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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1959)
o MAIL TRIBUNE, MW, Or. Monday, Oct. 5, 1959 "Everyone Ib Southern Oregon Read The Mail Tribune" Published Dtily except Saturday by M J3FOHD PRTVTTNG CO 8 Worth ii St Pb SP 3-6141 ROBMtl W HUHL VAiinr HERB GREV Advertising Managat uuuuu uiiium Business ami ERIC W 4XLIN JR. Managing Hdrtor EARL B ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAJi Teles Editor RICHARD JEWETT 8 porta Editor OLIVE STARCHES Women's Editoi DALE ERJCKSQN Circulation Mgr An Independent KewniMr Entered a aemnd Clara matter at Meal or" Oregon under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By MaV -in Advance Copy 10c. Dall- and Sunday 1 year $15 00 Daily and Sunday mos. 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mot 4.23 Sunday Only One year $420 By Carrier In Advance Medford Aahland Central Point. E a g 1 Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv er Talent and on motor route Dall7 and Sunday 1 year $18 00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo 1-50 Carrier and Dealer copy 10c AH Terms Cash In Advance Official "Paper of City af Medford Official Papat ot Jaelnw County United Press International FuB Leased Wire UEMBEH OF AUDTf-BUHEAO " OE CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO, INC Of fices to New Vork. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland St. Louis. At lan'o vaneravet B.C V NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS "ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITOBIA1 Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 5, 1949 (Wednesday) Dwight Houghton tells the Medford city council his com mittee is conducting an ex haustive investigation of gar bage collection methods. South Barneburg rd. resi dents protest a proposed wa ter main, saying service is sufficient at present-and so is tb cost. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 5. 1939 (Thursday) Next year's tentative budg et total for, the city of Med ford is reported to be $235, 370.27 by M. L. Alford, re corder. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: , "The better local experts are quite busy this week. They run the Cincinnati ball team in the mornings, and lead the French army in the afternoons." 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 5, 1929 (Saturday) Today is the 114th consecu tive day since Medford and vicinity has had rainfall. Mrs. Huaon and'son buy the Sweet Shop at Sixth and. Ivy Sts. -' S ' ' ' : 40 YEARS AGO ' Oct. 5. 1919 (Sunday) The federal court term starts here tomorrow. High school adjourns for a week to let 274 students help pick the apple crop. SO YEARS AGO Oct. 5, 1909 (Tuesday) Last minute preparations are made for the Southern Oregon district faL- in Ash land. The P and E railroad plans to construct. a roundhouse. Vhsl's Your I.Q.? Nina or ten comet la lUDCrief : vail or eight is esxsflsnr; five ot . fix it good. 1. Is a pimpernel a species of fish, flower, or bird? 2. Who is the author of de tective stories about "Perry Mason"? 3. Ulyssees S. Grant and Jefferson Davis both served as army officers in the War with Mexico; true orfalse? 4. The donor of funds for the erection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D. C, was Andrew W. ? 5. Who tamed the shrew? 6. Is Faneuil Hall, the "Cradle of Liberty," in New York, Boston, or Albany? 7. Into what did Shadraeh, Meshach and Abednego fall? 8. What is the hardest sub stance known in nature? 9. What ocean lies between Africa and Australia? 10. What ex-President of the TJ.S. wrote his "Personal Memoirs" while ill of cancer? Answers: 1. Flower. -2. Erie Stanley Gardner. 3. True. 4. Mellon. 5. Petruchio. 6. Bos ton. 7. Into the midst of the fiery furnace. 8. A diamond. 9. Indian Ocean. 10. Ulyssees S. Grant. ' NUDIST FILMS DULL London-fflPlJ-High Anglican churchmen today urged a full investigation- of horror movies but suggested that a church warning was all that was needed on nudist films. Watching the nudist films "produces a tedium so oppres sive that it seems impossible they can do harm," the clergy man said in the Anglican magazine Prism -v Likely He'll Live A reader who knows of this newspaper's tra ditional opposition to capital punishment asks a question. "How do you feel now?" he asks, "Don't you think the fiend who killed that little girl up in Washington ought to.be sent to the gas chamber?" . . . The answer, ignoring the fact that Washing ton kills its folks by hanging instead of by gas, is, "Maybe so." But the gnm fact is that the "fiend," when they catch him, probably won't be executed. Instead, the state of Washington, like the state' of Oregon, is