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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1957)
"I'M REALLY LIVING since Kellogg's All-Bran overcame my irregularity" Is irregularity due to lack of bulk making your life miser able? Then read how All Bran helped Mr. Lee Uhler, Baltimore, Maryland. "At 67 constipation had made me unfit for work. Today I'm really living (since All Bran overcame my irregular ity). I'm happy and back at work." All-Bran has helped mil lions by correcting a common cause of constipation lack of good food bulk in the diet. An ounce of All-Bran a day Crovides the natural laxative ulk you need daily to avoid irregularity. Try it for 10 days. See if it doesn't put you back on schedule . . . comfortably, naturally. Enjoy All-Bran's old-time bran muffin flavor. Kellogg's the original ready-to-eat whole bran cereal. Satisfac tion guaranteed or return empty carton and get twice what you paid. Kellogg's, Battle Creek, Michigan. ALL-BRAN YOU'D NEVER KNOW I HAD v For 24 years psoriasis sufferers have learned that Siroil tends tore- move unsightly ex ternal crusts and scales. If lesions recur, lijtht applica tions of Siroif help control them. Wntt (or nw FREE boohitt wfittM by ititld pnyti- ctin ll anwr JO moit tiktd q wi ll on i IDOMI yow imn Mil. n vm. m 111 i-v X. It 1 I lU'XK j? airoii won I w roil won t ttain cloihinc bed linens. Offered on 2-wccks-saiis basis. AT ALL DRUG STORES Seatf fer FRE bMtM. written by pkytkiai. f SIHOIL UtSOKATOIIIKS. INC. 1 I D.pf. FW4S iMtl Atonic. C.IH. f'U'a-f cinl mr your fret' iKmklt-t on l-Mirlii"ttt IVAMK u.M. I - tnim:.ss I I.ITV STATK I lion BAlrllUBS - SINKS KB! hn'lom nl COPMR P01S 1IU flOORS MttAlS AU10 BUMPfHS 11 ' lllMnUfM W ' mui DMt L Gm4 HMkfintJ mitdH PROOUCIS P0B0K W UimfVN H J to JfcS Vol! WERR saving... ( After the Bail ' T . mlw- or years, alter our school proms, the students used to go to another town to eat, but last year the seniors' parents sponsored "post-prom" activities. They had a show and a party later with almost anything we wanted to eat and a juke box for dancing. It lasted until everyone got tired which was pretty late! The next day I guess the parents were pretty tired, but the students really enjoyed and appreciated the party. I think if the parents in every town tried this idea it would cut down the number of juvenile delinquents. Miss C. H., Auburn, III. "CAN DO" IS OUR MOTTO. "Of course we can" is a code my husband lives by, and he's passed it on to me. We started out that way when we decided to go ahead and get married just before Christmas instead of waiting until June despite the fact I was teaching. Then when he was attending college, I didn't think I could enroll, too, but he said, "Of course we can do it," and I got my degree the same day he did. We even bought a 1927 truck when we wanted to take furniture along to our new home, but didn't have a car. That old truck carried us 1,200 miles, and we did it! It's been like that for almost nine years, and while "of course we can" is no "open sesame," it's given us an adven turous way of life. Mrs. Lloyd D. Huff, Abilene, Tex. PRESERVING THE PAST. I'm past 72, and have begun returning family photos to their original owners. Al though no one could cherish these pictures as I have, I think the photos someday will mean as much to the younger generation as they did to me. As the years pass, I hope this gesture preserves some of the love and beauty of the bygone days so dear to me. Mrs. Grace Williams, Odessa, Tex. We Pay $10 for Your Letters We welcome your views on any subject of general interest. we print your letter, you will receive $10. Letters must be signed, but names null be withheld on request. We reserve the right to edit contributions. Letters cannot be returned. Address Letters Editor, Family Weekly, 179 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago 1, III. . . . the oray-haired woman whose husband had died so short a time ago wept into the handkerchief clenched in her hand. Across the aisle sat the man whose suicide attempt failed last year. Beyond were the grandparents raising the boy whose parents died in an automobile crash. The two old men sat in a back pew. Their lives had been one long struggle for survival. Neither had a single re deeming feature in his face or twisted body. But up in the pulpit a man spoke of Blaster morning and read the immortal words. The man in the pulpit was middle-aged with an outthrust chin and an air of determination not common among min isters. And, because he is not more than mortal, he must sometimes rely on his Bible to provide the only inspiration of his words. But this Easter morning he reached out and held his congregation with a kind of glory. r1 The woman beneath him wept, but there was relief in her tears. The man who had sought death heard the minister speak of life and was rewarded. The aged men in the back pew leaned forward for a comfort that the fight to exist had never offered them. And down the aisle among them walked a Man with the light from the purpled windows staining His face. Silently, silently He came among them and not one might have touched the hem of His robe. And yet there was not one who did not feel His presence. It was a small church, a small congregation. Close beside an elder sat the daughter of a woman of easy virtue. The farmer's wife shared a hymnbook with a man who could not pay his bills and a baby smiled at a boy who once took something never his to take. But the choir sang Hallelujah. And the sun trembled on the lily. FAMILY WEEKLY, 179 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago I, III. Leonard S. Davidow, Publisher- Walter C Dri.vf A,-,i. o ui-. . .......... Patrick O'Rourke. Advertising Director: Melanie De Proft, Food Editor; William A. Fetter Art Director' iXrt Pu.bil,sh!r: Ben Kartman, Editoria Director- Glasner, Regina Grim, Jack Ryan. Jerry Klein, New York. ' A" Ulrec,0r. Koo" Fit!g,bbon, Managmg Editor; Associate Editors: Jack Address all communications about editorial features to Family Weekly. 177 N. Michiqan Ave Chirinn l ill c j ., Weekly, 153 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago I. III. Contents Copyright 1957 by Family WeeklJ - Megaiiro. 17? ' N. Michig'a" A Cce communications to Family cago I, III. All rights reserved.