MAIL TRIBUNE, MaJforJ, Or.
- Wt4it4ay, July 22, 1959
MEDFORDckTBIBl
"Xveryone la Southern Oregon)
Reads Tha Mail Tribune"
Published DhIIj except Saturday by
CUrOKD PRINTING CO
83 North fix St Ph. SP 2-6141
ROBKHT W RUHL, Editor
ITERB GREY Advertising Manager
GEHA-LD LATHAM. Business Ugr
ERIC W ALLEN JR.
Managing Kditor
EARL B ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg Editor
RICHARD JBWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Women's Editor
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as second elan natter at
Medforrt Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from tha files of Tht
VUil Tribune 10. 20. 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO - ; r
July 22, 1949 (Friday)
Bob Bosworth, 2325 East
Main st., wins first prize in
the "best painting by an art
ist under 17 years of age" class
-at the second annual South-
era Oregon An exnroiuon.
j Medford Mayor Diamond
Flynn appoints eight-man cit
izens' committee to advise the
cuy council saieiy cuiuuuucc
and the police department on
traffic control matters.
20 YEARS AGO
July 22, 1939 (Saturday)
Mail Tribune circulation
department shows population!
trena in county on own qw
initely away from city to the
rural districts.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Auto
. ists who were in no hurry to
, get their operators licenses,
' now are."
SO YEARS AGO
July 22, 1929 (Monday)
r Horseshoe tournament spon
sored by American Legion be
gins. ' General Electric stock sells
, at 362 on the New York stock
exchange for an all time high.
'40 YEARS AGO
July 22, 1919 (Tuesday)
The strike at the Home and
Pacific Telephone and -Tele
graph companies end.
An editorial entitled "Ex
pensive Economy"r denounces
.federal government spending
in some areas while the local
office of the U.S. Employ
ment service . closes due to
lack of funds.
50 YEARS AGO
July 22. 1909 (Wednesday)
No injuries reported when
Eagle Point Limited-express
train is derailed north of the
Pacific and Eastern junction.
New Yorker -leases Moore
hotel and announces plans to
build modern hotel on west
side at Seventh and Fir sts.
What's Your I.Q.?
Mina a tan eamet is suMrlar;
seven or eight is excellent; five at
Six is good. - ,
- 1. Would a miter box most
likely be used by a butterfly
collector, carpenter, druggist
or church?
. 2. How many sheets are in
a quire of paper?
3. Is it the Atlantic, or the
Gulf, coast of Florida that of
fers winter resort facilities?
4. Who was the last Presi
dent of the U. S. to be inaug
urated on March 4? -- -
5. Which branch of Congress
Is called the upper, and which
is called the lower?
6. Which has the greater
tensile strength; nylon fabric,
or wool fabric?
7. When a measure is sub
mitted to a popular vote for
approval or disapproval, that
is said to be a r m?
8. How many Stomachs has
a cow?
9. Persons 65 years or older
receive extra exemption cred
it on Federal income tax as
sessments; true or false? - v
10. Which is nearer to the
United States, Brazil or Ar
gentina? ; Answers: 1, Carpenter. 2.
25 sheets, (sometimes 24). 3.
Both. 4. F. D. Roosevelt. 5.
Senate, upper,- House of Rep
resentatives, lower. 6. Nylon.
7. Referendum, t. Four. 9.
True.. 10 BrasiL
The Hurrfan "Jungle
Are we, as President 0. Meredith Wilson of
the University of Oregon told the graduating
class there recently, living in a "jungle of moral,
political and diplomatic confusion"?
Yes, we are.
The moral confusion is seen every day in
the police records and courts (including divorce
courts) of the nation, among many other places.
Moral confusion is a confusion of values. It
is an inability or an unwillingness to tell
right from wrong, or to choose right rather than
wrong.
.
AS TO political and diplomatic confusion, any
literate person is fully aware of this, and, per
haps unhappily, has made his own compromises
in order to be able to live with the confusion.
Confusion will be with us as long as human
beings remain the fallible and imperfect things
they are today. .
Every human being, to a "greater or lesser
degree, has his own prejudices, his own biases,
his own "blind spots" in. learning or humility or
understanding.
But, just because this
we should not contmue
better, more orderly, more humane world.
'.'