more likely to execute some stumble bum who is not nearly so dangerous to society as the person who raped and murdered little Sherry Edgell, age 9. THERE, as here and elsewhere, the really un- x desirable person the defective delinquent, the psychotic murder, the psychotic with a high potential for murder is more likely shipped off to a state hospital where his head is examined. That's what happened in Kentucky a few years ago. The man was discharged and came to Ore gon, where, last winter, he murdered a restaurant operator at Oakridge. In Washington, as here and elsewhere, few men have been executed if they could afford expert legal counsel. There, as here, capital pun ishment is reserved for the relatively indigent. There, as here, a lot will depend upon the mood of a certain jury and the attitude of a certain judge. The convicted criminal will be at the mercy of factors quite beyond his control. He'll learn that it's "the luck of the draw" whether he's ex ecuted or not. .. riTHER we're too civilized or we're not civil- ized enough. We don't exterminate the unde sirables saveo in rare cases. There seems to be no logical pattern for the way the state employs its power to kill off its criminals. So we shall continue to oppose capital pun ishment until the far-off day that the state re thinks its position and begins looking to the crim inal's probable future instead, of toward a fleet ing moment in his past. Not Venus Again! The mystery of the "flying saucers" report ed in Redmond and in Bend recently appears to to have been solved. . When the first "saucer" appeared, it attract ed attention over the entire west. On that oc casion the object was spotted in the dawn heav ens. It appeared to be moving. Yet it was observ ed over a period of an hour. Last bunday, a number of Redmond residents joined in a "flying saucer party." Present were news people, a photographer, police and a rep resentative of the FFA. They viewed a bright oDject in tne east. . - 'HEN came a Bend radio broadcast with a youngster interviewed who had reportedly sighted a saucer-like object low in the south in the late, evening. : In Kedmond,:Boyd A. airways technical field office,- who also " super vises operation of an IGY auroral camera, came up with a solution that appears feasible: ; ' ; ine UFO s are planets. He advanced the theory after definitely de termining that the object spotted in Redmond bunday morning was the brilliant planet Venus. There is a strong possibility that the object seen earlier, on Thursday morning at about the same hour, was also Venus, apparently drifting through low clouds. Actually, in such cases the "drift" is caused by the movement of the clouds, not the bright object beyond. IT IS true that radar tracked some object Thurs 1 day morning. But that could have been some other earthly UFO, not Venus, which at present is snmA fiK rnillirm tViiIpq rHstanf But how about the observations in Bend on an evening earlier this week, when two possible "flying saucers" were observed? - - Low in the southwest at dusk these evenings is the lustrous nlanet Jiimter. 'riant -of thp nlane- tary world. Not far distant is flashing Antares of J. 1 ! i - -mi . - me iaaing summer sKy. wnere me .cena - saucers ; were ooservea. Persons who mistook Venus for a "sancpi should be chagrined. Through the years it has uccu .Luiaumcu xui signal ngnus ui spies, Japanese balloons and Martian ships. Bend Bulletin. Local Residents Attend Conclave Mrs. Leland Mentzer and Elliott Becken, members of the Jackson County Library board, participated in an Ore gon State Library workshop in Klamath Falls recently. The two trustees were ac companied by Miss Joyce Mar ling assistant librarian of the Jackson County library, who attended the librarians' sec tion of the same workshop. Mrs. Mentzer, board chair man, spoke to library trustees from Klamath, Lake and Jose phine Counties on why and when it is necessary to set up a- library board policy. The subject was of major interest to trustees present, and the group resolved to request the state library to formulate a basic policy for Oregon li brary boards. Eugene Register-Guard. . - , V Wolf, chief of the FFA iney were near tne spot Becken, assistant superin tendent of the Medford public schools, reported on a study sponsored . by the Pacific Northwest Library associa tion: "Administrative atti tudes toward public school li brary practices in British Co lumbia, Idaho, Montana, Ore gon and Washington." Following the morning ses sion, a luncheon was held at the Winema hotel for the 50 librarians and trustees attend ing the .workshop. The li brarians' afternoon panel dis cussion centered around "cri teria for book selection." RETIRED ADMIRAL