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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1942)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1942. MEDFORmiTRIBUNI Itb ) as iMithmi Otvsaet as las IU1I Trlteae." Ball Bnaet Bmt9mT pob'tii1 br tr-t Nrth rtr it. rto till ROBERT W RT'HU Editor. VRKEST IV OflSTRAP. M KlUrcd wcanA flw tnattw at Hd tor. Orom. dor Act of March l. Ult UBSCIMPTIOM RATE! w Vailts Arlvaneati kA Bun da naattia... 1 Dllr an 4 Sun Jar thraa won tat I Dallr and Suodar na mantn... .11 land. Central Point, Jirtcasnvllla. OtT Hi IV, Rojua Rlr.f, PhoaaiJt, TaUat. Daily and Bun.lar jaar Dallr and Bandar ona month. All urmi eah .la ad wan a. Official Paper f tho Clti mt M4ffr4 Off trial rape Jar jvmr MIMRfR OF THE AfWrOOl ATED PREM0 RMOiTIBf rail WilM Tfiro Ttta AMO-latod Praaa la asc)uilaly atltlad to tho uaa for pnhlleatlon of all Dm dlapatchoa crdito4 to It or Mhar w errditrd to trila papar, and alM t tha loeal niwi publUhad haraln. AH rlfhta for publication of apaalaJ 41apatehaa oaraia ara aiao r rw. MEMBER OP PKITEP PRESS MEMBER OP ATJPTT BUREAU or CIRCULATIONS Alortlaln Raproaantatlo WEST-HOLLI DAT COMPANY. TWO. Sea FranHaca, Los AiMta aula, rattles. St. Laoli. Allaeta. Vntiunr, on finis Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthui Petty If the current weather keeps up there will be a general thaw by the end of the week. Officers of the women's army are cautioned against using per euasive tricks of their sex to in- fluence their superiors. They are not supposed to straighten out tha hair over the bald spot of a general and say: "The col onel thinks It's too hot to drill today and so do I." High aces of the democratic party are looking over 1944 pre sidential timber. They figure tha vice-president, whatever his name Is, is the moat likely can didate. . PAGE. MR. DIOOENES1 (Del Norte (Cal.) Triplicate) ' "When we were in your place Sunday the other man took the money for our things while you were out, and he only charged ma. 13c for the Banana Split, and I am al most sure it was 29c, so I am inclosing 10c to pay the re mainder on it I am sorry I didn't notice my change sooner." A citizen reports while rum maging around in his garage he found a quart of Prohibition "Scotch" In a dimpled bottle the kind that smelled like a pair of gloves drying back of the kitchen stove. Two Willamette valley farm ers charged with using a tire for a friendly tug-of-war between a truck and a tractor are charged with committing an "indecent or Immoral act." If this la Inde cent, the cooling off from the war effort, on highway curves end straightways, comes under the head of obscenity and cor ruption of public morals. a A California congressman charges H. Bridges, awaiting de portation to Australia, Is the beneficiary of "inside protec tion," and has been granted an other extension of time There seems no way to cut the gent loose from the White House apron strings Things looked blue over the weex-ena on all united Nations front when alnntf cam th. heartening news Charlie Chap- un, mm comeaian, ana nis dl Vorced wife war raiio-ht raH handed eating a dish of Ice cream together and same was duly photographed. a a "CHASES FLY TO CAP! TAL." (Hdline L. A. Times.) And, forgot the swatter. a a a The Caucasus, at whoa e-at- ways the Hitler hordes are pounding, has a unique distinc tion. It apparently has more gateways than Crater I when every CofC. on both sides ot ine Cascades, claimed it was the only one. A BOUNCING BABY (Worcester (Mass.) Telegram) "Elmer A. Johnson, feat ured soloist and member of the WT AG - NBC orchestra, learned the Hawaiian guitar from native Hawallans . . , and, among other things, was born on a boat in the middle of the Baltic sea, while his mother and father were va cationing in Sweden." . It's getting along towards th, time of year whrn a proud farmer shows tip with a corn stalk longer than he Is, and gives only himself. Instead Nature. Old Sol, and the M share and share alike, for altitude. Cloalnc tlma for Cluuiflad Ada a. as. Too Ut to dually 11.30 p. m. Advertising Thert wai dream that men could one day speak thoughts of their own choosing. There was a hope that men could one day stroll through streets at evening, unafraid. There was . a prayer that each could speak to his own Cod, in his own church. That dream, that hope, that prayer, became AMERICA! Creat strength, youthful heart, vast enter prise, hard work made it so. Now that same America Is the dream, the hope, the prayer of the world. Our freedom its dream. Our strength its hope. Our swift race against time, its prayer! We must not fail the world now. We must not fail to share our freedom with it, after wards . . , Keep singing, keep working, and fight for AMERICA! "THE above is copy of an institutional advertise 1 ment just issued by E. R, Squibb & Sons, New York, which has NOT been ordered published in the Mail-Tribune. However, it is NOT ONLY eood advertising eonv hut such sound doctrine we mis column witn it, toaay, tne lirst time In the Eaper's history that the editorial column has been eaded by an advertisement, paid or unpaid ! ! Will ShlinCdve In? THERE comes word from Switzerland that Stalin, , convinced the allies are letting him down, is secretly negotiating for a We would wager a balloon-tire against a second hand peanut this report emanated from a German source. For undoubtedly that is what Der Reichsfuehrer has been working for ever since his 1941 campaign against Russia failed. A ND we would also wager even more emphatically there isn't a word not even HALF a syllable, of truth to it We grant in this mad can happen. We also grant no moral scruple would ever keeD Joe Stalin from anv action he micht con- sider to his and Soviet Russia's interest But ask for a 'separate peace with Hitler? NEVER! Comrade Stalin would on the rack with all Red WE could conceive of Adolf grovelling before Stalin mora fVlfl A via of aorroi-Inrr fft ita Anrtm fall. But never the other For the "man of steel" treaty with Hitler, and then was betrayed. There is the unpardonable sin in the Georgians moral code. He may be never a second time. AS far as Stalin is concerned this war with Ger many is a war to the death, he asks no quarter and will give none. Whether any of his allies of all the Russians is going to fight Hitler to the absolute end. This, at least, is this gorical prediction and without the slightest misgiv ing ' Ye Editor herewith on the extreme end of the Time TT is easy to be wise AFTER the event. But in this department's judgment there is little doubt a serious weakness in the allied policy from the start of this war has been ultra-conservatism. Or to put the same idea another way, lack of daring, unwillingness to P"0R over a year now a huge British army in Eng- land, close to 2,000,000 men and well equipped, has been doing nothing, but like Micawber, waiting for something to turn up. That something of invasion. Just how many American soldiers are now in England, or Ireland, also well equipped, is not known, but probably 2.")0,000, perhaps more. They too have been attempted invasion of Ireland. WE can't believe that, for at least six months, thnro haf hnnn IVtTTPIT rniemvihlA rlnnlit in iiivi v ail ar v v t a a a. iv id' wiiitiriv iivivv informed British circles of Germany's plan to try to first crush Russia, and then and not until then, turn on England and in this way by dividing the opposition make a clean-up In fact in his last official broadcast Hitler prac tically admitted as much, we Brant micht justifiably wouldn't) V17ELL at any rate, it seems to this department ' that the time to abandon ultra-conservatism and "take a chance" HAS COME,-that if the allies refuse to take a chance NOW, the net result of the present campaign may well not, disasterous. We grant the dangers, further inaction more serious? This question needless layman source, and the from competent military intelligence we have. But it is our deep conviction the time for those experts to speak and for is here I take pleasure in heading separate peace with Hitler. world almost ANYTHING willingly die first and Russia in flames; way around. once signed a separate double-crossed once, but do or don't, the Dictator column's concise and cate and hereby, climbs out limb! To Act! take a chance. course has been a German waiting, primarily for an in Europe. (which fact, however, strengthen the belief he be extremely serious, if but aren't the dangers of to add is from a rank answer should only come experts, the best military the allied forces to ACT Personal Health Service By Wlllim Blfiicfj ietctn fMTtatntnff t pervonal hJth and t.jflrn, not to disease dlamU or treatment, will b aruwrred by Dr. Brady If a stamped self addressed entelopa Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing; to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply ran be made to fluerts not conforming to Instructions. Address Ur. William Brady. 