. The moth and the flame. the spider and all these poor saps of human flies. and death his white, red and blue sash, his pink cheeks, those blue chev rons on his sleeve! "Death in the afternoon." Half an hour later we found all our fears were unfounded-- the jockey was knocked out but not badly hurt, we had only thirty minutes of unpleasant speculation and a lot. of foolish moralizing for our pains! Yes, foolish, for what good we like it or don't, just living if unci on ! Aid To Property Own.rs ROSEBURO, Ore, Msrcb 3 (API A rebate of two percent in Inter sst charges on delinquent rltjr lient pa:t In full althln the next SO dayt was rctei hers last Blfht by the city council. mob of people could enjoy a kings or any other sport, just and losing it. Eight horses on 20 minutes of racing five hours ends it all for that boy with does moraliiing dot Whether is a gamble, and the dance of 1? W. R. YAMHILL. Ore . March S (API- Hens Marsh, attorney for the Yam hill I'nion high achool dim let. aaia final approval had been received or ths 7.aoo hlih school WPA Project and that work probably TOU14 Start V1U4B ft ttt Otjn, Personal Health Service By William Brady, M D. Signed letter, pertaining to personal health and nyglene not to disease dlagntisl. or treatment wtu be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope I. enclosed. Letter, should be brief and written In ink Owing to the large number of letter, received only a few can be answered No reply can o made to querlea not conforming to Instruction.. Address Dr. William Brady. 283 El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cal. WHAT TO DO There's little new I can tell you. Ptom the very multiplicity of theor ies and laboratory observations it seem likely tnai the Illness known as the grip, la grippe, Influenza or flu la not a specific dlaeaae but rather a group of diseases which happen to have certain . y m p toms in com mon. especially fever, chill, prostration and general acbea and pains. Qualifying adjectlvea such aa "Stomach" flu, "Spanish" flu, "nervous" flu are vague attempt, to describe the par ticular type of Illness. i Although no germ or virus as yet discovered can be regarded aa the cause. It Is fairly certain that the disease Is communicable and further that It Is usually a respiratory In fection. By that we mean the germ or virus Is spread through the se cretions from the mucous membrane lining the breathing passages, and It gains entrance to the body of the next person through the muc ous membrane lining the respira tory tract. It might seem logical then to assume that the germ or virus la carried In the air and In haled. That assumption flte In with the old belief that moat epidemics were air-borne and that sometimes great scourges were brought Into a country In the wind blowing across the seal But we know that these notions were absurd. We know that a dlsesse germ or virus never travels in the air: It has to be transported by human or animal or insect, agency In order to retain enough Ufa or virulence to survive and gain foothold in the new country. The nubile has been duly warned about the danger of catching euch disease through the open cough or sneeze. The moisture spray given off when a person coughs or sneezes without carefully masking or cover ing mouth and nose carries as rar u tan or twelve feet, and may carry virulent disease germs or vir us, which la thus directly impian uDon the mouth or nose of an other, perhaps inhaled, so that It lodges on the mucous membrane of the respiratory tract. The publlo' has not been fairly apprised of the more subtle danger of catching atich disease through polite conversational spray. This car ries less thsn live ieei, oraiu, two or three feet, but the Invisibly fine droplets of moisture given on when a person talks may carry the virus or germs of disease and lm i.nt infection directly upon the mucous membrane of the breathing pasaage of another person. In my opinion this Is Indeed the most frequent mode or iniecnon respiratory disease, anyxning uu coryza. to tuberculosis, from grip to cerebro-splnal meningitis. Old tlmera who hold rnipow" political positions in health depart ments still endeavor to make a to do about the agency of dish-wash ing. ahBklng hands, gelling ef fect wet. chsnge of weather, for getting one's heavy underwear oil men. Isn't It characteristic of the medical profession to prefer the roundabout, complicated explanation of things we don't understand very well? Wasn't It the doctors w suthoVlzed or ordered the qustni hntmin nusrsntlne we formerly em ployed against yellow fever In the south? (Editors Note: The Third Article by Dr. Brsdy on Influenza will be Published Tomorrow). Flight 'o Time Mrdrord and Jarkson Count) history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and tl) year, sro. TEN YEARS AOO TODAY March 3. l!- (It was Thursday! Oovernor Fleroe visit valley with state bonus bosrd. Corvsllls voters bsn Sunday movies, Ths almond treea of the city Just coming Into blossom. tonard Carpenter returns from a trip to the west Indies and Cantor nla. Al Melvln. hlh school bssxetbsll prospect, will! not be started In game with Ashland tomorrow night, Coach Calllson announces. BUI Morgan will play at guard. Upstate counties urged to units to secure O -c. ta refunds. Republican leaders In congress oussh Dcmocrntlc plan "to tinker with the tarltf snd monkey with the money svstem." cMtdi;e "economy plan" approved In committee. TWENTY VKAKS AOO TODAY March .1. !!'