o
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MEDFORDtiTMBUW
"Everybody in Southern Oregon
Reads Tne Mail inoune
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St Phone 2-6141
DntiroT HI DITtJT VAitnr
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
E. C FERGUSON Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STAR CHER Society Editor
JACK JACKSON Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act ot
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall In Advance: Per copy 10c.
Daily and Sunday One year $12.00
Daily and Sunday Six months 6.50
Daily and Sunday Three moi 3.50
Sunday Only One vear S3 S0.
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 $13 00
Daily and Sunday One month lis
Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy
All Terms casn in nawon
Sfficial Paper ol the City of Medlord
Official Paper ot Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
Advertising nepraaiu.u.i.
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY INC.
Offices In New York. Chicago De
troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles
Seattle. Portland. St Louis Atlanta.
Vancouver B.C.
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
ASSOC'l-ATllON
0" 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
Nov. 11, 1945
(It was Sunday)
Jackson' County Health asso
ciation announces visit of mobile
x-ray unit.
From Arthur Perrys' Ye
Smudge Pot column: Several
citizens who " remained in the
shade all summer, plan to go to
California for the sunshine soon.
20 YEARS AGO
Nov. 11. 1935
(It was Monday)
Veterans, civic clubs and oth
er organizations participate in
Armistice day parade.
Camp Precott CCC men mine
eoal within mile of camp' for
heating barracks.
30 YEARS AGO
Nov. 11. 1925
(It was Wednesday)
Medford Memorial mausoleum
In IOOF cemetery dedicated.
From Local and Personal col
umn: The fire department had
one of the many odd floats in
the parade today. Their float,
made by the firemen, depicted
a hock and ladder company of
a rural community.
40 YEARS AGO
Nor. 11. 1915
(It was Thursday)
Dr. J. M. Keene appointed to
city council succeeding Col. H.
H. Sargent, who resigned.
From Talent Talk: The Ath
letic club expects to clean out
a room at the cannery next
week. The room will be used as
a clubroom.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of lh 7? .
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. Adlai E. Stevenson is about
the same age as President Eisen
hower, or two years older, or
six, or nine or 12 years younger?
2. A person may be a depend
ent for federal income tax pur
poses if not related to the tax
payer; right or wrong?
3. The draft will be extended
this month to include the Navy
or will continue for the Army
alone?
4. Less than one-fourth the
whole U.N. budget, or about
one-third or one-half, or more
than three-fourths is paid by the
U.S.?
5. Before Communism took
over Russia in 1917, most Rus
sians were Orthodox (Greek)
Catholics,- Roman Catholics,
Jews, Lutherans or Mennonites?
6. Adultery is grounds for di
vorce in every single one of the
48 states; right or wrong?
7. Haym Solomon, Jewish fi
nancier, helped out the U.S. in
the Revolutionary War, War of
1812, Mexican War or Civil War.
The Answers: 1. Nine years
younger. 2. Right. 3. Extended
io Navy. 4. About one-third.
5. Orthodox Catholics. 6. Right.
7. Revolutionary War.
HONEY TREAT '
Grand Rapids, Mich. (U.PJ
Children in one Grand Rapids
neighborhood received an unex
pected treat of honey when a
large tree limb fell to the street.
Thousands of bees swarmed
from the limb when it fell and
police called Mrs. Isiah B. Stev
ens, a bee keeper, to remove the
limb. She passed out honey to
children in the neighborhood.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Editorial Correspondence
San Francisco, Nov. 8 Certain critics call Chuck
Taylor of Stanford a blow-hard. But he has been right
in his forecasts this year and to date has a batting
average of around .800. He said USC could be beaten
when the Indians were underdogs to the tune of two
touchdowns. His team proceeded to prove it. Now he
says he is afraid of the Oregon Webfoots on Saturday
and not only fears them but overconfidence. Our
hunch is he is right on both counts. Finally, after that
beating from Michigan State early in the season,
Chuck had no alibis but admitted the better team had
won and would go to the Rose Bowl. When asked
about Michigan, the team that had beaten Michigan
State, Chuck said there was plenty of time for Mich
igan to be beaten before the season ended. If Mich
igan State does go to the Rose Bowl and it has an
excellent chance Stanford's "Blow Hard" will qual
ify as that rare specimen, a prophet of honor in his
own bailiwick.