JTOPIA isn't just around the comer.
There is, in fact, no Utopia.
But despite this, mankind will do itself an
injustice if it gives up
Each step forward,
in the human condition, is something to be
hailed and cherished.
And, imperfect and confused as is the
"jungle" in which we live, still the "jungle" is
not quite so personally menacing, quite so starkly
brutal, quite so unthinkingly inhumane as it once
was.
Our progress has been achingly slow. But it
has been progress. It is up to each individual, in
his own way, to contribute to,that progress if he
has in him the stuff to do so. E.A.
Clubs Grow Rapidly
One of the fastest-growing phenomena in the
financial world these: days is the so-called "in
vestment club." ; -
Throughout the nation there are thousands.
In the Medf ord-Ashland . area alone it is esti
mated there are about twenty or so.
The clubs are a way in which a wage-earner
can invest in the stock, market, or in bonds, or
in real estate, without the painful necessity of
socking away a substantial sum in advance. And
their popularity shows they have great appeal.
CUCH a club is an association. of men (or, as in
several cases, of women) who meet regularly,
operate under a well-defined set of rules, and
who contribute a stated amount each, each week
or month. This sum is pooled and used to pur
chase whatever shares or other securities the
membership decides upon.
Thus, a group of ten has ten times the invest
ment potential of a single person. If the group
meets each month, and each puts up $10 each
meeting, the club has some $100 to invest each
month a not inconsiderable amount.
The members then have a feeling of partici
pating in the nation's financial life, without hav
ing to scrape and scrimp to do it.
-
I JSUALLY the club is designed to operate on
a long-term basis, with no expectation of im
mediate financial "killings." Investment in solid,
growth stocks is the aim, and reinvestment of
dividends, plus a diversity in holdings, is the
usual practice.
- Some of the groups are more speculative, and
will "play the market" in attempts to obtain a
fast return on stocks which have a tendency to
fluctuate in price.
Almost all of the clubs, however, at least
ostensibly, have "education" as a chief objective,
and in this they are largely successful, for they
do make the members pay more attention to the
economic picture than they would without a per
sonal stake in it, however small.
A NEWS release the other day from the Na
tional Association of Investment Clubs re
ports that, for what is believed to be the first
time, one club has amassed a clear profit of
$100,000.
The club, in Detroit, Mich., has twelve mem
bers. It meets monthly, and each member puts
in $10 each month. Except for a few years during
the war, it has been meeting regularly for more
than 19 years.
Total deposits have been $37,145. The profit
has come from dividends reinvested, from the
sale of securities at a higher price than when
purchased, and from the present value of stocks
held over their purchase price. The clubs assets
now total $146,283.75.
IF OUR arithmetic is right, each member has
deposited around $3,000 in the club's treas
ury, and now, after 19. years, has an accumulated
share interest of a little over. $12,000 or about
four times the amount he put in." - ;
And at no time, at $10 Tier month, has anv
member put himself into a precarious financial
position, or subjected himself to a loss he can't
aiiora to sustain. .;, : :;.
All-in-all. the investment clubs' erowth con
stitute an interesting, and
xdttui iu me American
99
is so, is no reason why
the eternal striving for a
the struggle to find it.
each small improvement
increasingly important,
economic picture. rj.A.
Dennis the Menace
I'll get rr;
Sommunications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer,
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial
for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right tc
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters
submitted for opublication must not exceed 400 words.' The letters
printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the
paper; in fact the contrary is often the eaa.
Swimming Pool Site
To the Editor: I think a
swimming pool in Central
Point would be a very wel
come addition to the commun
ity. It would offer both a
means of recreation and be
of educational value if in
struction in swimming and
life saving were offered. We
need only read the daily
papers to see how many trag
edies could be prevented by
such instruction.
As to location, I feel we
would be overlooking an ad
ditional value by not consid
ering the possibility of locat
ing it at Crater High school.
With the addition of a "plastic
bubble," it could be used as
part of the physical education
facilities during the nine
months that ordinarily - it
would stand unused. This too
might be a solution to some
of the financial problems, to
share them between school
and community. It would offer
every student in high school
the opportunity to learn to
swim. The Crater staff already
has a man who is doing an
outstanding , job . in just this
activity.
