BIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MedfordJ&Tribune
"Everyone ID eouUwrn OreioD"
Indi The Mill TrlbuM"
Dell; Except Saturday
Published by
MtnrnRD PRINTING CO.
rt.lt Norlh rir St. Phone a-e)ll
ROBERT W RUHL, Editor
ERNEST R OILSTRAP Meneger
HERB GREY, Advertielni Mir
E C FERGUSON. Meneglne Edltol
ERIC ALLEN JR., City Editor
BARRY CHIPMAN. Telefrepn Editor
BENRY L GREEN. Sunday Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Society Editor
GERALD LATHAM Clrnuletion Mg
An Independent Newepepei
Entered as eecond claei matter at
Medford. Oregon under Act ol
March 9. H97
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
n MilLln Advance:
Dally and Sunday one year... 00
Dally and Sunday lx months 4.76
Dilly and Sunday three moe a SO
Daily and Sunday one month 1 00
By Carrier In Advance Medlord
Ashland Central Point. Jackaonvllle
Gold Hill. PhoenU. Talent and oo
mnlnr mutes:
Dally and Sunday one year 112 00
Dally and Sunday one month I 00
All Terma Caih In Advance
Official Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
-full Laaaed Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representative:
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY INC
Office! In New York Chireio Da
trolt. San Franclico Los Angelea
Seattle. Portland. St Louia AUanU
Vancouver. B C
j5XNiWSrAPit
PUSllSHIIi
-ASSOCIATION
NATION A l EDITORIAL
AS;sbcUT,0)N
7 y
Flight o' Time
Meetfortl trid Jacks Coyne Hrs
hry treat Hit riles fhe Mar)
Tribun 10. 20 and J4 yaara at
10 YEARS AGO TODAY
March 1. 1940
(It Wai Friday)
February rainfall in area to
tallej 5.36 Inches, largest on rec
ord for that month and 2.D4
Inches above normal.
Piggly-Wlggly store here to
observe second anniversary at
present location on South River
side avenue.
Howard Goldsmith Initiated
into local Legion post.
February building permit to
tals $1 4.4nS in value compared
with $4,525 last year.
Miss Dorothy Thomas, How
ard school teacher, confined to
local hospital with slight illness.
20 YEARS AGO TODAY
March 1. 1950
(It Was Saturday)
County registration lor May
primaries totals 11,411.
Bill Young opens new service
garBge on North Front street.
Medford high defeats Ashland
35 to 11 to close season.
School census shows 9,696 pu
pils registered In county schools
as of February 29.
34 YEARS AGO TODAY
March 1. 1916
Reduction In cost of city gov
ernment over last year and sav
ing of $17.2118 in two years cited
in CPA report.
March welcomed to area by
snowstorm which disrupts phone
and telegraph lines In mountain
sections.
County .ludge F. L. TouVclle
and bride, (lie former Miss Eli7.a
Blosser of Chillicothe, O., arrive
here.
The Grange
Sams Valley Grange
Sams Valley Grange will meet
Saturday, March 4, at 8:30 p.m.
Members are asked to be prompt
an the program will be held first
and will feature a Inlk by Coun
ty Agent Ben Tucker. He will
expliim the formation of a soil
conservation district to be voted
on later this month. The program
is sponsored by the agriculture
committee and will be open to
the public. All interested are
urged to attend.
Initiation In third and fourth
degrees constituted the main or
der of business at the last meet
ing, February 18. New members
included Mr. and Mrs. Amos
Gnmshy. John, Sylvia and Frank
Nelson. Vera Abbott and Kvelyn
Frederick. Serving refreshments
were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Strnu-,
Bertha Straus and Mr. and Mrs
Milton Snndrrson.
Visitors from oilier Granges
were Mr. and Mrs. Chris Christ
ensen of Live Oak; Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Fiene of Gold Hill and Mr.
McMonlgle of Portland.
Oregon City Papers
Announce Merger
Oregon City, Ore., March 1
(U.R) Two of Oregon' oldest
newspapers were merged today
when the Oregon City Enterprise
and the Oregon City Banner
Courier announced Jointly they
will become a single publication
to he known at the Enterprise
Courier. Subscribers
To report Improper or non
delivery of the Mall Tribune phone
2-el4i before :45 p. m. dally and
I0 J0 a. m. Sunday
If regular dell eery arrives
shortly after you rail, please nnntv
nfflre, thus eliminating special
messenger service.