A man by the name of Christopher whose first
name should be Columbus but isn't won the mayor
alty here two to one, not so much due to his own
eminence as the flatness of the surrounding country.
He also had all the money behind him, and wasted a
large part of it in parading sound trucks around the
county, and pasting his name and picture on any
vacant space that could be found. Supervisor Chris
may be high minded, honest and able but he doesn't
look it. However he is a Republican and his opponent
a Democrat that means a lot down on Keamy Street,
and enough to give him the support of all the news
papers. Other Republican candidates for mayor didn't do
so well, according to the latest newspaper reports.
And the Republicans in Kentucky were beaten out
for the governorship by Happy Chandler. Why the
people of Kentucky should want any more of Happy
Chandler after having had a taste of him both as gov
ernor and U.S. Senator, is more than this department
can fathom. He is erood at smiling, hand shaking and
being a jolly good fellw, but as far as we have ob
served absolutely n.g. at anything else.
One thino- in California
before it gets better is "smog." In spite of all reports
to the contrary Los Angeles is not the only area
cursed with it today it is so thick here and down
the peninsula one could cut it with a imiie. lo maKe
mnttprs worse the mercurv is over 80, in fact all heat
records for November have
times. The smog today smells like crude oil mixed
with fumes from a leather tannery. "Ore-ee-gon here
we come!"
Why is it such a hienous crime for. a Republican
to leave his party and join the Democrats but such a
splendid exhibition of patriotism for a Democrat to
lonvo his nart.v anrl im'rt the GOP? Edo;ar Smith, a
life long Democrat, ran for the Senate as a Democrat,
but after his defeat joined the Republicans. So did
Judge Latourette, but neither of them to date have
been burned in effigy. We can't follow that line of
reasoning! We doubt it any newspaper m tne state
outside of the Grants Pass Courier can.
Incidental intelligence: The George Roberts and
the Martin Luthers according to our social scout will
take in the Oregon-Washington football game this
Saturday and the Big Game the week-end following.
They will make their headquarters at Pebble Beach
and Carmel.
Newspaper treatment of this Abbott murder trial
ic a rliscrvflPP t.n the newsnaner profession.
The state and the defense have not been blameless
either. Ever since we came the case has been tried,
not in court but in the press, and with the jury still
to be completed that is still the procedure. .
"There. should be a law against it!!" R.W.R.
Is That So?
MAIL DAY. "With winter
coming on. can you tell me if
fish can actually survive being
frozen in water?" asks J.R.P., a
reader of the Logan (Utah) Her
ald Journal.
Yes, fish often do. Fish that
live in our far northern waters
are sometimes frozen for months
and with the return of spring
and thawing "come alive" again.
A common creek minnow may
be frozen overnight in solid ice
and when the ice melts in
the sunrise, thaw out with no
seeming iU effects.
"Do big snakes eat human
beings," asks John S., Jr., 11, a
reader of the Boise Statesman.
"Also, what is the biggest thing
they can swallow?
Johnnv, this is one I am going
!to answer, yes and no. You see,
I don't want to scare the living
daylights out of people. So, I
must say yes, that it is possible
for some of the biggest snakes to
swallow a small human being.
And there are some accounts to
this effect. But, no big snakes
don't go around looking for
human beings, ordinarily they
are afraid of humans.
As for the size of their meals.
I'd say they could swallow a
good-sized fawn or say a wild
pig weighing around 125 pounds.
Actually, the natural food of
Friday, November 11. 19S5
that nromises to get worse
been broken two or three
By EUGENE BURNS
Ranger-Naturalist
even the most enormous snakes
is a relatively small animal. And
a sizeable meal will last them a
long time they are relatively
small eaters.
"With a bird's feathers being
so fragile, how can they fly
through storms with them?" asks
S.R.E., via the Bethlehem Globe
Times.
