Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 01, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    form mtoforb MAa-Tnrauira
Mondsr. Oei. 1, 1945
Sverrirae In Southern Oretoa
Beads Ih Mall Tribune"
Dallr epl Saturdar
Published by
MED FORD PMNTINO CO.
t,B Korth Fir Bt Phone '
ROBERT W. RUHU Ed'tor.
BKNEST B. G1LSTHAP, Manale.
HZRB GREY, Advertiilng Mr.
B C. rKRGUSON. Mnnauinf Cdlta
ARTHUR PKRI4V. Sunday Edlttr
MRS. OLIVE STARCHKR, Soc. Editor
GERALD LATHAM, Circulation Mr.
Aa Independent Neerspsper.
ton-red u lecond class mtlr
Madjord. Oregon, undnf A ox of
March J. 1B79.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
BT Mall In Advance!
Dally and Sunday one year . V 50
Silly and Sunday tlx month! 4 00
Pally and Sunday three moi. 1.10
Daily and Sunday one month T
Mr Carrier In Advance Medford,
Ashland. Central Point, Jackson
Mile, Gold Hill, Phoonls. Talent, and
on motor routes:
Bally and Sunday on year W JO
Dally and Sunday one month ,79
All terma cash In advance.
Official Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper mt Jachaon County
United Praia roll Leassd Wire
Editorial Correspondence
MEMBER or AUDIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representative
V7EST.H0U.IDAV COMPANV, INC.
Offleca In New York Chlcaro, De
troit, tan Franclaco, Los Angeles. Se
attle. Portland, St. Louis, Atlanta.
Vancouver. B C.
Mutis
PmiJHEM 4sfs.nu!io
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Parry
Now It la October. Frost and
sun are making the leaves of the
oaks and the maples almost as
much of a riot of color aa the
cowboy shirts worn by the dres
sier males.
e
A pair of enemy propagandists
of tha female persuasion, viz.:
'Tokyo Rose" of Tokyo and Los
Angeles, and "Axis Solly" of
Roma and New York, both American-born,
were not sufficiently
melted In the famed American
"melting ' pot." Both bit the
hand that coddled and protected
them, with rattlesnnke vemon.
e
Tha pigskin season Is now
well underway, and the word
"powerful" bids fair to take a
worst drubbing than any of ath
letic machines It purports to de
scribe. No football team In this
broad land is feeble enough to
escape designation as "power
ful." The fingertips have been
worked off tha word "power
ful" more so than "overall,"
"activate" and 'directive," In
civic humdinger circles.
e e
TUCKERED JOURNALIST
(Jerome Prairie News)
'There is a lot of news fly
ing around the country right
now but tha writer of this
column has Just been too busy
hanging around the Youth
Fair to seem to corral many
of these Interesting items."
e e e
A group of ex-GIs who battled
from New Guinea to Oklnnwa.
Jiave deployed to the hills fot 10
days to kill a deer and "rough
It. .
"LOST Very small reward for
recovery of one hennaed gad
get. In fina ennditinn when
Test seen. Answers to name
of Virginia." (Oregon Journ
al.) Yes. Virginia, there Is a
Oof catcher
' Tha end of the world predict
ed by t Los Angeles preacher
will not come to pass until noxt
fall, he now states. Th nmnimt
knows the hour and day the
cataclysm win occur, "but It will
Hot be revealed to lot the news
papers sell more copies." But
for the newspapers the prophet
Would be unsung and unknown.
e
EARLY DAY PERILS
(Pendleton East Orrgcmion)
"A batch of roller skating
waiters have been taken from
Chicago to Portland and are
to work In a bon ton restaur
ant. People from the bunch
grass region of eastern Ore
gon will fight shy of any such
innovation. They don't wont
to go down to Portland with
new suits and hove a roller
skater spill soup in their lops."
(50 Yrs. Ago Col.)
Watches and clocks
turned back an hour vm
pieces now Jibe with the
pieces now Jibe with the
nothing but the crowing
were
Time-
sun,
sun
of
roosters. The change caused
tllUCh COnflljInn A. It..-.
more confusion than anything
Ise, a little bit more was unnoticed.
Mt. Klsco, N. Y., Sept. 27 Fox hunting is no doubt "Jolly
good sport," but not so "good" perhaps in a Ford V-8. Especially
if you missed your breakfast, as we did in order to reach the vill
age green at Bedford at 7 a. m.
