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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1956)
27-BUSINESS DIRECTORY Oil Burner Service FLYING A Heatine Oil Quick reliable service. Ph 2-8277 or 3-3369 McGINTY FUEL CO. SPARK & H C LITTLE SPECIALISTS 4th & Front Ph 2-5296 ICEN-NEDY FUEL OIL Service & Repair ALTERATIONS On ladies' &c men's clothing. Helen Roseborough, located with Frances Dallaire. Furrier. 1060 Crater Lake Ave. Ph. 2-6528 OFFICE MACHINES ALL MAKES Vern Chapman o Ph. 3-3907 or 3-4714 FRANCES DALuAIRE FURRIER Complete Fur Service Restyling clean Risked and storaro Ph 2-6526 1060 Crater Lake Ave. Painting SPRAY painting roofs, houses, general painting. Free estimates. Sullivan Bros. 219 S. Ivy. Phone 2-9851. PAINTING Brush or Spray. Free estimates and terms. A. Q. Murphy Phone 2-8595 or 2-9143 Generator Starters Generator-Starter repairs 5c exchange" Armature winding Cliff's Auto Electric 1311 N Riverside 2-5068 Asphalt & Cement Paving ASPHALT PAVING D r I v e w a y . motels, parking areas mill yards, roads and industrial floors Free esti mates Work guaranteed Rogue River Paving Co Ph Medford 2-4037 Income Taxes TOM BANKS Income Tax and Book keeping Service. 103 First SU QJ Phoenix. 2-7656. Federal & State Wage earners, farm' ers. partnerships. 20 yrs. exp. Opal none, -ne rairmont, 3-391Z anytime. M. A. CRAMER Tax & Accounting Service 3185 Madrona Lane Ph. 2-5930 Federal & State Income Tax assistance S. C. Jones & Sons Billings Agency tor. eth Be Holly. Medford t 42 E. Main St.. Ashland CLEO CANOOSE. 55 Ross Court. For day or eve. appointments Ph. 2-2913. lath year in same location. INCOME TAXES farmers, loggers, wage earners, small firms, reason able. 25 years experience. At Acme Realty. 1238 N. Riverside. Evenings Fhone NO 4-1090. INCOME TAX RETURNS Victor C. Sether. Brophy Bldg. Main & Central Experienced Tax Servico MARY B. MAASS 804 S. Ivy Phone 2-9231 Plumbing BROOK'S ELECTRIC PLUMBING DEPT For fast, courteous and efficient service on all your plumbing prob lems. Call 2-2952. BROWNIE'S PLUMBING AND HEATING. INC. PROMPT. EFFICIENT SERVICE 519 Crater Lake Ave Ph 2-4801 Granite 8c Top Soil GRANITE; creek run gravel: top-soil; fill dirt. Prompt delivery. Road con struction. Charles Bennett, ph 2-2511 GRANITE Loading & Hauling LUCIUS & WILBERT LULL Phone 3-N04-1489 TOP SOIL, fill dirt, granite and creek run gravely. Tractor and Cat dozer and loader for hire. Austin L. King Trucking. Phone 2-7258 or 2-4167. CRUSHED ROCK. SAND & GRAVEL. M. C. LININGER & SONS " Phone 2-5336 or 2-5897 Electric Motors GAGE ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE Delco and GE Motors Motor Rewinding and Repairing 112 N Front Phone 2-2626 Well Drilling EXPERIENCED Reliable well drill ing by GRIBBLE. Phone Gold Hill 5-9328. ROGUE VALLEY DRILLING CO. Im mediate service on wells & pumps. Work guaranteed Terms Beet s,tock accepted. Ph 2-7372 885 Shafer Lane off Kings Hwy. Crater well drilling No well too deep Immediate service. All work guaranteed FHA terms ar ranged. Phone 2-2098. 1111 W 10th GOFF BROTHERS Well Drillers; ex perienced fc reliable S&H Green Stamps Office Siskiyou Hdwe 225 W Main. Medforo Phone 2-2939 or evenings 2-702S or 3-3744. DEISTER S WELL DRILLING CO. For vnnr wntpr well Droblems Reliable & exnerienced. Ud to the minute equipment. 139 Vancouver Ph 2-9308 SHULTS BROS well drilling & pump service We strive to please every customer Ph 3-4141 Eves a-5669 Rug Cleaning RUGS. Furniture Cleaned repaired Carpets made to order, any color MEDFORD RUG FACTORY Ph 3-2539 511 Marv St Transportation ATHEL HUPP DUDLEY TRUCK TRANSPORTATION P O. Box. 242 Medford. OTegon. ICC-MC 71652 Raoid transportation between Southern Oregon and Points and Places in Calif on all building materials heavv machinery and livestock Ph Medford. Ore.. 2-4174. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED to rent with option to buy. modern 2 or 3-bdrm. home, some acreage. Ph. 2-9181. NOW You can purchase a used re frigerator starting at only S55. Oth' ers slightly higher. COUEY-ADDliance Store 225 E. 6th Ph. 3-5433 DON'T SELL TIMBER! Let Us Log It for You! You will make more money. Or we will buy for cash if you prefer. Write Tribune Box 5395. CUSHMAN SCOOTER, S50. Terms. 