DIES New York -(DPD- Rear Adm. Roland P. Kauffman (ret.) 60, a naval aviator who was awarded the Silver Star in World War n, died Saturday. r Dennis the You rats 6H0ULOA ckm he when the BHWSS VJBPB fl&5. We had STEAKS I' Washington Report By WILLIAM MACMILLAN AND : GAITSKELL Washington The British election campaign now draw ing to the end is, of course, a good deal more than a contest be tween, a Con servative Tweedledee in Prime Minis ter Harold Macmil lan and a Labor ite Tweeddle dum in Hugh Gaitskell. Nevertheless, the vital point for Americans is that no mat ter which party wins, the long and useful American-British partnership in the world will go on largely unchanged. The differences between Macmillan's party and Gaits kell's party are real, right enough. They are, however, mainly over domestic policy. (And even here not every di vision is one of principle so much as of : emphasis and method.) As to the thing which most interests us in the United States, .basic " foreign" policy, the Tory Macmillan and the "Socialist" Gaitskell are not farther apart, r ;ally, than the span of a large hand. British "socialism" by the prevailing American standards may be terrifyingly unkind toward certain kinds of private prop erty in England. . i-- ' BUT GaitskeU socialism, un- den variety kf the world 'at large, has no undue, crippling attachment to pacifism. Gait skeU socialism-and this is the wholly dominant variety in England now-is strictly pro- West and pro Western alli ance, v It believes about as much in force, when only force will do, as does Mac millan conservatism. The great bulk of labor in Britain is a-ithentically, and even especially, anti-Communist. Labor has always had a special awareress of commu nism's danger to aU free movements, including free unions. Actually, the "tough est" foreign minister Britain has had in the postwar period was the late Ernest Bevin, who was to a Labor govern ment. . As far, back as 1946,. while we herer were still desperate ly trying to "get along" with the Soviet, Union it was Laborite Bevin who ' had the Russians' number. - Try and William S. White -By BENNETT CERF- SUCCESSFUL AUTHORS and playwrights don't mind not too much, anyhow when rivals score a .smash hit, but too much acclaim for said rivals proves increasingly hard to take. Moss Hart facetiously hit the nail on the head with his opening night wire to another playwright shep herding his second suc cessive smash into New York. "Good luck but for the last time!" was Hart's, message. . In the same vein, auth or Somerset Maugham refused to get too excited when one of his young proteges had his second book in a row chosen by a big club; "One likes to see a friend get ahead," grumbled Maugham, "but not out of sight!" Old Grandpa Hanna hurt his leg in the Catskills last summer. He'd been watching Westerns on TV where, every time the villain killed a man, he cut a notch in Ms gun. So every time' Grandpa persuaded one of the lady boarders to give him a kiss, he cut a notch in. his cane. One night, unthinking, he leaned on the cane .... C 13, tijrBeoatfi Cert SicUbbySias JtHraSfulIa M Menace S. WHITE AT the 1946 Big Three con ference over Trieste in New York, our conservative Secretary of ftate, James F. Byrnes, was going all-out to placate Soviet Foreign Min ister Viacheslav Molotov. When a tough Western line simply had to be taken it was - "good ole Ernie" who came in to carry the ball. And it was "Ernie" whom Molotov, with the jugular in stinct of the old Bolshevik, instantly singled out as his one great enemy. He pushed and stabbed savagely and endlessly at Be vin until at last the tough little Briton had had enough. One day, after an unusually bitter taunt from Molotov, Bevin replied to him with soft distinctness: "I have the honor, Mr. Molotov, to repre sent a government that AL WAYS fought Hitler." Molotov, for the first time in the conference, was speech less. For it was he who had helped arrange the infamous Hitler-Stalin pact that for a time had left Britain alone in the field against the Nazis TF there is any real present distinction between the two British narties on world af fairs it probably lies, if some what vaguely, in the field of world trade. Both Macmillan and Gait skell thoroughly understand this matter in the academic sense. But from some slight acquaintance with both lead ers, this correspondent would say that Gaitskell understands it with his mind whereas Mac miiian grasps it both with his mind and his deepest, visceral awareness. This, on the whole, would appear to be one election in which the free world will be no loser no matter which man wins: the slim, elegant, rather laconic Macmillan or the shorter, plumpish, highly arti culate and civilized Gaitskell. (Copyright, 1959. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) FOOD FOR THOUGHT Ft. Stewart, Ga. - (DPD - It's back to school for Army cooks here. Military mess stewards are studying under chefs at Savannah in an eight -week training course "to improve the service of food;" - DEDICATES LAW CENTER Chicago-dJPD-Vice President Richard M. Nixon arrives here today to dedicate a new law center at the University of Chicago. Stop Me 0 m Matter of Fact By Jostph ATsop Washington "We have our fingers; crossed; but it really begins to look as though the othr side decided to can their dogs off." . - The forego ing crisp sum- mary of tne 3 situation in ji troubled vital Laos c o m e s from a high American au thority. It ap pears to be cheerfully Jof-ph Alsop substantiated by the current news. The Laotian army has now retaken large chunks of the territoryl along the north ern border which was lost at the end of August when ad ditional Communist battalions were sent onto., Laos. : Many of the border-crossers also ap pear, to' have retreated again into North Vietnam, . This is a good time, there fore,' to teU a remarkable; un told story. In brief, the most likely explanation of the marked improvement in the siutation in Laos was a series of moves by the American armed forces in the Pacific. These moves were unannounc ed to the world. They passed unnoticed in this country. But they were most certainly ob served, as they were meant to be, by the watchers in the Kremlin, and in Peking and Hanoi. rpHE moment of truth," - which produced the Pres ident's order for these crucial military movements, occurred on Sept. 4. The second inva sion of Laos by special infil tration battalions organized, armed, and trained in North Vietnam had taken place on Aug. 30. But communications are non-existent in little Laos. Hence word of the new in vasion- took more than 48 hours to reach the command er of the Laotian army, Genl Ouane Rathikoune, There was of course a further delay be fore the grave news reached Washington. Time was also needed to assess its signif icance. . Such were the reasons for the time-gap between the new invasion and "the moment of truth." At that moment, on Sept. 4, orders were sent .to the CINCPAC, Adm. Harry D. Felt, to place all his forces, ground, air, and sea, in a state of immediate readiness, and to dispose the 7th Fleet for possible action to assist in the defense of Laos. :- ON SEPT. 5, therefore, all leaves were being cancel led on Okinawa' and else where; and the great 7th Fleet began streaming grimly and majestically southwards to wards the" Giilf pf Tonkin, There was no bluff iir these moves either. It was the set tled policy of the U. S. gov ernment, agreed between the President and Secretary of State Christian A. Herter, to use force to safeguard the in tegrity of Laos if this was nec essary in the last resort. Meanwhile, of course, the Laotian government had also appealed to the United Na tions; and on Sept. 8, the U.N. decided to send observers to investigate the border-crossings. It is therefore widely supposed that the Communist decision to suspend the attack on Laos was due to this U.N. action. : On Sept. 5, however, small units of the border-crossing battalions had come within five miles of Samneua, the main Laotian army position in the province most heavily attacked. It then appeared that an attack on Samneua town would develop within a day or so. Yet on Sept. 7, Laotian army patrols were already finding signs of a pull-back. In short, the lull in Laos began before the U.N. acted. ... BEHIND this story of "the moment of truth" and its sequel in the Pacific, there is another long story of the American government's earl ier response to the challenge in Laos. It is a story of care ful, methodical, quiet political action, aimed to bring the other nations in the South East Asia Treaty Organization into line- and to get ready for the worst in Laos in other ways. If the American govern ment had not got ready for the worst, one cannot doubt that the worst would have happened. There were, and j are, ample ' Communist - re serves in North Vietnam to make the worst happen. But the probe in Laos was met with unexpected firmness, on the spot and in Washington. It was therefore suspended. And one can hope that the probe will not be resumed, because of the remembered firm response, plus r the new atmosphere : created by the Khrushchev-Eisenhower meet ing. . -. - - Fingers-crossed, . in . short, we can say we have had a Significant, success. Certain points about the success are particularly worth noting. For instance, the. unaccustomed n wo Foreign Desk: U.S. Arms Shift; Japan Premier Stiffens