By 8:15 with a fox still to be unearthed we were glad to call
it a day and return to Lawrence Farms for breakfast, with the
V-8 missing on at least three cylinders, apparently as regusted as
we werel
Now with breakfast over we are rather sorry we did not stick
It out at least until the hunt got started. Fear we didn't show the
proper HUNTING spirit. On the other hand perhaps It never got
started. There are plenty of foxes up there in the woods, they
say, but now and then, even the hound pack 25 or 30 dogs,
can't get a scent, and after wandering all over the landscape in
two and threes, return to their kennels, or are brought there,
very much disgruntled. These hounds, moreover, were mostly
novices, it was their first hunt as it was the V-8's, so their
chances wert not of the best.
We did see the boys and girls Jump a fence, one of these old
mossgrown loose stone fences so common and attractive, in
these ports. Not much of a Jump three feet perhaps, but it was
quite thrilling to see them all go over, including a "Junior Miss"
on a pinto pony, all without a hitch and on down the road where
the riders split up Into two groups, each with a "whip," and
technically the hunt was on.
But while there was considerable barking and rushing about
of the hounds in the woods across the road, there was no baying,
and until a -hound bays there Is no fox. At least that is tha in
formation given by the wife of one of the hunters, who drove a
cor Just In front of ours. There were four cars following the hunt,
all in single file and running on low so as to keen behind the
dogs and horses who walked, walked very sedately and dispirit
edly It seemed to us. (But we missed our breakfast!)
It was the first hunt of the season for this club, and for this
reason perhaps was not as well attended as usual. One of the
motor caravan even claimed it wasn't a fox-hunt at all but a cub.
drive, they were not after a fox (or foxes), but merely wanted to
scare up some of the cub-foxes and give them a work-out, also
get a line on the prospects for the fall and winter. Haven't been
able to check up on this as yet, but our informant was a veteran
groom, who said he often had followed the hounds in the "old
country," where he maintained there was real hunting with high
gates and higher walls and double-ditches, anrl thrv rnri rinhr
through swamps, not around them. In fact, ha was very snooty !
about hunting here in "the States," so he may not, therefore, 1
rinve oeen a reuaDie witness.
We were also surprised to finrf
tha men and women. Oniv thma "mri.ff. tv,. u !
ently wore whatever they liked, or got their hands on in the dark. 1
u.aiuvi-icu nicy iiaa uretiKiusi around six, and probably
tumbled out of bed at least 20 minutes earlier.
There was one young army officer, without a coat, a single
silver bar on his tan khokl shirt: another young chap they all
looked to be somnwhrr in Ihmr fin. ........ .... i , , ,.
hat, whipcord riding breeches, swallow-tail coat; a third in "Jonah
purrs and a cowboy "Stetson," a fourth had a cap, sports jacket
and carried what looked like a piece of a carriage whip, then
there were three or four young women, one in a red coat the
others In conventional riding costumes. Most attractive of all
m', mB Jur miss," before mentioned on the "Jumping
pony" oerhans 1R hnn.. i,i ...uv. '. .. J T1
, . , , .."..vV u'"un, wjiii uiib oi mese long
I 'rS .b'"c ve'V'' Cap ullcd down v curl', white
uuvm very cms eight or 10 In all.
The horsea Avnortt Jr. it.. -
f, i . M"ii.v, ui course were more unl-
na JT!" Bnd m.r,e !ve. One was a large, dash-
whh ,.. i i ' , y ?ay'" 011 ra"8v. well-groomed and
B , " musclllar hind-leg, characteristic of Jumpers.
But none of them nr nnciidi,. - . . . J""'rc'"-
.i.h i ,.,u- it . " .leemea aieri or inter-
Cda'c but as a group
out their coffee and "oais!" ' " "'"gSCa 0ut of bed with"
Well, the next time we will set the alarm clock at 5 a. m
arrange for a hot n-ir nf en. j . :!