520 S. Fir. SPECIALS 45 COLT automatic with holster, like new. S45. 2-Wheel trailer. S35. Doo ' die Bug scooter. S20. Delta jointer, $65. Craftsman 10" saw. S70. New shower stalls, complete, with chrome trim. $49.95. Complete bath sets with all the trim. S142.50. Complete line of Glidden paints. Everything for a Building HAGGARD LUMBER Hwv. 99, Phoenix Ph. 2-7915 ' 1)48 STUDEBAKER coupe, good con- ?v jdition, new tires and battery. See at 19B S. 5th or at Crater Department Store. Central Point. FOR SALE, or trade for hay: crain-fed locker beef, half or whole. Ph. 2-7889 WANTED To rent with option to buv. 2 or 3-bdrm. home. Ph. 2-2660. W ILL purchase small contracts and mortgages, wnie inpune dux jhh. FXJRN'ITURE MOVING & STORAGE Padded Van Service. We have a clean, fire-resistant storage ware house. Phone 2-5295. SAMSON FEED & SEED CO. PLAN TO ATTEND the smorgasbord at the Sacred Heart Parish Hall from noon to 7 p.m.. Sunday. Jan. 22. Adults S1.50. Children 6 to 12, 75c: under 6. free. . 1955 FORD VICTORIA ALL EX TRAS. 3900 mi. Just broken in. You can save $700. Have car furnished me. Ph. 2-7630 Sat.. Sun, or eves. SFECIAL $15.00 trade-in for your old stove on a new SPARK OIL HEATER SAMSON FEED & SEED CO. 4x4 ROUGH cedar posts. 6 to 16 ft., at 7c lineal ft. Free delivery. NORTON LUMBER CO. ' Phoenix. Ph. 3-2888 Nice Golden Delicious APPLES $1.00 per Box PHONE 3-2472 luried Treasure by (fihfy, 1880 Dime Bank Claimed More Rare Than Savings "It's my bank," said the youngster, "but it's more import ant to save it than it is the money." Larry, the boy's father, re moved two banks from the man tel. One was an ordinary dime bank. The other was a fort bank, the first of its particular kind I had ever seen. The old bank consisted of an octagonal grey fort with tiny, red-tipped cannon bristling from its sides, except for the side in which 'there was a slot facing a siege gun a few inches away across an area painted to look like water. Both the siege gun and the ford were typical of those in the Civil war. "To work the bank," Larry said, "You put a coin in the muz zle of the cannon and shoot it through the slot." There was a lever on the un der side of the gun that could be A USED STAMP IS WORTH There are still far too many people who don't realize that a used ; stamp is always worth more on its envelope or cover than when cut off, regardless of how generous, the margin. Recently, the mother of a friend of mine sent me a stamp she had cut off an envelope which she felt - was too large for convenient mailing. The stamp was one put out by Boyd's City Express, of New York City, a firm founded by a John T. Boyd back in 1830. The firm, by the way, competed with the Federal government's mail service until it was finally suppressed by law in 1883, the year in which the United States finally took complete control of the mails. Anyway, the stamp, fortun ately cut square, consisted of a double oval. In the outer were the .words BOYD'S CITY EX PRESS above and POST TWO CENTS below. Both EXPRESS POE PRAISED OWN WORK IN Jack had a book in his hand, but he wasn't reading it. Instead, he was smiling to himself in a smug, self:satisfied way that fairly demanded an interruption, "There's reason enough to be pleased with myself," he said, handing me the book. If you; book, though, and for that rea suddenly had found that this son a fair copy like this one is was yours, -wouldn't you be worth better than $100." tickled, too?" But what made Jack especi- The book meant nothing to. me at all. It was dated New York, 1845. But age in itself rarely means anything in a book, and in this case nothing, so far as I could see. The title indicated date and that it carried "The small promise. It was "A Plain Raven," one of his favorite System of Elocution," by George poems. Putting two and two to Vandenhof. gether, he decided to look the "Why do you feel so happy matter up. over this?" I asked, handing the "It didn't take long. Only book back. about an hour's reading was Jack smiled and opened the needed to find the necessary in volume to the page on which ap- formation, and it certainly was peared the first verse of Edgar one of the most profitable hours Allen Poe's "The Raven." I've ever spent," she said. "That's why," he said. "This (Released by book is the first one in which McClure Newspaper Syndicate) TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE 1950 FORD deluxe sedan. One owner. Excellent care and con dition. Ph. NO 4-2432. - COTTONSEED MEAL with Stilbosol. Feed 2 lbs. per head per day. $5.15 per 100 lbs. GRANGE CO-OP Central Point ' Ashland CHEVROLET ring job, $45. Champ's Garage. 