Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 21, 1960, Image 4

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    J MAIL TRIBUNE, M.dford, Or.
A Monday, March 21, 1960
MEDF01fflQiSfcTaBU!iS
"Iveryone In Southern Oregon
- Reads The Mall Tribune"
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
33 North Fir St., Ph SP 2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
GERALD T LATHAM. Bus. Mgr
ERIC W. ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Women's Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail In Advance. Copy 10c
Daily and Sunday 1 year $18.00
Daily and Sunday S mos. 8.00
Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25
Sunday Only One year S4.20
By Carrier In Advance Medford
Ashland. Central Point Eagle
Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill.
Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv
er. Talent and on motor routes.
Daily and Sunday 1 year $18 00
Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50
Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
All Terms Cash in Advance
Official Paper of City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
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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 21. 1950 (Tuesday)
Heads of Medford, Rogue
River and Talent Irrigation
districts urge water users in
this area to vote in favor of
soil conservation district at
election tomorrow.
A four - year - old Medford
boy died in a Portland hos
pital yesterday from a brain
hemorrahage.
20 YEARS AGO
March 21. 1940 (Thursday)
Fifteen CCC enrollees of
Camp Gasquet were injured
yesterday, several critically,
in a truck accident near Gold
Hill.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "It is
reported a higher type of can
didate is running for Congress
this year. It appears qualifi
cations other than the strength
to grab and hang onto the
presidential coat-tails and feel
sorry for the poor, are now
necessary."
30 YEARS AGO
March 21. 1930 (Friday)
Publisher of local weekly
here is acquitted of two crim
inal libel charges, but jury
recommends he "tone down"
his writing.
Local fruitment lighted
smudgepots last night for first
time this season.
40 YEARS AGO
March 21, 1920 (Sunday)
Logging has reopened
the Butte Falls district.
in
Nine inches of snow
are
reported on the ground near
Prospect.
SO YEARS AGO
Much 21. 1910 (Monday)
One result of popularity of
auto here is sale yesterday of
Union Livery and Feed Sta
ble, on Riverside ave. between
Eight and Ninth sts., for
S9.200: will be turned into
storehouse.
Only 50 votes cast by noon
in today's election to grant gas
plant franchise here.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or fan correct is superier!
seven or eight is excellent; fiva
(is is OOfl.
1. What beloved American
humorist said: "I never met a
man I didn't like?"
2. In baseball, which base
is called the "keystone" sack?
3. In what western state is
Zion National park?
4. Besides Noah, what hu
man beings were taken in the
ark?
5. Are there more Chris
tians, or more non-Christians,
in the world?
6. Who wrote the novel
"Gone With the Wind?"
7. Is Dale Carnegie best
known for his course in steel
technology, public speaking,
or dry farming?
8. How did the Carthagin
ian general Hannibal die?
9. What are the five posi
tions on a man's basketball
team?
10. In the Biblical story,
what baby was hidden in a
basket of rushes?
Answers: 1. Will Rogers. 2.
Second base. 3. Utah. 4.
Noah's wife, his three ions
and their wives. 5. More non
Christians. 6. Margaret Mit
chell. 7. Public speaking. 8.
By poison. 9. Center, two
guards and two forwards. 10.
Moses.
The Modem Babylon?
There is an uncomfortable amount of truth in
Senator Fullbright's charge that during the Ei
senhower Administration the United States has
become "a Twentieth Century Babylon, headless
and heartless, a big fat target for the ably-led
Communist world and the clamoring poverty-ridden
underdeveloped nations."
It is humiliating, as he further observes, that
the United States, with an income nearly double
that of any other country, should be "debating
the extent to which our armed forces may be in
ferior to those of the Soviet Union."
"I17HAT is the cause? Senator Fulbright com-
plains that because of President Eisenhow
er s attitude toward national problems few men
of ideas come to Washington." This is a point
that may well be marked down by history as the
great debit against the Eisenhower era.
