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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 27, 1954)
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE MedforivCJwTribuni 'Everybody in Southern Oregon Readi The Mall Tribune" Published Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PHIKTINO CO. 27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141 ROBERT W. KUHL. Editor HERB GREY, Advertising Manager E- C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor HARRY CH1PMAN. Telegraph Editol RICHARD JEWET1. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act of Alarcn 3. iaa SUBSCRIPTION RATES By MaU In Adrance: Per copy 10c Dailv and Sunday One year $12.00. Daily and Sunday Six months 60 Daily and Sunday Three mos 3 JO Daily and Sunday One month , 12S Sunday Only One year 3.50 By Carrier In Advance Medford, Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent and on motor routes: Daily and Sunday One year $15.00 Dally and Sunday One month 1.25 Carrier and Dealers 5c pet copy All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press Full Leased Wire r MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU " OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY. INC Offices in New. York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland. St. Louis. Atlanta NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Dec. 27. 1944 (It was Wednesday) 1 Fiction story written by Dor othy Pruitt, Medford, appears in Ladies' Home Journal maga zine. " . ' Perry's Ye Smudge Pot col umn: The JDPA reports the Christmas turkeys were too large to suit people. Another school of thought holds the ap petite of the people was too small. 20 YEARS AGO , Dec 27. 1934 (It was Thursday) Prizes for Christmas decora tions go to Judge F. L. Tou- Velle, Emil Britt, and Mrs. Ted GeBauer. ' Coach D. K. Burgher reports Medford high school basketball team is having difficulty sched uling games. 30 YEARS AGO Dec. 27. 1924 - . (It was Saturday) Chauncey Florey, . Medford, appointed deputy United States commissioner. . . Phoenix residents planning New Year's Eve celebration in Clyde hall. 40 YEARS AGO Dec. 27. 1914 (It was Sunday) Medford woman is arrested in Grants Pass for wearing male at tire while on downtown streets. As the result of auto bus com petition over the Pacific high way, Southern Pacific railroad withdraws its motor car service between Grants Pass and Ash land. What's the Answer? (Can You Get 4 of the 7?) Copr. 1954. Editorial Research Report 7. Under the reciprocal trade act the President can or can't suspend all the tariff duty on any import? ' 2. Sen. Arthur V. . Watkins, head of the Senate committee on censuring Sen.- McCarthy, is of the Baptist, Catholic, Jew ish, Methodist or Mormon faith? 3. The great bulk of tax col lections by' cities and other lo cal political units comes from property taxes; right or wrong? 4. Have the Chinese Reds ever appeared before U. N. to answer charges by the U. S. against them? 5. For middle-aged women the death rate from diseases of the heart or blood vessels has gone up or down, or stayed the same, in recent years? 6: Immigrants at N. Y. not admissible at once are detain ed at Ellis Island; right or wrong? 7. Texas was never part of which one of - these: France, England, Confederate States of America; Mexico, Spain? ' The answers: 1. Can't; he can only -lower it within spe cified limits. 2. Mormon. 3. Right. 4. Yes, in iate-1950 about Korea. 5. Has gone down. 6. Wrong; the Elis Is land detention station is now closed. 7. England. The name Australia was first applied to a group of South sea Islands. (NATIONAL3 EDITOKIAL Holiday 'J'HIS editorial is being written Christmas morning. The. writer is, at the moment, alone .in the office. The teletype is clacking away intermittently, with long pauses as the usual, uneven flow of holiday news comes in. (It is iriostly about international events, with a few Christmas tragedies or other events, but much of the time the teletype stands idly humming.) A ROUND of telephone calls to state and city " police and the fire department has provided enough news for a few stories, mostly about events which, for the participants, bring unhappiness or pain. Outside, the f lurry of snow which fell in the early morning has melted away, and the tops of the few cars in sight are steaming as a bright sun dries them. A third cup of coffee from the pot made by the janitor is being gulped down, and the rest of the pot sits steaming on a hot plate. There are some Christmas cookies, which a friend of the paper brought in. THE mail picked up at the post office was mostly uninteresting news