PAGE EIGHT
BEDFORD MATT7TBTTSTTM3. fEDFORT). OTJTTiON'. TTTTTRSDAY. BECEAFBER 8. 1938.
MEDFORDvi-TRIBUNE
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Rda thm UmU TribM."
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Publlthtd by
MEDFORD PRINTINO CO.
tlIT2 No. fir flU Pboa Tl
ROBbUT W. RUHL. Editor.
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Ms!
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
Military experts predict the fight
jng In tha next war. will be waged,
ehlefly by machinery. ThU leaves the
prlvatea In the rear ranks, with
nothing to do, but salute the myri
ads of 3nd loots.
The New Mexico aheap experiment
tatlon reports "a black aheep'a wool
1a grey, and sometime changes to
brown In ruga," There have been
time; 'vhen a "black sheep" showed
up aa a defendant, waa pictured aa
white by counsel, and the Jury made
him blue,
SUCH CANDOR
(Oakland (Calif.) Tribune)
"Millions to work on WPA. Aa
the debt la now .19,000,000.000.
we find he apent al2.O0O.0O0.OO0
to pull the country out of the
ditch and keep the Americana'
body and soul together. Should
we be harrasaed? I don't think."
.
Tributes, tinged with sarcasm, greet
the announcement James Roosevelt,
son of the president, hsa risen to a
90.000 per year vice-presidency of
a movie firm. Jamea la now 31, and
too old. but as a boy down on the
farm, he would have gone far and
high, In a 4-H club atockralslng con
test. "Several members of the Pride of
Oregon camp, Royal Neighbor lodge,
and a few visitors gave a surprise
galloping tea on Mra. Anna Hansen,
one of their membera Friday eve
ning." (Cooa Bay Times) What
might be called a social hop.
...
A lady lecturer compares and de
clares there la no difference between
Adolf Hitler, and a burglar. This
comes under the head of libel, and
burglars ahould aee their lawyers.
F. Luy, the Antelope cowman, has
been going to the dentist. Hereafter,
Mr. Luy will not drag a branded
steer, unable to get up, out of the
corral by Ita tall.
...
The Tula spirit has gripped the
Older Girls. They are shopping,
cleaning house, and hoping for a
"white Chrlatmaa," with snow that
ean't be tracked Into the parlor.
Kids have started writing letters to
Bant Clsus and bicycles are the
moat popular request. This refutes
the common belief every kid already
had one.
A sensational kid pitcher of the
American IraRue. nahbed and fined
for driving His auto 87 mllea per
hour, plana to appeal the decision
to the Iowa aupreme court. The
Iowa governor, following a personal
plea of tha high paid athlete, de
clined to restore his driver's license.
It Is highly probable his 1030 con
tract will have a clause tending to
transfer some of the Hunt-headed-neea
to the heavy foot on the gas.
Otherwise his bosses may well fear
their prlr Investment will be no
further use on the diamond. They
should present the gentleman with
one of the Kentucky road signs
that read: "SIOW UP, BEPOMC YOU
BECOME A STATISTIC!"
11I.IMISKS oT MlllKII
(Klamath Kails Herald)
"We went through safety week
without any serious accidents
and this year male drivers coped
with the added haunts of short
skirts on attractive pedestrians,
too."
Mr. Prltchett of Canada, a Pacific
Coast labor leader. In Portland thla
week, along with H. Brldc.es of
Austtnlla and others, to scold the
people of Oregon for passage of the
ntl-plrket law, and hatch plans lor
Its annulment, Is charged with Com
munistic leanings, by testimony be.
fore the Dies committee. Whereupon.
Mr. Prltchett retorts from behind
the east-tails of the President, say
ing: "In my opinion, the Dies com
mittee la nothing but a committee
set up to attack the President and
the Nrw Deal." There la no use
bet Ing the author of that crack
will not scoot back to his native
Canada beloie the Dies committee
can subpoena him to explain It.
2Sr; Discount on all
Rewti - r.,. '.i ui and Hats
ETHEL WYN B. HOFTMANN
Be Careful This Christmas
VT0UNG BILL won't bang up his stockings this Christmas eve.
The little boy who so eagerly watched for Santa Clans
last year, who dashed from his snug bed at the crack of dawn
on Christmas morn to joyously unwrap a new football and a
pair of roller skates is gone.
