IX KZDfOHD MAIL TRIBUNE
MEOTORSi&WrRIBUNI
Jtveryon In Southern Oregos
Reads tht Mall TrlbnnaM
Dally Eacipt laturdar
Published by
MEDFORD PBINTINO
47-29 North Fir St Phona 3141
BOBEHT W RUHU Edttor
KRNEST R GILSTRAP Manager
RTRR RREY. AdvcrtltlM MaT.
K C FERGUSON. Uanaglnr Editor
ARTHUR PERRY. Sunday Editor
MRS. OLIVE STARCHER. Soc Ed It of
GERALD LATHAM, Uircuiauon vibt.
An Independent Newspaper
Kntered aa aecond claaa matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3, 1B7
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
MnIn Advance!
Daily and Sunday on yaar.7.B0
Dally and Sunday lx months 4 00
jjatiy ana sunooj mrw muj.
Dallv and Sunday one month .7S
By Carrier In Advance Medord,
Aahlanrf. Antral Point. Jackson
villa. Gold Hill, Phoenix, Talent.
and on motor routaa:
Dally and Sunday one year... .99.00
Dally and Sunday one month .7(1
All terms caih In advance.
- Official Paper ol the City of Medford
Official Paper I jacKion county
United Prati Full Leased Wire
MEMBFR OF AUDIT BUREAU
CIRCULATIONS
Advertising ReDresentBtiv
WMT.HOLLIDAY COMPANY. INC.
Offices In New York, Chicago, De
troit, San Francisco, Loe Angeles,
Seattle. Portland, St.
Louis,
Vancouver,
B. C.
Ore
PiuujhIeb
SOtJUIHII
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Pry
Washington, D. C, report "In.
flation is Just around the cor
ner." Several local citizens
' peeked and saw nothing but a
couple of junior high kids fight
ing.
New Zealand Is now sharply
opposing Russia in the security
council of the United Nations.
Iran is also squabbling with the
Soviet. Angered fans at wres
tling matches trying to crawl in
to the ring to whip the masked
vllllan for his meanness, display
the same brand of heroism.
Wally Dlnkens of Prospect
towned Sat. He reports the snow
is melting fast up there, and Earl
Ulrlch and T. Boothby are both
bar.
"Dish cloths can be bought
for a dime again, after all these
years. Our old one Is so worn
that we get no pleasure In wash
ing dishes," (Maxtne Buren in
Salem Statesman.) Now let
somebody else tell one.
t
A few signs of spring are
showing up. A South Orange
street resident reports a neigh'
bor ha' borrowed his lawn
mower. jf MEANEST DIG ITEM
i (Eugene Register-Guard)
"President Truman Is re
ported to be worried about be
ing 'overweight,' but unfor
tunately that is a worry which
la not shared by large sec
tions of the country."
The war cost the United States
1334,000,000,000. It wasn't
worth it
"Autolsts should drive like
very pedestrian was their
mother," a California exchange
editorially urges. In these parts,
many drive like every pedestri
an was their mother-ln-law.
The crows have returned from
the South, and again adorn the
rural scene hereabouts. They eat
most anything. Including grain
soaked in strychnine to kill
squirrels, but It only makes the
crows' eyes glisten, farmers re
port. All are black as the ace of
spades and always fly "aa the
crow flies."
In the elections In Germany
last. Sunday, the left-wing Social
Democrats defeated the rightist
Christian Democrats by a throe-to-one
majority. There are Re
publicans in America so preju
diced they are at loss to under
stand how a Democrat, even un
der the control of the Allied
army, could be Social, Right, or
a Christian.
Post mortcms are still the or
der of the day for sport scribes
of the Willamette valley, on the
late J. Kahut of Woodburn
Champion G. Lesnevlch fight.
The typewriter autopsies reveal
Mr. Kahut made three mistakes
apart from getting In the ring
with Mr. Lesnevlch in the first
place.
"What appeared to be a good
LOOKING business In last
week', gazette, was really a
good LOGGING business, but
due to typographical giratlons of
our galloping "portable" this er
ror occurred for which we are
duly apologetic." (Del Norte
Triplicate.) Excuse It, please!
WEATHER
Northern California: Partly
cloudy today and tonight, but
ralri v .tretne north portion
Wednesday rain. Warmer inter
ior valleys tonight moderate
southerly winds off coast.
