MAIL TRIBUNE, Me-jfore", Or.
Wednesday, Oct. 7, 19S9
"Everyone n Southern Orecoa)
- OReada The Mall Tribane"
tublihgd Dtll cccept Saturday by
83 Noatt tU St Ph SP 8-6141
- HIRB GREY Advertising Manatrar
'CWIALD LATHAM I
ERIC W ALLEN JR.
Masai-nag Mrur
EARL U ADAMS, City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Telef Editor
' RT-JHARD JKWETt Soorta Editor
OLIVE STARCHES Women'! Edites
DALE ERICKSON Circulation MX
An IcdeDendent Newspaper
Cfrteree) as second class matter a
oieoxorn ureeon unaer jics
March 3. 1897
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the Tiles of The
NAail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Oct. 7, 1949 (Friday)
An eager Medford young
ster hops into the city' spank
ing new swimming pool and
splashes happily about until
warned by employees that
the three feet of water in it
is just there for testing pur
poses. Snow dusts the hills rim
ming the valley, including
Roxy Ann, while a half inch
of rain washes down Medford
itself.
20 YEARS AGO - -Oct.
7, 1939 (Saturday)
Thespians are urged to try
for 'Noel Coward's "Hay
Fever" as E. H. Hedrick's
community theater- project
gets rolling.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudee Pot" column: "Fletch
Fish, the boom-day tenor of
Phoenix, has gone and laid
himself liable to th social
rowdyism known as a shiv
aree." 30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 7, 192S (Monday)
A New York dock strike
halts shipments of Rogue
Valley nears. ;
Medford's mayor proclaims
next week as Fire Prevention
week.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 7. 1919 (Tuesday)
American . Legion plans a
big 'Armistice' Day parade
here Nov. 11. -
: The federal court term is
now under way here.
50 YEARS AGO
Oct. 7. 1909 (Thursday)
- Medford Commercial club
lays plans for its annual High
Jinks musicale.
The Ashland fair is report
ed to be well worth a visit fo
that nether end of the valley.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or te correct is
seven or eight is excellent; five ee
tis is good.
1. Irs an old song, whose
"throat is like the swan"?
O 26 What country did Napol-
eon call "a nation of shop
keepers"? "3. Whom did the spider in
vite into her parlor?
;4. One U.S. Vice-President
resigned that office to become
a Senator from South Caro
lina; who was he?
5. In the Biblical story,
when Lot's wife looked back,
what happened to her?
t 6. Did the U.S. acquire the
American Virgin Islands from
Spain; Denmark, or The Neth
erlands? ' -
-" 7. The army of what U.S.
General defeated the Mexicans-
at Buena Vista in 1847?
; 8. The practice of polygamy
was once an article of religion
of the Shaker the Quakers,
or the Mormcs?
9. What r a baby frog call
ed? S 10. In vvnat city is there a
famous section known as "the
Left Bank"?
Answers: 1. Annie Laurie's.
2. England. 3. The fly. 4.
John C. Calhoun. 5. She turn
ed to salt. 6. Denmark. 7.
Gen. Zackaxy Taylor. 8. The
Mormons. 9. A tadpole. 10.
Paris, France.
,4
Is Re-Thinking Needed?
What is the purpose of the new Oregon Cor
rectional Institution?
This is a question which is receiving, some
serious attention these days, and is the center of
a controversy among members of the legisla
ture and the board of control. .
About the only thing upon which all parties
concerned are agreed is the idea that it is de
signed to rehabilitate first offenders.
At this point agreement ceases.
JUDGING by appearances, the board of con
trol believes that the correctional institution
should be a maximum security prison, surrounded
not by one tall wire fence, but two so as to
give guards time to shoot, or recapture, a pris
oner if in an escape attempt he gets over, tne
first fence.
; Legislators, conversely, seem to think that
the idea of the correctional institution is to re
ceive prisoners who have a good chance for
rehabilitation, that it should not be a "maximum
security" prison, and that
tight custody should go
On the face of the
this distance, it would
argument is the better
TPHE matter of the fence isn't one of principle
A and theory only, either. Cost estimates for
it range upward to $150,000 which is a lot
of fence, although it is a drop in the bucket in
the overall state budget.
Last week the state
posed of members of
interim spending authority of funds appropri
ated to it for emergency
ture, turned down a request for money to build
tne fence.
