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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1957)
can cooking wrfngf Colgate's Floicnt Makes air smell flower-fresh On ipray of Colgate's naw 'lorlant instant-action Air Deodorant quickly kills un pleasant household odors cooking, smoking, bathroom, pets, musty closets, baby's room, and sick room. Get it at your grocery or drug store. Be sure to keep an extra Floricnt handy in the bathroom. hjl f FRAGRANCES : ) I 3 FLORAL, SPICE, CSrrllil No Witt . Ho Walt . No WMt Covar: lockhaad Aircraft Corp. Paoa 12: U.S. Marin Corp., Wide World. Pagat 14. 15; U.S. Air Fore. Unit.d Pratt. Sunburn Heat Rash Poison Ivy 'Chafing Relieve Fiery Misery F With fcoatblttg Luiotaft!i Hot, Tired, Tender. Perspiring FEET? Yihi'U nuirvel how quick ly Dr. Scholl's oolhiit. nrrtwhiiiK Foot I'uwttrr rrlievw mtrr. timl, Imm inn. MririnK, orioroun, wratilive fwt . . . how it mmv new or light horn . . . helm imtvenl Athlrtv'a Koot.SUrt using it today. Sold fivrry whrrr. 1 J & txs vou wine saving... to Survive l - " ;. J F A rlOOd T U "A"' y--rasL-- n V7ur neighborhood was flooded recently by a nearby creek. Within minutes there was two feet of muddy water spilling over my floors and furniture. As I waded through it, trying to set my valuables on a higher level, I thought nothing worse could ever happen. Finally, in tears, I stumbled next door, There I found them standing in water up to their knees and laughing. On the steps leading to the second floor sat my neighbors' 12-year-old son. He had a rod and reel and was calmly fishing into the living room. Soon the water receded and, as I went about cleaning up my once-shiny floors, I kept chuckling to myself at the sight of that young fisherman. My troubles didn't seem so big then. Mrs. E. J. B., West Plains, Mo. EPITAPH TO A CAREFREE YOUTH. I used to wonder about what people called "the degeneration of the younger generation." My younger brother, in his high-school and college frivolities, seemed irresponsible. Even when graduated and headed for a career, I questioned his aim. Then he had a recurrence of a childhood disease, rheu matic fever, and needed an operation. At the hospital his attitude was still the same gay, frivolous, carefree. "Is it really true?" I asked myself on the way home. "Is this generation so completely uncaring?" He died after the operation, and my "irresponsible" brother was gone. But inside the drawer of his hospital nightstand he left an epitaph: "If I do not survive this operation, my body is to be turned over to heart specialists for research. Perhaps the incurable condition of my heart will save someone else's life." That was the end of my "frivolous" brother, a member of the "degenerating younger set." Ethel Hale, Pataskala, O. W Pay $10 for Your Letters We welcome your uieu on any subject 0 genera! interest. ue print your letter, you unll receive $10. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld on request. We reserve the right to edit contnbutwus. Letters cannot be returned. Address Letters Editor, Family Weekly, 179 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago 1, 111. ... 1 may possibly be the first person ever to meet one of America's greatest golfers in her petticoat. I didn't actually meet her, but I did spend the morning with her. I had a wonderful time. The dressmaker in the converted office once owned by a color-mad architect was altering her collection of fine tweed skirts. When I walked in, it seemed to me there was some thing vaguely familiar about a customer with a turned-up nose, twinkling blue eyes, and freckles to match her curls. Not until she asked about another appointment after prac tice did it dawn on me. Practice? Ballet? Arpeggios? Card tricks' Golf? Patty Berg! Patty is a superb golfer. She conducts clinics just as well. But that day she gave one of her most successful perform ances before an audience of three dressmakers and me. When she sneered, it was a production. The wild walls shook and the bolts of yard goods slithered across the tables. Patty had a gamin grin on her face. 4 Family Weekly, July II, 1957 $ 1 ml "My goodness," gasped the dressmaker. "Are you through?" TheaHWaT SneCZed' 8nd leaded windows rattled. , f.makerS Clutched at the'r hairpins. God bless you!" cried the dressmaker. Patty favored me with a Mickey Rooney smirk. alteratinn rf ntiVely fit f skirt. decided fr alterations, decided against. Sighed caSn Sshyed,I:er I86 in mirror' ving every indi prei a tir, B She ed ' Si'dmT " n?e Side?" she ask set her crTsTh T '" PM chuckled" su" When she had gone, we looked at each other It wa, ""I dPesSm aker aked. go p"a tevrSdtement- IVe "eVer - Pay on the her rCat pkvin, , nStrnting W form' But Py in of pu dehght 8 8 8a"ery f foUr was ""thing short BBS! Iff tfletfiWua 'IhOINTMtNT