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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1959)
t 'I Mill listerinestops ladl)ieath 4times fetter than toothpaste! , Tooth paste is for your teeth Listerine is for your breath. Germs in the mouth cause most bad breath, and you need an antiseptic to kill germs. Always reach for Listerine after you brush your teeth. No tooth paste is antiseptic, so no tooth paste killsgermsthe way Listerine Antisep tic does ... on contact, by millions. Listerine stops bad breath four ' times better than toothpaste noth ing stops bad breath as effectively as the Listerine way. . your No. 1 protection . against bad broath ALSO KILLS MICE, ROACHES, GOPHERS ONIY 49 CSTEARHS muniluatK. run co., cum?w!romir i Xr. w. m 71 I BUY U.S. SAVINGS BONDS Shrinks Hemorrhoids New Way Without Surgery STOPS ITCH RELIEVES PAIN For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hem orrhoids and to relieve pain with out surgery. In case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual, reduction (shrinkage) took place. Most amazing of all results were so thorough that sufferers made astonishing statements like "Piles have ceased to be a problem!" The secret is a new healing sub stance (Bio-Dyne) discovery of a world-famous research institute. This substance is now available in suppository or ointment form under the name Preparation H. Ask for it at all drug counters money back guarantee. r. im. pt.or Gladdens Vour Feeftl Fast Relief From Sore, Hot, v urea, rerspinng reci 7 Wonder-working Dr. Scholl's Foot Powder does all this and more. Eases new or tight shoes... lessens exces sive perspiration . . . helps eliminate foot odor, pre vent Athlete a root. 15 40 and 75. Try itl Red-faced over slipping False Teeth? Now avoid the embarrassment of sliding, rocking false teeth. PERMA-GRIP Dental Powder anchors plates hour after happy - hour. Get white, tasteless, alka line PERMA-GRtP. r-m. I WOK I T.v tort 1. K. Fox, fur spe cialist, restyloa your old, worn fur cont re gardless of comUtlon. Into glamorous new cape or Hole. Special n.-lre. (22.05 complete. Include! new lining. Interlining, monogra in. cleaning, gluing. All U.L n n.r.,..,4 rlBondljFur Sntelaliitt NKND NO MONKYI Wrap up your old fur rout, mail it to mi now, Mrudyour ilress sine and lielnht on postcard. Pay postman $22.ni pins postage M'lirn new cape arrives, Or send for KHEK Style. Hook now! Many styles to rhonae from. Write: I. R. Fo, 146 W. 29 St., Dept. B-21, N. Y.'l EVERY WEEK there's good reading in FAMILY WEEKLY f JEW lP-27 TREATMENT under skin surfaces-even penetrates into toenails Promotes growth of healthy tissue. GwufeBlnstinfectta Latest laboratory tests prove NP-27 Liquid not only works under skin surface to kill fungus where it breeds and spreads but even penetrates into toenails. Works in Taalunder-surfaceskinlayerswhere ordinary remedies cannot reach. Using new NP-27 Liquid-Powder Treatment, doctors in two leading ' clinics found that Athlete's Foot, ' Ringworm and other fungus infec tions, even stubborn cases, usually clear up within two weeks often in less than 7 days. As part of Treatment, new NP-27 Medicated Powder dries the foot perspiration that helps fungus grow, eliminates surface fungus, deodorizes and soothes chafed skin, guards against re-infection. NP-27 Treatment guarantees relief, or full refund from druggist. Recordially Yours by Norman Weiser tops on the record shelves : Columbia's "Gypsy" album, featuring Ethel Merman, Sandra Church and the original cast of the Broadway hit, and Decca's "Destry Rides Again" with the cast of that show, are both fine listening. Collectors will want to add "50 Never-Before-Released Original Performances by Glenn Miller," an RCA delight which includes three disks in deluxe wrapping. And for the jazzophiles, Dot's "Gilbert & Sullivan Revisited" by Manny Albam and the Jerry Duane Singers, and MGM's "The Seven Ages of Jazz," featuring