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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1958)
CUR AD -the bandage that pill tag ralexoff New CURAD with non-sticking Telfa pad won't hurt when you take it off... won't reopen healing wounds 1 Not this! Bandage with ordinary gauze pad sometimes pulls off scab, reopens wound, causes bleeding. Now this! CURAD Band age with Telfa pad, free of scab, peels off without sticking to wound, doesn't hurt. Sottle Rib bon bond ages for kid hove the pain l.ii Telfa pad, tool Here's why: The pad in the Curad adhesive bandage is the exclu sive new Telfa. Telfa is "the mercy dressing" that the nation's leading hospi tals are using to prevent damage to healing skin tissue . . . speed wound recovery. It has a plastic surface with scores of tiny hoJvs in it that does thelrk k allows wound to drain, but doesn't stick to the scab. Se when you take it oJf, ft won't re 0en the cut. Don't take a chanre on hurting your children. Getcft new Curado (the waterproof plasticjbavdage o with germ-fighting medication right in the pad, too). Bauer & Black DIVISION Of THE KENDALL COMPANY km I The Lord's Money. When passing a downtown church recently, I. saw an elderly man with a banjo, tin cup, and the customary "Help the Blind" placard. A small boy led the way. In my haste to drop a bill m the cup 1 IIUSIUU& T um iui fx. The boy, after exchanging whispers with the old man, offered to give me $4 in change. Having -made the mistake, I refused. But the old man was just as deter mined that he wouldn't keep the money. Finally, to solve the situ ation, he told the boy -to count out four dollar bills. "Now take them inside the church and drop them in the poor box," he said. "That's the Lord's money." Robert E. Allison, Jacksonville, Fla. Frieed of the Family. Our church was filled to capacity; our new pastor was to preach his first sermon. Well up front, in an overcrowded pew, a well-behaved, rosy-cheeked girl of eight sat pressed between two elderly women. Curiosity got the better of one of them so, during a lull in services, she whispered, "Are you all alone?" "Yes," the girl whispered back. "Mommy's sick." "That's too bad," said the woman, and to keep the conversation going, she commented, "I think we're going to like our new pastor." The girl's face brightened. "Oh, I know you will." The woman looked at her in surprise. "Do you know him?" "Of course," she said proudly. "He's my daddy." Mrs. D.H.,Lititz,Pa. Take Five! As a farm wife and mother of four small children, I always worked at a frantic pace to get things done. I used to keep promising myself, "When I'm finished with this, I'll spend some time with the chil dren," but I never did. Now I make a point of taking five minutes out of every hour, no matter how busy I am, just to do something or nothing with the children. It works, too. The other day my little girl gave me a big hug just because I sat down and listened to a record she was playing. I not only discover more about their growing personalities, but I also find contentment instead of frustration by "taking five out of 60." Mrs. Raymond Plummet, Greenfield, lnd. Gifts of Green Stuff. Once a year a friend of mine plans a surprise party for someone who needs a financial lift. He asks the guests to bring as gifts crisp new bills of any denomination. With them he has made a "money tree," a small potted pine to which the currency was clipped as leaves, a "Gay Nineties" hat rosetted with bills which were bunched and sewn all over it, and a Hawaiian lei with the precious greenbacks as flowers. Eva Dunbar, Carmel, Calif. We Pay $10 for Your Letters. We welcome your views on any subject of general interest. If we print your letter, you will receive $10. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld on request. We reserve the right to edit contributions. Letters cannot be returned. Address Letters Editor, Family Weekly, 179 North Michigan Ave., Chicago 1..IU. 'J Ni.Michi?JB Av Chicago I, Ml. L.onard S. Devidow. Pre.ident and Pub iiher; Walter C. Dreyfus, Vice-President; Bn Kartman, Editorial Director: Patrick ORourke, hVh-,,'-D:;ei0yHlani ff00 "itor.William'A. F..r Art Diractor; Robert Fiti J.,. Hi?? vL A"DC,, ,Eton: Kavin V. Brown, Jack Ryan, Thomas Gorman. Honora Singer, Jerry Klein, New York; Peer J. Oppenheimer, Hollywood. AdMr,V.!!! V?.miTrt,L0.?, abu' edi,?r1' aurei to Family Weekly, 179 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago kntlnt! Ci,?oh qkf Tm ,n'cSl'onL,1 amil W"kl- 153 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago I, III. AN right. TeseTved ' ' Magaiina. Inc.. 179 N. Michigan Ave.. Chicago I. III. T.M. Th KrixUM rrnnpuny