Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1958)
I -V A Treet yourself to good eating! id a ham and pork combination, sugar-cured like the finest ham! Adda the good meat touch to egys, salads, sandwiches! HO MORE DRY SKIM ITCH... Thanhs to Dermassage '. . , your product is a bfestinft" writes Mrs. i. S. of Chicago, III. "for 8 years I've suf fered from agonizing If ii irritntinnv anil " l&w Vw tried everything. Finally a doctor rec ommended Di'rma.ssaxc and overnight my skin condition disappeared. We use it all the lime for hody massage and all over skin care. It's wonderful!" ii ml MEDICATEO oeiassae BODY RUB w 1 -i , 89c ond $1.49 no fed. lo USED FOB SKIN COMFOKT IN OVEK 4,000 HOSPITALS! "I'm always satisfied most with a Brand that's made a Name for itself!" i H u Si BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION INCORPOftATCD 437 Fifth Avenue Now York Ifi. N. Y. Af the first tickle or soreness in your throat reach for Listerine! Gargle Listerinc Antiseptic full-strength every few hours. Listerine Antiseptic docs what non-antiseptic cold "remedies" can't do - k ills germs by the mil lions. And germs cause much of the misery of a cold. 12-year tests proved: People who gargled twice daily with Listerine had fewer, shorter and milder colds than those who did not. rf n Pi - , in i.j ;!: g i nip Children Should Be Seen, Not Read lb your No. 1 protection against infection by Dick Emmons I don't like to appear immodest, but to my three children I am some thing of an idol. This is especially true of Ann, our seven-year-old daugh ter, who views me as a pleasant mix ture of Abraham Lincoln, the Lone Ranger, and Donald Duck. She often interrupts me, craving my company. When I'm reading, for in stance. And what father can resist a winsome, sweet-faced little girl who rips the book from his hand, ties his feet together with her skipping rope, and accidentally knocks an ash tray into his lap while jerking his glasses down his nose? In the cozy father-daughter talks that follow these overtures, my mature brain leads her untrained little mind through a broad gamut of educational and inspiring subjects. Just the other night she ambushed me in the living room and said, "Golly, you must be smart. You read books and things all the time." "Reading is the path to knowledge," I said simply. "Read me what you're reading," she pleaded winningly. "You wouldn't be interested, honey," I said quickly. "Daddy's improving his mind. Go play." "Do you want me to scream? I scream good." "Okay, okay," I gave in, looking around nervously for signs of my wife. "I'll read just a little bit." I lowered my voice. " Til give it to you where it hurts!' Sloan said, wiping the blood from his hairy forearm. 'Keep the dough, keep the blonde if you want; 8 Family Weekly, January 19. 1058 just let me live!' the sniveler begged." "Gee!" Ann gasped. "That's enough for right now," I said hastily. "Why don't you go trap some more beetles or something?" To my surprise, the girl leaped from my lap and, firing her six-gun wildly, galloped off. Naturally, I reopened the book to see if Sloan would take the blonde. If he didn't and she was any thing like the girl on the cover, he was an absolute fool. My concentration was interrupted by a tete-a-tete between my wife and daughter in the kitchen. "Hands up, Mommy!" Ann ordered. "Ooh, don't shoot!" her mother mocked. "I'll give it to you where it hurts!" Ann said. "What did you say?" my wife roared. I loped for the back hallway. "Come back here!" my bride com manded sternly. I edged into the kitchen, secreting my book behind a picture on the wall. "Did Ann learn that from you?" she demanded. "Learn what?" I asked in a hurt tone. "I'll give it to you " Ann began to chant loudly. "Never mind!" her mother shrieked. "Now keep calm, sweet," I started. "Keep still!" my wife barked. "Keep the dough, keep the blonde, and let me live!" Ann burst out. Things got a little fuzzy for the next few minutes and I guess I made some feverish promises in the heat of the moment. Anyway, I'm now reading a book called "Edna Treadway Goes to Finishing School." It isn't exactly racy but it's absolutely safe.