A careless driver a swerving car with screeching brakes!
and Christmas for all time was ended for one small boy.
So Christmas will not be the same in Young Bill's home
this year a day filled with happiness and joy and boyish
laughter has become one of bitter memories and tragic despair.
No tree will glitter with tinsel and lights; no stockings will
hang in anticipation of a visit from a pudgy old man with
flowng white beard and scarlet nose whose reindeer clatter
across the roofs of little boys' and girls' homes.
VfOUNG BILL'S life represented the sacrifices, the anxieties
and sufferings of parents whose purpose in this world was
to have their boy grow up to be a useful man.
Yes, Young Bill had been warned not to play in the street
little boys and girls don't always heed warnings. Some adults
don't either 1
Christmas day will be one of sadness in many homes, simply
because SOME people who drive are not careful I
rIE holiday season is always a danger period in traffic.
TriArA ia tVja ehii.pv anA Vinatlo tf elinnninrr rlacViimv tr.
parties. Visibility is poorj streets are wet and slippery.
It's time right now to make a few holiday resolutions
Drive slowly no excuse can be given lor speed that
may cost a life I
Be courteous I Let the Christmas spirit of "Peace "on
Earth, Good Will to Man" be reflected in YOUE driving!
And again we say, if you drive don't drink; if you must
drink, don't drivel
The Medford Traffic Safety Council, comprising public
spirited men in all walks of life, is seeking to make YOUE city
a safer place in which to drive and walk. Traffic, police
and schciol officials are cooperating in this commendable program.
It is clearly an obligation
whole-hoartcdly cooperate.
So, DRIVE CAEEFULLY I
The Lion Stirs
THERE is so little good news in the world today, particu
lni.lv in tfltl.srta tlinf wliai, an Annm. ..n U..K
up, it should be mentioned.
The dispatch from London that England is planning to make
a large loan to China, comes under the heading of "good news"
certainly.
Since Munich there lias been a general feeling, that "perfidi
ous Albion" would bow before superior might in the Far East,
as she did in Central Europe, and abandon China, as she aban
doned Czechoslovakia.
In fact some students of the Far Eastern situation, have
feared that England would not only abandon China, but resume
her old alliance with Japan, and for certain trade concessions,
let Nippon have a free hand in the far Pacific.
IF this war loan report is correct, however, it means that John
Bull has no such intention, and will oppose the conquest of
China, with moral and financial support, if not with her naval
and military power.
For John, Bull doesn't ninke loans, to an enemy potential or
actual, nor to a forlorn cause.
This change of front in tho Far East, added to Britain's
abandonment of her appeasement program, as far as returning
colonies to Gcniuuiy is concerned, strengthens the hope, that the
.Munich surrender did not mean the decline and fall of Anglo
Saxon democracy in Europe, but merely a bid for time, during
which to prepare, for the inevitable showdown,
In other words John Hull may be on his way out, only the
future can tell, but at least ho is going down with his colors
flying, he isn't going to take it, as so many feared, lying down!
Whatif,--!
IT is interesting to notice the universal acclaim iu the American
press that arises to greet Secretary Hull's trade treaties
with Great Britain. We are hearing a lot about the mother
country these days. Is it not a subconscious desire of Americans
to cuddle up to mamma in times of dangert In other fairer
days when anyone would say a kind thing or do a favor for
Great Britain, all the Anglo phobia latent in this country after
the Revolutionary war would begin to appear in growls and
rages. Now the Hull treaty which makes this country econom
ically a part of the British empire is greeted with huzzas.
The delight is genuine enough. It hasn't been worked up.
The applause conies from a feeling that we luivo over-played
the tariff barrier business too far. No one can doubt that the
economic interests of all the democracies the British Empire,
the Scandinavian countries, France, Holland, Belgium and
Switzerland are almost identical. In these democracies we are
all middle-class people. We all have a fairly high standard of
living, America a little higher than some others, perhaps, slight
ly lower than the Scandinavian countries. But no serious com
petition from cheap labor would face us in any alliance, league
or union of the democracies,.