2iJKjaBKawDni
Columbia Diversion Study
The reclamation bureau wasn't fooling when it
came out some time ago with the proposal that water
from the Columbia river be diverted to drought-ncl-den
portions of California. That the bureau still has
the matter under study is shown by the request to the
house subcommittee on interior department appro
priations for $170,000 to enable continuation of the
study.
THE Columbia baslp, with its enormous excess of
water, is the only known souce of water needed in
California and neighboring states, a memorandum
from the bureau explained.
It will be a year or two before a report can be
made to congress. In the meantime there will be no
information given out as to possible routes for the
proposed diversion, said the bureau in making the
study fund request.
i
T WAS also stated that
of the Quantity of water
but it was said that it would be very small compared
with the 170 million acre feet of water which is an
nually discharged by the Columbia into the saline
embrace of the Pacific ocean at Astoria. E.C.F.
Early Oregon Printing
A commission was appointed in 1855 to meet in
Jacksonville and review
property destroyed by the
during the war of 1853. Handbills broadcast at the
time are among the interesting items described in
"Oregon Imprints," a bibliography of material print
ed in Oregon from 1847 to 1870, just issued by the
University of Oregon Press. Author and compiler of
the book was the late Douglas C. McMurtrie, noted
typographer and bibliophile. His work was carefully
revised bv his associate. Albert H. Allen, and the
. . i
Farm Markeiing Cash
For the first time In 12 years,
rash receipts from farm market-'
,g, ,n Oregon have shown a dc-
crease, according In a report
prepared by the Oregon Stale
college extension service from
United Slates department of ag
riculture reports and other data
Figures Just released for 1H4
show a decline of 13 per cent
Activians Attend
District Conference
Councillor Al Bradford, Im
mediate past president, and Clint
Dennett, president of the Med
ford Active club, represented
this area at the annual spring
council meeting of District 3,
Active lnternalinnal thnt va
i.i.i ;.. l - . ..
, i . , , in r.uK'-ni' iiiinnv. mr:,
southern Oregon delegation was 1 ,
headed bv Vmce Vatwlre Krauts
Pass, lieutenant governor of ,
District 3.
The session was held at the
Eugene hotel and was attended
by representatives of Ariivx
clubs In Oregon and southern
Washington.
manuscript wa3 suomiuea to me university oi wre
gon press in 1943.
AMONG printed material described are several
other items of interest in Southern Oregon. There
is, for instance, the listing of Jackson county and state
candidates for the 1862 election. The list was carried
in a copy of the Jacksonville Civilian, published by
S. H. Jenner at Jacksonville in May, 1862. The Civil
ian was short lived, however, as it suspended publica
tion at the end of that May.
CXCERPTS from H. D. Sheldon's History of the
University of Oregon reveal that "in 1851 the
(university) location was given to Marysville, now
Corvallis. . . In 1854 a board of commissioners re
ceived a gift of five acres, advertised for bids, ac
cumulated building materials and other assets worth
2,877.20, all for the benefit of the Marysville loca
tion. But the very next year, the university was re
located at Jacksonville in Southern Oregon. A year
later the legislature repealed this act. . ."
e e e e e
IMPRINTS also refer to a catalogue gotten out by
one of Ashland's pioneer business concerns, the
Tolman and Blake Nursery. The booklet, listing fruit
trees, was from the press of the Table Rock Sentinel
of Jacksonville.
Another reference to the Jacksonville Sentinel
tells of a poster issued on October 6, 1866, by the
board of trustees inviting proposals for building a
bridge across Rich Gulch on the Applegate road.
e e e e e
"THE overland mail route to California from.Port-
land, passing through all important mining cen
ters of Southern Oregon and Northern California,
was advertised July 19, 1866 by posting of cards
which sported a large woodcut of a stage with gal
loping horses. According to the "Imprints" descrip
tion of the card, the stages from Portland connected
with the railroad at Oroville for Sacramento. The
journey, which required six days, cost $50.
e e e e e
"NE of the most interesting items described is a
circular published June 7, 1847 by James V.