Fragile! Far from it! Feathers
are tough. For size and weight,
just about the strongest thing
you'll find in nature. Further
more, as you may know, S.R.E.,
each feather is extraordinarily
complex in its make-up. On each
of the feathery fibers attached
to a feather's central shaft are
two rows of smaller fibers called
barbules. They act like zippers
locking the fibers. And on a
single feather these delicate bar
bules may number more than a
million!
(Released by
McClure Newspaper Syndicate)
FREE: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my panel of
judges will award each week to
the reader who sends me the
best true-life nature adventure,
the best nature observation, or
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 submissions
wUl be considered. Sorry, I sim
ply can't answer your many
friendly letters: Please address
your letter to: IS THAT SO! c'o
Medford Mail Tribune, Box 575,
Sausalito, Calif.
Lead by Magsaysay's
Party in Philippines
Tops News
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The week's good and bad news
on the international balance
sheet:
THE GOOD
1. Pro-American, graft-hating
President Ramon M. Magsaysay
of the . Philippines steam-roller-
7rm ed toward
overwhelming
victory in a
national m i d
term election.
A direct test
of Magsaysay's
popularity was
provided by a
race for nine
Senate seats.
N a t i o n alist
Party candi
dates were
cnanes iUcCaiiii
leading, in partial returns, for
for eight of the nine seats.
2. Relations between the Unit
ed States and Yugoslavia were
improved further by a cordial
one-day conference between Sec
retary of State John Foster
Dulles and President Titq, The
meeting made it increasingly
clear that Tito, though he re
mains a Communist, means to
maintain friendly relations with
the Western Allies.
3. France completed arrange
ments to restore Moroccan Sul-
Babson Discusses Adults
By ROGER W. BABSON
Babson Park, Mass. We have
approached the stage where we
must consume our reserves of
natural resources with more
caution and wisdom. Unfortun
ately, too many of us have looked
upon these vast resources as na
ture's gifts, to be used as de
sired. Our minerals and forests
have therefore been used too
freely, although we have achiev
ed one of the highest standards
of living.
Through our skillful utiliza
tion of coal, iron, aluminum,
copper, and other raw mater
ials, our work has been made
easier. We have more leisure,
so that we may follow cultural
pursuits. However, this leisure,
to be meaningful, should include
pursuits which add to our spirit
ual values and not just those
which further our pleasures or
promote more technical achieve
ments. Natural Resources
May Be Depleted
The wisest industrial leaders
have begun to look to the time
when some of our precious nat
ural resources will be depleted.
With plans for solar, atomic, and
gravity power still only in de
velopment stages, for war or
peacetime uses, we especially
need to conserve our resources
so that we may make the best
possible use of them. We should,
therefore, be more careful of
our ore, forest, and oil reserves.
We are already replenishing our
woodlands by reforestation and
are using better methods of soil
enrichment, fertilization, and
cultivation so that each acre of
farm land will yield more ef
ficient crops.
We have also realized that
we must search for new and ad
ditional reserves of natural re
sources, not only here, but also
all over the world. More coun
tries will then be able to de
velop their own industries and
agriculture, so that more people
may benefit therefrom. Each
country will produce those items
which it is able to turn out most
efficiently. Then, these products
will be exchanged so that all in
dustries may be used to the best
advantage of everyone, every-
The Ultimate Goal
The ultimate goal of the wise
use of natural resources is to
raise the standard-of-living, and
it is important to keep this goal
in mind. Moreover, it is just as
important to emphasize the
building up of spiritual resources
as of physical resources. Our
nation's true power is in its
spiritual strength.
Therefore, in our attempt to
conserve natural resources in
order to attain material well
being, we must emphasize the
dignity of the individual. This
country has become the richest
nation, in the world. We have
proved our -leadership in indus
try. We must now show our
leadership by building up our
spiritual and other human re
sources.
