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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1959)
4 Monday, March 30, 19S9 MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. MEDF0Rl)j5SkSTRIBUNI "Everyone u. Southern Oregon Readi The Mail Tribune'? Published Daily except Saturday by MJJ3FORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fii St Ph SP 2-6141 ROBEHT W RUHL, Editor ETRB GRETr Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM Business Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR. Managing Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER Women's Editor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as semnd class matter at Medforrt Oregon under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By M a 1 1 In Advance. Copy 10c. Dail- and Sunday 1 year (13.00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.0C Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4-25 unday Only One year S4.20 By Carrier In Advance Med ford. Ashland Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv er. Talent and on motor routes. Dail7 and' Sunday 1 year $18.00 Daily and SunUcy 1 mo. 130 Carrier and Dealers c o p y 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City of Medford Official Papei of Jackson County United Press Internationa Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDTTBUREAU OF CIRCULATION, Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC Of fices in Ne York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver B.C. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL AsTsbcftiTiO ZJ kJ 33 Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO March 30, 1949 (Wednesday) A contract is awarded to H. R. Puddycomb, Medford contractor, for construction of Lincoln school. Salem solons introduce a "Let's go home April 6" reso lution, but sponsors admit it's merely a "hurry up" measure. 20 YEARS AGO March 30, 1939 (Thursday) Spring brings work on county roads and a full head of water in the Rogue and other rivers and streams. Trom Arthur Perry'i "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "All Focis' day comes Saturday. Citizens will observe the oc casion with the hope they will not be more so than usual." 30 YEARS AGO March 30. 1929 (Saturday; W. A. Gates and J. C. Barnes are to make radio talks supporting the Medford airport bond issue. Rain is predicted for Easter Sunday. 40 YEARS AGO March 30, 1919 (Sunday) The war trophies train is scheduled to visit Medford. Fine spring weather-with no frost alarms-prevails. 50 YEARS AGO ' March 30, 1909 (Tuesday) A movement is on for wid ening of West Sixth st. in Medford. Much city and orchard oronertv chanees hands with the coming of spring, local. realtors report. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. If the Parliament of Great Britain declares war, the vari ous Dominions are obligated to participate; true or false? 2. What is a sobriquet? 3. What is the name of the side of a triangle which lies opposite the right angle? 4. Is the head of the Sphinx that of a man, or a woman? 5. What is the unit of cur rency in Hawaii? 6. In what collection of fables is the fable of the fox and grapes? 7. Is the Tropic of Cancer north or south of the Equator? 8. Where is the Acropolis? 9. Correct the following: "Much water has flown over the dam." 10. What sort of machines are named "one armed ban dits"? Answers: 1. False. 2. Nick name. 3. Hypotenuse. 4. Wom an. 5. U. S. Dollar. 6. Aesop's. 7. North. 8. Athens, Greece. 9. "Much water has flowed ..." 10. Slot machines. TO LEND UMBRELLAS Jamaica,- N. Y. -UPD- April showers may come the way of commuters on the Long Island Railroad, but nobody will get wet if the railroad's new plan works out. The LIRR announced today its lost and found department will put hundreds of unclaimed umbrellas at strategic spots on train stations next month. Commuters can borrow 'em, free. The railroad hopes the laa CTii bumbleshoots will be return ed the next day. Oregon The end of the world's most famous trail is Oregon, and argument might be assembled to show that a region first glimpsed by a Portugese sailor in 1542, pioneered more than two and a half centuries later, granted statehood in 1859, is if only through refreshing unpredictability at the polls our best example of democracy at work. In the Lone Fire Cemetery in Portland a babel of markers in many languages is wan-ant to such thought. In a land of contrasting climates, soils, and crops, the people and opinions of people will differ too. How tremendous "Where rolls the Oregon !" IN THE vast remains of a once vaster Oregon Territory, two decisive mountain ranges and a torrent of rivers determine the position of pawns and castles on the chess board a sweet and sour mixture of pay dirt, hard