I feel strongly that we need
to encourage activities and
sports in which every student
can participate, rather than
become spectators watching a
chosen few. No wonder the
new Opera House to be con
structed in New York is go
ing to have wider seats due
to the fact that our American
males are larger than their
grandfathers!
- As a second choice I feel
that the ball park area has
more to offer as a sight than
the others mentioned.
Mrs. Eileen Schmidt,
Route 1, Box 292B,
Central Point.
Her Sentiments
To the Editor: Excellent!
Your editorial of Friday, July
17, re: Rogue River controv
ersy and the request for some
intelligent thinking and an
swers, was splendid, and it is
good to .see one of your in
fluence take this position.
First line, paragraph three,
contains my sentiments exact
ly! '
For though I fish -with a
vengeance I get nothing but
3-inch ones which are difficult
to remove and replace in the
stream, and that only until
about time for the big ones to
bite and the swimmers take
over my hole. And I cast aside
fishing gear and join them in
disgust and envy.
If that 8 per cent was being
Caught it would be understand
able this furor over 'pre
servation of our fish', but not
Try and
By BENNETT CERF-
BERGEN EVANS, word expert,, frowns on the use of "pass
on"' in place of "die." "'Pass on,"' observes Evans, "is, of
course, a euphemism of 'die. And the trouble with all euphe
misms is the unpleasant fact
cannot be brushed aside. It
will, in fact, infect the eu
phemism in time. Take the
word 'cemetery,' now fre
quently : replaced by 'me
morial parkj 'Cemetery,
which means 'sleeping
place,' originally was- a eu
phemism itself for 'grave
yardbut the grinning face
showed through."
.-'
The great Montaigne, four
' centuries ago, wrote: "I guard
'myself now against temper
ance as I used to against
pleasures. For it holds me back too much, to the point of stupidity
. . . Prudence has its own excesses, and it ha3 no less need of moder
ation than folly."
Joe E. Lewis (an admirer of Montaigne) had a tough crossing
aboard the United States. The third day out the sea kicked up so he
bad to be lashed to the bar.
o 193. by Ssfiaett Distributed by King features Syndiota.
I think rr asoutmb l
8 per cent of Jackson county
is catching 1 per cent of the
fish.
Reasonable thinking of aver
age intelligence, it does ap
pear, would see the only alter
native is Rogue River develop
ment, with more recreation
for the evening bathers, and
leaving room for the fisher
man; with a pool large enough
to contain the fingerlings
which will grow into legal
size fish; with fish ladders, the
success of which has not been
Questioned since it was ques
tioned if the auto would re
place the horse and buggy
successfully and with safety
provided for the thousands of
families downstream -who
yearly stand a chance of
drowning.
Shasta Dam has proven
much to those who have left
the valley and gone far
enough to learn how others
live. Their recreation area is
unsurpassed i n swimming,
boating, fishing, but yet there
is power for the industry that
is coming-must come because
there is no other available
land in the U.S. left for place
ment of those industries.
Each year as I fill in and
return my salmon card with
nary a hole punched ' out,
wonder, what in blue blazes
makes anyone think they have
any fishing to protect in the
Rogue River the way it is at
present, and frankly, a fishing
license is just not worth $4
to anyone who lives in the
Rogue Valley at this time!
Virginia D. Card,
Jacksonville, Ore.
Deplores Selfish Attitude
To the Editor: We wish to
take this opportunity of show
ing our appreciation for the
splendid editorial regarding
the attitude of the Fish and
Wild Life Service toward a
dam on the main stem of the
Rogue.
Some of the undersigned
have fished the Rogue for
nearly 50 years, and knew
this stream as one of the best
steelhead and salmon streams
in the world. It is now rapidly
becoming the worst.
. It was stated at the meeting
on July 12 in the Court House
that if 8 per cent of the salmon
were forced to spawn below
the proposed dam " at Lost
Creek, the riffles would be
overcrowded. We have, con
servatively speaking, seen as
many as 100 times as many
salmon on the riffles as there
are now, and there was room
for all.
We believe it is a selfish
attitude to deprive the people
of this valley of the right of
Stop Me
NOW TAKE
QgJnT THE WORlt.