-iti,.. si. a . a,,u "ltn Bl,CK out until
e either see the fox or know for certain there will be none We
grant, however, there will be difficulties for a second-hand "V-8 "
or any other four-wheeled vehicin fm- ii,ni .'
through the thick woods hereabouts and negotiate the stone walls
and farm-gates! And If one can t do that the chances of seeing
mL. il TiTt, th." Chase' are not 100 bri"nt' Bllt that might
SJ'.'11 he more Interesting and exclting.-provided one had
plenty of gas, hunting the fox hunt, so to speak!
e e . . ,
Yes, plenty of gas, Interesting how quickly habits are
formed! We con t get over the feeling that somehow It Isn't quite
cricket, to use gas as freely aa we did before the war. (And A-ith
these reports of shortages in the Middlewest perhaps It Isn't!)
tf
Then, too, If we were lucky enough to spy the fox, we know
how we would feci about him. All Ranme an May-hce-Ko bull-fight,
all for the fox as wp!I for th hull TKinu jn t,..j j..-
wee., ( Ul ' J Mlf IVJMUU-t-Jl'1.9
against one little red-tailed fox! And the latter with his tongue
nanging out and thinking of his wife and babies at home. and
the entrance to the home blocked out by some two-legged mer
cenary the night before.
TAINT R1GHTI
There Is one thing to be sold, however, for the fox, he has
what the bull hasn't, BRAINS. In fact last year, one of the
old foxes used his brains to take up his final stand In a ploy house
on one of these country estates, and it being surrounded on all
sides by garden, it was ruled the chase could not enter. It seems
there Is a law In Westchester county against chasing a fox through
or Into private gnrdens. So that old Reynard made his escape.
We hope he taught all his cubs the same trlckl
Jng with tire from, battle-hooks
and clubs studded with nails,
they are organized for that, too.
The sticks which carry the
strike placards technically are
not clubs but harmless staffs
with their printed appeals. They
are Just a legitimate and inno
cent means of holding aloft print
ed appeals. Freedom of speech,
you know.
And, of course, the union
armies wear uniforms for Identi
fication. Sometimes the uniform
consists of a distinctive CIO over
seas cap with insignia and piping.
It may be a brassard.
We know that private armies
are forbidden but we have old
movies taken in Michigan, Ohio
and Pennsylvania, during Roose
velt's CIO riots, which show or
ganization, command and disci
pline. a
BUT 8URELY men who
fought to preserve the nation
against foreign enemies while
the union bosses thrived, fatten
ed and increased their political
power and their treasuries at
home, have as much right to or
ganize for battle as the unions
have and the right to go unmo
lested to and from lawful em
ployment. That is what they think. That
is what you think.
But it Just isn't so. The union
bosses knew it all the time, more
over, and planned for these
strikes knowing that rioting,
murder and arson, robbery, van
dalism and terrorism were con
ceded to be their exclusive right
in Mr. Roosevelt's time. They,
alone, of all elements In the
United States, enjoy those rights
and there is no indication that
President Truman will challenge
them.
Westbrook Pegler
Copyright. 1945. by King Features Syndicate
MECHANICAL MESSES
Mom and Dad are pretty
tiroud when Sonny, showing me
chanical genius, mokes a "bi'g"
cut of the remnants of three, de
ceased machines consigned to the
Junk heap. It is an accomplish
ment, too, which bids fair to
etand him in good stead. But
emce the thing is put together
eften merely a box on four
Wheels with a cough under them
the whole should be subjected
to rigid scrutiny In order to
live the coroner the trouble.
(Woodland (Cal.) Democrat).
The acquittal of Peter ZenRer
In 1735. for libel of his news
paper, established freedom of the
press in America.
Washington, Oct. 1 Let us as
sume that the men with the little
gold button In the left lapel, civ
ilians who were fighters in uni
form yesterday, all want Jobs.
Many Jobs are available but
the union movement, no longer
a labor organization but a law
less political power, forbids the
war veterans to work at them
and plants pickets to beat up
these new civilians, one by one,
overturn their automobiles and
keep them ot a distance.
Going further, the unions will
terrorize the veterans' families.
Persons unknown will throw
bricks and filth through their
windows, keep them sleepless in
the night with mysterious threats
by telephone and plant silent
lund-mlnes tn driveways, consist
ing of small nails in boards, to
ruin their tires. The police and
sheriffs will be helpless. The
law will be useless. Government
will abdicate as it did before.
BUT THE VETERANS are
good fighters, as the Germans
and Japs learned in battle. Hav
ing faced gun fire and explosive
land mines, surely they are not
afraid of a few hundred unmili
tory civilians. Afraid? Of course
they are not afraid. They are
fighters.