pan, agricultural and grazing land, saw-timber, kinetic water, and mineshaft. Taken thus by squares, Oregon is lush and alkali, magnificent and desolate, heart-wanning and heart-breaking; the fisherman's paradise and squatter's despair; one of the world's great orch ards ; a game preserve, rain, forest, desert, placer ruin, and manzanita thicket;' flyway for ducks and geese. The traveller remembers Mt. Hood, the Bon neville Dam, roses and apple-blossoms, rhapsodic Crater Lake, and the majestic sweep of the Co lumbia River east and west at Crown Point high above it. He also remembers that the people everywhere are neighbors and friendly. IT WOULD take a northwest Sibelius to sing 1 the symphony of Chinook from Table Rock and ghost town to the John Day countiy or the wheat-field geometry of Grand Ronde Valley; from the sea-lion coast to the vertical Cascades ; from the running of the salmon and steelhead to the quicksilver life in shelving waters, or the sound of blue grouse exploding in high timber. New England set her stamp on Oregon's archi tecure of the north, and journeyman carpenters made the shanty-towns. But the true poetry of Oregon red man and white persists in the names of rivers, districts, and places; Clackamas, Klamath, Willamette, Umpqua, Yamhill, Tualatin, Deschutes, Rogue River, Umatilla, Llao Rock, Wagontire, Siskiyou, Multnomah, Tillamook, Scappoose, Owyhee, and Necanicum. David McCord Cambridge, Mass. (The foregoing tribute to Oregon on her Centennial year is reprinted from the Oregon Historical Quarter ly, by permission. It was written by the distinguished author and poet, David McCord, now at Harvard uni versity, who for, three years between 1911 and 1913 lived on a ranch in the Foots Creek area of Jackson county.) Consider A policeman's life is is also a vexing one if the policeman's name hap pens to be Fod Maison and if his job is being sup erintendent of state police. He has been subject ed to badgering and abuse on two counts that his boys m blue make too their morale is bad because they make so many arrests. We don't know about their morale. But if it is bad, we think it is bad because they know their superintendent, and eventually the officers them selves, are going to be attacked for doing a good job. t XE DO know about the arrests. Far from m.ak- ing too many, they probably make too few. The relationship between traffic accident rates and traffic arrest rates is a close one. The more police crack down on speeders and reckless driv ers, the fewer accidents there will be. The decis ion to crack down and to issue citations instead of warnings was not Mr. Maison's decision. That came, quite properly, from Gov. Robert Holmes who told the superintendent to carry it out. It must be especially galling to have most of the abuse coming from a person who is both a state senator and a driver with a long history of being on the unfortunate end of the police siren. Presumably, the public is reading of Sen. Rich ard Groener's endless tirade against the state po lice and is taking it with an appropriate grain of salt. Eugene Register Guard. Ugh! As we wavered this week between giving in to the flu and going to bed or trying to remain erect through it we got to thinking of a potion that mother administered to her children through the "months of colds." The stuff was called Sen na tea. It was in those days we concluded that anything that would benefit your health had. to taste bad, had to be extremely unpleasant. Sat urday night was Senna tea night. Little wonder we had a particular dislike for Saturday nights long after the medication was discontinued. We can't recall the effect of Senna tea on our health whether we were more immune than other children to colds. But it had a long range effect. Forever thereafter we've had to be sicker than a dog before we'd go near a doctor. We knew he'd prescribe medicine and we associ ated medicine with Senna tea. Ilp-h! Prndlplnn JEast-Oregoniaa. the Source not only a lonely one, it many arrests and that Dennis the 'No,no.uff! Just OUR Matter of Fact DARK BROWN HORSE Washington - "We think California has always thrown in its hand too early, in past national con ventions." The remark has a sinister ring for non C a 1 i f o rnia Democratic candid ates hoping for C a 1 if d rnia delegates. It Jnnh AUnn was made by one of the revivers of the California Democracy, Roger Kent, who is now Chairman of the northern half of the state organization. It an nounces, in clear terms, what may be called the serious dark horse candidacy of California Ciov. Pat Brown for the Demo cratic Presidential nomina tion. There is the widest differ ence, of course, between an ordinary dark horse and a serious dark horse. Just about every Senator and Governor in both parties is