Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1958)
STOP MM. INSTANTLY COMBAT INFECTION PROMOTE HEALING WITH SOOTHNO Campho- nL j 7 THEY SAID IT COULDMV BE DONE a PUFF BY PUFF TODAY'S LT.1 GIVES YOU BVTMERE T& BeaWr vyaTVl I vr - I r waw rnemque j LIQUID USE IT FOR FEVER BUSTERS COLD SORES, j GUMBOILS lF3t! Camoho- KeniqiM' Not only do fever blisters heal faster, but the same thins; happens when Cam-pho-Phenlque Is used on cold sores, gum boils. Wonder fully soothing; too, for minor burns, poison ivy, itching; of insect bites. And Campho I'hentque Is a highly effective, pain-relieving antiseptic for minor cuts and scratches from paring knives, can openers, tin cans, eta Used on pimples, Campho Phenlque helps prevent their spread and re-infection. 4ftTIfrtC FOR ATHLETE'S FOOW CAMPHO-FHENIQUE POWDER In Th row Shak Con 1. Checks Fungus Growth. 2. Prevents Its Spread. 3. Stops Itching. 4. Promotes Rapid Healing. ,4 mw"T J 1 rA LWMn nl,,,l I Like Walking on Pillows! Or. Scholl s AIR-PILLO INSOLES Mode of tali IATIX fOAM Alr-cuiAlsns my thsi fsr inly 60 Ptrforotod 1. Relieve Pain, Cal V.nfXoCd PU,( Tendernet.. 2. Give mild cuthlonlng tvpport . . . foe eretiure on nervei of (eel. J. Metp beten HmIk troro long taoritiga a wdklns Dr. SutoJi'e Air-KUo Inwrfw, nnK every flay mal hviidn a your to! Worn in any iW (let a pair Ubiy. AUJrug, Shoe, Dept. and 5-lOe . . . "now before we begin the tour, folks, let me tell you a little bit about why he came here in the first place. "He was taking a boat trip down the river and he spotted that clump of bamboo. He'd wanted to use bamboo in some of his experiments. So later he came back and bought 14 acres. "Over there's a dynamite tree. You oughta hear those seed pods pop. Watch for the orchids along the walk. This tree came from India. He collected them from all over the world. He was interested in what could be done with some of them." The tourist in the thin sweater shivered a little in the coolness by the river. The man with the camera eyed the old house for unusual angles. "Here's the office and the swimming pool. He never had much time for swimming, but he sure spent a lot of time in this office. It's been preserved just as it was, even down to the turtleback spittoon. Some people like to glorify him because he was such a famous man, but even geniuses are human. So he liked cigars, but he chewed 'em mostly. That's the reason for all the spittoons." The house was a dim sanctum. The tour group peered intently at the incandescent bulbs and into the bedroom of his wife. It was almost as though they expected a gentle, white-haired woman to walk across to the spacious living room under her own portrait. It was almost as though he might materialize in the wheel chair he used in the years of his infirmity. It was creased still with the marks of his heavy body. In the pantry shone the copper of the samovar from Czar Nicholas and on the porch wall hung the varnished and long-defunct tarpon caught by the scientist's son. "Now, folks, step right along and we'll go over to the rubber laboratory. He slept a little on this cot when he was working on a new project. Like the time he extracted rubber from goldenrod in case America needed it in wartime. You can see back there the morning glory phonograph he built. He got pretty hard of hearing, but that didn't lick him. He used these earphones. Sometimes he stayed 24 hours over here, working on his inventions." An old photograph dominated the wall. The guide pointed to it with his cane. "There's the picture of him with his good friends Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone. You can tell he was a pretty good-sized fellow, but it looks like he bought his suits even bigger." The tourists chuckled. The white suit did appear to wrinkle and fold about the old man. But one of the group spoke quietly. "I don't know. Lots of scientists these days. When ..ML1 SeemS Hke Tom Edison w,s kind of g'nt Maybe he was big enough for that guit after all." 4 f ' i J . . They said it couldn't be done... a cigarette with such an improved filter... with such exciting taste. ButL'Mdid itllfM's patented filtering process electro statically places extra filtering fibers crosswise to the streamjof smoke . . . enabling today's LM to give you-puff by puff -less tars in the smoke than ever before. More taste I If M gives you more of the clean rich taste of the Southland's finest cigarette tobaccos ... best tasting smoke you'll ever find. at c .0 o O 4 o Hmty Weekly. Jtily7, 195 oo o o Co