Well. then, why won't the vet
erans meet force with force and
psychological terror with meth-
News Behind
The News
By Paul Malloo
Millionth Soldier Out of Europe
let vi j I
if '-''5VV' ."..,,: . ' )sJV..- :4 !
v r f
Li4i 3fcawt iir, I &,Jk 5 V!
3s at i W
..'IT
fJrme J elvpnomi
The one-mUllonth soldier to be redeployed to the O. S, from European
theater since V-E Day, Pvt. Almon Conger, Tacoma, Wash., disembarks
from Queen Mary at New York City. Member of the 35th Division, he
left his bride ot 10 days behind in Coventry, England. Following down
the gangplank is MaJ. Gen. Paul W. Baade. CO of the 35th Division.
m
ods that they learned in training
anil perfected in war?
The answer is that the union
terrorists were thinking far
ahead. They foresaw this situa
tion and planned well for It.
They are organized and the
veterans are not. The unions
have their general heodquorters
The veterans have none. Their
staff work Is the result of expert
ence in old organization wars
and strikes. They hove their field
commanders and their sergeants
and corporals on the picket lines.
Lieutenants posted at tele
phones get orders from head
quarters and transmit reports of
action on their sectors. They
hove roving cars with loud-speakers
to appeal to the veterans
with propaganda Just as. in the
war. the soldiers worked on the
confusion of the enemy by prom
ising them comfort and safety
in surrender and pointing out
the error in their loyalty to their
dictators.
Union propaganda does not al
ways threaten those who would
crash the picket lines. Often it
wheedles, pleading with them to
forsake the cause of the corpora
tions, to see the light and Join
their fellow proletarians, saying
nothing, however, about dictator
ship under racketeers and com
munists. BUT, If IT COMES to fight-
Washington, Oct. 1 Mr. Tru
man's action in calling down his
ways and means committee for
round of
mi m. .unLiui wrist-slapping
rather a u m d
founded them.
They came out
benumbed and
speechless, but
surprised more
than chasten
ed. A minor
din had been
raised against
them by the
left leaning
writers and
shouters because they delayed
action on the increase ot unem
ployment compensation. Within
the din, it was contended big
party split had developed with
the southern bloc fighting Mr.
Truman, etc., etc.
Actually, as both Mr. Truman
and the committeemen knew,
neither the issue nor their rejec
tion of It was new. They had
voted even stronger against the
same thing when Mr. Roosevelt
and C.J.O. tried to push it
through last year. The four dem
ocrats who stuck to their guns
were merely defending their own
past records. Tha worst that
could be truthfully said of them
was that they did not change
their minds when Mr. Truman
renewed Mr. Roosevelt's request.
e e
NO ONE here Is now charging
C. I. O. had anything to do
with the president's decision to
make a public scene of the issue
and demand that tha congress
men do as ha wanted.
Congressmen near the inside
said they Judged Mr. Truman
was hurt because this was his
first unsuccessful encounter; he
thought he had to make dis
play of his position, and refuse
to accede quietly; also, he
thought he was on sound po
litical ground.
What is behind the whole
matter as behind nearly every
thing else In the domestic news,
Including the strikes Is the new
grand mass assault of C. I. O. to
take over and direct the infla
tionary economy of the nation
and next year's congressional
elections, although no doubt Mr.
Truman does not look at it fully
that way. Equally Important
with his insistence upon the un
employment compensation legis
lation has been the development
of a new and Insufficiently re
ported direct attack upon state
congressional delegations by or
ganized C. I. O. bands. This new
method of scare-lobbying started
a few weeks ago. First came a
New York state delegation repre
senting C. I. O., then Maryland
and last week Pennsylvania. The
Pennsylvania delegation was
about 250 strong.
THROUGH their influence they
get into the caucus rooms,
where members of congress are
supposed to meet in party ses
sions. Instead of calling on the
legislators, they "invite" both
senators and representatives to
come to see them. They are well
organized. Each C. I. O. man is
given by his organization a mim
eographed poll sheet. All mem
bers of congress were asked to
say how they would vote on the
unemployment compensation bill
first (the specific C. I. O.-Kilgore
billi, then the full employment
bill, minimum wage increase to
65 cents an hour, the fair employ
ment practices bill and the Ball,
Rurton. Hatch bill to which
C. I. O. is opposed because it
would require unions to assume
more responsibility in a mild
way.
Ordinarily no threats are
made against the congressmen.