an ordinary dark horse, if he is not an avowed candidate. To be a serious dark horse, however, you have to be solemnly convinced that you really can slip past the front runners and win in the stretch. You have to own some dele gates who will assist you in tljis delicate operation. And you have to have a theory about how you can use your delegate strength in order to achieve your grand objective. If you pass these three tests, you are a serious dark horse. GOVERNOR BROWN, it is clear, now passes all three of these interesting tests. The development began to be sus pected when he came to Wash ington to speak at the Grid iron dinner, and stayed on to make the formal rounds of the other Democratic candidates who now form such a rank local growth. The reality of the development has since been confirmed by visiting Brown henchmen, among whom Roger Kent was the most significant. The Brown theory is sim ple. California's political im portance has grown greatly since the days when the Re publicans foolishly underrat ed the vote-getting possibil ities of Earl Warren. Even in those days Warren might have had a better chance to be nominated if he had been more insistent about his candi dacy, which was also a dark horse candidacy. Brown is ready to be insistent. Cali fornia law requires California convention delegates to stay with the man they are pledged to until he releases them. A favorite son delegation pledged to Brown is being pre pared. Hence the Governor will also have the means to be insistent. Brown is further reported to believe that neith er of the active Democratic candidates, Senators Kennedy Try and -By BENNETT CERF- NOTHING BUT NOTHING can stop a certain type wag from fitting odd words into odder sentences. For instance: Soviet: Dinner was ready soviet. Cadillac: A Cadillac mean if you pull its taiL Boll Weevil: After the boll weevil all go home. Loquacious: She bumped into me and I told her to loquacious going. Notwithstanding: My lazy brother wore out his pants, but notwithstanding. t A whimsical barkeep in San Diego has hung a shrunken head on the mirror behind him. The sign underneath the head proclaims: "That certainly WAS a dry martini!" A she-ghost complained that a certain he-ghost was getting a trifle too familiar. "Don't be angry," he begged. "I'm simply doing what comes supernaturally." O XKt, fey Sannatt Cert Distributed by Sine Features Syndicate. Menace papbr j Joseph Alsop of Massachusetts and Hum phrey of Minnesota, is going to be nominated in the end. If Kennedy and Humphrey fail, the Brown argument is said to run, the convention will then look at the inactive' active candidate, Senator Symington of Missouri, and the inactive but available can didate, Senator Johnson of Tt.'xas. But neither Symington nor Johnson can hope to carry California, according to Brown. So why not Brown as the next choice? TF THE Governor really has the guts to hold out the huge California delegation for Ballot after ballot, in the man ner above-indicated, it will matter a great deal to the other candidates, even if the Brown theory utterly fails to work. The front-runners, and especially Senator Kennedy, will not be able to look to California to put them over By the same token, the other inactive but available candi date, Adlai Stevenson, is just as likely as Brown indeed a good deal more likely as of now - to benefit from a suc cessfully executed stop-every-body-else plan. That fact cer tainly cannot be absent from the minds of the rather numer ous California Democrats who are Brown supporters, but Stevenson enthusiasts too. Still speaking as of now, almost no one in the United States but Brown and a tiny number of men in the" Cali fornia party organization take the Brown dark horse candi dacy at all seriously. Even the people of his own state, who gave Brown such a huge ma jority for the Governorship, apparently do not think of him as a President as yet. In a March Presidential test made by the usually reliable Cali fornia poll, for instance, Sen ator Kennedy downright trounced Vice President Nixon and Governor Rockefeller of New York. Adlai Stevenson beat Nixon but was beaten by Rockefeller. And both Rockefeller and Nixon beat Brown. All that can be chang ed by Brown's performance in the Governorship, which has been much more solid and im pressive so far than most ob servers predicted. A major Brown success in the Cali fornia State House could even cause his candidacy to' be taken very seriously right across the country. But even if Brown alone is serious about it when the day comes, it will still be important if he thinks he can get the big prize and hangs on to his delegates for that purpose. (Copyright 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc.) THOU SHALT NOT . . . Atlanta, Ga. - (UPD - Easter Sunday worshippers N at the ITorthside Methodist Church were greeted b y this sign when they drove their cars ij to the curb in front of the church: "Thou s h a 1 1 not park." Stop Me Iran Seen Conquest; By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Editor Istanbul, Turkey - (UPD - The next Soviet target in the Mid dle East could be Iran. Here in Turkey, in the United Arab Repub lic nf T.ffvnt -r- and Syria, in Lebanon and CVCJ.1 111 UflgH tjU .6 , ... i 'sfe-sj ne Daiue lor i&UNm the Middle East is just beginning. And as Communism spreads its tentacles across Iraq, neighboring Iran is a natural target. It becomes more so Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although "nder cer tain circumstances tne use of pen name or initial for publica tion is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensation Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words (Editor's note: It appears necessary once again to re mind our correspondents of the Mail Tribune's policy regard ing "anonymous" communications. Under no circumstances is an unsign ed letter, or one without a return address, considered for publication. Under cer tain special circumstances letters will be published without signatures, but not in matters of public contro versy. Letters which do not have an identifiable name and address on them when received are thrown away.) Nos. 49 & SO To the Editor: When writ ing to our new states, since no abbreviation seems appro priate, just give-'em a num ber, No. 49 or No. 50. The post office, I'm sure, will de liver it post haste to Alaska or Hawaij. L. W. Miles, 157 Winter st., S.E. Salem, Ore. Has Complaint To the Editor: The students of Gold Hill school have a complaint and would appre ciate it if someone would realize it. We like Hanby Elementary but this year it has been very boring for the upper grades. We have "monkey bars" but girls cannot play on them be cause we have to wear skirts. At noon we have nothing to do. We are not allowed in the gymnasium and all we can do is sit in the room, play tether ball, four square, or hop scotch. We certainly miss being able to have the gym and play records and dance, which we were allowed to do last year. What we would enjoy is having swings on our play ground. Our principal says that they are too dangerous. The. first, second and third grades (which are in a separ ate school) have swings. I am sure that most of the older children learned to swing be fore the first grade. It is lots of fun to sit and talk at noon or recess. The only place we have to do that now is in the room, the front steps or the railing in front of the school. The school I went to be fore had swings, which were not considered dangerous. We also had the same principal. He didn't say anything about it then. B. A. Ross Route 1, Box 55 Gold Hill, Ore. Gold Is Where You Find It To the Editor: It all hap pened here is southern Ore gon. Around the turn of the century the hand of fate play ed a role in the destiny of a number of quartz gold pocket hunters. The first sequence, a couple of prospectors about two miles west of Gold Hill, Ore., missed their deposit with a drift by only two inch es. Seeking the advice of a Woodville miner, he pointed to the exact spot that turned failure into fortune. Around 1916 a Grants Pass miner and "pocket" hunter dreamed of finding a good gold quartz lead, he afterwards found named the "Golden Wedge of Ophir." In the year of 1921 an old prospector and an el derly retired railroad engin eer ask a rancher near Rogue River a likely place to find gold. After meditating a mo ment the rancher pointed to a small ridge directly east, across the river. Within a few days the two old "fortune hunters" were "sitting pret ty" by uncovering a lost trace to a handsome "pocket" that had been missed years before. Bert Kissinger, 520 Boardman st,. Medford. J Cell Keep Them Home To the Editor: Why all this controversy about roaming dogs on streets, highways, at the airport, in fact all over the entire area of Medford? People that do go to the ex- Possible Next Target of Red Middle East Battle Not Over in light of the growing enmity betwen President Gamal Ab del Nasser's UAR and the Soviet Union. For with Syria firmly in Nasser's grasp, Soviet Pre- mier Nikita Khrushchev loses his chance for a Mediterran ean port. Therefore, he might decide it is time for a flank ing action, driving toward the Persian Gulf. . Such an idea would not be new to the Russians. In 1940, during the brief period of friendship between Russia and Hitler's Germany, the Russians candidly de scribed the "area south of Batum and Baku in the gen eral direction of the Persian Gulf" as the center of Soviet aspirations. : If Communism takes over Iraq', then Iran is the only