1114 N. Central. Ph. 2-4109. ALFALFA HAY FOR SALE By the ton or truckload. Phone 2-5295. SAMSON FEED & SEED CO. TRUNDLE bunk bed, new. Was $72.95. now, $59.95. TWIN SIZE mattress, new. Was $29.95, now $24.95. PR. twin size bookcase headboards, $10. BROWN'S FURNITURE 120 S. Main Phoenix 2-4921 FOR SALE Used J,2-ton capacity Ver tical Feed Mixer S 100 .00. and 2 ton per hour Hammermill $150. SAMSON FEED & SEED CO. 'OIL TO BURN" Also expert Burner Service. MEDFORD FUEL. Tel. 2-2111 THE J. H. Lusk Piano Co., 333 S. Riverside announces they are re maining open evenings for your con venience. You are cordially invited ' to see and hear those beautiful Baldwin Pianos & Organs. Ph. 2-8635. MID-JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE FEED SPECIALS Wheat , $4.10 per cwt. Hen Scratch 4.10 per cwt. Rolled Barley 2.35 per sack Grd. Oats & Barlev 3.35 per cwt. SAMSON FEED & SEED CO. CHICK SEASON Is Here. Order yours now to get early birds. GRANGE CO-OP Central Point Ashland FIR SLABS BEST GRADE 12 or 16 inch green Quick Delivery. Big Loads MEDFORD FUEL Tel. 2-2111 MEDFORD FURNITURE 2ND HAND STORE USED Furniture and Appliances 2502 W Main Phone 2-9355 BUSINESS EQUIPMENT EXCHANGE 632 N. Central - Medford Phone 2-2157 USED DESKS, From : $25.00 ADDING MACHINES (Limited Quantity)... 29.50 USED 4-DRAWER FILES 22.50 NEW 4-DRAWER FILES 49.50 Office Furniture and Office Machines Refinished. Estimates Gladly, Given pushed back to lock into place. A knob on the breech served as a firing mechanism by means of which one released a spring that ejected the coin. Obviously, it was the kind of a toy that would delight a youngster, and I could well see how Larry's would feel upset at having to use a bank of the ordinary type. "There's no name on this bank and never has been. We don't know who the manufacturer was or anything about him," Larry said. "But it was probably made in the 1880s. Anyway, there are just enough of them known. for it to be a real collector's item." The bank had been given to the boy by an elderly cousin who had no idea of its value but knew it would stimulate the youngster's thrift. Larry didn't know its value, either, until an acquaintance of his offered to buy it, finally going up to $90 for it. MORE ON ITS ENVELOPE and POST were followed by periods. In the inner oval was the de sign of an eagle standing on a globe against a background of fine vertical lines. The stamp was green in color and had been cancelled by the word "free" in red ink. The stamp, shown by "Scott's Stamp Catalogue, Specialized" as being an 1844 issue, the first one put out by the company, for merly engaged in a regular ex press business, was valued at $75. Not bad at all, of course. But when my friend's mother took her scissors and snipped off the corner of the envelope, she cut herself off from at least $25 more. Value of the stamp on the cover is catalogued at $100. It would be worth even more, though, if the letter had been addressed to or by an historical personage. PHONY LETTERS TO EDITOR Poe's great poem was published, After it came out in the New York Evening Mirror with Poe himself writing phony letters to the editor praising it, incident- ally - it appeared in various magazines. This was the first ally pleased with himself was that he had found the book in his own home. He had been on the point of giving it away when he noticed the publication TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY SINGER sewing machine. Treadle. A-l. 2 davenos, one with new ny lon cover. Mahogany record cabi net. Child's wardrobe. BROWN'S FURNITURE 120 S. Main Phoenix 2-4921 WE FIX 'EM while you sleep HAWKINS NITE GARAGE 616 S. Riverside Ph. 3-1534 20 OFF ON POULTRY SUPPLIES Founts Feeders Brooders Heat Lamps Egg Scales Etc. MID-JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE SAMSON FEED & SEED CO. CHICK Starter Mash .100 lbs. $ 5.20 All in One Mash 100 lbs. 4.85 Co-op 16 Cowfeed ..100 lbs. 3.95 Dairy Special 100 lbs. 3.55 Molasses by the , Barrel 600 lbs. 13.50 GRANGE CO-OP Central Point Ashland BUNDLES OF OLD NEWSPAPERS for sale. 20c each. Mail Tribune Office. 