and publicity about far away places and unimportant events. The one bright spot was a letter from a young German friend who is now living, in Lima, Peru. He said, in part: Now I am sitting here in friendly Lima, living in a house built of Oregon douglas fir, driving a Hudson model 1923. What worries me most at the moment is that there are twelve dogs in the house, each of them inhabited by a a strong colony of fleas. And all these fleas seem to be .' especially fond of me. Beside of that, I have to learn Span ish. Tea with lemon and milk means "te coil limon y leche," and Coca Cola means "Coca Cola" and Martini means "Martini." But not everything is so easy. THE relative quiet in the usually noisy newsroom leads to thoughts of the future ; of plans for next week's paper; of how we, whose job it is to bring you the news, can do so better, and more interestingly. The newspaper over the hill, the Klamath Falls Herald and News, has been doing some of. the same kind of thinking. During Christmas week, it told its subscribers, it would print on Page 1 only good news. For instance, the earthquake which rocked Eureka, and which was felt in southern Oregon, was put on Page 5 of the H&N last week. The hiatus in '.'bad news" on Page 1 is not a per manent plan, but was tried out for a week as a "Christmas present" to the paper's readers. . THIS experiment emphasizes what is a frequent complaint about newspapers "Why do you al ways print the bad news, and never the good news?" the question goes. , That is a difficult question to answer, because there are many answers. First of all, the assumption on which the question is based is not entirely true. Here are a few headlines chosen from Page l of Mail Tribune issues last week to show that all the new was not bad : . " ; "Direct Telephone Line to North Pole Planned," "Pope Pius Planning Christmas Broadcast," "19 Newly-Born Babies Reported at Hospital," "Crater Lake Now Operating on Winter Schedule," "'Junk Mail Order May be Reconsidered," "Best Yule Shop ping Season Nears Close," "Cancellations at Local Post Office Reach Record Mark," "Pilgrims Gather for Rites in Jerusalem," "UMC Drive Goes Over Top," "Local Elks Distribute Yule Gifts This Week," "Em ployees ot City Honor Mayor Flynn." ' THE same problem is illustrated by the holiday quiet 'xi- - : mi. a i , . . - m me newsroom. j.ne Dig siory oi unnstmas is in the homes of people today; in the churches where they go to worship; in the faces of the kids as they open those tantalizing bundles under the tree. But this story is difficult, if not impossible, to tell on Page 1. It is told in- the everyday lives of 'all the citizens, n is tne "usual ' ana tne "normal" and rou tine" big and important and overriding as it may be in our hearts. '. So the cold black type on Page 1 recounts the acci dents and the fires and the crimes; but it also tells where it can of the happier events which are symptoms of the big, continuing story oi the people of America mostly good people, kind and decent and self-respecting. . v .. ... NEWSPAPER is a mirror of the life of -its com munity. If that life is, by and large, good, the paper will have predominantly good news. The soc iety and sports pages are mostly devoted to reporting "good" news, and the general news columns, while they tell of unhappiness and death, also tell of charity drives and YMCA parties and meetings and concerts and plays and elections and new buildings all the things which people do. m Unless a newspaper tells the news good and bad it ceases to be a newspaper. Telling the news, as completely and accurately and interestingly as pos sible, is the only reason it has for existence. -."'.. .. THE rest of the staff has started to arrive, the cof- fee and cookies are almost gone and it's time to get to work on Sunday's paper. We hope the news will be more good than bad. But whatever it is, it's our job to report it. E.A. Portland Hunter Found " The Dalles U.R) The body of Charles Edwin Eaton, 30 year - old Portland commercial artist, was found early today in a .heavily wooded area about five miles south of Mosier, end ing an all-night search.. Wasco county Coroner Ken neth Libby said Eaton had been shot through the head with a .22 calibre rifle which he apparent ly had been carrying. The rifle was found under Eaton's body on preliminary e x a m i nation. Monday, Dacamber 27 1984 Reverie Shot in Head However, Libby said he, was awaiting reports from the state crime laboratory before pro ceeding further with his investi gation of the death. Sheriffs deputies, state police and volunteers from Hood River and Mosier began the search for