Stand By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor From the foreign editor's notebook: Merry-Go-Round: Gen. Charles de Gaulle's re fusal to , p e r m i t American atomic arms in France un less they were under French control has touched off a whole se ries of moves for U.S. air craft and the men who would - man eiom - Communications Letters to tha Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under , certain circumstances the use of a pen name or inltia' for publication is perrnissible. .The .Mail Tribune reserves tha right tc edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent tha views of tha paper; In fact the contrary is often tha caa. Read and Alive To the Editor: A new de parture in the: common uses of discarded newspapers has apparently been found among the natives ... of New Guiana j (S.A.). , The latest : announce ment is, the unique way of using the paper after reading the contents is . to turn them into cigarette v papers and smoke them.- ' Just after a little thought on the strange idea of the newest fad we have counted 16 other practical uses that the ordinary newspaper has been adapted to, more or less, dur ing the past. That the kind of material paper is made of is probably one of the innova tions. We do not know of any one manufactured article to day that is utilized in as many different ways as paper is. One of the old riddles often ask, was what object is black .and white and red (read) all over? Answer, a newspaper. A - newspaper has circulation too because it is alive! Bert Kissinger 520 Boardman st. Medford Cheers! 1 - To the Editor: With the bouquets that come your way, Surely your head has - expanded. Let us hope the posies do not fade away Ere your ship of fancy j has landed. ' The editor must be a great man, : :. With intellect more than passing fair,. To fill with such evident v.elan : r , The space in an M.T. chair. Please remember it is all in fun. ' I am sure no harm is intended; ' ' But be careful ere the .- day is done , That M.T. chair may be . ..upended. , - iX costs me fifteen bucks a year - ' To keep you in that 'M.T. 'cheer'. : . ': "-L- G-Weaver 301 Haven st. Medford The Pound's Work To the Editor: I was amazed to read : in the Tribune that anyone, especially a humane society, could object to the work Mr. Joe Taylor has done in regard ; to finding good homes- for the . dogs at the pound. After so many years when no one was interested in the deplorable conditions at the ' pound a few humane minded' citizens . brou g h t enough,, pressure- to bear so that some improvements were made but it is still far from what it should be. Many of the impounded ani mals , are thoroughbreds but any of them deserve a chance to live in . a good home. No female is given out without being 'spayed. The money col lected" for this Is added to a revolving fund to augment the small" sum of $200 allowed Mr.: Taylor by -the county court, according to your paper. It; is common knowledge that?v the. ; Southern Oregon Humane' society has no facili ties to care for either dogs or cats and the animals taken there are immediately put in the gas chamber. Our ; community is large enough for the operations of any humane; organization as this is one activity in Medford that has been sadly neglected. As the .fee. charged .for. spay ing has been increased, so the number of surplus dogs, and cats increased. The fact that an average of over 200 dogs are destroyed each month at the county pound is proof of quietness of the 7th Fleet's movement made it very much easier for the other side to end the probe in, Laos with out undue loss of face. The whole episode in fact had a quite new style a style of calm and silent resolution which may perhaps be called the Herter style. : (c) 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc. , them in the defense of Eu rope. One squadron of -F-104 fighter-bombers already has been moved to Germany from France. Within the next few weeks, the U.S. is expected to close down operations at the Chaumont and Toule-Rosiere bases in eastern France, leav ing only small caretaker units.' The main force of some 250 F-104s will go to Spang dahlem", Ramstein and Sem bach bases in Germany. The Hard Line: Japanese Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi, frequently criticized for indecisive han dling of national affairs, ap- this and no one can tell how, many cats and kittens are dropped by unfeeling people along roads and highways to starve. - What sort of a humane so ciety do we have to object to the' efforts oi a kind man to find homes for these aban doned creatures? : -. - -Mrs. O. B. Bates 4010 Jacksonville Highway J Medford In the Days News By FRANK JENKINS The London