11iIAT if in some period not so remote, the triautiiiliir inili
" tary alliance of licrnuniy, Italy and Japan shall force
the world's democracies. ;l(Hl million people, into an economic
union? If the union works, if it is found there is no competition
of low standard living among those 300 million people, if it is
found that the H00 million people can unite in trade treaties
and ally themselves for military defense, how long would it
be before those democracies with their 300 million people will
be coining exactly the same money, forming their own political
union, raising their common' defense plans! Then the next step,
a short one, will be a national conference, council, assembly or
but your eye and swallow it '. congress to regulate international
commerce in the international state.
. The parliament of the world! Win. Allen White in Emporia
I Knn.) Gazette.
Franklin D. Roos.rlt ns the Mrst p:tlnum was known to the n
Demorrstlc state sen tor fleeted trom dents but its high melting point
his New York district since 1S6 1 prevented their working It.
of good citizenship for ALL to
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letten pertaining to persunuj health and byciene, not to disease
(Jlugtiouli or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a tamped self
addrewd envelope 1 enclosed- Letters huuld be brief and written In ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply can he made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address
Dr. William Urady, 205 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
TUB USES
Beside the heart, germ or embryo
In the kernel, from which wheat
grows, the outer cost of the kernel
is removed In the
modern milling
of flour, and the
outer coat or
bran contains
considerable vita
min B complex
tho not so large
a proportion of
It as Is contained
In the germ,
Plain wheat. If
people can be
taught to use It
In the everyday
dletaiy. Is probably the best natural
food source of the vitally Important
vitamin B complex now available to
the white race.
Wheat bran and wheat germ are
both excellent and wholesome foods
for everybody not under medical care
or not In a state of Invalidism.
Trouble Is that commercial and sub
sidized medical nnd health propa
ganda have instilled Into the lay
mind morbid notions that wheat
bran and wheat geim are in some
vague way unfit or even injurious
for human consumption.
The fine bran or outer coat of
tho rice kernel, called rice pollshings.
contains most of the vitamin B
complex which grows in rice. This
outer coat of rice is removed be
cause the commercial lntei-ests long
ago taught the simple laity that
Buch polished "white" rice Is "purer"
and better suited to the refined taste
and delicate dices' Ion of civilized
people than is the natural unpol
ished brown rice. That little affecta
tion of degenerate civilization has
been responsible for untold suffering
from beri beri in eastern tropical
countries. In my opinion ultrarefine
ment of wheat In the manufacture
of white flour Is responsible for a
large part of the poor health of
the average American population
the moderately well-to-do class who
do not suffer from famine or from
starvation, but do suffer from Igno
rance of nutrition.
So difficult Is It for people to
avoid the use of ultrnreflned, de
natured, vitamin-poor staples of
the diet that the only practical way
to correct the deficiency In the diet I
Man About
Manhattan
Bv r.EOHOi: TLCKKIt
NEW YORK The loneliest and
most forlorn creature In New York
Is the chestnut vender. Somebody
I think It was the late o. O. Mcln
tyre described him once as "a scare
crow on a windswept corner, sticking
at sorrow like a lollipop." Odd was
in very good form when he wrote
that phrase.
For the man with the charcoal
smudge is one of the unforgettable
vignettes of metropolitan life. You
will find him
where the crowds
are thickest and
where the winds
nre chlllest, hud
dled over hie
movable charcoal
stand, a smudge
on his chock ,
more than likely
an Icicle on . the
end of his nose,
hawking a con
fection In n voice
that is part cry.
part prayer, part
grunt and a
1
,1
groan: "Chest
nut, sir. hot chestnuts, rich off
th fire, rlcht out of the red hot
pan ..."
There used to be a lot of htm but
his number now Is sadly diminished.
Where he hides In summer no one
knows, but when winter comes he
emerges from hiding and takes up
his position In the crowded actors
of 6th avenue, of Times Square, of
Herald Square, in subway entrances,
nnd on icy comers. His sales ere In
five- and ten-cent lots. Oddly onnv:h
his success is greatest when the ele
ments nre against htm. when the
thermometer falls, when the wind
curls out of the north with nn ley
keen, when the pavements are slip
pery, when each breath loaves a frojrty
plume In the air.