Cloving lime for Sunday Too Lett
Tuesday. Jan. it. 194
Future Here Looks Bright
When the bent and bewhiskered Old Man of
1945 gave way to the dimpled, diapered young man
known as 1946, an era of unprecedented development
was ushered into Jackson county. Yes, this should
be a banner year for the Rogue River Valley. The
green light will be given
Oregon s vacationland should reap its full share pi
the crop of pleasure-seekers through the combined
promotional program of the State Highway commis
sion and the chambers of
Ashland. '
I ITERALLY hundreds
under construction or
ing fact in this area faced
lem. Business buildings, including Sears Roebuck, J.
C. Penney and Ford,' will contribute hundreds of
thousands of dollars in new investments and navrolls.
Jackson county's $750,000
program will get underway
equipment are available in
City of Medford's projected park, sewer system,
bridge and road building program will add to the
growing total.
I IKE Rip Van Winkle, the little city of Central
Point is awaking to a new era of prosperity. This
community has emerged as an industrial center with
umber mills and wood-processing plants expanding
and such companies as Diamond Match and Du Pont
eyeing it as possible locations for future development.
New homes are rising and the last Central Point city
owned lot has been sold.
WITH the largest stand of timber in the U. S. at
Jackson county's back door, with more irriga
tion water on Rogue River Valley's unused farm land
anticipated, with increased flow of tourist dollars in
prospect, the future here appears brighter than ever
before.
AS a financial backlog to future development, Jack-
son county citizens have the best part of $11,363,
088 in "E" bonds purchased during wartime drives.
There remains a sizeable share of nearly $28 million
bought in all types of war bonds plus accummulated
savings in other investments, oanK accounts ana
safety deposit boxes. H.G.
In a Tough Spot
Any President following the late President
Roosevelt would have a hard time. For F.D.R. had a
marked literary facility, a great sense of the dramatic,
and was always doing the unexpected.
But it is a particularly difficult role for a man of
the Harry Truman type, who depends almost entirely
i i . e. i in. r-r : An
upon gnosi-wruei s ior nis merary uJieniiKo, 10 eaacu
liallv matter-of-fact, and avoids the sensational as
instinctively as a tramp avoids work.
SO it is not surprising that Mr. Truman's message
on "the state of the union" proved to be the
longest and most tiresome on record.
Not that anyone could criticize it particularly.
Pradtically all the recommendations as far as this de
partment is concerned, we would endorse.
But all of them were expected : none of them was
expressed with any particular punch or charm; and
everyone, we believe, was relieved when the reading
of the opus ended.
T is a bit too bad, the President's lack of color and
nersonalitv. For these Qualities count not only
with the rank and file but
congress.
And it is especially unfortunate coming as it does,
after a chief executive who was so proficient along
these lines, and probably the greatest natural show
man since P. T. Barnum.
.
SOME, of course, pretend they like the change,
they were tired of the FDR "line," the "smoothie"
technique.
Mebbe so. But they represent a aeeinea minority
and probably exclusively a partisan one. For the vast
majority, conditioned to the tactics of a natural
leader, super-politician, and master salesman, the
change not only represents a decided let-down, but,
the net result is an unfortunate lack of authority and
therefore influence in anything President Roosevelt's
successor endorses or advocates.
"Mi. Truman mav be able to overcome this haiuli-
an to some extent, but we
hill fight as long as he is in
Inexcusable Waste
President Truman again advocates unified de
fense command, and the need for such unity partial
; ihn mnttni nf mnforisils nnd eauirmient is
Jf ill lllV IIUIIVV-I v ...... 11,
clearlv shown by the present situation in Klnmath.-
The Veterans' administration is involved, with
the Navy instead of the Army, but the principle is the
same.
THE famous Marine Barracks erected near Klamaui
at great expense for the special treatment of
tropical diseases, is, according to the latest reports,
to be abandoned.
At the same time the
announces it will erect a "million dollar hospital in
the same neighborhood.
It will take until late Spring, they say, to dis
mantle the former, and a year or more to construct
the latter. , , . .
IF these two departments were under one adminis
trotiva Vinnrl wnnldll t SOME way be found by
.which either the old barracks could be transformed
tourist travel and southern
commerce of this city and
.
of new homes are either
in prospect an encourag
with a critical housing prob
road and bridge building
as soon as material and
sufficient quantities; the
with the members of the
t .
fear it means a tough up
office. R.W.R.