1NLRB Examiner Finds Bloomer
As Articles of Apparel for Today s Girls
By FRANK ELEAZER
Washington -(UPD When the
news broke that the National
Labor Relations Board had
held up ladies
bloomers as a
declining style
I could hard
ly believe it. I
always fig
ured NLRB as
dealing more
with labor re
lations. Union suits,
Frank Eleazar yes. JUt wom
en's unmentionables, never.
Here was their finding,
though, all about the rise and
fall of the bloomer.
Carribean Area Unrest Said
Worst in the Past 20 Years
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Editor
Just as Cuba's Fidel Castro
served to dramatize the revo
lutionary spirit existing in the
Caribbean, so
it has become
the fashion of
Caribbean na
t i o n s where
unrest breaks
out to blame
it all on Cas
tro. Castro is
the avowed
Phil Newsom enemy 01 me
dictatorships of the Domini
can Republic and Nicaragua,
both of which have been the
scenes of abortive uprising at
tempts within the last few
months.
But unrest in Latin Amer
ica is as many-colored as the
rainbow and has as many dif
ferent causes. -
protection from floods, for the
generating of power, for irri
gation, and for recreation. It
just doesn't make sense for
all the flood waters to go to
waste, doing no one any good
but creating damage, when it
could be held in storage to be
used when needed. We do not
believe one agency should
have this much power.
Again we thank you.
Milt Steinmetz
Mayor of Gold Hill,
Fred Lester,
President, City Council
and President of Lions
Club, Gold Hill,
Delos Walker,
Member of City Coun
cil and Past President
of Lions Club.
H. D. Force,
President of Gold Hill
: Rod & Gun Club.
Credit Ambulance Men
To the Editor: In regard to
the article about the Prospect
youth in the Sunday, July 19,
paper.
It seems to me that the
ambulance drivers are not
given the due credit for their
work. The Prospect youth was
not brought from where he
fell over the cliff by any of
the forest service men. For
your information, the two
men, Lee Clark and Jim Hall
of the Medford Ambulance
Service, weni down to where
he had fallen and carried him
up to the ambulance on a
stretcher with aid of others.
These men actually carried
him up to the ambulance.
Please put credit where
credit is due.
Mrs. K. W. Kohn,
1533 South Columbus ave.,
Medford.
Excuses
To the Editor: I was a trav
eling salesman for many years
but I never was able to get
away with excuses for not
wanting the Mrs. along with
me on certain occasions.
I may have a peculiar sense
of humor, but I got a real
hearty 'belly laugh,' while
reading this quote from a
Dallas, Texas paper:
IThe Dallas, Texas, cham
ber of commerce announced
that the winner of it's mem
bership drive would receive
a week end in Monterey, Mex
ico.; The SECOND price win
ner would receive a week
end in Monterey . . . with
HIS WIFE."
At least the chamber of
commerce was nonesi aooui
the prizes given to the win
ners of their, contest. I'm
laughing yet.
Owen C. Gearnart,
Camp White, Ore.
Wonderful People
To the Editor: We wish to
take this opportunity to thank
all the wonderful people of
Prospect who assisting in get
ting Paul out of the canyon
PAINT WITH
Vs
According to these august
gentlemen they soon will be
forgotten.
Bloomers Are Out
In short, they divulge that
the girls now aren't wearing
bloomers. They are wearing
something caUed panties, with
which the bloomer must' not
be confused.
The bloomer, we learn from
the agency's 78-page finding,
is a longish kind of thing,
loose, and gathered in at the
knees. The panty apparently
is not, although the board did
not see fit to go into that.
All of this came out in an
NLRB story about seven
bloomer girls and , some of
In some instances the hand
of Moscow is apparent.
But the seeds "of unrest lie
also in these statistics:
Little Land Cultivated
Half of the inhabitants of
Latin America are illiterate.
Though two out of three
make their living from the
land, only 5 per cent of the
land is cultivated.
Average food consumption
is about one fifth less than in
the U. S., and in some coun
tries, 1 per cent of the popu
lation control 20 per cent of
the wealth.
The 1950 census for Hon
duras showed 'that only about
In the Days News
By FRANK, JENKINS
Foreigh affairs:.
Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev abruptly cancels
a scheduled tour of four Scan
dinavian nations.