I think that when he finally dis
appears something will have p.used
from the American scene that nil the
Ingenuity of the novelists and the
movies can never replace. Like the
hlll-bllly mountaineer nnd the cleat
store Indian he Is ementlally Kmvr
ienn. Anyway he Is essentially New
York. But In his eye you will detect
a lurking fenr, n shadowy pwr-aiement
that asks why hut dtv not militarily
reject the semilng conspiracy acn!n.n
him.
There Is a conspiracy. The radio,
the mall-order clothes, the automo
bile tivik the coonskln cap of, the
mountaineer. It Is the liex, rhle,
streamlined nut shoppes (somtitine$
in his pnirrs he must a-K Ood what
a shoppe is nnd what he has done to
have an av.ilnu 'lie of them cent
hlMh
REAL BARGAINS IN LUMBER
while they last at
BIG FINES LUMBER CO.
PHONE 1.
Brady, M D.
OP WHEAT
I Is by taking dally an adequate
j amount of vitamin B complex In
a concentrated form or, If one can
manage It, by eating dally seveial
ounces of wheat germ or a few
ounces of dried brewers yeast or a
few ounces of powdered rice polish -lngs,
or any combination of these.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Lumps
Have had lump In my right breast
size of silver dollar at times It
feels sore and pains some. Three
smaller lumps, one next the large
one, one an Inch above It, one in
armpit. Age 61. Health poorly for
years, underweight, do not have
much appetite. Mrs. M. P. O.
Answer The description or history
you give Is Inadequate. Better have
your doctor examine you, and be
guided by the doctor's advice.
Inhalation
How do you explain the practice
of many physicians who prescribe
(an Iodine salve) as an application
over the thyroid gland, and how it
works. If nothing is absorbed through
the unbroken skin? p. H. H., Ph.O.
Answer Just aa I would explain
the systemic action of camphor when
camphorated oil Is applied to the
throat, chest, etc. this has caused
serious poisoning of Infants in some
instances. Of course the Iodine or
the camphor volatilized by the heat
of the body is Inhaled. Physicians
probably prescribe such things be
cause their forefathers did so.
Nutrition and Disease
How can I secure a copy of Prof.
Edward Mellanby's book on "Nutri
tion and Disease?" You referred to
it recently. Mrs. E. O, E.
Answer If It is not available In
the public library, any book dealer
can got It for you. I doubt you
will derive any practical help from
it. The high vitamin A diet, etc..
Sir Edward suggests for multiple
(disseminated) sclerosis, trifacial neu
ralgia, etc.. Is given tn "Nerves and
Nutrition." for copy of which send
twenty cents coin and stamped enve
lope bearing your address.
(Copyright, 1938, John P. Dillc Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wtshlng to
commit nl( ate with Dr. Brady
tfhould send letter direct to Dr.
Wllllnm Brady, M. !).. 26S El
Camlno. Beverly Mills. Calif.
against him) that Is erasing 1 him
from the streets of New York.
The merchant la against him. too.
In cooperation with the city, there
la an ordinance against him now.
forbidding him to approach within
100 feet of a store. When he passes
beyond this deadline he is arrested.
The merchants say he is unsightly.
Itinerant peddlers find no favor in
corporation men and the big store
owners.
November to March Is his waeon
He obtains his chestnuts from the
freighters off East River docks in
small but wholesale lots. Most do
mestic chestnuts it seems are Import
ed from Italy. Formerly they were
American raised, but an Aslnstlc bark
disease left its mark on the chesvnut
forests of the United States. Hence
the daily scene of ventilated barrels
being hoisted from the hold of those
low-lying, black freighters off the
end of 33rd street.
I think he is doomed. I think In
a few years he will have disappeared.
But It seems to me that the smell
of his blazing charcoal burner and his
ory of "Chestnuts, sir," will always
be remembered, for they are as na
tive as tho cry of "play ball'1 or
"Buddy, can you spare a dime'''
4
The
Capital
Parade
(Continued from rage One)
pointment of Donald W. Smith to the
National Labor Relations board.