Nesmith at Oregon City. The circular was issued as
an answer to J. Quinn Thornton, in the controversy
over Thornton's denunciation of the southern Oregon
or Applegate immigrant route.
Nesmith's circular declares that :
"J. Quinn Thornton, having resorted to low, cowardly
and dishonorable means, for the purpose of Injuring my
character and standing, and having refused honorable satis
faction, which I have demanded: I avail myself of this op-
fiortunity of publishing him to the world as a rcclaimless
iar. an Infamous scoundrel, a blark hearted villinn. an ar
rant coward, a worthless vagabond and an Imported mis
creant, a di.vgrnce to the profession and a dishonor to his
country."
E.C.F.
Wtdntiday, March 1. 19S0
there has been no estimate
which might be diverted
the claims of citizens for
Rogue River Indian tribe
. ,1 tt ?i e r -
Receipts Said Down
from the record high of 1948.
Farmers cash receipts are still
SM
ice said
Hcceints from crons
declined
15 per cent for the year and live
stock and livestock products
tension service her.uee rial. I
promicllon expenses are not
available. For the United States
as a whole, realized net income
dropped 17 per cent during
1941). according to prrtiminarv
estimates made by lite bureau of
agricultural economics.
WEATHEH
By United Press
Northern California: Variable
high clnudinesa lodav. tonislit
.-.,. . . '
"""''"V except local mom
Occasional rain neat
i., go? . '""'S1" ""ft
Thursday. Cooler northern Inte-
nor Thursday. West to north
were down 12 per cent. Just how i , . , . ., n 'l h
nineh tiie ,ii.Min. ,,,. i ; """. sistei s make? A. Only
terms of rcalned not income to ?S , nn"V l""1
Orcgyn fanners cannot be deter- t," v's n r , Rond hl"bn"ri'
mine11..t n ,rH,,,o in ih. -v J 1 h0.v ""'iTstand women. Also
west winds 10 to 20 mph off
coast except southerly from Pt.
Arena north.
L'se Mei) Tribune Went Ada
f .
m
JULIA
s nesg i
"That fence goes all the way around the block and Julia is
makin' Tubby clean off the whole thing, just for writin' her
'nitials in a couple places!"
S eta MMiaMMIIMIIelMtlltlMlllllltHIIIII
On the Side"8" L v- DurUn
Distributed b Kino Features Syndicate, lac)
I am only one
But I am one.
I rannol do everything
Hut 1 can do something,
What I can do
I ought to do.
And what 1 ought to do
By the grace of God I will do.
Cannon Ferrer.
(Keep the above in mind when
you come upon "a wronq that
needs resistance, or a cause that
needs assistance. A aood.
strongly worded letter can often
do wonaers. as zor example, ev'?. oir naipn rticnardson, was
New Yorker becoming angered j eliminated because he was play-
ai me airiy conamon oi ine
street ha lived on wrote the
mayor that if said street was not
cleaned immediately he would
start a movement to have him
impeached. The street was clean
ed the next day.)
The salaries of bookkeepers in
Now York City are now from
$45 to S75 a week. Executives
secretaries can command S60 a
week. Experienced stenograph
ers are paid from $45 to $55
weekly. Telephone operators
get $42 a week. Receptionists
are paid $35. Beginning clerks
are paid $28 weekly which is
not quite as much as earned by
office boys who get $3(1 a week.
Imagine an office boy getting 30
bucks a week! Why when I was
a freight notice messenger for
the Pennsylvania railroad my
salary was only $22.50 a nonth.
Just a little more than five bucks
a week! I was tabbed!
Quite A Folio
The youngest looking actor
who has been on the stage 50
years is undoubtedly Reginald
Denny. Still Reggie isn't so aged.
He started his acting career in
London at the age of eight. His
father, W. H. Denny, was a well
known member of the original
Gilbert and Sullivan Opera com
pany. Reggie first really hit the
limelight when he was starred
in a series of films about a boxer
titled "The Leather Pushers."
Remember that series? If you
don't you certainly are not elig
ible for the Young (Jin Timers.
In addition to his stage and
screen achievements. Denny was
long interested in the manufac
ture of miniature airplanes. He
is also credited with having de
veloped the first non-man-carry
ing radio controlled aeroplane.