The board, is now
ure to provide the facilities needed by the insti
tution if it is to operate as planned. But where
is the "emergency"? And still unexplained is
the need for a second fence for an institution
which nominally is for first offenders with a good
chance for rehabilitation. If they are apt to go
over the first fence, let alone the second, should
they be there at all? - v l
.'.'.'''..-.
THE correctional institution has one cell section
set aside for maximum security cases. Surely
this should suffice. If not, shouldn't the same
amount of money have been spent' expanding
the existing penitentiary, rather than building
an entirely new, separate, expensive institution?
. This all seems to add point to the desireability
of -a- state correctional authority, perhaps sim
ilar to that in California, which administers all
penal institutions.
; i With such- an authority, prisoners could be
sentenced to certain terms, but the authority
would determine in what institution, with what
degree of security, and with what chances for
education and rehabilitation, , the sentences
should be served.
IT HAS been said (by ,the Oregon Statesman)
.there has never been an institution in this state
"which was studied with
as many informed persons as the correctional
institution.".,
v This may well be true. But was it studied in
light of the state's overall penal needs, in con
nection with youth work camps, MacLaren school
for bovs. Hillcrest schools for pnrls. the neTiifn-
tiary itself, and the state board of parole? and
V 1 A
proDauon:
Mavbe some more
thinking is needed. E.
Clear
Glancing through the Roseburg News-Review
the other day, we came across a Page 1 headline
which said, "S.P. To Keep Tracks Clear."
The first paragraph said: :-
"The Southern Pacific Co. and Roseburg city
officials reached an agreement Monday night - -
whereby railroad tracks win be kept clear dur- 'i
ing traffic rush hours." ... , , . .,s
The rush hours were, defined as 7:30 to 8:30
a.m., 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 4:45 to
5:45 p.m.
IXTE'RE jealous of Roseburg.
yy It must, of course, be acknowledged that the
situation in Roseburg (chiefly; lumber) is. differ
ent than in Medford. where fruit napkin o- h
cluster along the tracks
downtown ran crossings.
But it does seem, somehow, that a thoughtful
approach to the nroblem mie-ht pome 11T1 nrifri o
similar solution.
As it is, dav after dav. We have seen hoaro
rush hour traffic held up for as much as 5 or
10 minutes at a time, by switching cars, backing
automobiles up for blocks on the main east-west
thoroughfares. - ;
IT MAY not be wholly germane to this discus-
sion, but it was interesting to note that loot
spring, when switching
iic m -Koseourg lor about 20 minutes, the train
master was given a "ticket," and the S.P. paid
a u ime m municipal
The ideal situation,
over- or under-passes at each major crossing
a project of extreme expense.
Lackincr this, though . can't the S P at. least
let rush hour traffic through without delay?
E.A. s
prisoners needing such
to the state penitentiary.
evidence at hand, and at
appear that the second
of the two.
emergency board, com
the legislature who have
purposes by the legisla
being criticized for fail
as much care and by
.....
careful and informed
A.
Track
just south of the busiest
;
held up crosstown traf-
court f or "overparlong."
of course, would he fnr
Dennis the Menace
SEE MX KBtO TALK W&OeH HS rWT '
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer,
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initiai
for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right tc
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letter!
submitted for publication 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 case. I
Not THAT Kind of Club
To the Editor: Two ladies
came to the door of the Fifty
Plu.: meeting. I heard one say
"Where is aU that lovely mu
sic coming from?"' T h e n-
"Huh, the Fifty Plus club. I
wouldn't be found dead
there!"
The poor soul doesn't know
what she is missing. .
Reminded me of another
time I asked a friend to come
to the Fifty Plus, club with
me. She replied, "I am sorry,
but I don't drink."
I was flabbergasted, until
she explained, "I know what
a club is." She named a doz
en drinking houses. Then I
knew for most of the tav
erns saloons c all their
places "dubs."
They are so mistaken. The
Fifty Plus club meets every
Friday noon at St Mark's
Guild : hall. NX. corner of
Fifth and Oakdale, Medford.
- Nothing goes on in that haU
that would displease our
Savior if He were here in the
flesh. We do have clean fun.
- Pent-up griefs, lost ones,
sickness and troubles need to
be shared with friends. Every
Fifty Plusser is friendly and
wants to help others. 1 have
reason to know.