A formal Soviet note said
the surprise decision was due
to a bitter Scandinavian press
campaign against the visit and
threats of anti-Soviet demon
strations if it is made.
THE proposed visit was less
than three weeks away
from the date when Mr. K was
to have begun a grand swing
through Denmark, Sweden,
Norway and Finland. The trip
had been planned down to the
final details. Top-level Soviet
officials, including chiefs of
security : and protocol,- had
gone over the ground, and
presumably the final OK had
been stamped on it.
The move is described in
the dispatches as a "diplomat
ic shocker." It threw the Big
Four talks at Geneva into
turmoil. Western diplomats
had no way of knowing wheth
er it indicated the Soviet chief
might be ill (which, of course,
would be startling news) or
whether some important new
cold war move mighf be in
the making.
1IHAT does it mean?
" Nobody knows. Mr. K is
an unpredictable character.
But -
Anti-Soviet feeling has been
growing in Scandmavia. Anti-
Russian groups have been
forming in Sweden. Included
in these groups are refugees
from the Baltic countries that
were forcibly taken into the
Soviet structure. The four
Scandinavian countries have
been leaning much farther of
late toward the West. They
have reached virtual agree
ment on joining with Britain
and other Western nations in
a trade alliance.
All this is significant. It is
particularly significant be
cause of the long-established
neutralist policies of these
countries-especially Sweden.
A NATURAL guess is that
the foulness of the com
munist system has been com
ing home so forcibly to the
freedom - loving people of
Scandinavia that they find it
impossible to be wholly neu
tral toward Russia-that their
horror of communism and its
practices is overcoming their
desire to play it safe.
That may be wislif ul think
ing. But at least the change in
Sweden's attitude is signifi
cant.
and to the hospital. Also all
the well wishes and prayers.
We also thank our friends
in Medford for all their kind
nesses toward us. .
May the Lord richly repay
each one.
Mr. and Mrs. Uther Rogers
and Paul
Box 298
Prospect, Ore.
MEDFORD PAINT
and
Wallpaper Store
6th & Holly Diagonally
Acres hem Post Office
PHONE SP 2-9321
We Giva
SfcH GREEN STAMPS
their friends and cutting and
fitting at the Marion Mills, in
Guin, Ala. A trial examiner,
James A. Shaw, who wrote it,
said some parts might have
been better told by Balzac
than by a mere NLRB trial
attorney.
I don't know ' about that.
Author Shaw obviously" la
bored long and hard over his
manuscript, and I guess the
board members liked it Any
way, they included it all in
their . final report, including
Shaw's passing respects, in a
footnote, to the late Amelia
Jenks Bloomer (1818-1894),
the dress reformer and wom
en's rights leader for whom
30 per cent of the population
had shoes.
In April of this year, some
80 men made an invasion at
tempt on the coast of Panama.
Their leader reportedly was
Dr. Roberto Arias, former
Panamanian ambassador to
Britain.
Later, the Panamanian gov
ernment quoted some of the
captured invaders as saying
they had set sail from, Cuba.
Accuses Castro .
The "invasion" later was
dismissed as a quarrel among
Panama's traditionally ruling
families, and Cuba largely
was absolved. .
In mid-June a 112-man air
borne force attempted an up
rising in Nicaragua.
This month, the second at
tempt in the last six months
was made against the govern
ment of Honduras.
Whatever the cause, wheth
er uprisings are born from
within or without, the Carib
bean is seething with nnrest
as it has not for more than zo
years.
Next month, In Santiago,
Chile, foreign ministers of the
2 J. American states will meet
to study the broad problems
of "unrest in the Caribbean:
It will be the most import
ant meeting of the OAS in its
11 years, and its problems the
most delicate.
Yreka Limits Use
Of Wafer to Help
Prevent Shortage
Yreka - Irrigation with
Yreka city water has been
limited to two hours, three
days a week by action of the
city council.
The move is an attempt to
stand off a growing water
shortage. Owners of even
numbered houses may irri
gate from 6 to 8 P.m. Mon
days, Wednesdays and Fri
days, and odd-numbered
houses from 6 to 8 p.m. Tues
days, Thursdays and Satur
days.
Sunday watering is pro
hibited.
The council decided to in
stall immediately a Hill pipe
line to provide more pressure
for the higher elevation of the
northwest residential area.