Mr. Eisenhower personally prefers to associate
with successful business men and his approach,
as, in indeed, he promised in 1952, is that of a
business man. This is not to disparage business,
but the art and the science of leadership in the
latter half of the twentieth century require the
best and most imaginative brains in the countiy,
wherever they may be found, and the will to use
them.
TTrlOSE whose memories go back to the depres-
sion have noted the contrast between the dar
ing schemes President Roosevelt employed to
pull the country out of a desperate domestic
crisis and the tepid budget-minded measures of
today. And yet many wise men who see through
the current fog of complacency believe that the
United States now faces an international crisis
of the greatest moment.
Bold plans are needed. Such men as Wallace,
Ickes, Frankfurter, Hopkins, TugweH and Cor
coran arid Cohen were bitterly criticized in the
1930s, but they had ideas and enthusiasm. Where
are today's .counterparts?
I
T IS too late for this
action.
But the next President, whether Democrat or
Republican, will inherit the formidable task of
reinvigorating American leadership. He will need
idea men, and to attract them to Washington he
will have to establish the atmosphere of dynamic
forward motion that has
years.
This is something for the voters to ponder.
St. Louis Post-Distpatch.
For Best Results
It won't be long before Lane county's board
of commissioners and
have selected a committee to study and, perhaps,
propose local usage of the "home rule" powers
granted county governments by the 1959 Oregon
Legislature.
Under the home rule
are to select four committeemen. The incumbent
legislators also will select
choose a ninth member.
It goes without saving
should be top-flight. All
ed in the problems of our county government and
sufficiently well-informed to evaluate Lane Coun
ty's needs for governmental changes via a new
charter.
IT GOES without saying, too, that partisanship
should play no part in the committee's selec
tion, nor its operation. There should, for instance,
be no arbitrary deadline set on the committee's
service simply because candidates of either party
might be benefited by a report issued prior to
the November elections. There should be no in
herent taint upon what the committee is to do,
nor should any be inferred: There should be a
careful balancing of the political affiliations of
the committeemen.
What the charter committee faces is sure to
an arduous and involved task. And a highly im
portant one. It is impossible to believe there is no
room for improvement in our present form of
county government. At the same time, it is im
possible to believe that anyone connected with
the charter study processes will view their re
sonsibilities as any less than those of providing
future residents of Lane county with a govern
mental form as sound as men can now conceive.
Eugene Register-Guard.
Eye for an Eye ,
On reading of the murder of three wives of
Chicago business leaders who had gone hiking
in a state park not far from Chicago and of the
murder of a woman living near Ashland who had
been shot nine times, one wonders if the human
race has progressed very far from its animal
origins.
Such brutality is quite incomprehensible to
normal minds. It is crimes like these which keep
so many persons convinced of the need to retain
capital punishment, not that it accomplishes much
by way of deterrence, but it satisfies the instinct
of punishment, an "eye for an eye," itself an in
heritance from the law of the jungle. Oregon
Statesman, Salem.
administration to take
been absent in recent
its legislative delegates
law, the commissioners
four. These eight will
that all nine members
should be keenly interest
Dennis the
,lMONlQa
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 initial for publication is permissible. The
Mail Tribune reserves the right to 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 the
views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the case.
Space Visitors
To the Editor: After 13
years of reading the pros and
cons of admittedly unidenti
fied objects seen in space, I
have never ruled out the pos
sibility "the things' have
been identified as being real,
or only some mechanical in
vention of an inhabitant of
the modern age.
On returning from the Sis
kiyou summit, from work on
Highway 99 around 4:30 p.m.
on July 6, 1947, in company
of four other persons, we all
sighted an unusual object that
was opaline in color, being
round in shape, traveling
north at a moderate rate of
speed, apparently a mile high,
looking to be the size of a
polo ball in diameter. At that
particular moment there ws
a rather long lone white
cloud hovering over Emigrant
lake east of Ashland. The
whirling o b j e c t heading
straight into the lone cloud
went out of sight.