How to Develop Spiritually
Most readers are asking for a
practical method of developing
this nation spiritually. I, of
course, am very happy with the
example which President Eisen
hower has set us by attending
church services regularly and
trying to make Sunday different
from other days. I also appre
ciate his opening his Cabinet
meetings with silent prayer. Cer
tainly the habit of family pray
ers, under which I was trained,
was a great factor in my life. I
believe that Bible reading in the
public schools should be retain
ed. When I think of my ances
tor, Reverend John Rogers, who
was burned at the stage Febru
ary 6, looo, for translating and
distributing the Bible, I feel
for Week
tan Sidi Mohammed Ben Yous-
self to his throne under an
agreement which will give the
protectorate semi- independent
status. There was good reason
to believe that the agreement
might end the long, bitter Moroc
co crisis.
THE BAD
1. Soviet Foreign Minister
Vyacheslav M. Molotov shatter
ed all hope that any agreement
on the reunification of Germany
could be reached in the current
Big Four foreign ministers con
ference in Geneva, angered
by Molotov's stand, Secretary
Dulles asked him: "I wonder
whether agreements with the
Soviet Union are worth much?"
2. President Eisenhower warn
ed that the increased tension
in Palestine made it all the more
imperative that a settlement be
found between Israel and the
Arab countries. "All Americans
have been following with deep
concern the latest developments
in the near east," he said.
3. The South African delega
tion walked angrily out of the
United Nations Assembly meet
ing in New York when that body
voted 37 to 7, with the United
States and 12 other countries
abstaining, to continue inquiring
into the South African govern
ment's "apartheid" or race seg
regation policy.
ashamed of myself for the little
effort I am making to increase
Bible reading, especially the
reading of the modern Con
densed Bibles such as the "Soul
of the Bible," or "Reeve's Brief
Bible."
When admitting students to
Babson Institute, we do not ask
whether they are Protestant,
Catholic, Jewish, Hindu, or Mos
lem, but we are greatly inter
ested in their character and hope
they pray to the Universal Fath
er. The nation must, however,
go even further; we must see
that our corporations are led by
men of character. I forecast the
day when auditors of corpora-
tions will report statistics to
stockholders indicating the char
acter and health of the leading
executives just as they now give
financial statistics. This is per
haps the most important thing
we could do to assure continued
prosperity and avoid a severe
business depression.
Fairview Official
To Conduct Seminar
In Medford Nov. 16
A seminar on abnormal chil
dren will be held at the Public
Health department at the Jack
son county courthouse Wednes
day, Nov. 16 at 7:30 p.m.
The seminar, which will be
conducted by Dr. Irvin Hill, sup
erintendent of the Fairview
home, Salem, will be open to
doctors and interested parents,
it was announced at the monthly
meeting of the Jackson county
medical society, Nov. 9 at the
Medford hotel.
Approval for membership in
the county medical society at the
meeting were Dr. Stanley Brown
Jr., Gold Hill; Dr. Thomas C.
Bolton, Medford, and Dr. An
drew D. Bulkey, Medford.
Named Chairman
Dr. James C. Luce was ap
pointed chairman of the Jackson
County Civil Defense agency at
the meeting to fill a vacancy
created by. the resignation of
Dr. Edwin Durno.
Principal speakers at the
Wednesday night meeting were
heart specialists Dr. Albert A.
Kattus Jr., associate professor
of medicine at the University of
Califernia at Los Angeles, and
Dr. S. Gilbert Blount Jr., asso
ciate professor of medicine at
the University of Colorado.
The speakers were sponsored
jointly by the Oregon Heart as
sociation and the Jackson Coun
ty Medical society as part of the
postgraduate program of medi
cal education.
Youth Fund Drive
Far Behind Quota
Ashland The Ashland-Talent
Youth Fund drive, already two
weeks past the scheduled clos
ing date, is more than $7,500
short of its $14,300 goal, drive
chairman Gordon C. Hays, an
nounced yesterday.
Less than half the amount
collected by a house to house
canvass last year was raised by
a similar move last week which
brought in only $1,050.
Activities supported by the
Youth fund operated on a cur
tailed budget of $8,000 last year,
committee heads said, and it is
virtually impossible to operate
with less.
All those who have not yet
contributed to the drive are
urged by. committee members to
do so immediately.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a Den name or
initial for publication is Dermis
rible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
Not Evolution
To the Editor: From last
week's issue of one of the lead
ing magazines of the United
States I read this article titled
"Man Inherits The Earth." Be
cause of the article's content and
its quotation from a Baptist
minister, I feel I must let the
public know our feelings in the
matter.