the Portland artist Sunday after he was reported missing. - Ice cream cone sales in a year in the U. S. amount to about $24,000,000. ; L' jjlllfiilf mi III I' STANDING BENEATH sagging porch, Linda DeMers, 5, and brother, Bruce, think they are pretty lucky to have escaped in Jury when quake struck their Eureka, CaL, home. (International) Matter of Fact DEMOCRATS LOOK AT '56 Washington What with an administration program which is hot really very controversial, a popular President, and a non- election year, the upcoming session of Con gress ought to be fairly brim ming with peace and good wiU to men. . But it won't be. The reason is twofold. There is a deep and bitter split Stewart Alsop in the Republican party and the Democrats mean to exploit this split for all it is worth. The Democrats are already thinking, of course, of 1956, and exploiting the Republican split for aU it is worth is the heart of Democratic strategy for win ning in that year. Under any circumstances, as far as the Sen ate is concerned, the Democrats start with a great natural ad vantage. For, by the luck of the draw, there, are about three times as many Republicans as Democrats up for reelection in doubtful states. Thus it is going to take a real Republican landslide not sim ply, an-Eisenhower landslide for the Republicans to win back the Senate in 1956. The voters, the Democratic leaders reason, are not apt to give a landslide majority . to a party which is constantly engaged in . pulling its own hair' out by the ' hand' ful and kicking itself in the teeth. And since they control Congress, the Democrats further reason that the Republicans can be kept almost constantly en gaged in these pastimes. The reciprocal trade issue pro vides a good example of the way the Democrats mean to exploit the Republican split. The Presi dent has indicated that he wants the Randall Commission tariff program, which would permit him to reduce most tariffs by 15 per cent in three years, passed in this session. The Democrats will be happy to oblige. By and large, the Democrats art romarlraMv uniorl rT- 4Tia issue. All the Democratic mem bers ; of the House Ways and Means Committee, for example, are for reciprocal trade, while the Republicans are split six ways to Sunday. In the Senate. the Republicans are also divided right down the middle, while there are only a handful of Dem ocratic dissidents, notably Kil gore and Neeley of West Vir ginia. So the Pftnocratic leadership means to put reciprocal trade very near the top of the calen dar. The Democrats are looking forward rather smugly to the row which the issue is sure to generate among the Republi cans: And it .will be, surpris ing if the Democratic leadership "Mk JH COMMUNICATIONS Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible: The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. , Why. is Cold War Not Over To" the Editor: Why isthere not "Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men?" Why is the Cold War not over? Is it not because our hearts and minds are not truly concerned about Peace? A truly slxong desire with which the Father can work is lacking. We love the gold and the mater ial things it will buy too much to be "deeply concerned about even the dangers of a Cold War. But it is ours to win if it is ever won. Armed forces can't do it. A Cold War deals with the hearts and minds of people. And it is dangerous too. For how can we know where our Front Line is? How can we know how much ground we've lost? Yes, a Cold War is a people's war and must be won by them. The only sure weapons are Faith, Hopeand Charity. Unwavering Faith in God and His Principles of Truth and Righteousness is more powerful than guns. Sus tained Hope that creates a will By Stewart Alsep shows any great haste, to get the issue settled. : " .' " The Democratic" leaders, to be sure, are pledged to bi-partisanship in foreign policy and de fense matters. But they, will feel no great pain if there are unseemly -wrangles among the Republicans about such issues. For example; a whole : series of Democrats; led by the shrewd Senate Democratic leader Lyn don Johnson, rose to "commend" Sen. William Knowland's call for a "great debate" on the Ad ministration's foreign policy. In short, nothing would give '. the Democrats -more pleasure than to adopt statesmanlike poses on the sidelines, clucking their ton gues and shaking their heads while the Republicans shouted "warmonger" and "appeaser" at one another and at the President At any rate, the Democrats are convinced to a man that, with a strong assist from the Republicans, their position wiU be greatly improved in the next two