Veterans' administration
at slight expense Into the new hospital or at least the
materials of same utilized in the new construction.
We believe so.
But 'according to present plans, one will be torn
down and sold for scrap and an entirely new super
nospitai constructed from the ground up, only a short
distance away, for more millions of the taxpayers'
money.
This is not such a vital matter in the huge na
tional picture, of course. But it does, we believe,
illustrate the inexcusable waste resulting from di
vided authority in federal departments of rehabilita
tion and defense, one department going its own
sweet way, with some other department taking a
parallel road, and needlessly duplicating the effort,
when they might a3 well much better in fact join
hands in one project. R.W.R.
On The Side-By e. v. Duriing
(Distributed by King
l,,,M,M,lH,IMMIIMlt
Tlf only belnff In love, or debt.
That breaki ui of our rett.
And he that U quite out of botb
Of all the world li blest.
He sees the golden age, wherein
All thlnge were free and common;
He eat., he drlnki, he Ukei his
rest
And fears not man or woman.
Suckling,
e
Valente Ramirez died recently
in Delano, Calif. He was 113
years old. He is survived by his
widow, Vlrla, who Is 115 years
old. "Can Brooklyn top that
longevity record for man and
wife?" asks my informant.
Asking
Queries from clients: Q. How
many cakes do you claim should
be in a stack of hotcakes? A,
Six. Restaurant efficiency men
have cut the stack to three but
that is no reason why you should
accept such an undersized stack
in your own home. Q. Claim the
poker originated in France. This,
my wife, another of those argu
mentative redheads, disputes
She says it is of American ori
gin. A. Poker originated in Per
sia. Was introduced to the
United States by French settlers
of Louisiana. Q. How about
World War II poetry? Was there
any written that might be class
ed with such World War I mas
terpieces as McRae's "Flanders
Fields" and Joyce Kilmer's
"Rouge Boquet?" A. Believe
"The Soldier's Prayer" by an
unknown author, which was
found on the battlefield at El
Agheila on Dec. 14-, 1942, can
be classed with the poems you
mention. I will quote two verses
of this prayer to recall It to your
mind.
Stay with me, God. The night Is
dark,
The nlfht Is cold. Mv little spark
. Of murage dies. The night Is
long.
Be with me, God,' and make me
strong.
I love a game,,! love a fight,
1 hate the nark. I love the light,
I love my child, I love mv wife
I am no coward. I love life.
I'm hilt the son my mother bore
A simile man, and nothing more,
Uut nnd of strength and gentle
ness, Be pleased to make me nothing
less.
ITelp me, O God, when death ll
near,
To murk the hancard face of fear
That when 1 fall If fall I must
My soul may triumph In the dust.
Remarkable .Animal
"On the Mojave desert near
Inyokern my husband found a
turtle which we took as a pet
and named Howard," writes a
Californian. "Howard will come
when tailed by name. He sticks
his neck out and likes to have'lt
rubbed. In getting on and off
the porch he often fell on his
bad:. My husband built a ramp
which he uses cleverly. Howard
begs for food by standing on his
high logs against the refriger
ntor. He eats lettuce, cabbage,
string beans, watermelon and
peaches. After eating he cleans
his face with his paws. As win
ter approached Howard started
to build a hole to hibernate in.
He has stopped eating for the
winter and spends most of his
time in the hole. However, he
comes out a little every day to
sit in the sun."
Another Break
One in 10,000 people live to
be 100 years old. Six in every
100 live to be 75. Tall men live
longer than short men. So states
an expert on longevity. As my
height is six feet two that is an
other break I have had from an
expert. It Is the third. First
was when an expert said "Men
with big feet make the best hus
bands"; second, "People whose
handwriting slants to the right
are extroverts." However, I am
still suffering from many cruel
cracks such as that by a frank
female who said "Long legged
men arc poor lovers."
Passing By
Frank Veloz. The certified
public accountant who became
one of the world's greatest pro
fessional ballroom dancers
Frank and Yolanda Veloz have
been dance partners since they
were youngsters. They started
wl.inlng cups at dance contests
around New York as amateurs
and then became professionals.