263 El Carol no, Beverly Hills. Calif. ENRICHED WHITE BRAD IS PREFERABLE Being, as your Aunt Samantha might aay, a doctor of the old school that Is. regular medi cine, w h 1 c h some followers of newer "schools" have dubbed "al lopathy", altho no such med ical school exists or ever has existed I don't go for every new de parture that comes along, Or. Bradr - until I have had an opportunity to sire It up and decide In my own pecul iar way whether to recommend it to the public or to pan it In this column. Sometimes this system proves sound enough for example when I urged here the superior ity of diathermy extirpation of tonsils over the old Spanish cus tom, injection treatment of hemorraids over the crude clamp and cautery operation involving hospitalization, and ambulant treatment of hernia over the radical operation. I had to take it on the chin from many a big shot In surgery, for recognizing the practical value of these newfangled methods and recom mending them to the laity while the Pooh-Bah was telling the public that such methods were unsatisfactory, "dangerous" etc. But I ran take It when I know I'm right. History has brought that satisfaction. All three methods are now so firmly es tablished in practice that it is no longer necessary to defend them the public is too well in formed about them. Sometimes the system falls. Some months ago I presented the facts on which I based a protest against "enriched bread". Later I learned that the Na tional Research Council, Is re sponsible for enriched flour and enriched bread, and the proced ure Is endorsed by the Coordi nator of Health, Welfare and Related Defense Activities as part of the program for Improv ing nutrition In the interest ot National Defense. The produc tion and sale of enriched flour and enriched bread by the mill ers and makers of the country is also approved by the Federal Food and Drug Administration. So you see Uncle Sam gives en riched bread the nod, and If it aood enough for Uncle It's good enough for me. Especially now that I know the rapacious Pnnh-Bah can't move in on it with his yes-yes-1 n d e e d-m e n yclept the Council on rooasana News Behind The News by Paul Mallon (Continued trom Pe One) parations for a managed post war system are Ignored. The AFL claimed 4.569.000 paid-up members last year and no doubt has more now. The CIO claimed 5,000,000 members but did not mention how many were paid-up, and probably has less than 3,000,000 in good standing. Latest figures from the Mc Nutt public welfare headquart ers here officially places the total number of workers at 50, 800.000, including: War workers 17,500.000 Non-war 20.000.000 Agricultural 7.800.000 Self-employed 5,000.000 There are also unemployed (meaning unemployable) 2.400.- 000, and 5,500,000 are in the armed services. a a a THE national Income division of the commerce department has figures showing that salaries and wages were paid last year to 33.887.000 workers, skilled, un skilled, white collar, etc., not in cluding agricultural or govern mental. These 33.887.000 re ceived much more than half the national income. $53,701,000, 000, or an average of $1,584. You must add to these the 4. 523.000 self-employed who re ceived $8. 10. 000, 000. or an average of $1,362 each. Also to be added are 6.073.000 farm ers who are workers. Accord ing to these inadequate national income figures, they received more than the self-employed (little business men mostly), about $8,482,000,000. an average of $1,400. (This does not in clude hired hands.) There are four representa tives of the public on the war labor board, along with four union leaders and four indus trial representatives, but no con sideration beyond this "public representation'' was given to the interest of th great bulk of the workers of this country In (this little steel case, or any lotiter. Their Interest however Bndy. M. P. Drugs or some such pretentious name. j ncnicmocr me designation "enriched" flour and "enrich ed" bread do not confuse it with any other designation. It means just good plain white flour or white bread to which Is added, without any appreci able change in appearance, tex ture, taste or cost, a fair amount of the nutritional elements in which refined white flour and ordinary white bread are defi cient namely, vitamin B (thia min), niacin (formerly called nicotine acid prevents pellagra) and iron. For better nutrition and better health I urged every one who buys flour or bread to prefer enriched flour or enriched bread wherever it Is available. QITSTION ANSWERS Braaklnff Ont Cannot tell you how srsMful we feet since our daughter was relieved of an obatlnato breaking out by fol lowing instructions In your pamph lets on Acne and Calcium Shortage. We had taken her to many skin spec ialists, but she seemed to show no Improvement until we followed your excellent advlee. fMra. T. C. H.) i Answer Wfhlch may hare been due to the treatment the physicians prescribed. However, I am glad to insll on request a copy of the pam phlet on Acne (Blackheads and Plm pies). If reader aupptea Mimwi en velope bearing his or her address. If you want also a copy of the pam phlet "Tha Calcium Shortage" In close six eenu additional. Vitamin B. Complex and fllahetea Noticed something In your column , about value of vitamin B complex In diabetes (R. J. S I Answer Potentlsl diabetics (those who have Inherited the tendency! and actual diabetica, should make sure to have an optimal dally ration of vitamin B eomplsx. Piles Last sprtrqr I asked you to recom mend a doctor who could give the ambulant treatment for piles. Tou recommended Dr. I am glad to report that the doctor has cured me completely, and the treatments never hurt enough to mention and never Interfered with my regular work. I certainly feel grateful . . . the trouble had be almost Incapaci tated . . . Now I am as fit as ever. (B. B.) Answer Really It Is stupid to suf fer from plies. Any one so afflicted should send stamped self-sdrtressed envelope fnr copy of pamphlet "It Is Stupid to Buffer from Piles". I sm always glad to recommend a doctor or speclsllst If I happen to know of one I can recommend in the correspondent's vicinity. (Copyright 1 John F. Dill Co.) Ed. Note! Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Or. William Brady. M. n, tea El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. i Is obvious. Whether the 44 j cents increase is to cost $22, : 000,000 a year for little steel alone, or $44,000,000 for all the ' steel industry, or hundreds of millions when the increase is 1 spread to unionized Chrysler, 'General Motors and the others, labor will have to pay it The cost of government contracts will be Increased by that amount and the implements of war will drain Just that much more from the treasury. JO one will arise to claim the ' little steel increase was not Justified on a basis of the in creased cost of living the yard stick which Mr. Roosevelt has fixed. But any thinking person can see the political sham and economic pretense that enters into a government managed eco nomy which considers only the interests of a minority of work ers. If increases to the 8.000, 000 are Justified by the yark stick, some increases to the other 42.000,000 can hardly be neglected. They cannot live outside Mr. Roosevelt's yard stick, their rights in a demo cracy are no less Just for their having failed to pay tribute to AFL or CIO for their Jobs. But If this is done and the increases are extended to all. Inflation will surely rise In a greatly accelerated spiral, and defeat the purposes of any wage Increase. The logical solution dictated by these facts there fore would seem to require a freezing of all. Including little steel. Certainly this governmental pretense of helping "labor" by only helping a few unions will become Increasingly apparent and unjust as Washington pro ceeds upon the path of managed economy Into which It rushed at the outset of the war to fix prices, wages and the economic lives of Its people. Family Is Intellectual Troy. N. Y. flJ.R) The Has well family claims a unique place In intellectuality. Mrs Robert Haswell. the mother, is a Ph D.. State Normal College. '04. Four of her sons are graduates of Rensselear Polytechnic Insti tute. A fifth son holds an A M . and a daughter Is a State Tea chers graduate. Cloa.ne time ror Oasaifled ads . ra loo lata to CUtuij 13 sc Kelly's Comment From Washington. D. C. Power Czar In Flank Attack Army Agent Eye Coast Coal Pita ! Aluminum Clay Under Survey By Jobs W. Kellr Washington, D. C, July 21. So determined is the Bonne ville administration to crush private utilities that it has ap pealed to the federal maritime commission to order the Kaiser shipbuilding concern to make a contract with Paul Raver's Bonneville power and to forbid Kaiser from buying power from the Portland General Electric Co., although Bonneville has no transmission lines to Swan is land and has no franchise to construct such lines within the city of Portland. In view of the desire of Secretary of the Interior Ickes to have complete domination over power In the northwest by forcing the private companies to sell (stealing their customers, sapping their rev enues), the affair at Swan island is of regional rather than local interest. Maritime Commissioner How ard L. Vickery is quoted as say ing that "we own the yard at Swan Island and Kaiser man ages it for us. The yard must take power from Bonneville." WHEN Kaiser was given a contract to build 56 oil tankers at Swan island (former airport of Portland) there was already a transmission line to the island, for PGE had served the airport for years. With the building of the new yard the power com pany obtained priorities from WPB and increased the capacity of the line. PGE was serving the yard before Administrator Raver was aware of this new customer but when he did learn of the arrangement he demanded that PGE turn the power sale over to Bonneville. Not having a franchise for lines within the city of Portland, he insisted that PGE "wheel" Bonneville power to Swan island over PGE facili ties, a demand that was refused. The Swan island shipyard will require a heavy load of power and Raver wanted that load; determined to get it away from PGE. The private com pany's rate for power to the shipyard was as low as that of Bonneville, $17.50 per kilowatt year, so that, financially, it made no difference whether Swan island