All concerned are too subtle for
that. But everyone involved
knows what the game is. During
the Maryland meeting, one C. I.
O. speaker- did say something
about taking care of those con
gressmen at the next election
who did not vote the C. I. O. way
and Senator Tydings walked out,
creating a stir by proclaiming
he was elected by the people of
his state, end was answerable to
them, not to this one class.
e e
AFTERWARD the C. I. O. state
delegations call on senate and
house leaders to Impress them,
then get Into hired special busses
and ride down to the White
House for a talk with the same
Truman secretary, Matthew Con
nelly, who seems to be in charge
of receiving them. I have heard
estimates that the New York
delegation trip must have cost
$30,000 or $40,000 for rounding
up leaders from all parts of the
state and paying their way and
lodgings from home-portal to
portal, but some authorities
think this a little high. What
ever it was, the amount and
method comprise formidable
warning of the millions back in
C. I. O. coffers for organizing
"political action" even down in
those southern districts where
C. I. O. has no members.
e e e
NOW when you couple these
bills with an insistent nation
al strike demand for a 30 per
cent wage increase, you will real
ize that the whole future eco
nomic structure of the nation is
at stake in a political bat
tle which is rising In Intensity
with next year's congressional
elections always the controlling
psychological influence In the
background, not only In congress
but at the White House.
Mr. Truman's new personal
pressure has not made It any
easier for congressmen to main
tain their position they always
took against Mr. Roosevelt in
these matters, and It Is therefore
uncertain how long they can re
sist a dual challenge more pow
erful than any a congress has
faced.
First Woman Back
Flight o Time
M.diord and Jaekson Co. HI
torr from tha files of the MaU
Tribune 10. iO and 34 Taars
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO
Oct. 1. 193$
Ot was Tuesday)
nihn AAA code is held in
valid by high court. j
hi., lnejil hunters kill nine
deer in eastern Oregon. j
r . nnn r.t n.va eitr re
servoir under PWA will be voted
on soon as relief wor.
Cloudy. High 87, low 4S de
grees.
Chicago Cubs and Detroit to
Ungle In World Series.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
Oct. 1. 183
(It was Thursday)
Building permits issued by
city last month total $116,000,
largest on record.
Fair and continued cool. High
67, low 37 degrees.
Butt spring water to be
brought here for purity testa.
Chester Hubbard is named
president of the Medford high
student body.
Navy rescues bodies from lost
submarine.
p proximately !,850,000,(
years old.
KEYSTONE KOP DIES
Hollywood, Oct. I U.R
Funeral services will be h
Tuesday for M. E. Burrell,
one of Mack Sennett s scr.
Keystone kops. Burrell kno
on the screen as Ted Edwa.
died Saturday at his home.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
Oct. 1. 1911
(It was Sunday)
Shopmen's strike starts en
Espee.
James J. Hill, railroad king,
to visit city and valley.
B. F. Palmer has returned
from Klamath county where he
sold a carload of pianos.
Rogue River Valley industrial
fair opens at north end of Cen
tral avenue.
rf
V
f4
-32
Fifth of Poland's
Population Killed
Warsaw, Oct. 1 (U.R) Ap
proximately one-fifth of Poland's
pre-war population was killed in
battle, executed or died during
the German occupation, Polish
sources estimated today.
Between 6.000.000 and 7,000.
000 Poles died, either in Poland
or fighting for the Allies ouuide
their country. Accurate figures
will not be available for some
time because no census was
taken during the war and ap
proximately 2,000,000 Poles still
are outside the country.
1Acm Telephoto)
First woman to be returned to U. S.
alter release irom Japanese POW
camp Is Mrs. Etta E. Jones, St. Paris,
O., 65-year-old, gray-haired school
teacher who was captured during in
vasion ot the Aleutians, shown here
as she arrived at Fairlield-Sulsun
Army Air Base, San Francisco.
Cloalnt time roi claimed Ads 8:30
i m loo Late to Classify 13:15 p m
Stuffed Owl Cause
Worry to Bluejayn
In House Cleaning
Milwaukee"! WiT (U.R) The
Dueckers of Milwaukee were
given the bird when they began
rummer house-cleaning.
Four bluejays hovered around
the home scolding and diving as
the family moved Its belongings
outside in preparation for a
clean sweep within.