When 16, Yolanda's great ambi
tio.i was to own an evening
WOMEN! WHO SUFFER
FIERY MISERY OF
HOT FLASHES
If the functional mkMl-(r-ptrlcd
prculKr to women ciiuc
you to suflrr from hot fbuht, nr
voi tension. Irritability ut fam
ous Lrdta E. Plnkham's Vnretabla
CVmtxmtK, to rrltevf such symptoms,
tnnkham i Compound u one ol the
best known medtctnea (or this pur
pose. AIM ft frtod nonwhic Waici
M MHHt lit HI IN HMH Ml t II II I III MM 1 1 H Mltl till 111 1 1 It 1 1 IHl 1 1 1 1
i
Features Syndicate. Inc.)
J
gown. Now she has 136 evening
gowns.
Briefly
It was Frank Jeff ares who
said " a woman Is afraid of si
lence; when a man refuses to
speak she doesn't know what he
is thinking and she can't stand
it." . . . For testing a typewriter
a Chicago secretary says the best
"all-alphabet" sentence is "The
quick brown fox jumped over
the lazy dog." I don't think so
much of this sentence. There is
one letter of the alphabet miss
ing. If you can't discover which
it is m less than 30 seconds cease
calling yourself an observing
person.
Loving Wives
Physicians claim that during
a blessed event women usually
call for their mothers. That the
woman who calls for her hus
band at such times is rare. That
may be true of the general pub
lic but it is not the case with the
readers of this department. I
have received hundreds of let
ters telling of loving wives who
during the blessed event called
repeatedly for their husbands.
One Carnegie, Pa., wife insisted
her husband remain with her
and hold her hand. This he did.
That is quite a touching and ro
mantic way for a child to be
born with the mother and fath
er both present and holding
hands.
Please Note
When the Japanese returned
to California some home mana
gers thought an opportunity to
secure cheap domestic help had
arrived. These ladies have been
sadly disillusioned. Japanese
couples in California are asking
for $325 a month plus room and
board. Single Japanese domestic
workers are asking $150 to $200
month plus room and board.
Japanese gardeners demand $1
to $2.50 an hour.- Several thou
sand Japs who are unemployed
are on public relief in Los An
geles. News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
Washington, Jan. 221 wrote
a column yesterday mentioning
incidentally how the unions. In
their recent
strike cam
p a i gn , had
built up the
striking power
to atom pro
portions. The
strikes they
called but
not simultan
e o u s I y in
t e 1 e p h o nes.
telegraph
radio, electri
city, truckage
elevators, streetcars and busses,
demonstrated that a few unions
could at any time obliterate com
mercial life in the entire coun
try, without touching the major
industries like steel, autos and
meat packing.
Large cities could get little
food if the teamsters and han
dlers struck no matter if the meat
packerj and farmers were work
ing. The local movement of all
goods to store shelves would
stop. Lighting, heating and
cooking in the nation's city
homes would stop with a strike
of powerhouse' workers.
e e
AN elevator strike would kill
much of the city business, as
it did in New York. Without
busses and street cars, local
transportation could be broken
down. Telephones, telegraph and
radio walkouts would furnish
whatever impetus was needed
for a complete national collapse
in the processes of living.
That Is what I meant by my
allusion to the new power of the
strike weapon. I am saying this
Lai'tJi
ctu Mellon
SEE US . . .
About Your Personal or Standing
MAILING LIST
Morse's Nailing Service
Phona 3722 39 South Grape St.
Give to Hie Victory
.y STAND
HELP GOD'S CHILREN JL THERE.'
(Nl THE OLD J "f SET SPARE
' ' W0RL0J cLerrmsH;
jCgpr, IP41, Kina Fnt
to editors and readers who asked
an explanation, some of whom
suggested I should go farther
into the fundamentals of the
striking privilege, and its rela
tion to the era of grievances in
which we are trying, with im
pediments, to iive.
When you think about it, the
right to -strike is a right every
one has. Work is essentially
only a devotion of energy by
the individual. A man has a
natural right to withdraw his
energy if he chooses. Employers
have a right to shut down their
businesses. Indeed, they have
done so in Argentina in a gen
eral business strike.
e
A BROADWAY columnist has
" suggested we should all do
the same jusf withdraw our
energy, individually, as the
unions do.
But it is not natural for indi
viduals or businesses to want to
strike, bolli for the same reason.