bought from PGE or Bonneville. BONNEVILLE agents have al ready sought to take other cus tomers away from this particu lar private company and are still working on two or three big concerns. The government owned plant is furnishing power to the Oregon Shipbuilding cor poration, located on Willamette river, of which Edgar Kaiser is manager and used some of the same tactics that have been in voked on the Swan island yards Kaiser was about to sign a contract with PGE when Raver put the "bee" on him. a a a ARMY investigators have been examining the coal de posits in Washington and Ore gon as 180.000 tons must be sup plied to the cantonments now being built near Medford and Corvallis. These inspectors were at Renton, looked at the coal at Bellingham and probed into the Coos bay field. From about 1889 to 1907 Coos bay coal heated San Francisco, col liers operating between Coos bay and the Bay city. So far as known this is the only coal deposit in the United States at the oceanside. As an experi ment, the army men gave an order for 2,000 tons but did not designate whether it would be used at Medford ,or Corvallis, nor did they fix a price. Con versations were also held with the Washington mine operators for a few experimental tons. Eventually, whatever mine wins the contract it will be a big boost for the northwest industry, see LOOKING ahead to the possi bility of bauxite being cut off from Dutch Guiana because of German submarine activity, the bureau of mines has sent sur vey parties into the northwest gathering samples of aluminum clay. The large deposit near Castle Rock has been checked and now a party is drilling about 13 miles east of Cottage Grove. In case of a pinch the clay deposits will be used: the process is a trifle more costly than with bauxite, which is the principal reason aluminum in got plants prefer the Dutch Guiana material. Bureau cf mines is also drill ing again in the rhromite de posits of the John Day country. Last year it explored a chromite deposit in Montana and when the production of steel was in creased the government was im mediately ready to have that ore mined and concentrated; pays a royalty to the owner. a e ADMITTING that synthetic rubber must be produced as rapidly as possible. Vice Presi dent Henry A. Wallace shocked a senate subcommittee by de claring that he does not wish to see this plastic continued after the war. Wallace main tains that unless the motor in dustry goes back to natural rub ber there will come World war No. 3. He Is not sympathetic toward using surplus wheat to provide tires nor of developing raw materials in the United States If they can be purchased abroad. He calls this the long range plan. , Communications From The Old 81st to the New To the editor. I noted with a great deal of pleasure and in terest that Major General Char les H. Berhardt states that the new 91st Infantry division wiU be the best the United States has ever seen and the Brigadier General P. W. Clarkson states that the new division will have a better record than the old 91st division. As a member of the old 91st division I sincerely hope that the new division can live up to our old reputation but it can not have a better record as our rec ord was 100 always taking our objective and never retreat ing. As for the new division be ing tough they will have to go some to be tougher than the old division as we were so tough that when we crossed the At lantic every time any member of the 91st division spit in the ocean they sunk a submarine regardless of how far away it was. So here Is to the pew 91st division may they live up to the record of their predecessor. E. H. Thomas, Co. C. 316th Field Signal Battalion. Attached to the 91st division, Medford. July First. Answer to Mrs. Jack Moore To the editor: According to some of the rental rates quoted to me, army ladies would have to be ."high and mighty acting" to get their money's worth. If Mrs. Jack Moore will do a little checking with her neigh bors and make some social calls on the newcomers, I am sure that she will find that the majority of the army ladies want to pick up after themselves, do their share of the routine work, and escape from the living room as much as possible. The "some of these women" that Mrs. Moore spoke of is a very low per cent. In every large group of people there are always a few who get out of line. Mrs. Moore should be able to under stand this better than anyone else. She should not assume that her opinion is that of all the housekeepers in town, for I know too many who are enjoying the association they are having with these so-called high and mighty army women. Tell Mrs. Moore that her household is not the only one that this war is disturbing and that her town is not the only one meeting the housing problem by sharing their homes. AN ARMY WIFE. Medford, July 2 