Then it was discovered that a
stuffed horned owl, killed with
a bow and arrow about two
years ago, was the object of all
the commotion
The owl had been placed on
the front porch, to the bluejays
dismav, and along with the Due
ker rugs the old bird took
ouite a beating It was missing
12 head feathers when finally
rescued.
STASSEN ARRIVES
San Francisco, Oct. 1 lU.R)
Cmdr. Harold E. Stassen, United
Nations conference delegate and
member of Adm. William F. Hal
sey's staff, arrived here today on
the Honolulu Clipper from
Tokyo. Stassen declined to com
ment on his trip other than to
say he has been working on
problems of liberating Allied
War prisoners.
9
Who In Medford has
Complete Facilities for
EVERY FORM OF
Aviation & Aircraft
INSURANCE
Including personal ncel
dent for pilots, passenger)
and students?
PA-MoW
Whare Insurance Is
Business. Not a Sideline
203 Medford Center Bide
Tel. 4444
ADD A
For That Growing
Family With A
FIRST FEDERAL LOAN
Huge Fund Asked
For Flood Control
Washington, Oct. J-JU.PJ The
Army Corps of Engineers today
asked congress for $1,494,670,465
for its major program of flood
control and rivers and harbors
improvement since the beginning
of the war.
The corps' civil works division
is ready to start now on projects
totaling $900,615,000 and will
have plans prepared by late
spring of 1948 for other projects
totaling $593,954,965, the request
said. i
Oregon projects include:
Lookout Point reservoir, $24,
029,000. Columbia river. Ore. nrt
Wash., Umatilla dam, $49,090,
000. ,
FIRST
Savings
FEDERA!
Si Loan Assn.
Medford
27 North Hcily
(
Red Cross Leaders
Set Portland Meet
Portland. Ore rw 1 niD,
More than 125 service chairmen
and directors from Red Cross
chapters in the northwest will
meet here Oct. 2. 3 anrl A t-
cuss peacetime responsibilities of
ure urbanization.
Services to be emphasized by
speakers and discussion groups
Include nursing, volunteer pro
ject Junior Red Cross, public
information and air! r.v
' the armed forces, veterans
ana tneir lamilies.
Uranium is Used To
Decide Earth's Age
Chicago (U.R) Uranium, the
raw material from which the
atomic bomh ta .
IUWW,
long has been used by scientists
in m-ierraraing tne age of the
earth and of meteorites, accord
ing to Dr. Paul G. McGrew.
McGrew, acting chief curator
of geoiogy at the Chicago Nat
ural History Museum, said tests
showed that rock material in
meteorites Is about the same age
as some of the rocks in the
earth.
This has led scientists to be
lieve that the entire solar system
Is the same age.
Uranium anrl other Mlne.
five materials decompose at a
definite rate to form lead.
On measuring the amount of
radioactive substance and the
amount of lead In a rock, it is
possible to compute its age. Mc
Grew said.
So far, the oldest rocks
"dated'' by this means have
come from Russia. They are
NOW UNDER
MANAGEI1EN1
Richfield Service
12th & Riverside
Open
7:30 a.n. to 9 p.rr
GAS OIL
Tube Repair-Car Washin
NOTICE
We are Now Accepting
CURTAINS
Medford Domestic Laundry
130 N. Riverside
Phone 2166
FOR SALE
ONE
Caterpillar 50
DIESEL
TRACTOR
and Bulldozer
Located 17 Miles North i
Medford on Crater Lai
Highway
Gulf Red Gedar Co
Inc.
Box 308
Stockton, California
WHY BE FAT?
Get slimmer
without exercise
You rosy Iom poundi and have a
moil (tender, graceful figure. No 1
eierdiini. Nolaiativet No drugs.
With tfcii AYDS plan ycu don't
cut out any meali. (larche. po
Utcet, meftU or butter, you sim
ply cut tiiem down. Ifi easier
when you enjoy delidnut (vita
min fortified) aS'DS before meal.
Abiolutelv harmle..
In clinical lts conducted bv medioil do
tnore than 100 persons loat 14 to 15 lba.
aga la a fr vteeU with AYDS Vi
Candy Reducing Plan.
Try a 30-dy nupr.Iy of AYDS, cnly :
Mooey back on tha very firt box U you
Ket result. Phone 2440.
WAINSCOTT'S PHARMA
400 East Main St
1
CONGER-MORRIS
Exclusive
AMBULANC
SERVICE
Offica of the County Coroner