bar to fulfillment of that dream. Here in Istanbul, responsi ble Turks believe the West ern powers may not be suf ficiently impressed with the Soviet southward threat or with the historic reality of Soviet aspirations.. Passes Split Mountains It would not be hard to convince many here the Sov iet Mideastern threat -is a greater one than the Soviet threat to West Berlin. .Three passes split the moun tains dividing Iraq and Iran and provide the only feasible land routes between them. The Iraq's army's second division is spread out across pense of fencing their yards to confine their own pets, have all the horrors of neighbor's dogs putreying children's play yards, digging among flower beds, leaving behind bacteria and fungi. The solution is not going to all the expense of a dog pick up, spayed or . put to death dogs, because of some one's lack of appreciation of a pet or towards their fellow man, but the simple solution is a leash law and its penalties if not obeyed. The leash law would pre vent promiscuous breeding which is causing an over abundance of dogs, which in turn requires the gas cham ber. Start at the source. It's as simple as that! Or can it be that the poli ticians are afraid of the short sighted electors who call them selves "dog lovers," but who are wiring to let their pets roam the streets and take a chance in getting killed or crippled, eat refuse and run the disk of disease and who are indifferent to the feelings of those people who like clean lawns where their children may play and friends visit without stepping in the mess of some "dog lovers" pet. Our pet stays in her own yard. Yes, we too, are dog lovers, and we love her enough to keep her where she will stay alive, eat health ful foods and not annoy the neighbors. Mrs. E. Spencer, 1709 Oregon ave., Medford. Against DST To the Editor: Why are the state political troublemakers trying to shove daylight sav ings off on us taxpayers again? This daylight savings mess has been brought up to the voters several times and each time it was defeated at the polls, so this must show what the people want. I'm getting sick and tired of reading about politicians, with nothing bet ter to do, trying to get us to change our clocks. I raise pigs on my ranch and do you know that they can't tell time? Neither can the chickens or the livestock. That's a fact and if daylight savings time goes in, they won't grow a bit faster. Daylight savings time won't make the sun come up any faster and set any later, but of course if Salem could pass a law about that they would. Now if the sun and. my chick ens and pigs don't pay any at tention to daylight savings, I know that none of my neigh bors or anybody else will. I think that it is time to get rid of some of our dead wood politicians up north who can't tend to business and leave my clocks alone. Harry Downs, Phoenix, Ore. Editor's note: The proposal to start DST this year was de feated in the house. A bill call ing for a vote on DST in 1960 was passed by the house and now awaits action in the sen ate. More Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH Here Is a pleasant way to overcome loose plate discomfort. FASTEETH. an Improved powder, sprinkled or upper and lower plates holds then firmer so that they feel more com fortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. It's alkaline (non acid). Does not sour. Checks "plate odor' (denture breath). Get FAS rEZTK todaj at any drug counter. northern Iraq guarding those passes. But at most it is a token show of force because no one expects an invasion from Iran. But Iran itself could be in vaded, not from the south hut from the north. Could Use Coup It need not necessarily be a military invasion. The Rus sians had a military foothold in Iran after World War II and had it until the force of world opinion marshaled by the United Nations pushed Drummond Reports (Walter Lippman is -again traveling in Europe. Rescea Drummond reports from Washington in his absence.) THE MOCK HEARINGS ON LEWIS STRAUSS Washington-The petty per formance which the Senate Commerce committee is put ting on in connection with its mock hearings on confirma tion of Lewis L. Strauss as Secretary of Commerce is, it seems to me, a discredit to the Senate and a disservice to de cent government any way you look at it. What is happening is that by every devious a d dilatory device some Democratic mem bers of the committee are seeking to stall the hearings so interminably that some body, somehow, will be able to turn up something discred itable to Admiral Strauss-or that he will be induced to re sign in frustration. He won't. Of course the somebody who is most intensely eager to turn up any tidbit which could be used against the sec retary 'designate and who is busily working at it is one who has made an anti-Strauss crusade a personal preoccupa- tion-you guessd it-Sen. Estes Kefauver (D.