1st. (Name on File). War Versus Housekeeping To the editor: I am a civilian and if I am to be judged in the minds and hearts of army and navy wives as I am Judging the lady In question, I'm sorry and ashamed that I am a civilian. I have lived among the wives of service personnel for years In a land which was strange, cold and distant to me upon my ar rival there. Among my first friends were the wives of service men. How thankful I was to find such kind humans; they did not question why I was among them, they Just accepted me in their kind-hearted way. In all that four years not at any time did I ever find one who was cruel or self-centered, and not once while among them was I ever made to feel that I wasn't wanted. But here in Medford I have faced that very situation each and every day of the three months that I've been In this com munity. The writer of that letter sounds as though she has lived a very happy, full and sheltered life, perhaps always in this very town. In comparii-.j the wives of these service men must take their very little happiness where they find it, never in a home of their own as they have no home except perhaps In a one or two room apartment that someone is willing to rent them at extremely high rents. They can't even call their souls their own, they don't even come first in their hus band's affection, instead their country and people who are prejudiced, as the writer of that letter, are first as they make up the country for which these men gladly lay down their lives. These service wives are not high and mighty as accused: they are a puzzled, broken-hearted lot of women, trying to make the most of these last few weeks or months, as the case might be, with their men (although I don't like mentioning it I find I must) who. when they leave, may never return and if they do per haps maimed for life. I wonder if faced with the same situation Just how the majority of civilian wives would act. I was in Honolulu Dec. 7. 1941. and can assure those concerned that these service wives were al ways among the first to aid thosa less fortunate than themselves in the more dangerous areas. It was their homes which were thrown open first to evacuees. They were the first to rally round when blood donors were called. Now about this housekeep ing business. I have never seen better housewives than the ser vice wives; due to their husbands training they have to be. And lady, this Is war. Don't you think that housekeeping Is of second ary importance at this time. I think that if at this time we thought less of self and more ot what we could do to make life happier for the other fellow, per haps this would be a better, hap pier, more Christian world to live in (at least a better Med ford) with exceptions. MRS. CHAS. ALLEN, Medford, July 22. Flight o Time Medford and Jackson Conntv History from the flies of the Mail tbunefnjresrsajo TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 21, 1932 (It was Thursday.) Former legislator is arrested for college merger petition theft hoax. Rain brings end to midwest heat. President signs two-bllllon-dollar relief bill. Leo Lomski scores flukey kayo of Jack McCarthy at Armory last night. Kid McCoy, former champion freed from San Quentin, wiU work for Henry Ford. Army worms still plentiful In valley, do much diniage. Still warm, no change In sight. High 94, low 39 degrees. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 21, 1921 (It was Friday.) Chamber of Commerce to oppose divorce of Espee from Ceepee. William Allen White, famed Kansas editor faces arrest for defiance of anti-picket law. Hero of "Message To Garcia" during Spanish-American war Is awarded distinguished service medal by war department. Fair and some cooler. High 93, low 54 degrees. Walter M. Pierce refuses to resign from tax commission and meeting here is called off. Mispronounced word is cause of Los Angeles shooting. Negro called "caustic" "hoss-tick, ' and suspects joke. G. Grants Pass, July - (SplV The housing problem facing fam ilies of non-commissioned offi cers from Camp White remain unsolved following a meeting of auto camp owners and oper ators Saturday morning at the chamber of commerce who met with Frank Van Dyke, coordi nator. Glenn Jackson, Medford of commerce representative and Capt Kelly of Camp White, all of Medford. Van Dyke will be In Grants Pass again the first of this week to canvass auto courts who will make available cabins for non commissioned officers' families. Housing for from 300 to 500 persons must be located, accord ing to J. M. Isham, secretary of the Grants Pass Chamber of Commerce. tta-i att -Vi unusual i Drinks! M tfI Si 2 isa HONS 70-Proof SLOEG-TN If yoo're looking for a new voire thrill, try drinks with a distinctive, frvit-y tong . . . mode with LYONS Sloe Gin! M.SOVs Quart, n.lOPinl MIO WMI t ttAJ CO. V v .0 (0 o o