! (It waa Saturday) Northern Oregon swrpt by snow, sunshine In the valley. If ths grounds are In shape the first practice of the year will be held by the Medtord bsseDall team. epidemic of whooping cough pre- valla in th Table Rork area. Ashland Msh defeats Medtord high 7 to t. In baaketball gams at the Nat. Tfe score at the end of Uie first half wrs three to nothing In favor of A.n land. "Dutch" Thomas scored all the p nts for the locals. UrltUh channel towns raided by Zeppelins; deadlock st Verdun con Unties. Newton D. Baker, former mayor of Cleveland. Ohio, is named secretary of war by Presides Wlltoa. terri.f-f-iAtlWMMl ABOUT THE FLU QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Sleep Ration. How msny hours sleep dally should a child aged 17 months have . . . (Mrs. E. T. M.) Answer A child a yesr old needs 18 hours sleep. At two yesrs fourteen hours. 13 at night and a two hour nap each afternoon. At four years, a child needs twelve hours sleep of which I to 1!4 hours Bhould be In the afternoon nap. At six years, 11 to 12 hours, all at night. 1 At 8 to 10 years. 10 to 10'i hours. At 12 to 18 years, 8 to 10 hours sleep. At 25 to 39, 8 hours sleep. . Prom 38 to 60. 7 hours sleep. Prom 80 to 70. 8 hours sleep. Prom 70 to 180, 8 to 6 hours sleep. Much depends on physical activ ity, not on the amount of so-cslled "brain work." The more active one is physically the more sleep needed, and vice versa. Running Ear I used the ear drops you suggest ed and In three weeks the ear dis charge stopped and I have had no sign of It for nearly a year. I owe you my gratitude for the suggestion and for many other excellent things we have learned from your column . . . (T. 8. H.) Answer The ear-drops consist of a solution of ten grains of boric acid to the ounce of pure grain alcohol. Drop one or two drops In the ear night and morning. Warm the solution first by standing the vial In warm water. This has appar ently atopped the discharge In many cases of chronic running ear, and in any case It is harmless. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communlcoate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Or William Brady, M. D.. 2G5 CI Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. St ay ton Paper 8 old STATTON, Ore., March 3. (API Hal Cuffel announced the purchase of the Stayton Mall from Ralph Curtis today. Cuffel formerly was employed by the atate liquor com mission. Curtis Is night editor of the Salem Statesman. The Mall Is a weekly. S ilk i UNDERTHINGS Ai f A K frr I NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyie NEW YORK, March 3. Irving Ber lin, attaining fresh triumphs with his tunes for the talkies, continues shy est of the cur r e n t celebrities. In almost any public gathering, he has a way of making him self so Inconspic uous he Is often not seen at all. He Is one of the first nlghtera who arrives on time and does not flit around showily between acts. In a close-up he Is soft-spoken, an excellent listen er and has a good word for every body, especially contemporaries In composing. And he's been loyal to friends of other days. Physically frail, he la a careful eater, moderate cigarette smoker and rarely Indulges In more than a single cocktail on festive occasions. One of hla eccentricities on an evening out la to motor to a Broadway barber solely to have his hair brushed. His marriage to the beautiful, and socially prominent Ellen Mack ay. de spite the head waggers, proved a un ion of unusual devotion. He is reput ed to have written a lyrical senti mentality for her eyes alone every week since they were married. Just leaves It around. Jerome Kern and Irving Berlin are richest of the living popular tune makers. Each in the millionaire di vision. Kern's fortune waa augmented by royalties but It was chiefly from his marvelous collection of first edi tions, sold shortly before the crash. He could realise little on them today. Berlin's fortune Is almost solely from his songs. He is said to have loaned his father-in-law, Clarence Mackay. a million when the vast Mackay estate was in Jeopardy. An all-time record aggregation of autograph collectors clotted a few weeks ago at the premiere of the Chaplin picture on Broadway. Scores of them took places hours before the hand-picked crowd began to arrive. For a time they stood dumbly, like cattle In running water, while the current of celebrities swept from li mousines and taxis. All seemed too awed to make usual requests because of the surfeit of ermine, mink and monocles. Then one broke the police corral and the stampede was on. glv- r Itere8 a sale you can't afford to miss! The icere loir IIEFOItE they irere reduced! Come tng Broadway one of the most dis gusting spectacles of "celebrity con slousness" it has ever seen. The monocle Increase this winter la one of the roost pronounced dandy isms since Lucius Beebe barged down from Boston. Heretofore New York has gazed only at such occasional monocllsts as Jules Bache, Achmed Abdullah, De Seguorola, Tommy Mil lard and George Arllss. But a crop of English actors augmented by noble men parked here because of cheaper living haa given the town a glassy gloss. A half-dozen monocles may be counted along