Afterward the cloud turned
a dark color. On reaching
Ashland we all decided to
report the unusual sighting
of the object to the manager
and editor of the Ashland
Daily Tidings who gave it a
story in the issue next day.
After returning home the
same evening I kept on a look
out for the slowly, ever-
lengthening dark cloud drift
ing leisurely in a northwest
erly direction. The next morn
ing rather early the same
cloud was visible yet, appar
ently right over Medford.
That same evening of the
second day, looking in the
editorial column of the Med
ford Mail Tribune, I read a
letter to the editor, some Med
ford resident had reported
having seen the same uniden
tified object moving along
side the cloud in a northwest
erly direction. I asked one of
the weather station observ
ers then employed at the top
of the Siskiyous if anyone un
leashed a weather balloon
that day, and he replied no,
so that part of the probable
theory was dismissed as a clue
of the unexplained mystery.
The lone dark cloud was a
most unusual coincidence that
made a screen for the space
visitor.
Bert Kissinger,
, 520 Boardman st.,
' Medford.
From Athletic Club
To the Editor: We, of the
Medford Athletic Club, have
followed with interest the
newspaper articles and letters
pertaining to the Pal Club.
We received the definite
impression the Police Depart
ment is most anxious to re
activate the Pal Club.
As a result, we offered, free
of any charge, to allow them
to place their equipment in
the Medford Athletic Club
building located at 843 South
Riverside. As a matter of fact,
we of the Medford Athletic
Club were willing to physi
cally transport all of the Pal
Club's equipment to our build
ing and set it up. We further
had an agreement drawn
where we would take out a
fire insurance policy in the
name of the Pal Club and
permit and welcome any boy
under the age of 21 years, to
have full use of our facilities
without charge or restriction
of any kind.
This offer was rejected by
the officials of the Pal Club.
Why, we do not know. We
regret that Pal Club officials,
apparently did not feel they
should take advantage of our
offer since it would mean the
almost immediate re-opening
of the Pal Club for the boys
of the community, without
cost of any kind to Pal or its
sponsors. -
The Medford Athletic Club
Menace
NV3W no, iMON.
will be open for its members
by April 15, 1960, and we
wish to take this opportunity
to extend an invitation to any
boy to use our training equip
ment without charge of any
kind. We, as a group of local
business men, have the inter
est of boys at heart and wish
to aid them any way we prop
erly can. We hope they will
avail themselves of our fa
cilifies.
In closing, let me quote one
paragraph from the by-laws
of our non-profit club: "To
conduct amateur boxing and
wrestling in Southern Ore
gon".
K. E. Myers, President
Medford Athletic Club
843 South Riverside ave
Medford
Post Office Defended
To the Editor: I want to
come to the defense of the
Medford post office depart
ment. In the four years since we
moved to the valley, we've
had as many different ad
dresses, the present one since
last summer. Adding to this
confusion, the last change was
a different number and town
. . . but SAME ROAD. Cou
pled with the frequent mis
spelling of our name, and
"wrong number s," we've
marveled that we have never
"lost" any mail.
Because I was late in get
ting out my Christmas cards
and notes with our new ad
dress, we feared, this year,
many of our incoming cards
would go astray. But as busy
as the Medford crew was,
they always took the time to
cross out our old address and
write in the new ... so that
not one of our "once-a-year"
greetings was missing. That's
the kind of neglect we like!
May I also toss a bouquet
to the Central Point post
office, for their correct in
terpretation (there's no other
word for it) on some of our
mail, for the above reasons.
I wonder if "Aggravated"
(March 17, Communications)
always adds "Oregon" after
Phoenix, on his return ad
dress? It does seem a bit
superfluous when one lives so
near the destination of their
mail; but it might be worth
the effort.
Thanks again to both postal
crews.