an all-star cast, are both well worth your listening time. I i;i ' h Sandra Church music for family listening: Let's sing our way down the wax trail, starting with Mercury's "Favorites from TV" by Patti Page, and following quickly with "Bing," a musical auto biography of der Bingle on Decca. The jeans set will find Tab Hunter's "When I Fall in Love" a Warner Brothers swoon whirl, while Mom will recall her "ooh" days with MGM's "Billy Daniels at the Stardust." RCA has a newi Abbe Lane biscuit which could be a big one, "Where There's a Man," and from Capitol comes "The Letter," an offbeat bit ably handled by Judy Garland. - Recalling many memories is a new Dot LP, "The Great Millions,", which spotlights such favorites as Pat Boone, Billy Vaughn and the Mills Brothers chanting their big hits. Felsted's "That Certain Boy" by Kathy Linden; "The : , Exciting Connie Francis" and "100 Strings and .Jon i James" both on MGM, and Camden's "Dream Street" by Tommy Leonetti are all excellent listening. Finally, for something a bit different, try "Kitty Jarvis Sings Supper-Club Favorites" on the Skyline label. jazzomania: Modern Jazz Quartet There's something hot and something cool for the jazz bash this month. Atlantic's "The Modern Jazz Quartet at Music Inn, Vol. 2" leads the pack, with "Some Like It Hot", by Barney Kessel, Contemporary, a real winner. Ernestine Anderson is featured in a Mercury shellac identified only by her name. Here is a real bright newcomer to the jazz scene, one destined for big things. Marty" Paich has a top effort in "The Broadway Bit" on Warner Brothers, while RCA has three excellent packages in "Stars of Jazz" by Bobby-Troup, "Easy Now" with Ruby Braff and Shorty Rogers' "Chances Are It Swings." "Themes from the Hip" is a really hip treatment of some TV Western themes by Bud Wattles on Roulette, and Muriel Roberts turns to "The Flower Drum Song" for a delightful, interpretive job. Finally, "Lorraine Geller ' at the Piano," spotlights a warm swinging ride on the 88. special merit: A truly stirring and exciting LP is "Ballad for Americana'"' with Dr. Norman Soreng Wright and the Sanctuary Choir on Dot. For those on a budget, try "Porgy and Bess" with Lawrence Tibbett and Helen Jepson on Camden, and for a top film score, spin "John Paul Jones" via Warner Brothers. Finally if you're a weight-watcher, "Slimnastics" with Dr. Charles A. Bucher, Decca, will help you reduce. stereo sound-off : London once again offers some excellent stereo packages in the classical field, starting with the score of "The Merry Widow"- with various artists and the Vienna State Opera Orchestra, and fol lows n with highlights from "Cosi Fan Tutte" by the Vienna Philharmonic, star ring some magnificent voices; Rachmani noff's "Concerto Noi 2 in C Minor" and Balakirec's "Islamey" with pianist Julius Katchen and the London Symphony, and Mendelssohn's "Symphony No. 4" played by the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. Decca offers Michel Piastro and his or chestra in "The Best of Strauss," and from Coral comes "Les Br ets Africains" by De Keita Fodeba. . new sound pop beat: In a modern mood with the stereo sound, try "Latin Holiday" by Dante tVarela on Decca; the original sound track of "Porgy and Bess," one of the finest waxings we've heard all year, on Columbia, which also of fers "Jazz Party in Stereo" with Duke El lington as your host; "Victory at Sea" by Robert Russell Bennett and "More Music from Peter Gunn" by Henry Mancini, RCA. . From Capitol Tower comes "The King ston Trio at Urge," "They Said It Couldn't Be pone" by the Mighty Accordion Band, and Ray Anthony's 'Sound Spectacular," all ideally suited to show off your new system. London's top dance-music maker, Ted Heath, offers "Shall We Dance" to a binaural beat, and Felsted joins the chorus with "Never Too Late for Dancing," featuring Joe Leahy and his fine musicians. , . , .. 16 Family Weekly, September 13, 1959 f t