That lovely music men
tioned was rendered by Alex
ander's fine Hawaiian band,
and. no person has ; been
"found dead" at our meetings.
In fict, those who were ill
when the club was organized
in April, 1958, aU revived and
today are as merry as happy
youngsters. .
i Don't take my word. Come
in and get acquainted.
.' . v Pearl Spackman
; Box 33
Jacksonville.
Join Objection
- To the, Editor: This is to
commend The Rev. Le Roy
Nidever for his "letter of ob
jection" in - Sunday's paper.
He wrote concerning a theatre
ad for Sept. 30, 1959.
As parents, we too object to
such ads in a newspaper, any
newspaper, but especially
where it is the one daily pa
per read by so many folks in
this area.
It is our considered opinion
that the editor and whoever
paid for that ad, and then-
like, are more of a threat to
the future of our. young peo
ple than Mr. Khrushchev and
all his communist comrades.
, Mr. and Mrs. George
Guthrie
Route 2, Box 220
Central Point, Ore.
Lot and Peace
To the Editor: Isn't the in
crease in juvenile delinquen
cy largely due to progressive
education 'and thinking? It
has- unbridled the "Devil"
that is born in aU of us. It en
couraged selfishness, self
worship and ego. It destroyed
the .sense of brotherhood and
cooperation. It did not teach
playing the game and facing
fair competition. It did not
prepare young people for life
after graduation. It left them
afraid and frustrated.
So what? "We need to teach
morals' and ' social . relations
as weU as the three R's, sci
ence and art. We must teach
our- children to overcome
their weaknesses, how to live
with them, and not indulge in
self-pity. Children need to be
made conscious of the per
fectly natural state of love.
If we aUowed ourselves to
love one another as God has
commanded, there would be
little evil. We would try to
protect and defend instead of
hurt and destroy. "Love" is
not a religion but a basic
truth of life. "Love" is also
a need in life and lack of it
prompts most of our crimes.
"Love" could do much to
overcome disease as most of
it comes from emotional up
sets. "Love" could bring peace
to the world.
The world needs to culti
vate its natural instinct to
love, so it can accept love and
return love. Only then can
we live in peace and happi
ness. v Frances Ray
Ralston, Wash.
Sen. Morse on Pensions
To the Editor: Jackson
county veterans of World War
I will be glad, I. fell certain,
to -read the contents of the
following letter wnicn I . re
ceived from Senator Morse:
"Thank you so much- for
your comments upon my
work for a reasonable pension
program for veterans of
World War I. . You may be
sure that it wiT always be my
purpose here in the Senate to
deserve your continuing con
fidence and support.
"I voted for the pension
bill, H.R. 7650, on final pass
age because it contains many
desirable provisions for wid
ows of World War II and
Korean veterans. It also en
ables veterans presently on
the pension rolls to continue
under the present program in
stead of switching to the new
law according to their own
choice. Therefore, H.R. 7650
will only affect veterans com
ing under the pension rolls in
the future.
"As I indicated, I shaU con
tinue my efforts to improve
the pension program as it af
fects World War I veterans,
and I am most appreciative
of your support of these ef
forts." David Frisch -P.
O. Box 292
Camp White, Ore.,
Mrs. Khrushchev's Clothes
To the Editor: I have been
reading many comments about
Mrs. Khrushchev's attire at
The big reception. I am won
dering, had Mrs. ,K. come
over here with trunk loads of
clothes, if she would have
made a better impression.
Mrs. K. is a grandmother, and
her type of a person has long
since lost interest in clothes.
Her life has been so full of a
number of things, some very
sad (they lost an aviator son
in War H), some things were
very productive. She taught
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
CPEAKING OF the past U.
Tuewell noted. "It is a
Presidency that the processes
corrupt, boss - managed
and infiltrated with venal
arts, have never deposit
ed a man in the White
House who was wholly
unworthy."
During the Taft ad
ministration, the White
House staff suddenly be
came convinced that
ghosts of departed Presi
dents still were roaming
about the premises.
Things reached a point
where President Taft
had to forbid any men
tion of ghosts though he admitted privately he liked to
hear about them himself!
Some years later, Margaret Truman picked up the story
about Lincoln's shade being about, and she and a couple of
schoolmates slept one night in the unused Lincoln room,
hoping for heaven knows what. Her father toyed with the
idea of hiring a ghost for the occasion but, wary of unfav
orable publicity, thought better of it.