years. The curious converse of this confidence, however, is that the Democrats are also prl vately convinced to a man that Dwight D. Eisenhower could beat the living daylights out of any potential Democratic president ial candidate. Moreover, the Democratic strategists have as yet no very clear idea of how to deal with this deplorable situation. Most of them now believe that direct attack on the President is not a paying proposition. When Paul Butler, the new Democratic chairman, attacked the Presi- dent,'Lyndon Johnson "reported ly telephoned to give him some thing approximating unshirted hell. Butler himself, whose re marks about the President's "lack of capacity" were strictly off the top of his head, has re portedly come round to the view that a direct assault on the popu- l T" S J X . .n m mm-. iar i-resiaeni wouia De seit-ae' feating. rpHEN how else is the President to be cut down to def eatable size? Some Democrats are be ginning to talk of a strategy of identifying the President with WaU Street and "the big money," using the Dixon-Yates contract as a starter. But the present in tention of the leadership is sim ply to exploit the . Republican division, .while leaving the seem ingly insoluble problem of how to beat Eisenhower up to the can didate, whoever that unfortun ate may be. The confidence of the Demo-' crats as ' regards the Congress, and their near despair as regards the White House, suggests an obvious fact. , To a truly re markable extent, the Republican party is -now almost, totally de pendent politically on President Eisenhower. This is a fact that some of the more sensible Re publican conservatives are com ing to recognize. (Copyright, 1954. New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) to do or' die is' mightier than man power. Understanding Charity that executes justice and brotherly love can overcome at omic destruction. America's greatest and most unique weapon is not Hydrogen bombs but Brotherly Love. That puts responsibility on each of us to contribute our share to his dynamic -force so this present Cold War can. be terminated. Each of us must assume our duty to help establish justice and well-being in all the contacts we make. We must root out the ev ils and help 'rehabilitate. We must take our place as people with a mission to fulfill, for the King of Kings, whose birth we celebrate at this season. Let us rededicate ourselves to His work and make Him First in our lives.- Then we shall win the Cold War. Then we shall have Peace on Earth good will toward men. .- ' , - , ... , Frances Ray, 4 Ralston,: Wash. ' Is That So? By Eugene Burnt ; RangtrNaturalUr , Another quiz before the old year dies. As usual, answers f oUow .questions. Six correct out of the seven makes you an ex pert; five is excellent, four is good. 1 Which of these animals has horns, which antlers: Rocky Mountain goats, pronghorn ante lope, reindeer, moose, . bison, rhinoceros, mule deer? 2. Are there any fur-bearing mammals in the Antarctic? 3. Whales have been . known to dive fairly deep, but how deep? 500 feet, 1,000, 1,500, 2,000 or 3,000 feet? - 4. Water, supposedly, is in compressible, yet at a depth of 1,200 feet it is compressed about 2 per cent. Without such com pression: approximately how much higher would sea level be? 10 feet, 20 feet, 60 feet? 5.. Do aU birds lay eggs? Do any lay their eggs in midwinter? 6." Which of these mammals has the smallest offspring: bear, porcupine, reindeer, elk? 7. Pair up the closest living relatives among these two groups pronghorn antelope, ring tailed cat, wolverine: with Rocky Mountain goat, rae- coon, weasel, bobcat, caribou.- ANSWERS: 1. The prong- BUT horn antelope, bison, V buffalo, Kocky Mountain goat ana rnino ceros have horns: the reindeer, moose, and mule deer have ant lers. 2. The onlv imnortant mam malian life in the Antarctic is marine form there are num erous whales and a few species of seals. No fur-bearine mam mals. (However, the French gov- erntment which claimed a sec tor of Antartica issued a nrn- clamation against shooting polar bears in these regions.) 3. The whale has been known to submerge to over 3.000 fpntf In one instance, a 45-foot whale met his death entangled in a submarine cable at a depth of 3,zsu teet. 4. ActuaMy, 60 feet is. Tjeing conservative it is , closer to uu teet. All Birds Lay Eoos 5. Yes. all birds lav eeps Tom that come to mind, lav thoir eggs in midwinter; the Emperor penguin in . tne Antarctic and the Griff onan ; African' vulture 6. The bear cub is smallest nt these at birth. Even smaller than the porcupine's young. The black bear's cub, in proportion to the mother's weieht. is ahnnt 1 200th; a -human's is about i.sutn; a porcupine's, i about l15th. ; v v-w 7. The pronghorn antelope's ,ciosesi relative i is the Rocky Mountain goat; the ringed tail cat belongs to the raccoon fam ily; tne wolverine is related to weasel. (Released by McClure News paper Syndicate) Free: By, special arrangement with 'the editors of the Ency clopedia Americana, my panel of judges will award each week to the reader who sends me the best question -on nature and wildlife a complete . 