The individual must have his
pay check to live. Businesses
must have receipts to sustain
themselves.
Of course the individuals
might seek unemployment in
surance, and if all businesses
went out at the same time they
might protect themselves against
new competition rising up and
apply to the government for
funds to pay the idling expenses
(rent, watchmen, etc.).
Fundamentally, however, nei
ther the individual nor business
wants to strike. Their natural
instincts are to keep things go
ing. The unions want to strike be
cause, they say, they have griev
ances. But where in the coun
try is there a person without
grievances? I have them. You
have them just grievances,
e e
"THE grievances of individuals
and business are just as
great as the grievances of the
Unions and I SIlsnpM much
greater toaay because of the un
balanced economy the unions
have built In recent years.
what is simnle lust ire In this
situation? I do not exneet nnv.
one to heed me, but I think I
can see what it is. The right of
the public Is fundamentally
paramount. This is the natural
right of all people to live, to
earn, to work.
Of this fundamental right,
there can be no impairment.
Common justice requires this.
The people have a right to serv
ice from labor as well as from
business. No nation can sustain
itself long otherwise.
e
IJNIONS then, must find other
means of getting justice
than by strikes against the pub
lic interest. They easily can get
it in many ways, by judicial ar
bitration and otherwise. They
should only have the right to a
fair trial like everyone else.
They cannot retain the power to
stop all living, restrained only
by conscience, if any.
The people do not and should
not give their government such
a power. They cannot, in rea
son, be expected to give any
special group such a power over
them. With continued unre
straint, this power can lead only
to active strike use of it, with
a breakdown of the nation, or
Indirect use through political
pressures to control the econo
mics of the nation forcing wages,
prices and costs ever higher and
higher, from year to year, until
the economy cracks with infla
tion. In either event, destruction is
the inevitable outcome of the
existence of the atomic propor
tions of the striking power.
SWORD FOR SNELL
Salem, Jan. 22 tu.P.) Gover
nor Snell has received a Sa
murai sword from his friend.
Sergeant Millard Hodges of
Grants Pass. The sword was
taken from a Japanese general.
Sergeant Hodges mailed the
four-foot weapon from China.
Clothing Collection f
P.-T. A. Activities
Jackson P.-T.A.
In i
School
talk to the Jackson
tion Clyde Fichtner, city police
man, told about ways to de
crease juvenile delinquency by
clearer cooperation between par
ents and local police force.
Mrs. W. R. Finch reviewed the
article "Is a college education
worth while?"from the National
Parent-Teacher magazine.
Third grade pupils under di
rection of Mrs. Ivah Murray
sang tnree songs.
Mr. Gustin, school principal,
explained the school health pro
gram and urged parents to keep
up the high standard previously
set by the school. .
Following the business meet
ing presided over by Mrs. Edith
Hamilton, a social hour was en
Joyed by parents, teachers and
friends. Mrs. Olive Putman ar
ranged the decorations.
Next meeting will b Feb. 15
when Founders Day will be ob
served. Sams Valley P.-T.A.
Sams Valley P.-T.A. held reg
ular meeting Jan. 16. The sub
ject was "Health," and interest
ing reports were given by the
Health and Hot Lunch commit
tees. Bill Bowerman, director of
athletics at Medford senior high,
gave an instructive talk on play
ground equipment which is con
ducive to building health and
especially correct posture of our
boys and girls.
Pupils of Mrs. ' Jcssup's piano
class presented fnusic after
which refreshments were served
by Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Mc
Donough and Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Perry.
Washington P.-T.A.
A discussion of compulsorv
military training featured the
meeting of the Washington Par
ent-Teacher association held last
Friday evening at the school fol
lowing a pot-luck dinner. Two
senior high school debate pupils,
June Bosworth and Bill Mdffat,
directed by Miss Barbara Comp
ton, led the discussion, with -Dr.
C. L. Coyle and Mrs. J. K. Hoey
also participating. The discus
sion had been arranged by E. H.
H e d r i c k, superintendent of
schools.
Ben Schmidt spoke on the
needs of the Y.M.C.A. here and
Mrs. A. E. Brockway was in
charge of games.
The meeting opened with the
flag salute and with prayer led
by the Rev. Delbert W. Daniels.
Miss York led community sing
ing and Kenneth Hulburt, new
principal of the school was in
troduced.