Times, assaying the results of Mr. K's visit to the United States, offers this interesting conclusion: "The net result of it is that Mr. Khrushchev seems to have left the image of a man who genuinely wants peace, but also of one who is VERY CON FIDENT and is UNSHAK- ABLY CONVINCED THAT HISTORY IS ON HIS SIDE." That is to say: He made it very clear dur ing his visit that HE believes that over the long pull com munism will come out ahead, TF THAT is true - - If he believes that history is on his side - What period of history is he thinking about? ' CJENATOR Neuberger, in his - talk to the Klamath Falls Kiwanis club, offered an inter esting thought along that line. He cited the Pelopennesian war in which Athens and Spar ta, the ' two great nations of the . Ancient Greek world, came finally to grips in a war of survival.? r . Sparta WON. WHY? " ' Athens,, formerly tough, became SOFTENED BY LUX URY. Every Athenian had his helot. ; (Helots were slaves.) The helots did all the work. As time passed, the Antheni- ans worked less and less. En joyment of life was their chief concern. . This period was known as the Golden Age of Athens. The Spartans were a differ ent breed. They were rough and tough. The SUPREMACY OF SPARTA in the small world of that day was their ONLY concern. IT ALL came to a showdown in the Peloponnesian war r which.lasted 25 years. ' Athens lost. - Sparta won.- ' Reasonable Funerals (Priced for Everyone) 4 r FRANK PERL FREE . . Parking Spaca Adjacent 1 To Mortuary FRIENDLY, parently is ready to take a much firmer stand against his socialist opponents on revision of the U.S.rJapanese Security .. Treaty. He took the gloves off ... last week in his hardest hit-: ; ting speech to date before the Japan Newspaper Publishers (. and Editors association. His line: If Japan does not have j the support of the United';; States, it will not be able to: carry out many of its econom--ic programs. The only ones to benefit - the Communists." '1 Argentine Payoff: Argentine President Arturo Frondizi is not out of the ' woods yet, but his policies are . paying off. Thman many ex pected not to last out the first 100 days of his regime still is . in office. Meanwhile, oil im ports are down, trade balanc es are in the black, the cost of living upward ; spiral is slowing and there is the be ginning of a boom. The free peso has steadied at a level of about 82 to the dollar and in flation appears to be under control. Big problem still, the Peronists and the Commu nists. " Too Good to Last: Moscow Radio's campaign of sweetness and light toward . the West began to show signs of cracking less than a week after Premier Nikita Khrush- chev's departure from Wash ington. It commented on Ital- ian President Antonio Segni's .. Washington visit and attacked U.S.-Italian agreement that . this was not the time to weak- en western defenses. Howev er, it still refrained from per- - sonal criticism of President Eisenhower, naming cs the. culprft Gen. Lauris Norstad, . American commander of : NATO. The broadcast labelled - the decision a continuation of the cold war. Sparta won because she was . rougher, toagher and MORE , COMPETENT in the things ; that count in a war of sur- vivaL SPEAKING of the things that COUNT in war, Senator Neuberger cited the differing educational systems of Russia and America. Russia, he pointed out, picks its brightest minds out of the high schools and sends them on through colelge - PAYING THEIR WAY. If there is to be a final showdown war in the world of today, it will f be SCIENCE that will be the de ciding factor. There is unmis takable evidence of Russia's growing scientific prowess. ; , The advancement of science in Russia isn't just happening by happenstance. It is being MADE to happen? ARE we Athens? Is Russia Sparta? ; We don't believe it. Bet maybe Mr. K does. Maybe it is that belief thatQgives him confidence that history is on his side-as the London Times, one of the world's , gatest newspapers, suggests. -It is at legst a challenging thought. More Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH Here is a pleasant way to overcome loose plate discomfort. FASTEETH. an Improved powder, sprinkled on upper and lower plates holds them firmer so that they feel more com fortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. It's alkaline (non acid). Does not sour. Checks "plats odor" (denture breath). Get FAS TEETH today at any drug counter- Hear. your fav orite hymns on KMED every Sunday, 10:35 a.m., sung by , 'Tennessee: Ernie" Ford Funeral Home Phone SP 2-6675 LADY ATTENDANT o HOMELIKE ATMpSPHERB PERL a - . , .. o - . . , ' ' e I 1 ''ii iiii ' t i ii li iiiir,ii"-K'ir-iiailii-'-flrfttiriJi-ilaiiwtf r rrr I'ltir :JTfaair-v- - - .,11