Smith Is one of the most aggressive
members of this troubled and much
denounced agency. He is regarded
as a CIO man, and his confirmation
will be opposed by the AP of L. All
the conservatively Inclined senators,
anxious to tnke a whack at the board
without seeming to attack labor'. Will
surely yield to the AF of L's tempta
tion's. Indeed, there's am excellent
chance that Smith won't be con
finned. Then Senator Carter Glass and
Harry P. Byrd. a formidable team,
are infuriated by a presidential ap
pointment to a Virginia Judgeship
nnd have sworn to defeat it, If
senatorial courtesy prevails, they
should succeed. And the report Is
that. In sounding out senate senti
ment on a good place for Governor
Frank Murphy of Michigan, the presi
dent has already met with violent
opposition. As for Harry L. Hopkins,
if the president merely gives him
the commerce department, the re
action should be mild. But if there
Is intimation that Hopkins will also
have a big hand tn the national de-
6TH AND FIR
fense program, the senate chamber
ought to resemble a glass of Seldlttz
powders.
Finally, there u the biggest prob
lem of all finding s successor to
Justice Cardozo. Of course. If the
president chooses rellx Frankfurter,
as he Is most likely to do, the senate
Is likely to approve the choice as
heartily as the public. A handful
of narrow extremists may cavil at
It. But Frankfurter's fine mind, long
public service and splendid abilities
appeal equally to wise conservatives
snd wise liberals.
Indeed, the mere existence of so
outstanding a candldste puts the
president In something of a dilemma
If he yields to his political Inclina
tions. Should his fondness for a
smart political trick prevail, a west
erner will be his candidate. If the
westerner Is such a man as Governor
Murphy or Senator Lewis Schwellen
bach of Washington, there will be
senatorial explosions. If he Is a
milder fellow, like Judge Harold M.
Stephens of the district circuit court
of former Senator James P. Pope of
Idaho, there will merely be a sigh of
disgust that the president should
have taken second best for political
reasons.
Of course, there Is the possibility
that Justice Brandels' resignation
may create a second supreme court
vacancy. As your correspondents
were the first to refer to this pos
sibility, It seems wise to add here, as
a postscript, that the story was not
Inspired, did not emanate from the
New Deal left wing, and was not
written with the Intention of "putting
pressure" on the justice. Vour cor
respondents, like the members of the
New Deal left wing, heve a deep snd
reverent admiration for Louis Dem
bitz Brandels. They merely sought
to record a choice offered to him by
the plight of his race, to alleviate
which would be the only reason for
his leaving the court. And whether
he decides to stay on the court or
leave It, they will be sure that Bran
dels has done right.
4
Comment
on the
Days News
By FRANK JENKINS
ACCORDING to the census bureau
there are some 14 Vi million em
ployed women in the United States.
(This refers to women getting a
pay check. Housewives aren't pre
sumed to be employed. The supposi
tion Is that they Just fool around
the house some 16 to 18 hours a
day, whiting away their time bj
cooking, washing dishes, making beds,
scrubbing floors, etc.)
ACCORDING to the best guesses
available (which probably aren't
any too accurate) there is about
an equal number of unemployed
persons In the country presumably
men, since housewives aren't count
ed either way.
If you like to Jump to hasty con
clusions, here Is one:
Fir all the employed women and
give their Jobs to men. Whereupon
(If It Is true that women don't
count, anyway) unemployment will
immediately VANISH.
IT WOULD be nice to get rid of
unemployment. If we could get
rid of unemployment, we ought to
be able to get rid of relief, also
and relief Is becoming a frightful
drain on the country's resources.
But does anyone really suppose
that if we fired all the employed
women and gave their Jobs to men
there would no longer be any need
for relief in the United States?
MAYBE your daughter has a Job
and your son HAS NONE, ir
so, you are In a position to test
out this theory for yourself, without
watting for the country to try It
out on a national scale.
Just go around to your daughter's
boss and persuade him to fire her
and give hsr Job to your son.
Then, aftr you've done that, see
If It's any easier to pay your bills
and keep your family going.
YouH discover, of course, that It
ISNT.
IN YOUR grandfather's day very
few women worked for wages.
Theoretically, therefore, the men had
an easier time in those days, be
cause they weren't subjected to the
competition of women workers.
But your grandfather had to buy
for HIS daughter, out of his own
pocket, all the things YOUR daugh
ter buys for herself with the wages
she earns.
So, the chances are. It wasn't sny
easier for your grandfather than It
is for you.
MR. INVESTOR, MEET MR.
Flight o Time
Medford and Jack son County
history from the files of the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
December 8. 1038
(It was Sunday)
Medford enters bid for next meet
ing of State Bar association.