The dinner was planned by
Mrs. Arthur Brown and Mrs.
Goode.
RESENTS COMPETITION
St. Louis (U.K. "Hmmm,
a lotta robbers ain't in jail,"
thought a prisoner recently as
he boarded a train in St. Louis
en route to the Missouri State
penitentiary. Source of the dis
content, other than the Jail sen
tence, was a wisp of ham be
tween two razor-thin slices of
bread. "And they send folks like
us to prison for robbery," he
muttered. I
Use Mall rnnune Want Ads
Does the Atom Bomb
Explain
According to Edwin J. Din
gle, world-renowned geographer,
honored by leading geographi
cal societies, the power of the
atom as disclosad in the atom
bomb, is small compared with
tie known and seldom used pow
ers of the human brain. He
maintains that man, instead of
being limited by an average man
power mind, has within him the
mind power of a thousand men
or more, as weil as the energy
power of the universe, which can
be used in his daily affairs.
According to him, this sleep
ing giant of mind-power, when
awakened, can make man capa
ble of surprising accomplish
ments. It is as amazing as the
atom bomb is compared with for
mer sources of energv. Manv
thousands of people throughout
the world have already tried his
methods. Many report Improve
ment in power of mind, achieve
ment of brilliant bujiness and
professional success. Others re
port improvement in health, in
creased strength, courage, poise
or energy, or a more magnetic
personality.
Flight o Time
Medford and Jackson Co Kig
ory iron) the files ol the Mail
Tribune 10 20 and 34 years
aoo
TEN YEARS AGO
Jan. 22. 1936
(It was Wednesday)
Bonus bill passes house and
goes to Roosevelt for signature.
Britain, Turkey, Yugoslavia,
Greece and France unite for de
fense against Italy.
Plane service here disrupted
by fog.
King Edward assumes reins in
Britain.
Partly cloudy with fog.
36, low 30.
High
Ralph Jennings to run for
commissioner on the democratic
ticket.
TWENTY YEARS AGO .
Jan. 22, 1926
(It was Friday)
Spanish aviators on flight to
Rio Janeiro reach Azores.
John L. Lewis aErppa tn nlan
to end coal strike, but operators
decline.
Rain. High 46, low 39.
Senate to limit debate
World Court plan.
on
PuSSVwillows are hlnnmincr nn
Reese creek.
Community club at Tolo holds
annual meeting.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
Jan. 22, 1912
(It was Sunday)
War between France and Italv
looms.
Central Point schools re-nnen
after scarlet fever scare.
Commercial club and Greater
Medford club protest erection of
spray tank by Espee.
Clear. High 62, low 42,
Gas and Electric
Range Prices Set
Washington, Jan. 22 (U.R)
The Office of Price Administra
tion announced that 1942 price
ceilings will be effective for
sales of new gas and electric
cooking stoves.
Prices will vary accordine to
the manufacturer. The OPA
listed as typical ceiling prices:
standard electric range, $189:
apartment-size electric, $157;
standard gas range, $95; apartment-size
gas, $75.
COURT ST. OA."
1182 Court St.
Formerly "LillieV
OPEN
Under New Management1
24-Hour Service
Chicken and Steak Dinners
GAS
OIL
Park View
Convalescent Home
153 Granite St. Ashland Ore
Registered Nurse in Charge
Equipment for bed patients.
WASHING MACHINE
REPAIR
FOR ALL MAKES
Also,
Refrigeration Service
Younger's Appliance
31 N. Bartlett Phone 2419
Bible Miracles?
He tells how h fm,ni
strange methods in far off and
mysterious Tibet, often called
the land of miracles by the few
travelers permitted to visit it.
Here, he discloses, he learned
rare wisdom and long hidden
practices, closely guarded for
three thousand years by the
sages, which enabled manv to
perform amazing feats. These
immense powers, he maintains,
are latent in all of us. and meth
ods for using them are now sim
plified so that they can be used
by almost any person witn ordi.
nary intelligence.
As part of a great movement
: ...nivc i is metnoas available
to more people, a 9000 word
i treatise is offered absolutely free
jtor the time being. It reveals
'"1ny.startling results. Readers
jot this announcement can get
their fr?e copy by sending a post
card or letter to the Institutrof
4. Calif. Readers are urged to
: write promptly because this of-
may be w.thdxawn .. any
Adv.