Get It Right
"There seems to be much con
fusion as to the appearance of
that character of the old West
known as Calamity Jane,"
writes a California subscriber
"I knew Calamity Jane person
ally in the early nineties and
have her picture before me. Her
height was five feet 11 inches.
She had shoulders like Drmnsrv.
a mannish hut nnt tinlrlnHlv fur-it. '
a high forehead and Jet black
hair. Her name was Jane Can
ary. She was Irish. She died
about 43 years ago in the Galla
tin Valley of Montana and is
buried next to Bill tec-Wok in
Deadwood, S.D."
Asiaea i
You say a codfish ball Is
round." writes a New Yorker
"My dear fellow, a codfisli cake
is round. A codfish ball is spher-
irni i await Hie arrival of one
stogie carefully wrapped." . , .
Among the original investors in
the Ford Automobile company
was Miss J. V. Couzens who put
in $100 and later sold the stock
thus purchased for $355,000
That was really picking a long
shot, what?
Asking
u?" , i ..' ' ,
SV' t ft S
t i in- iii.ui i ;ini imcrcsiea
and he has six sisters. Anvthin'g
in your Mules & Men files on
' j , ' ' m:v n nis tatntly
"""" Ml sin ruillliictl Dv
many females for so lone, thev
are inclined to be more tolerant
ef feminine faults and eccentri
cities. The only threat in marry
ing a man with a lot of sisters Is
thnt sister-in-law trouble mav
develop. Sisters are tisuallv
somewhat mtical of their brotri-
DROPhuoco
CLOGGED NOSE
2 drop of Pntm N'om nrfiM V
In rach nostril. nsp ronifi A
lion, open clojtifrHl none. You
ireeth OlItli.T tVita V.ilr.in ts . '
nsSS: PLNETRQ NOSE DROPS "
I
by Roland Co
il.fltH.II.I.I ,..., ,
lers" wives. Especially when that
J brother is the only one they
I have.
Horses St Women
Just what is the extent of the
feminine prejudice against
whiskers? If you grew a beard
would your sweetheart or wife
object, and why? This comment
is inspired by learning that in
some of the advertisements of
the film 'The Heiress," the pic-
j ture of one of the featured play-
k r pari caning ior the wear
mg of a beard. The eli minnl inn
of Sir Ralph's photograph was
made on the grounds that "whisk
ers are box office poison insofar
as women are concerned." This
brings to mind that several vears
ago Clark Gable was asked to
play a part which called for his
wearing a beard. Mr. Gable
strongly objected, saving: "Wom
en don't like whiskers."
Southpaw Golfer
Chicagoan says that not so
long ago her husband took up
golf for his health on a doctor's
suggestion. He is a left-handed
player. His average score is now
77. He never took any golf les
sons, but found verv helpful a
book by Jim Dante and Leo Die-KC'i-"1'"!
"The Nine Bad Shots
of Golf. He thinks this is the
best book ever written on golf.
County Engineer To
Attend Association
Paul B. Rynning, county en
gineer, will attend the 47tn an
nual meeting of the American
Road Builders' association to be
held in the Netherland Plaza
hotel in Cincinnati March 6 to 9.
Rynning is a member of the
board of directors of the associa
tion and will attend all business
sessions and will take part in
discussions of the nation's high
way problems with the 1,500
delegates expected at the meet
ing. Federal aid to highwavs
will be the theme of the four-day
conclave.
Dead Una on Classified Ads:
s 30 p m for following day; 10 a m
Monrtnv for Monday, noon Saturday
for Sunday a m
it v.
.ie. A -9 L
A Nichc-l.' Worth of
Comment On
By HARMAN
United Preae
Washington, March 1-4U.R)
The sow, or mama hog, is a
dumb critter.
She feeds
her young, but
ts just line
her, often as
not, to roll
over on the lit
ter and take a
nap, particu
larly if it's
cold in the hog
house. Such a
roll can keep
a lot of pork
chops and
pickled p i g's
feet from get
tine to market.
y
Us.rmj.rj Nlehola
General Electric thinks it has
solved the dilemma of the sow,
with no help from her.
It has devised a gimmick
which it calculates will grow
more, rather than fewer pigs,
by the simple process of saving
the lives of those which are born
in the first place. If you follow
me.
The G.E. experts figured that
if the sow gets chilly so do the
little pigs.