30-volume set of this world-famous refer ence work in a handsome Seal craft binding. Each week, new Sorry. I simplv . can't s answer yeur many friendly letters. Please address your questions lc: IS THAT SO! c-o Medford Mail (Tribune, Box 575, Sausa lito, Calif. Speed and Alcohol To Take Heavy Toll New York Speed, number one killer on American high ways, and alcohol, , which runs a close second, will be responsible during this New Year's week end for at least 161 auto crash fatalities, according to a predic tion by the accident prevention department of the Association of Casualty and Surety companies. The . association's grim fore cast, released today, indicates that speeding accident will claim 97 victims, while overindulgence in alcohol on the parts of both drivers and pedestrians will cost another 64 lives. Before the end of the ;week end, which starts officially at 6 p.m. , Thursday and closes at midnight Jan. 2, there also will be 29 deaths in accidents caused by failure to keep to the right of the center line," 21 more for failure to yield the right-of-way and'another 18 in crashes caused by overfatigued drivers or driv ers actually asleep at the wheel, according to the prediction. Reptiles of the desert's scorch td wasteland instinctively hunt shade for a midday siesta. Ex periments.: prove that the rays of the southern California sun can kill a sidewinder rattler in nine minutes, says the National Geographic Society. Thus desert snakes seek their prey during the cooler hours between dusk and dawn. . Nehru, Titcf Insist No Attempt To Form Bloc of Meutra lists By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent - Two strange political bedfel lows have just issued a strange statement outlining their mu tual foreign! policy. - Jaw aharlal Nehru, the pa trician prime minister of India, and Marshal . Tito, the proletar ian president Communist Yugoslavia, in- charies Mci ann sist they are nt "neutralists." They say they are not trying to organize any "third force" or "third bloc" of countries which want to remain aloof from the East-West policy, they say, is one of "non-alignriient." They aim to rtthe promotion, both for them selves and the world, of condi tions of peaceful co-existence." No Force Involved Their "approach to world peace can not be based upon force or the accumulation of armaments as an instrument either of the negotiation or of the solution of conflicts, Nehru and Tito say. They explain that they are proposing "a positive, active and constructive policy seeking to lead to a collective peace." Well, from this distance it stiU reads like a statement of neutralism which involves the formation of a third and "non- aligned" force. The - Western Allies are for peaceful co-existence. But how are they going to attain it so long as Soviet Russia and Red China continue their aggressive policies? How are they, going to stop the accumulation of arm aments if they want to survive? In The Day's By FRANK JENKINS It's, a strange and troubled world we live in. . ' Only a few hours before Christmas Eve, in this critical year of 1954, the French assemb ly refused to ratify the rearma ment of Western : Germany, which is a move on the part of non-Communist Western Europe aided by the United States, to protect itself . against the march of world Communism, . led by Russia. By its action the French as sembly says plainly that it is more afraid of thet Germans than of Communism. Fr IS a strange complex. The action of the French as sembly came on the day before Christmas. Christmas is the great festival of the Christian w6rld. France is a Christian nation. On this day when the French as sembly was declaring that its fear of the Qermans is greater than its fear of Communism, the French people were busy with their preparations for Christmas. WORLD COMMUNISM LED BY RUSSIA. IS THE DE CLARED ENEMY OF CHRIST IANITY. That is -what makes the action of the French assembly so strange. '. Fear is a terrible thins. ON THE eve of this Christmas day of 1954, when so many strange things are afoot in the world, I think it will be well to remember that it was a troubled world into which Jesus was