Mr. Leonard Barnette, author
of the article, begins by saying
that Philosophers and Theolo
gians " accept the fact of man's
relationship to animals and his
evolution from them." Then he
seeks to clinch his statement by
quoting from a Baptist minis
ter these words: "Today the gen
eral idea of evolution is taken
for granted as gravitation is."
The possible reason for this
statement by Mr. Barnette and
his quotation from a Baptist
minister is to try to get the mul
titude of people who know lit
tle if anything about the Bible
to believe the article he has
writen. By far, I'm sure, the
great majority of the theolo
gians do not believe that man
evoluted from animals. I know
of no minister of any denomi
nation who does teach such
thing. It is probable that this
quotation he gives of the Bap
tist minister, Harry Emerson
Fosdick, is taken from a con
text that would throw an en
tirely different light on the
meaning of the quotation. At any
rate, the quotation is not the
teachings of Baptists.
This article, "Man Inherits
The Earth," is fined with many
words that speak of suppositions
and guess work words as "pos
sibly," "perhaps," "it seems,"
etc. The article is not at all
"scientific" but only "theory."
The fact is that one cannot
believe the Bible and at the same
time believe this article Barnette
has written. It is true that man
has progressed greatly in his dis
coveries and inventions since the
beginning of time. All these dis
coveries have made him more
completely dominate over the
animal kingdom and the rest of
the earth. But it is completely
contrary to the Bible teachings
to say that man evoluted from
an animal into a human being
Neither is it. according to the
Bible that man has existed for
"millions" of years.
Perhaps the anthropologists
ana Darwin who first submitted
the theory of evolution, were
sincere in their theories concern
ing the orgin of man because of
certain findings thev made. Sun
day evening at 8 o'clock I will
preach in my church from the
subject "The Beginning Accord
ing To The Bible" in which
will endeavor to explain the rea
son of some of the findings of the
anthropologists, but the wrong-
ness oi tneir theory on the evolu
tion of man into a human being.
fcioyd H. Yeats,
Pastor of Temple
Baptist church
794 Lozier lane,
Medford, Ore.
A Mother's Thanks
rT" 1 TTIJiJ. -r-rr - -
j.u me sailor: wouia you
piease print a thank-you mes
sage for me? For all the won-
derful people, who were stran
gers to me and mv son. Pfc.
Kichard George John Head, who
attended Holy Rosary and the
services for him. Thev did not
know us, but they came to Drav
ior tne soul of the boy who gave
nis me tor our country. ,
And thanks to Father Torriis-
sor, who gave a wonderful mass.
his little altar boys. And many
rnanks to the whole unit of the
National Guard, who cooperated
so wonderfully, and rendered ,a
beautiful military funeral.
And thanks to all the others
who were so sweet and kind, and
did everything they could to
help me.
Thank you again, and God
bless you.
Mrs. Rae Ellen Baker
and family
Star Route
Trail, Ore.
Equalization?
To the Editor The hill folk
who ranch in the Butte Falls
country are voicing some rustic
protests over the high finance
program of tax equalization in
Jackson county.
True, some property taxes are
lower, but the ingenious asses
sors have socked the taxes on
other properties high enough to
raise the overall tax 25 to 100
per cent.
In one instance, that of Mr.
Royce Cooley, the tax "equali
zation" took the form of a 554
per cent increase over last year,
on the same buildings and acre
age. This illustrates higher finance
at its best on the part of any
county officials. But we up here
in the hills are a quaint folk and
think this ranks as pure injustice
regardless of the "equalization"
slogan for Jackson county.
Surely there must be two peo
ple with authority at the county
level who would give just plain
justice to this and similar cases.
Naomi Fredenburg
Box 135, Butte Falls, Ore.
The number of American tour
ists visiting Denmark in 1954
was 12.2 per cent above the 1953
figure, previously a record year.