the avenue In a short saunter. And several opticians have window cards: "Monocle Adjust ments." The monocle, to my notion, haa no equal in promoting elegance. Noth ing so simple and Inexpensive haa the trick of creating an aura of cul ture, blood and top drawer what-ho. I used to carry one on trips to Europe, not so much for the show, although I had my moments, but as a sort of barrier breaker. Such aa this: I tried on two occasions for a ringside table at a haughty London night club. Each time no dice. A week later I dusted off the monocle, clapped it to my eye and. although the place was Jammed, was piloted pronto smack down among , the swells. Ersktne Owynne tipped me off to that one. Beatrice Kaufman, wife of the play wright, George S. Kaufman, and who has contributed a play and many magazine articles herself, stepped right out front in her new role of fiction chief with the sophisticated Harper's Bazaar, edited by Carmel Snow. What a name for a Colony dessertl Mrs. Kaufman has several surprises for the take-off and her wide acqalntance with the Dorothy Parker, Noel Coward types of literati presages a lot of contacts editors dream about but seldom realize. For no known reason the most reluctant and scantiest outputs of- writing come from those who bear the brand of sophistication. They toss much of it of gratis at cocktail parties. Sudden memory: Center tables with legs carved into claws holding clear glass balls. One of the chronic story tellers came bursting into the Lambs card room wUh a new one. "Stop me If you've heard this, 'he began. And Joe Lanrte, Jr., looking up from a pinochle game, drawled "How?" (Copyright, 1936. McNaught Syndicate) Family Dominated Town GRIDLEY. Kas. (UP) There la a possibility that this town's name may be changed to "KaufmanvUle." Frank Kaufman recently went Into the grocery business, fifth member of his family In business here. The Spi'iimg Sail I A. TWO-WAY Here's a 15-inch girdle that won't roll once it's on. Light ly boned front and back. Small, medium, large. After the sale, $1.98, now only. . . B. KNITTED As tailored or aa feminine a you please. All beautifully made. Lace trimming. Sizes 16, 17, 19, 20. After the sale, $1 now only C. LASTEX ROLL-ON CORSELET Two-way stretch lastex lace uplift brassiere for smooth, unbroken line. 32 to 38. After the $1.98 now only D. RAYON Tou'lt need lota of Blips for your lighter dre&ftes. Tailored or trimmed with lovely laces. Sizes 34-44. Alter the sale, 1.00 now only E. KNITTED Smart pajamas in many styles, mostly 2-piece. High colors snd pastels. Sizes 16, 17, 19. 2a After ths sale, $1 now only , Wmithtd Xot Sketched . . . Satin lastex corselet with lace uplift brassiere. Abdomen and diaphragm lightly boned. Inner-belt corselet of brocaded faille and woven elastic. Well boned back. Sizes 34-52. Sstin all-in-one with lace uplift brassiere Lightly boned. Elastic side panels. 32 to 42. 14-inch girdle: satin lastex. Lightly boned satin panel in front. Slide fastener. 24 to 34. Rayon taffeta slips, lace trimmed or tailored. 7Q. Double stitched seams. Tearose, white. 34-44. I wC. Rayon panties that lit smooth and flat. Lace rtflc trimmed or tailored. Regular and extra sizes. 0 9 others operate an eleotrlo shop, eia yator factory, broom factory and second-hand shop. . Campus Gets Giant Clock AUSTIN, Tex. (UP) Soon there will be no excuse for University of Texas students not knowing what time It is. A tower clock 12 feet In diameter will be erected on the new administration building. It will be visible five miles. Fifty-five clocks will be in the new building. Squirrel Dominates Pets BOURNE, Mass. (UP) Mrs. Eu gene Stowell's pet squirrel harmon iously plays with her cat and dog, and drinks water from a glass. Har riet, the squirrel, is the ruler among the household pets and takes what It wants from them. 5.00 SPECIAL 10.00 Dresses, Coats, Robes ETHELWYN B. HOFFMANN Helping Mothers to Cut Down On Family's Colds Unique Formula for Nose and Throat Helps to Prevent Colds And to Throw Off Head Colds at the Start. SOON CLEARS STUFFY HEAD Mothers are soof ten worried about their families' colds that they find special com fort in this unique aid for preventing colds Vicks Va-tro-nol. Especially designed for nose and upper throat, where most colds 1 starti, Va-tro-nol stimulates the func tions provided by Nature in the nose to prevent colds, and to throw off head colds in the early stages. Used in time at the first sniffle, sneeze or nasal irritation - just a f ewdropsup each nostril Va-tro-nol helps to avoid many colds. Where irritation has led to a clogged-up nose (a stuffy head cold or nasal catarrh) Va-tro-nol spreads through the nasal passages reduces swollen membranes-clears clogging mucus brings comforting relief. A Practical Guide for Mothers Each year, more and more fam ilies are being helped to fewer colds, sftorrer colds and milder colds by fol lowing Vicks Plan for Better Control of Colds. Vicks Plan has been clini cally tested by practicing physicians, and further proved in everyday home use throughout the country. Full details of the Plan come in each package of Vicks Va-tro-nol. 153 Ov.fl Million Vick Aidi Used Yearly Pfor Better Control of Colds prices early I STRETCH ROLL-ON 1 69 RAYON NIGHTIES iC with that Sizes sale, 69 TAFFETA SLIPS RAYON PAJAMAS c 298 298 1 98 - 93 GDtlD f