Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 03, 1958, Image 30

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    CURAD-the bandage that
wmi mm
cab off
New CURAD with non-sticking
Telfa pad won't hurt when you take
it off... won't reopen healing wounds
Not this!
Bandage with
ordinary gauze
pad sometimes
pulls off scab,
reopens wound,
causes bleeding.
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 holes in it that does
the trick allows wound to drain,
but doesn't stick to the scab. So
when you take it off, it won't re
open the cut.
Don't take a chance on hurting
your children. Get a new Curad
(the waterproof plastic bandage
with germ-fighting medication
right in the pad, too).
Bauer Black
DIVISION OF THE KENDALL COMPANY
Now this!
CURAD Band
age with Telfa
pad, free of
scab, peels off
without sticking
to wound,
doesn't hurt.
ii 1
in
ill & $-y
r
Sermon In a Hive. As a newcomer to town, and consequently a stranger
church, I was appalled the first Sunday to see a swarm of wasps Hying
about, sometimes lighting on the pews or members
of the congregation. With a few others, I followed
L their flight apprehensively.
The minister, noticmg the heads weaving about,
interrupted his sermon momentarily to tell us
gently that the wasps had been around for years
and that only once, when a member tried to kill
one, had anyone ever been stung.
"The wasps are God's creatures, too," he said.
"Pay them no mind, and they'll do you no harm."
He was right, for neither then nor at any time
since have they disturbed a service. It was prob
ably the best sermon I've ever heard on "live
and let live." Ted Kyle, Casper, Wyo.
The Confident Campaigner. Recently a bunch of us
teen-agers hitch-hiked to another town 50 miles
away to visit friends. We got ten rides going and
r l i
w r lour dhck.
One of the rides was with a man who was run
ning in some election. He made 11 the stops along
the way, giving people his card. Each time he went into a filling station
or store he left the car key in the ignition and the motor running.
It wasn't an important incident, I guess, but it made us feel good to
know someone could trust a bunch of teen-agers like that. Paul
Bridget, Jackson Tenn.
Fair Exchange. My father, a minister, stopped one Saturday at a shoe
shine stand to try to get the operator to come to church next day.
"I'll have you shine my shoes today," he said, "if you promise to come
to services tomorrow."
"I'll do that!" was the surprisingly quick reply.
The shoes received an extra-good shine but when my father stepped
down and drew money to pay for it, the man held up his hand.
"I'll shine your shoes free each Saturday," he said, "if you shine my
soul each Sunday." Leslie Dunkin, South Bend, Ind.
Hosteis with the Mattes'. Weary from
shopping, I stopped in a department
store dining room and was escorted to
a table by a tall, sleek, well-dressed
hostess with an impersonal and
decidedly superior air. She marched me
to a chair, tossed me a menu, and
promptly washed her hands of me.
Waiting, I noticed the other hostess.
Short, dumpy, inconspicuously dressed,
she was bustling about a young mother
and her two energetic young children,
taking the mother's bundles, finding
extra-high chairs for the children,
engaging them in conversation, and
sharing their obvious delight in the wonders of a lunch downtown!
Struck by the contrast, I did something unusual for me I compli
mented her. To my amazement, she took my hand and said, "God bless
you for that I've just been told that I'm being replaced tomorrow. They
didn't think I was the 'right type' for a place like this." Mrs. W. M.,
Mansfield, O.
We Pay $10 far Your Letters. We welcome your views on any subject of general
interest. If we print your letter, you will receive $10. Letters must' be signed,
but names are withheld on request. We reserve the right to edit contributions.
Letters cannot be returned. Address Letters Editor, Family Weekly, 119 N.
Michigan Ave., Chicago 1, III.
Ad. ng DV;cfor M.I.J?. tldi"l:J,,.n Kartman, Editorial Olr.ctor; Patrick O'rSourk.,
qibrwT Mo'nV Edltor Art Director; Robert Flti-
0.Wi&H . Thomai Gonn.n. Honor.
Chlc'ao" 1" IH0T.ndiC.n.d,.rtuL,d,h,,UI ,0 W"W. N Mlchlfl." Ay...
Chicago ; I I Cont.h cLr iw? C?,'l'io,':, & F?mllT W"klV N" Michigan Av...
A,... Chicago I, mTajI rl,M,T.?.r.dW' " W"k, M.qln$ N- M,Wn
Family Weekly. AuguMt 3, 195s