Mrs. Alfred Gallocci
Central Point, Ore.
4297 Table Rock rd.
Times Change
To the Editor: Has it come
to the point where a United
States citizen has to get a pass
port to" travel from one state
to another, or to accept em
ployment? Why. should there be ten
sions in a land supposed to be
of "liberty and justice for
an"?
- Mr. Wilson writes of the
New" York professdr's daugh
ter wanting to marry a Negro
ball player. Well, it hasn't
taken place, and the incident
is so unique that the story
has been told and retold
"From Dan "even to Beer
sheba." Intermarriage has
never been a problem in the
U.S. or any 'country, it isn't
intermarriage but intercourse
which is the problem.
. A speaker once said, "The
white man has ' been a very
bad boy when he gets away
from home." He has not taken
wife, but has left his progeny
throughout the world, where
ever he went. Everywhere is a
"Melting pot," races have and
always will mix. Some scien
tists claim there are few pure
blooded negroes in U. S., and
sociologists, ant hropologists
and psychologists have prov
en there is no difference in
races; the ' members ' of any
race can take on the culture
TV Violence Seen As Easing Juvenile
Frustrations, Bachelor Doctor Opines
By DICK WEST
Washington (UPD A friend
of mine in the baby doctoring
game nearly startled me out
S of my romp
ers the other
night by say
ing a few kind
words about
television.
I was star
tled because
nearly all the
com ments I
have heard or
read about TV
dick west
shows recently have been
critical. Much of it was direct
ed at the steady stream of
shoot-em-ups and whodunits
flowing from the tiny screen.
There seems to be a strong
body of opinion which holds
that the cowboys and the pri
vate eyes are corrupting our
young by glorifying violence.
For all I know, these critics
may be right. I am not trying
to pick a quarrel with them in
quoting my pediatric friend
or to hold out his words as
the gospel.
Keeps Minds Busy
I take the position that as
long as little minds are occu
pied with western gun duels,
little hands aren't going to be
and adapt themselves to the
environment of the commu
nity in which they happen to
be born or located, if not pre
vented by prejudiced, igno
rant people.
Now we come to the
"Founding Fathers." Our Dec
laration of Independence and
our Constitution, etc., were
very great documents, but
they didn't cover enough,
hence the many amendments.
Had these "Founding Fathers"
listened to Thomas Paine (his
"Common Sense" has been re
cently put at the head of the
list of great books) and put in
a clause abolishing slavery,
we would have avoided the
catastrophe of the Civil War
and its consequences. John
Adams should have pondered
his wife Abigail's letter, ask
ing him and associates to the
convention, "To do something
for the ladies," instead of
laughing it off, as the "Found
ing Mothers," (including my
grandmothers) endured every
thing the Founding Fathers
endured, then they endured
the Founding Fathers.
I am still indignant when I
think of being disenfranchised
when I went to Nevada from
Wyoming, the first place in
the world to give women the
franchise.
No, you can't sweep the
ocean tide back with a brook.
The colored races, which are
far in the majority, are on the
march all over the world. We
can't even condemn their vio
lence in some countries. "We
weren't so gentle when we
kicked the behinds of our op
pressors out of Yorktown to
the time of Yankee Doodle."
(Mrs.) Charity R. Sander
408 Oak Grove rd.
Medford.
Swallows
To the Editor: Well, as
usual the Los Angeles Times
and other California publicity
promotes bannered" the re
turn of the swallows to the
old San Juan Capistrano mis
sion, and well they might, as
is their custom, but unlikely
to be on March 19th or an
other man-specified day. No
more possible than Medford
Pear Blossom Festival offi
cials who try so hard to have
it come when the pear trees
are in full bloom, the same
as the Wenatchee Apple Blos
som Festival attempts that
way.
Both are dependent on the
weather the same as the swal
lows, who can only feed in
flight on insects that hatch
out with warming days.