Today and
By Walter
CAN WE MUDDLE THROUGH
We are facing serious deci
sions arising out of a,very great
expansion of the political power
and influence
of the Soviet
Union. The
problem has
been drama
tized by the
sale of arms to
Egypt and the
acute tension
which that
has caused be
tween Egypt
Walter Lippmann
and Israel. But the expansion of
the Soviet power is not limited
to this one area around Suez. It
is making itself felt in Spain
despite Franco's celebrated anti
Communism, it is making itself
felt in French North Africa, in
the Balkans and in Cyprus, and
across Southern Asia into the
South Pacific.
There have long been Commu
nist propaganda and infiltration
in these parts of the world. What
is new and recent is that the So
viet Union has now entered these
lands openly and directly in the
role of a great power. Until the
past few months the Soviet Un
ion has been a diplomatic out
sider, acting indirectly and ex
erting a clandestine power. Now
she has taken her place as a
principal player in the big game
of power politics. '
This is something very new
for which London and Washing
ton have been quite unprepared.
Until the past few months they
have been living under the im
pression that Russia was exclud
ed, as she has. been for centuries
from the Mediterranean and the
Middle East. Suddenly they find
that in these critical and unset
tled lands there are no longer
three great powers, namely
France, Great Britain and the
United States, but four great
powers. The appearance of the
fourth great power, the Soviet
Union, has altered radically
the fundamental - relationship;
throughout this region..
The Egyptian affair illustrates
the nature and mechanism of the
change. Formerly, the choice for
Egypt and for the other weak
countries was to join the coali
tion of the Atlantic powers or to
be refused aid and to be ignored
politically and to be scolded for
their lack of public spirit. Now
these countries can turn to the
Soviet government and thev can
trade and manipulate their way
between Moscow and Washing
ton, if they play the game skill
fully; they can use-Moscow's fa
vors and Moscow's promises to
trighten London and Washing
ton, and . they can use Western
favors and Western promises to
get more favors and more prom
ises out of Moscow.
This game can become very
dangerous, iiut as lone as Eewit
for example, or for that matter
Spain and Yugoslavia, can keep
the Soviet Union and the United
States bidding against one an
other, it is a profitable game for
them,
The great question of hi eh nnl.
icy which we face is whether to
accept the Soviet challenge and
to try to outbid the Soviet Un
ion, or whether to negotiate with
the Soviet Union about its inter
ests and our interests. There i:
Here a dilemma for the West and
either horn is extremely unat
tractive.
To accept the challenge and to
compete for influence and cower
is to undertake something very
Dig inaeeq. it will require mas
sive expenditures on- a scale that
will upset the whole financial
policy of this Administration. It
will require also truly agonizing
choices affecting the national in
terests of our allies in NATO.
For the Soviet Union can do
more than supply arms, it can
do more than give aid in the un
der-developed countries. It can
give these countries political
support, which costs the Soviet
Union nothing, in their struggle
against t ranee, Britain. Israel
and the United States.
The alternative to accepting
the challenge is to recognize the NERGEL is a tiny, tasteless tablet in
Soviet Union as a great nowpr I tended to restore natural habits without
fvvv-J. , 1- . TVTT7D "ITT i
in that part of the world, and to
negotiate something in the way
of a political truce. The objection
to negotiation is that it will at
once raise the political prestige
and bargaining power of the So
viet Union to unprecedented
heights, and thus may make ex
orbitantly high the price of an
agreement.
For either line of policy it will
be necessary to reappraise and
revise the doctrine, as we in
practice apply it, of containment.
We have held that all nations
New Kind of Safe
Medicine forAwfut
ASTHMA attacks
If you dread those awful attacks of asthma
that clog up your bronchial breathing tubes
so you choke, cough, pant, wheeze and gasp
for air, don't wait for the next attack to hit
but right now start taking the new medicine
called BATOR TABLETS that work such
wonders fast. "Without potassium iodide, with
out any of the old-fashioned drugs that irri-
CENTRAL REXALL DRUG
Tomorrow
Lippmann
must join our miiltary alliances
or be considered us fellow trav
elers on their way to becoming
Communist satellites. This dan
gerous dogmaQhas poisoned our ,
relations with InSia, the great-,
est and the most influential of
the free countries of Asia. It has
earned us the reputation from
Morocco to Indonesia of inter
fering in the internal affairs of
the new countries in order to
support factions which favor al
liances with us.