They figured if mama and the
pigs were in a place that was
warm, more of the little ones
would grow up to make fine ba
con, pork cnops or lams.
Ghost Of Niles Canyon
Takes To Heels As
Officers Fire Shots
Oakland. Cel.. March 1 (U.R)
The ghost of Niles creek can
'yon stopped walking yesterday
and began to run when police
men fired two shots into the
air.
About 20 years ago, a girl
mysteriously disappeared in
the east bay canyon and legend
has it that since then, at mid
night of February 27. the
ghost of the girl walks
through the canyon.
About 30 citizens, plus Dep
uty Sheriffs William Rote and
Ed Parom, were on hand last
' night at Stonybrook park
trestle when the witching hour
arrived. Sure enough, a fig
ure garbed in white strolled
down the railroad tracks and
glided out on the trestle.
The deputies, being practical
men, fired two shots into the
air.
The ghost, also being prac
tical, ran pellmell to the dep
uties and surrendered. Depu
ties said the ghost was a man,
but refused to reveal his name.
The Grange
Roxy Ann Grange
At last regular meeting of
Roxy Ann Grange Valentine's
day was celebrated in fitting
style. Colorful pantomines and
lablcaus portraying pistol pack
ing mama was enacted by Mrs.
Henry Mohler and Chas. Whitch-
er followed by "He loves me, he
loves me not," by Frances Mof
fatt and Ivan Wolfe, "The Old
Fashioned Girl" by Mrs. Clar
ence Phnister, then "City Slick
ers" (Beau Brummel Shober) and
Mrs. Chas. Whitcher, then "Be
My Valentine." by Mrs. Louis
Bish and Al Sims. A short skit
entitled "Bean's Night" was giv
en by Mrs. Jack Burns and Ivan
Wolfe. A duet by Donna Lou
Phnister and partner preceded
the lecturer's program, arranged
by Caroline Wolfe, lecturer.
Refreshments were served by
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hoover. Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Peacher and Mr.
and Mrs. Upp. Next regular meet
ing will be held Friday evening,
March 3. A special program of
square dance instruction has
been arranged for this night with
uon iveal presiding over
program.
Ihe
ma
Adri
214 r. Main
This and Thai
W. NICHOLS
Feature Wrltau
There were all sorts of experi
ments and the electricians final
ly came up with some heat
lamps. It was a simple thing,
really. They are the same kind
of lamps we use around the
house to take the ache out of
sore shoulders after a rough
game of handball and used to
thaw the water pipes in- the
basement.
Put the same lamps In the pig
brooder and what do you get
more piggies surviving. The
same sort of treatment can be
used in the hen house, the lamb
shed, and the cow barn to pro
tect the young of each.
In cases where the heat lamps
are used, according to Joseph P.
Ditchman. farm lighting special
ist for GE. an average of IV2
pigs per litter are saved.
Pig Saved It Money Saved
Ditohman reasons it like this:
A sow farrows early In the
spring and averages six to eight
pigs to the litter. A utter of five
just about breaks even on the
open market. Profits to the man
in overalls come on all over five
pigs.
It taKf." f "it 140 pounds of
feed to b: pig to market
age. A pig .- ..1 .'s a lot of mon
ey saved.
And the more pigs on the mar
ket, the less city folks have to
pay for a slice of ham.
As for the farmers:
Heated brooders, according to
Ditchman, are easy to build and
don't cost much. They consist of
a boarded-off corner of the far
rowing pen. You can cut a front
opening about eight inches
high big enough to let a pig in.
Lamp Attached To Roof
A heat lamp can be attached
to the roof, about 16 to 36 inches
above the ground.
The electric light company
will tell you that a pig brooder
consumes about 36 kilowatt
hours of electric power per lit
ter. That is from the time a pig
is born until it's big enough to
go out and risk a bad cold.
The department of agriculture
says that pig brooder research
and development have been go
ing on for a long time, among
state colleges and experiment
stations and power suppliers.
You don't have to sing to a
pig to keep it happy. Keep it
warm.
Forestry Bureau
To Open Bids On
Planting Bonds
Salem. Ore., March 1 U.R)
The state forestry department
announced today that bids will
be opened March 23 for S400.000
worth of Oregon forest rehabili
tation and reforestation bonds,
the first offered to the public.