Rumor waiter Pierce, former gover
nor of Oregon, married at Christmas
time.
Mussolini of Italy, agrees to sign
peace treaties, but will Increase army
when financially able.
Timber survey of county proposed.
First Chrlatmaa mall arrives at post
offioa.
Congress balks at move to have
America adhere to world court.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
December 8, 1918
(It was Monday)
Ex-kalser attempts suicide at Hol
land retreat. .Servant who foiled try
is wounded. Brother of Wllhelm re
ported to form royalist party in Ger
many. Allies again demand Germany
comply Immediately with all
of the armistice.
Night Policeman Charles Adams Is
confined to his home with a severe
cold.
The Totnlin Box Factory let con
tract for laying of foundations for
new plant.
County farmers to form bureau on
federal plan.
"Better and happier world" Is seen
by leader of newly formed Czecho
slovakia. Crop value coming vear to exceed
those of 1018. agricultural repjrt says.
4
Communications
Medford Taxes Are Higher
To The Editor:
In you editorial under caption,
"Local Taxes Decline," you give Med
ford and Jackson county a fine boost,
but sad as It Is you are certainly
wrong.
When the poor deluded taxpayer
tenders his tax money to the sheriff
he will discover that not only will
his taxes not be lower, but about 25
per cent higher.
Last year the levy In Medford for
all purposes, Including, county, state
city, and school district 49 was 56.1
mills, this year It Is 48.3 mills.
That looks gooo, doesn't It? BUT
the assessed valuation has been rals-
MAKE MINE
Whaf'll yours
0
v irB rwiiTO- sa
Here the careful investors of this association combine their
funds to help their neighbors to buy or build homes.
The home owners get the necessary funds. The investors get
sound first mortgage security, and Federal insurance. -
JACKSON COUNTY FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
ed 50 and In some lnitanoes more,
so the tax on 81000 assessed valuation
was $56.10 In 1038; on the asms
property assessed at 81500 this year,
the tax will be 872.40. Not much "de
cline." Sorry to disturb a pleasant dream.
Respectfully,
J. W. SHIRLEY,
Medford, Dee. 6th.
Editor's Note: t
The news story on which tha
editorial comment was based, was In
complete. In that It failed to state
the Increase In assessed valuation,
and taxing base. The mlllage rata
has been reduced slightly but tha
fact remains that taxes In Medford
this year on the same piece of prop
erty will be approximately 37 great-'
er than a year ago. though In soma
ether sections of the county, they
will be less. We thank Mr. Shirley
for the correction
4
Maybe She'll Fly
BOURNEMOUTH, England JrV
Mrs. Julie Hames at the ag of 100
loves everything on wheels. She haa
done so since her pram days. At tha
age of 62 she learned to ride a bike,
and rode It until she was 80. At 84
she rode on the "rumble seat" of
a motor-bicycle "because" she ex
plained, "I saw other girls doing It,"
At 90 she learned to drive a car.
Chevrolet
JINGLES
Copyrighted.
Well the rainy season 1 now
in our midst.
Everything from a down
pour to a gentle mist.
The pavements wet and slip
pery, so watch your step!
Have to hold back some of
that Chevrolet pepl
Better to sleep at home in
your comfy bed
Than land in a hospital with
a bandaged head 1
Of course, with our perfected
hydraulic brakes,
You are MUCH safer than
with any other makes I
Chevy M. Hurd
Rogue River Chevrolet
Main and Riverside
Service Dept. 32 North Riverside
I'sed Car Lot Riverside at 4th
be-whiskey mixed or straight?
WITH OOP!
Whatever your answer is, the
whiskey to pick is OOP (short for
Old Oscar Pepper).
That's because OOP stsods up per
fectly in any mixed drink-being all
whiskey. What's more, OOP is grand
tlraigbt because it's tombinalim of
straight whiskies, specially selected to
give you a combination of robust fla
vor and mellow smoothness.
So try OOP today Frankfort DhlilL
triSt Inc., Louist iUt and Baltimore
0
RAND
A blend of straight whlikle,
100 straight whllkl., 90 preef
95 4.85
Ull PINT FUU OUAUT
ALSO AVAILASJLI IN RYE
HOME OWNER