born. Greece, that brightest spot in the ancient world, was drifting back into darkness due to the inability of her city states to get along with each other and work together. Rome had already, become a dictatorship in which the com mon man amounted tp little. On every side, there were examples of what'happens when too much power is gathered into too few hands. : - , LET'S close with this thought: The world of today is a FAR BETTER - WORLD - than t h e world into which Jesus was born.,, It is. a better world be cause" of the influence of His teachings. - : The Golden Rule is a part of the teachings of Jesus: It is a rule, or a way of life, that was set forth by Him in His Sermon on the Mount.. As .quoted . by this Relief from Suffering of Colds DOES MORE THAN WORK ON CHEST! Nothing works like Vicks VapoRub to relieve suffering of colds. VapoRub does more - than just work on the chest.t -It acts two ways at once:- 1. VapoRub relieves nnsstdar -soreness and tightness, stimn- -' lates chest surfaces. . ' '. 2. At the same time, VapoRnVs special medicated vapors also brine relief with every breath. You can't see , these vapors, but you can eej them as they - Recalls French Debate Talk of peaceful co-existenct brings back '.o mind the occas ion years ago Vsrhen the French Chamber of Deputies was debat ing a proposal to abolish capi tal punishment for murder. The debate collapsed in a gal of laughter when a deputy said: "All right, but let the murder ers abolish capital punishment first." President Eisenhower summed up the situation when, at the recent Christmas tree lighting observance at the White House, he departed from the prepared text of his speech to say: . "There are some who have believed it possible and desirable to hold aloof from today's world wide struggle between , those who uphold government based upon freedom and dignity and ' those who consider man the pawn of the state. "The tunes are so critical and the difference between these world systems so vital that grave doubt is cast on the validity of neutralistic argument." Tito Visits Nehru Tito is now. in India on a state visit to Nehru. It is a strange meeting. Nehru, educated by English tutors in India and at Harrow and Cambridge in England, has lived in luxury all his life. His political philosophy is pacifistic. though he is ready to fight when need be. Tito, the son of a peasant blacksmith, grew up the hard way. A veteran Communist who conducted an amazing partisan campaign against the Germans in World War H, he is about as far remoyed from being a neutral as anybody ' could be. In fact, he is aligning himself with the Western Allies. . f - The trouble is that both Tito and Nehru have "bought? Russia's coexistence propaganda. News Matthew, He said: "Therefore all things whatso ever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them; for this is the law and the pro phets." "i TF THAT ruie (which is a sound rule of business, as well as a sound rule of faith) could be universally followed, this could be a far better World than it is. Co-Chairmen Named. For Kiwanis Kapers Lou Cranston and Frank Ben esh have been named co-chairmen for the production of the 1955 Kiwanis Kapers. The annual musical and var iety show is- Medford Kiwanis club's big fund-raising activity of the year. It will be presented on February 23, 24, 25 and 26. The 1955 show will have a television theme. Its title is "Tele-Versions..' . ' a- Reindeer of Canada and Alas ka are usually brown and grey in color. . ; New Year's Vow GEO. N. TAYLOR Yes, make a vow that in 1955 you will give the little woman a posy now and then. This will tell her that J your heart is glad for all that she is to you. And don't for get that women have ever been active in reach ing Red men and Brown and Yellow and Black and White men with the Good News that w God had a Son ' who took over our sins; became the sinner and died for us. It makes no difference to Ged how far we may have sunk God gives us eternal life as we take our -stand that Christ was God's Son and that -His blood washed out the stain of our sins. When God has his roll-call of the saved filled out, then this Gospel ag 'of now, ends. So closes the Bible offer of eternal life. Curtain then. And lor the saved comes resurrection into eternal life. This message sponsored- by a. dairyman. - - Paid adv. travel deep into the nose," throat and large bronchial tubes. Congestion starts breaking up. Coughing eases. Soon you enjoy warming re lief that lasts for hours. -.So when colds strike, use the best-known home remedy to relieve such,suffering Vicks VapoRub. . . Rub on Re'ief... "" Breofht in Refitf Waporud