Qi 1559. by Bennett Cert Distributed by Kins Features Syndicate.
Supre
Union Shop, Outlaw
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington-rtlPD - Stand by
for some big labor news from
the U.S. Supreme Court.
The Loo per
case, which
originated in
l Georgia, final
ly is up tnere
for decision.
Right behind
it and on the
way is anoth
er labor case
which origin
ated in North
.vie c. Wilson warouna.
A decision against organized
labor indirectly would invali
date union shop contracts in
all federal jurisdictions. The
Looper case, was brought in
Georgia against 15 standard
raliroad. labor organizations.
The AFL-CIO News a year
ago explained the situation
like this:
"Two cases (Georgia and
North Carolina) now moving
up through the lower courts
are expected to provide the
test whether union shop agree
ments can in effect be invali
dated by exempting from
their requirements any em
aaaaaaaaaaamaakXfaaaaaSV
'Undecided Vo ter' Is
Thursday's British Election
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
That popular character,
"the undecided voter," is the
kev fiauri; in Great Britain's
general elec
tions Thurs
day. It could
well be a far
reaching j de
cision. British pop
ularity polls
now place
Prime Minis-
Pnu Newsom ter xi a r o i a
Macmillan's Conservatives
and Hugh GaitskeU's Labor
ites in a dead-heat for the
voters' affections. Key is the
5M- million to 6 million vot
ers, out of a total of some 28
million, who still have not
made up their minds,
.. To help them make up their
minds, British .voters have
been treated to these defini
tions: By the Conse rvatlves
speaking of Laborite propos
als to up pensions and at the
same time cut taxes: "Desper
social science and English in
school as a young woman.
This trip, accompanying her
husband and family, was one
of the highlights of her life.
I am quoting remarks and
a poem from "The Reporter's
Notes," Oct. 1, Reporter Mag
azine:
Judgment
"It would be difficult to
find clothes comparable to
hers in the waiting room of a
New York employment agen
cy for domestic help . . ."
(Dorothy KilgaUen, in N.Y.
Journal American).
"The poor Khrushcheva did
not measure up- ,
"Her gowns were grisly
and her hair a mess;
"What matter if a woman
loves her home,
"Her man and children, if
she cannot dress?
"The poor Khrushcheva
learned to speak our
tongue,
"She smiled as mothers do,
and listened well;
"Her features said her life
was hard and long,
"Her body spoke more than
her words could teU.
"Pity not her tut ladies of
the press
"Who rate a people by the
; way they dress."
Charity R. Sander,
408 Oak Grove rd.,
Medford.
S.
Presidents, historian Rex
remarkable comment on the
of party politics, so often
me Court Ruling Could Invalidate
ployee who disagrees with the
union's legislative goals or po
litical philosophies.
"Six Southern Railway em
ployees (the Looper case), aid
ed by employer groups, said
they disagree with the legis
lative and political activities
of their unions and therefore
should not have to support
these activities with then
dues money.
Similar Case Pending
-"A similar case is pending
before the North Carolina Su
preme Court on appeal from
a lower court ruling that em
ployees under a railroad un
ion shop contract could only
be required to pay dues in
such amount as the unions
could prove in court were
'reasonably necessary and re
lated to . collective bargain
ing'." The AFL-CIO News said
that these test cases applied
only to union shop agree
ments -negotiated under the
Railway Labor Act, but that
"the principles involved gen
erally are agreed to apply to
all union contracts." "
These legal challenges to
the methods by which big
ate measures by desperate
men."
Real Issues Present
By the Laborites, speaking
of the Conservatives: "A party
of the past, a party of jingoism
and international anarchy, the
party of out-of-date colonial
ism, the party of Cyprus and
Suez ... the party of priv
ilege, the party of the snobs
and the servile and the stuffed
shirt."
Back of aU the verbiage,
however, were real issues,
both domestic and foreign.
Astronaut Life
Problems Studied
Washington -flJPD- The Fed
eral Space Agency is gradual
ly stepping up research on
how to keep astronauts alive
for long periods in the near
vacuum of space.
The National Aeronautics
and Space Administration this
week announced award of a
$90,000 contract to the Atom
ic Energy commission and
Universtiy of California for
"studies of biological life-sup
port systems in an interplan
etary environment."