Department officials said the
funds should be sufficient, for
the rest of the biennium, ending
June 30, 1951. They will pro
vide for tree planting, snag fall
ing and seeding on state forest
lands. Most of the work under
way is in the Tillamook burn
area.
Provide For Study
The funds also will provide
for an initial study of reforesta
tion needs and possibilities on
40.000 acres of the Nicolai moun
tain area in Clatsop county and
preliminary studies in Linn. Lin
coln, Marion, Jackson, Josephine
and Douglas counties. The de
partment said planting crews
would resume work this week
which was halted by heavy
snows since fall in the Tillamook
burn area.
This is the second issue of the
bond since thev were nuthnr.
ized at the November, 1948. gen
eral election and by legislative
VI .Vi
'h
e n
CURTAIN RISES
ON
Friday, March 3rd
Our Spring collection ha. all th
glamour and color of Hollywood
premiere! We've coats, suits,
dresses and hats in the exciting
Paris-inspired styles, faithfully
copied by our down-to-earth
American manufacturers at prac
tical American prices. Prices that
will suit you.
lenne s
Phone 2-7169
enabling act In 1949. The first
issue was for $300,000. The
bonds yield a maximum of two
per cent interest. They are is
sued for 15 years, callable in
five years.
MEDFORD
PHARMACY
127 E. 6th
Just Off Central
9 AM. 10:30 P M.
For Complete
Prescription Service
2-6253
If No Answer Call
2-8582
Prompt Free Delivery
Baby Needs
Sick Room Supplies
Rentals
JIM GORDON
Bidgood Hudson
Medford'i Own Modern
Pharmacy
PROPANE
TANKS
LOW EASY
RENTAL PLAN
DOMESTIC
GAS CO.
3330 N. Highway 99
LOANS
Start the New Year with a
elean slate. Pay those Holi
day bills with cash. Loans on
your salary, furniture or
automobile. With payments
to fit your .income.
Loans from $50 to $500
On Your
Salary, Furniture or Automobile
Up to 24 Months to Repay
SEE
AMERICAN
FINANCE
CORPORATION
Room 210-211 . Levercrte Bldg.
License M-362 License S-28S
PHONE 2-88S6
RENT A CAP
Daily's U-Grive
and
BODY and PAINT SHOP
Southern Oregon's Oldest
and Finest
29 So. BartleH
Medford
Suffered After Every
Meal Due to
Acid Indigestion
"We find it a good medicine and
are recommending KAL-O-DEX to
others who suffer," wrote this lady re
cently. "My stomach used to feel like
my innards were all tied up in knots,
especially after I ate onions or fish,
but, thanks to KAL-O-DEX I'm on the .
road to better health now." Another
writes, "It keeps that awful gas down
and allows me to sleep even after eat
ing cabbage, and best cf all my waist
line has reduced inches because
bowels are regular and I'm rid of that V,'
iwful bloating."
KAL-O-DEX is an Herbal Formula
of 5 juices from Nature's Plants. It
has relieved many people who Had
never been really heloed before by any
medicine. Taken shortly before meals
it mixes with, your food, helping to
eliminate the poisons that foster stom
jch trouble. It will cleanse bowels,
dear intestines and remove old, sick
ening bile from the svstpm. So don't
go on suffering! Get KAL-O-DEX to
day at all Drug Stores. Adv.
HMfmACKOR
INDIGESTION?
T'f UNK f'-WENS! Mo-! ltcltji iff juttP-d
ludlgedlon. When it ttnkri, tika Bell-pm
ubicti. They contnin the (5tft-ictirf
medicinn known to doctors fnr t lie rHiff oi
heartburn, gai and tlmilar dutreu. 25.
PILES
HEMORRHOIDS
4 eVheV trtl O'ldtfl
COION ..STOMACH
iACAr
lUrTUAf fHti-nio)
nttti VrltMat (eirtei ...1.
'0t00 w"il 3 00 Wan Ihre jah Pri
UM.i 100 m Men Wa tti CJ ), HO
FREE STrSS.?""- I"ST
THE DEAN CLINIC
in oua 40'" ti
M I. Csmer I. Iurni.es an Crsnd Ate.
T"'" l I'll P.rtl.-S 14. Ore.