Critical Stage
Tests of water supply in
dicates the local water level
is at a critical stage. The city
hall well is already so low
that it can only be pumped
12 to 14 hours a day. The
mam city wen contained
only 5V& feet of water when
measured Friday and the
cemetery reservoir is almost
completely empty.
Officials hope that limiting
water use to two hours a day
three days a week will be
sufficient for the wells to re
cover enough to supply the
town for all water uses the
rest of the summer.
Limited irrigating in 1955
proved that six hours irriga
tion weekly is sufficient to
carry a lawn an entire sum
mer without any ill effects.
BEAUTIFUL
Mountain View
CHAPEL
Nestled near
overlooking
hills. Quiet,
C M. Litwiller
surroundings with adequate off-street parking. Serv
ing all who call, with dignity and reverence. Super
ior funeral and ambulance service since 1935.
LITWILLER
Funeral
Home
Mountain View Chapel
Hwy. 66 at Normal
Office 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
Wa Naver Close
than to
Vanishing
the soon-to-be outmoded gar
ment was named.
Girls Join Union
The plot briefly was hat
the girls, and their friends,
joined a union and shortly
thereafter the bloomer line
wa shut down. What with
one thing and another, in
cluding conflicting reports
about an alleged amorous
maintenance man who also
was fired, the whole thing
wound up before NLRB as a.
case of alleged unfair labor
practices.
Evelyn Sandlin was a grad
uate of the Mill's panty line.
She transferred to the bloom
er line a year or so before it
was halted. Evelyn not only
joined the union but dis
played such enthusiasm for its
organizing campaign the oth
er girls named her as spokes
man to break the news to the
boss.
The news the boss broke to
her, Evelyn said, was that if
he ever caught her talking
union she would be fired.
When the bloomer line was
closed down, she said, he told
her that's the way it would
stay until "the union mess"'
was all over.
But Howard Sembla, a com
pany official, said economics,
not union trouble, prompted
the decision to quit making
bloomers at Guin.
A Declining Market
"It is what you might call
a declining market," he said.
"The people who like to wear
bloomers are ones who were
bloomers ever since 1900."
Sembla's testimony im
pressed Shaw as so reasonable
he was moved to some com
ments on his own.
"What is past is prologue,'"
he observed. "To the under
signed, at least, bloomers as
articles of feminine apparel
will soon rest in the hallowed
quiet of the past, alongside
other fancied foibles of yes
teryear, such as the bustle, ,
high button shoes,' and the
hobbleskirt."
On the strength of this and
other literary flights by the
trial examiner, . the board
found that it was indeed the
harsh dictates of changing
fashion, not anti-union bias on
the part of the company, that
put Guin's bloomer girls out
looking for work.
As for the rest of the story,
including the part about the
allegedly amorous mainte
nance man, you'll have to get
your own copy for that. I feel
reasonably sure the postmast
er general will let this docu
ment go through the mails.
Dr. Stevenson on
Boy Scout Council
Ashland-Dr. Elmo N. Stev
enson, president of Southern
Oregon college, was recently
elected a member at large of
the National Council of the
Boy Scouts of America, ac
cording to Hugh Simpson,
SOC director of information.
Election was made in San
Francisco at the 49th annual
meeting of the National Coun
cil. Long active in southern
Oregon Scout activities, Stev
enson has given outstanding
Scout leadership during the
past 30 years. Before his cur
rent appointment, he served
as both a regional and na
tional councilman. ,
Stevenson's election pre
cedes plans for the Jubilee
year of the Boy &couts or
America. Approaching its
50th anniversary, the Nation
al Council has selected at its
year theme or uoa ana
My Country."
Worry of
FALSE TEETH
Slipping or Irritating?
Don't be embarrassed br loose false
teeth slipping, dropping or wobbling
wnen you eat, tallc or laugn. jus
sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your
pistes. This pleasant powder gives a
remarkable sense of added comfort
and security by holding pistes mora
nrnuy. iso gummy, gooey, pasty tasia
or frellne. it's alkaline (non-add).
Get FASTEETH at any drug counter.
the pines.
the eternal I
peaceful -
1 stA naV i'f
Mrs. Utwiller I
"It is batter to know us and not need us.
need us and not know us."