.Last summer it awarded a
$60,000 contract to the Uni
versity of Minnesota lor re
search on a life-support sys
tem using plants, probably al
gae, to generate oxygen for
space travelers.
Altogether, NASA is now
spending about $450,000 on
research to find out how the
special conditions of space,
such as radiation and weight
lessness, affect living organ
isms.
Norblad To
Support Nixon
Stayton -UPD- Rep. Walter
Norblad (R-Ore.) came out
strongly for Vice President
Richard Nixon as Republican
nominee for President today,
"I don't think he'll have
any trouble getting the nomi
nation," Norblad said.
Earlier, both Secretary of
State Howell Appling and
State Treasurer Sig Unander
had indicated Nixon was their
choice.
Gov. Mark Hatfield has said
only that he will support the
party's nominee in Oregon.
Nixon and Norblad were
freshmen congressmen togeth
er and are close friends.
Norblad, at his home here
for the Congressional recess,
said he considered Hatfield a
possible candidate for the vice
presidential nomination, but
added: "Geography is against
him."
DELINQUENTS BEAT BOY
New York - (DM - Two boys
aged 13 and 15 were booked
as juvenile delinquents Tues
day night for allegedly beat
ing a 16-year-old Puerto Rican
boy with . a baseball bat on
Manhattan's lower East Side.
The injured boy, Arturo San
tiago, was taken to Columbus
Hospital with a fractured
right shoulder. His condition
was described as good.
New Many Wear
FALSE TEETH
With LittI Worry
Eat. talk, laugh or aneeze without.
fear of Insecure falsa teeth dropping.
tupping or woDBUng. fasteeth
holds Dlates firmer and more com
fortably. This pleasant powder has no
gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling.
Doess t causa nausea. It's alkaline
(non-aad). Cheeks "plate odor"
(denture breath) . Get FASTSETH at
any drug counter.
Political Monies
labor finances its political ac
tivities are likely to hit hard
er against the union shop con
cept than did the right-to-work
effort in the 1958 con
gressional election. This ef
fort to outlaw the union shop
by constitutional amendment
in several states was a spec
tacular flop. y - ,
Election Spending Ulegal
The Corrupt Practices Act
forbids any union organiza
tion to contribute or to spend
in connection with any fed
eral elective process. This
prohibition has been substan
tially nullified by a Supreme
Court ruling that unions may,
however, spend for political
education. That ruling led to
the establishment of well
heeled COPE, the AFL-CIO
Committee on Political Edu
cation. ... . , ...
The hub of the Looper and
North Carolina cases is wheth
er organized labor gets all
of its political education mon
ey from voluntary contribu
tors or, instead, dips into dues
and assessment funds. That is
a big question, and it is sub
ject to a big dispute.
Key 1 n
Generally speaking, it is
next to impossible today for
any major power to bring
about a reversal or even quick
changes in foreign policy, re
gardless of what party may
win an election. International
agreements, treaties or what
not are too far-reaching for
that. . i
But even minor changes
may lead to friction.
Between the United States
and Britain over the years,
numerous understandings
have been built up. They cov
er the world.
Oppose Bases
The - Labor Party dislikes
the idea of U.S. atomic bases
in Britain but has said it will
carry out original commit
ments, it lavors tne idea of a
disengagement of forces in
Europe . (strongly opposed by
the U.S.), and smiles upon the
poiisn uapacKi Plan for an
atom-free belt through cen
tral Europe.
Labor also would favor
leaving the atomic arms race
entirely to the U.S. and the
Soviet Union, while the rest
of the world stood aside.
Labor, much more so than
the Conservatives, could be
expected to be critical of
U. S. decisions as they arose
in moments of crisis.
Any of these differences
could lead to a strain.
Internally, the Laborites
have said i hey will nationalize
the steel industry, cut sales
taxes and increase pensions.
Chinese Win
Deportation Case
Washington 03PD A federal
judge has ruled that the Unit
ed States cannot deport two
Chinese aliens to Nationalist
held Formosa because it is not
a sovereign country.
utner court decisions pre
vent deportations to Red
China, and lawyers said the
new ruling virtually would
halt deportation of Chinese
nationalists by this country.