27 North Fir . PLANER BLOX quick delivery MEDFORD FUEL. Tel. 2-2111 APPLICATION tor Medford . Mail Tribune carriers Must be 12 yrs. old and in Jr high school resident of Medford Apply in person at Mail Tribune circulation department. Not . counting the recently ii stalled TV antenna on its tow er, the Empire State building rises to a height of 1,248 feet. Use Tribune Want Ads . QUICK and EASY! Just Call 2-6141 JIM THORPE MEMORIAL TROPHY Chicago Bears owner-coach George Halas deft) and National Football League Commissioner Bert Bell put their stamp of approval on the tirst Jim Thorpe Memorial Trophy in New York. The trophy will go to the pro foot ball player selected annually by the players themselves as the "Pro Player of the Year." This year's choice, in a poll of the players conducted by NEA Service, is Harlon Hill, Chicago Bears' end. Presentation will tie made at the Pro Bowl game in Los Angeles Jan. 15. Clatter Heralds Friend's Approach Hayward, Calif. -(U.R) Inhab itants of the Fairway Park hous ing tract here don't curse and grumble when they hear the early morning clatter of milk bottles. They know that this minor disturbance heralds the approach of a real friend. He's John Schuler, a young milkman who does much more than just bear vitamins for his customers. The helpful fellow also cuts lawns, changes diapers, runs errands, feeds pets, repairs broken furniture and cheerfully rouses his patrons when he knows they've overslept. And at no extra charge; just for the sake of spreading good cheer along his daily route. John first began the practice of neighborliness five years ago, after he gave up his whistling job on a radio show to become a dairy products carrier. . "I became a milkman," he said, "because nobody ever made any money whistling for a liv ing." Dogs a Problem This white-trousered spirit of good will does all these chores on his own time, and the fam ilies on his run have learned to depend upon him. Johnny now calls all his cus tomers by their first names, and holds several keys to homes within his area of service so he can watch over things while his friends go away on a week-end. What does he receive in return for his labors? "I'm getting a liberal educa tion," he said smilingly. However, there's one rough GIVEN SCANT HOPE of survival, this rare South African chameleon, one of 16 born at Washington, D. C. Zoo, is not expected to live because of climate. It is perched on finger of attendant, eyeing the keeper. (International Soundphoto) WANTED - for Cash! ir STEEL AND IRON SCRAP Fair Prices Certified Weight Any Quantity Call White City Office LAUGHLIN ALLOY STEEL COMPANY - TAlbot 6-2191 Overwork, Improper Diet Basic Education Problems Kansas City, Mo. U.R) Ex perts called for consultation in a diagnostic clinic on the prob lems of American education have identified the malady, basically, as overwork and un-der-nourishment. Some hinted that complica tions in the form of inefficiency and obstructed vision have arisen. Educators, School trustees, and outside experts participating in a symposium sponsored by the National School Boards Asso ciation delineated the problems, the tasks, and the probable fu ture of our schools. Here, simplified, are their findings: Education -today faces a job unparalleled in the history of the human race. Within a single generation, the mass of knowl edge held by mankind has dou bled; because so much informa tion is available, it is now impossible for an individual actually to attain what used to be known as a "general educa tion," a smattering of knowl edge in all fields. Pace To Increase spot in his routine dogs. He holds his company's' record for the number of times bitten while making deliveries. On one