This official infatuation with
military alliances has deeply
misled the Administration and
the Congress. For it has allowed
them to believe wishfully that
it was unnecessary to do any
thing important about the under
developed countries if only
these countries had signed a
military pact. The combination
of military pacts, which are ex
tremely unpopular in all coun
tries, and the withdrawal of eco
nomic aid, has left us wide open
and vulnerable to the Soviet
campaign. The Soviets give arms
without demanding that people
sign on the dotted line in mili
tary pacts. They are increasing
their economic aid at the very
moment when Mr. Hollister is
trying to reduce ours.
The trouble with all this is
that it calls for new decisions at
the very highest level, at the
level where only the President
can act. It is possible for Mr.
Dulles and Mr. Humphrey to
make decisions of this maeni-
tude, asking no more of the
President than that he should
give his consent?
All one can say is that thev
had better put their heads to
gether, and have a try. . For in
this new situation where the So
viet Union is an open competitor
for influence and power in south
ern Asia and m Africa, our po
sition will get worse if the best
we can do is to rely on our fa
mous capacity for ' muddling
through.
Copyright, 1955. New York ;
. Herald Tribune, Inc.
QUICK RELIEF FROM MOST
ARTHRITIS -RHEUMATISM
PAINS OR YOUR M0NEV ;
, BACK!
Our new "wonder-tablet"
AR-PAN-EX, QUICKLY, eases
most pain from arthritis, rheuma
tism, neuritis or lumbago or ...
YOUR MONEY BACK I r-
It's the HONEST truth this :.
new, scientific preparation has
freed thousands of happy folks '
from pains of stiff aching muscles,
sore joints and miserable days .
and nights. Those who TRIED
EVERYTHING and had to GIVE
UP are happy now thanking
heat-en for AR-PAN-EX.
It's a shame that thousands -who
COULD find RELIEF, but
are beset by DOUBT, will con
tinue to live in agony look and
act older than their years be a
trial to their loved ones because
they didn't have the 'get to' to
use a modern pain relieving mir
acle. It IS true it-IS here it's
AR-PAN-EX. Use this wonder
pain reliever . . . TODAY!
Western Thrift
30 N. Centra! Dial 3-5371
intestinal disturbances
dizziness, biliousness, stomach gas.
coated tongue, bad breath, bloating,
nausea, headaches, bad complexion.
Free Your System
Help your body drive out poisonous waste
which is often the real cause of making you
miserable. Start your lazy organs working
normally again.
QUICK RELIEF
Doctors will tell you that the most impor
tant organ in your body is the intestine.
When your organs are free of waste and
impurities you may fee! young again, your
eyes may sparkle and your ambition to
work and play will return. Sleepless nights
might vanish.
you need no prescription to buy it. It ib the
new drugless way to break the vicious lax
ative habit. It restrains those tired, weak
ened, over-worked irritated muscles. When
you are tired, nervous, irritable, look and
feel old before your time, have no appetite,
you are probably suffering from constipation.
GUARANTEED
Get a bottle of INERGEL tablets at your
drug store today. If after one week you are
not astounded by results, we will refund
your money. If you are miraculously sat
isfied, you will tell your friends about
INERGEL. Economy Size $2.00, at
Western Thrift
30 N. Central Dial 3-5371
tate so many, -new BATOR TABLETS work
through the blood stream (1) to loosen and
beip get rid of the thick secretions that clog
the breathing tubes (2) to counteract the
spasmodic coughing, choking, wheezing and
gasping before it starts (3) to ward off the
allergy of asthma and thus let you breathe
freer and easier again.
NOW AT DRUGGISTS
New Bator Tablets are now available at drug
gists without a prescription. Entirely safe,
these tiny tablets contain nothing harmful,
nothing habit forming. Fast, in just a few
short hours a course of Bator starts doing its
wonders internally through the bloodstream.
Bator allays the asthma attack in advance,
lets you sleep, lets you live in more normal
peace and comfort once again. Complete satis
faction or money back. Get new Bator Tablets
from your druggist today.
Main & Central