Judge Alexander Holtzoff
quoted Eli Maurer, the State
department's assistant legal
adviser for Far Eastern af
fairs, as saying that while the
United States recognizes the
Republic of China's "author
ity" over Formosa, the island
never has become "a country"
under international law.
U.S. immigration laws al
low a person to be deported
only to "a country."
The judge ruled in the cas
es of Cheng Fu Sheng and Lin
Fu Mei, both of San Francis
co. They came here in 1952
and 1953 as Chinese National
ist Air Force officers for mili
tary training. They defected
from the Nationalist govern
ment and decided to stay. The
Immigration Service moved
to deport them. i
PUBLIC
SERVICE
C M. Lifwiller
Mrs. Litwiller has served as lady assistant, organist and vocalist
for many years without added cost to our patrons. A sub
stantial saving on every service and is appreciated by the
many who call us.
LITWILLER
: Funeral
Home
Mountain View Chapel
, Hwy. 66 at Normal
Office 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
We Never Close
In a 1956 decision, thje Su
preme' Court held that there
had been raised before it the
question whether the union
shop "forces men into ideo
logical and political associa-
tions which violate their right
to freedom of' conscience ...
protected by . the bill of
rights." -r. ,
That ! very Question now
has been raised before , the
court by the Looper case.gA.
fair estimate of the situation
is that there is a conviction
among some members of the
court that the use of dues .
money for political purposes
would render the union shop
unconstitutional.
In the Day's Hews
By FRANK JENKINS
In the last installment nf
this column, we talked about
frivolous things - the ligffter
side of life. Let's talk today
about more serious tbinirs.
Change of pace is good for
us.
' - "o
TODAY'S big story is the
latest Russian moonock-
ci. .u. ii ewes wnat .Soviet
scientists hope it will do. it
will establish an oval orbit
out in space. This orbit wtti
be shaped much like an auto
mobile race track, with the
moon at one end of itoand the
earth at the other. It willttkid
around these ends much as a
racing automobile skids
around the ends of its0oval
race track.
As it passes around the
moon's end of this oval track
in space, it will take crude
pictures of the back side of
the moon, which earthlings
have never seen, and flash
them back to earth exactly asv
your TV flashes to you pic
tures of today's world series
game.
'-.
AS THIS is written (about
mid-morning Monday) it
isn't known whether Russia's
Lunik III will'make it around
the moon end of its planned
orbit, but the Russian scien
tists at least have confidence
enough that it will make the
grade to tell about it and
brag a little about it in a re
strained sort of way.
It could flop. It could skid
out of control as a ball
swung around your head at
the end of a string could do if
the string broke - and plunge e
off into the depths of space
. . . Or . . . it could stall ...
turn . . . and plunge back to0
a fiery death in the earth's
atmosphere.
The Soviet scientists say
they should know soon which
way it will be. 9
o o
A QUESTION:
What good is a moon satel
lite of the kind that has heeu
described for us this mopgr
ing? 8.
I wouldn't know. I doulb
if anyone who reads theags
lines today will know.
But
: If the Russians can create
a moon-and-earth-circling Sfeft
ellite, such as they are tallp- 'e
ing about, THEY CAN DOA
LOT OF OTHER THINGS.
MAYBE some of these other
things might concern our
future VERY DIRECTLY.
If we are wise, we won'io
laugh off the Russians and
their space achievements.
o
WAKE UP 0
RARIN' TO GO
Without Nagging BackaRa
NowIYoncaagetthefastKliefyrsiKeA
from nagging backache. heldaciS aaa
muscular acbes and pains that of ten rause
restless nights and miserable tireSt-out
feelings. When these discomforts come on
Britn over-exertion or stress and strain
-you want relief want it fasti Another
listurbance may be mild bladder irritation
following wrong food and drink often set-
2ng up a restless uncomfortable feelinav
Doan's Fills work fast in S separate
atays : 1. by speedy pain-relieving action to
2ase torment of nagging backache, head
aches, muscular acbes and pains. 2. QJ
soothing effect on bladder irritation. S. tnr
mild diuretic action tending to increase
ratput of the 15 miles of kidney tubes.
Enjoy a good night's sleep and thc
lame happy relief millions have for e9er
0 years. New. lam. siza aavea mnnev-
Set Soaa's fills today 1
Mrs. Utwiller
151
'It is better to know us and not need us.
than to need us and not know us."
G3
O