-Tenn.). Mr. Kefauver is not a mem ber of the Senate Commerce committee. Its chairman, Sen Warren G. Magnuson (D. Wash.), by nature a man of goodwill and fairness, for some reason seems willing to play Senator Kefauver's little private game of "let's-get- Lewis Strauss." T AM NOT arguing that Ad- x miral Strauss will be the greatest Secretary of Com merce since Harry Hopkins and Henry Wallace, appointed by President Roosevelt, or Averell Harriman, appointed by President Truman. I am not suggesting that every pol icy and every action which Admiral Strauss has initiated in a decade and a half of pub lic service has been without error of judgment. I'd almost say he ought to be rejected if such a claim were true. But the facts which are pertinent are these: Lewis Strauss has served three presidents with equal loyalty and skill in posts of large responsibility. When he was special assist ant to Secretary of the Navy Forrestal, he did such a good job that he was decorated by both the Army and the Navy. When he was a member of the Atomic Energy commis sion in the Truman adminis tration, he found himself the lone supporter of the H-bomb and when he won the backing of Mr. Truman, they together overcame the massive resist ance to it. When President Eisenhow er in 1953 was looking for a way to demonstrate America's deep interest in furthering peace-not just talking about it-it was Admiral Strauss who helped devise and strongly Reasonable Funerals (Priced for Everyone) FRIENDLY, it m( 4 them out. The weapon used could be the same weapon being used today in Iraq. A sudden coup toppled Iraq's King Faisal before the Western world scarcely knew what had happened. Then the Communists moved in to the point where many in the Mid dle East believe it will be al most impossible to oust them. The Communist Tudeh Par ty in Iran is outlawed. But its strength remains and it has never ceased its plotting. supported the atoms-for-peace program. AT TIMES Admiral Strauss hac liwn o rtnntrniropciol figure. Any public official worth his salt will be. Senator Kefauver, who seems to be biding his time to put in an appearance before the Commerce committee's hearings - which are being postponed for his convenience -is aiming to find some way to show that Admiral Strauss had an unethical part in the short-lived Dixon-Yates con tract by which a private com pany, instead of TVA, would provide some power for the Memphis area. I suspect that Admiral Strauss wishes the Dixon Yates contract, later can celled, had never been born. But the Department of Jus-tice-whom you might consid er prejudiced-and the Com mission for the U.S. Court of Claims-who is certainly not partisan and who examined the Dixon-Yates matter inside and out -found no evidence adverse to Admiral Strauss. And the Commerce commit tee's hearings on Secretary Strauss drag on. He wai named last November. We are now almost to the fourth month of the present Con gress and Chairman Magnu son has calmly adjourned everything until after the Easter recess, still waiting obediently for Sen. Kefauver to unsheath his accusations. None of this reflects any credit on the Senate. - It impairs the morale of the Department of Commerce. It makes it increasingly dif ficult for any President to get able and honorable men to serve the government when a Senate committee shows such calculated discourtesy to an able and honorable public servant like Lewis Strauss, (c) 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc. FAT OVERWEIGHT Now available to you for first time without a doctor's prescription, our new drug called ODRINEX. You must lose ugly fat in 7 days or your money back. Ko more starva tion diets, itrenuous exercise, laxa tives, massage or taking of so called reducing candies, crackers or cookies, or chewing gum. ODRINEX is a tiny tablet and easily swal lowed. Absolutelv harmless. When you take ODRINEX, you still enjoy your meals, sUll eat the foods you xike, but you simply don't have the urge for extra portions because ODRINEX depresses your appeUte and decreases your desire for food. Automatically your weight must come down, because as your own doctor wUl tell you, when you eat less .you weigh iess. Get rid of ex cess fat and .ive longer. ODRINEX is sold on this GUARANTEE: You must lose weight within 7 days or your money oack. Just return the package to your druggist and get your full money back. ODRINEX rmts S3 OO and is sold with this strict money back guarantee by: Western Tnrm store jo ven tral Mail Orders Filled. Hear your fav orite hymns on KMED every Sunday, 10:35 a.m., sung by "Tennessee Ernie" Ford PERL Funeral Home Phone SP 2-6675 LADY ATTENDANT HOMELJKE ATMOSPHERE