occasion John learned that kindness pays. He stooped over to pick up a case'of milk and felt the rear seam of his pants give way. A housewife on the block was good enough to lend him a pair of her husband's trousers while she repaired his on her sewing machine. Sunday, January 22, 1958 Technological and scientific advancements have brought sharply increased need for high ly skilled workers, hence for higher education of much larger numbers of people. Virtually every professional field is cry ing for more trained workers. This trend is expected to con tinue, at an even greater pace, through the foreseeable future The same advancements, along with other causes, have brought population shifts resulting in critical shortages of school facili ties in areas where the number of residents is mushrooming. Concurrently there has been a gradual destribution of wealth which has changed the education needs of vast num bers of citizens. The plumber the butcher, the cabinet maker now finds he needs a basic knowledge of economics, for in stance. His father didn't Even grade and high school courses should be reorganized and ex panded in many cases. New Vision Needed That is only a brief summary of the workload faced by our schools. Financial malnutrition plagued school systems in most of the areas represented at the session at( Kansas City, attended by school officials of all 48 states. Millions . are needed for new buildings and equipment, to hire additional teachers, and for urg ently needed expansion. Bond issues, special tax levies, and every other means of raising were studied at the three-day conference. Also undernourished is the na tion's supply of teachers. Not enough young people are enter ing teaching careers, the xperts said, and of those who enter many soon leave for higher-paid fields. An' industrial engineering ex pert and several educators hint ed of inefficiency and lack . of vision. .The engineer suggested adaption of industry-proved methods of saving time, money, and building space. He suggest ed, for instance, the hiring of teacher aides to perform routine tasks under the guidance of "master teachers." School buildT ings could be used the year around by rotating classes on a four-quarter basis and school hours might be lengthened, he said. One of the nation's top edu cators said thinking frequently has been stultified by lack of imagination. "Our vision," he said, "is too often obscured by our slavery to methods of the past." He called for a "fresh approach." Karlsruhe, Germany (U.R) Heinz Michael, consular secre tary in the West German for eign office, has been sentenced to two years imprisonment for "treasonable relations" with the Soviet espionage service. Portland (U.R) Ten new tree farms have been certified in Oregon, the Industrial Forestry Association reports. APPIES-PEMS Wonderful Cornice Pears Fine Quality Rejects from our Gift Pack Red and Golden Delicious Apples Big Gift Pack rejects and smaller lunch box sizes Bring your own containers PINNACLE PACKING CO. . Plant No. 4 - - - 1 1th and Front Streets 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. weekdays and Saturdays MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELITE College Trend Declared Upward Cincinnati (U.R) For the third straight year "the trend is briskly upward" in American collegiate enrollment, Dr. Ray mond Walters, president emer itus of the University of Cincin nati, reported in his 36th annual statistical study for School and Socety, educational journel. In 886 approved universities and four-year colleges through out the United States and its ter ritories, there are 1,612,225 full time students nine per cent more than in the fall of 1954, and a grand total of 2,111,485 8.3 per cent more than a year ago. Part-time students were up 6.5 per cent. These increases are viewed by Dr. Walters as "a portent of tre mendous enrollments to come in the next decade in consequence of the soaring youth popula tion." As in several preceding years, 1955's biggest percentage gains for freshmen were in specialized areas of study representing a "response to increasing demands for trained personnel in an in dustrialized nation." However, in -actual numbers, enrollments remained greatest in the broader area of the arts and sciences. "It is significant," Dr. Walters pointed out, "that recent larger collegiate classes have proceeded from high school classes which had smaller numbers than class es 15 years ago. "Recruits for the depleted ranks of school teaching are on the way in encouraging num bers,, especially in regard to men," Dr. Walters wrote. Last year there was an increase of 19.4 per cent over 1953 in full- time students starting courses in the field of teacher-training; this fall there is an increase of 13.2 per cent over 1954. "However, present enroll ments fall far short of supplying enough competent teachers and administrators adequate ly to handle the nation's great host of children who will be the citi zens of tomorrow." Teen-Age Vandals Gei Unique Sentence Grand Rapids, Mich. (U.R) Three teen-age boys who admit ted vandalizing a 72-year-old wi dow's home were put on six month trial during which time they must shovel the woman's walk, care for her lawn and help her in maintenance of the house. In addition, police ordered the boys to repair the damage they caused when they threw gar bage, rocks and leaves through a window they had opened in her home. Police said that if the boys, two 14 and one 15 years old, fail ed to keep terms of their trial period, ' delinquency petitions would be filed against them in juvenile court. IT'S HERE! Save installing new drain fields! Save cleaning clogged lines! Save pumping septic tank! ASK FOR GIMAC AT: GROCETERIA LUMAN'S GRANDVIEW MARKET MATLACKS BIG Y FEED & SEED O. K. MARKET or Write P.O. Box 255, Medford Get Marvelous KIIIG-OF-ALL To Clean Your Septic Tanks and Cesspools And to Keep Them Clean We guarantee satisfaction or ' your money back. Get King-Of-AIl today at your local Feed & Seed, Hardware, Plumber or Bldg. Supply v Store. WIN0-UP THE OlD YEAX WITH A PF "fresh Star?" LOAN . With the help of a planned loan, from PF, yon may be able to pay off overdue bills, reduce -monthly payments ... even get extra cash. In other v.ords, go into the new year with a fresh start. ..with the help of a W "FRESH START" LOAN ! 1 V A ' Caller come in for the whole, helpful . story today. . : I PACIFIC . INDUSTRIAL Frank Wilkinson, Manager PHONE 3-5308 16 S. Central Medford Be Choosy Buy Jacuzzi Vj H.P. Deep $!') 00 Well Pump Vs H.P. Shal low Well Pump $96 50 WE GIVE S&H GREEN STAMPS SISKIYOU HARDWARE 225 West Main FOR RESULTS -USE- Tribune Classified ADS DONT LET ARTHRITIC RHEUMATIC PAIN RUIN YOUR LIFE! There' no need to suffer jem CAK r-t Idief QUICKLT with JLR-PAN-EX. Most ysin vitt rnheioe . . . YOU. and your loved ; one ema rejoie Kite tboassnds who an now xdieved. " .' Eeij hue, viotipMof sciatica, hrobago and neuralgia an (naeovcrine oar "-wonder tablet" and thankinz heaves fcr the SURE BELIEF AK-PAU-EX brings. Ach ing Bmsdes, stiff joints mar become limber i again. "Tm sorry I didn't try AB-PAN-KX ' . months ago. Just think of the agonies I eootd hare avoided." writes one. '' Tea, indeed! Bat thousands who read , this wffl NOT act ... Till DOUBT oar -HONEST WORDS. We say BELIEVE in AB-PAN-EX and -we sincerely Ml yon AK-PAN-EX will qnickly relieve mneh pain or yoor MONEY BACK I WAINSCOTT'S PHARMACY 322 East Main - Phone 2-6440 Bladder 'Weakness' If worried by "Bladder Weakness" Getting Up Nights (too frequent, burning or Itch- lng urination) or Strong, Cloudy Urine due to common Kidney and Bladder Irri tations, try CYSTEX for quick, gratifying, comforting help. A billion CYSTEX tablets used In past 25 years prove safety and success. Ask druggist for CYSTEX under monsy-back guarantee. See how much betttr you feel tomorrow. POISON OAK? Try a Bottle of ZEMAC0L You mutt be satisfied or your money cheerfully refunded. Get a bottle to day at WESTERN THRIFT. CORN REMOVER v Cfvas itiitant relief from pain and pott? traoly removes hord corns, soft corns between me foes, callovset, worts, papillomas, dub nails. It contains -rai different oils that soften, loose ond dee not caws the irritation as do strong acid mixtures. Whon ad ttWi Kav failed wy this on. 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