The California publicity
lads at first reported how St.
Joseph some 160 years ago fed
starving swallows on March
19th, and in grateful appre
ciation they, have since been
coming on that day. But when
it was pointed out' to them
that this was utterly, impos
sible, they announced a year
ago that old St. Joseph found
the swallows driven from old
nesting . places and that he
(St. Joseph) told the fluttering
tribe they could nest at the
old mission, and so they did
and are still doing.
Now, as the pesky sparrows
have taken all my first -planting
of peas, and we have scold
ed, threatened and begged the
little feathered raiders in Eng
lish and Chinook Jargon to
desist forthwith, and they
have paid not the least heed,
would a massive upbraiding in
Old Spanish or Portugese be
understood and heeded?
This is of high importance
to we old-ones, considering
our limited income and rising
price of eatables 'from the
markets; would our good and
kindly neighbors down Cali
fornia Way let us know
pronto, afore the second plant
ing is all et?
F.J.Clifford
Route 2, Box 200F
Central Point, Ore.
out stripping cars or little feet
running through the room
where daddy is trying to read
the paper.
Much to my surprise, when
I made my feelings known to
tne medico who staunches
runny noses around mv house.
he didn't threaten to have me
arrested, or even lift an eye
brow. As a matter of fact, he said
a certain amount of exposure
to televised violence probab
ly is good for the juvenile
race. This was so abrupt a de
parture from what I presum
ed to be the conventional out
look, I urged the good doctor
Foreign Notebook: Plebiscite
Proposal; Aging Presidents
Ey PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
From the foreign editors
notebook:
To Be or Not To Be
West German Socialists are
not happy
with Chancel
lor K o n r a d
Aden auer's
proposal that
B e r liners be
allowed to
vote to decide I
their own fu
ture - whether
to go over
to the East
ihl Newsnm
German Communists or retain
their links with the West.
However, the Socialists still
have not decided whether to
go on record formally oppos
ing it. Meanwhile, there is no
doubt about the Communist
attitude. They oppose it be
cause the vote certainly would
go to the West. Adenauer's
personal prestige at home al
Washington Report
By WILLIAM
Washington - There was a
time when Vice President
Richard Nixon desperately
needed the all-out backing of
President Eisenhower, but
that time has long since gone.
And now that he does not
really need a
full Eisenhow
er endorse
ment is exact
ly what Nixon
at last has
been given.
This is the
the short and
ironical story
nf lVTr TTico.i.
William s. " ; " , ;
White hower s belat
ed declaration of unqualified
support for the vice president
for the 1960 G. O. P. presiden
tial nomination.
To have had such support
only three months agOr-before
Governor Nelson Rockefeller
of New York bowed out as a
presidential challenger, t o
him-would have been a great
boon to Nixon. To have had
it .years before would have
been an even greater help.
For Nixon was then walk
ing alone in the Eisenhower
wing of the G. O. P., shunned
by most of the "Eisenhower
Republicans." He was left to
row his own boat-upstream
all the way.
HE IS not the first man to
have worked his own
passage only to receive at
length the very assistance
which once would have meant
so much but which comes too
late.
The truth, to this corres
pondent's knowledge, is that
Nixon long ago privately de
cided he would be content if
the White House simply stay
ed neutral at the Republican
National convention. He fig
ured neutrality was all he
needed while he was still be
ing opposed by Rockefeller for
the nomination. He is bound
to figure now that, speaking
bluntly, he now does not real
ly require anything at all
from the Eisenhower adminis
tration. This is why he cooly offer
ed no thanks when Mr. Eisen
hower announced he would be
a Nixon man all the way. (It
is also possible that Nixon
had a wry secondary motive
in saying that he always re
fused to comment "on state
ments by the president, even
when they involve me." This
tone was very similar to Mr.
Eisenhower's own tone on
past occasions in refusing
comment when Nixon was in
trouble. The president would
say he did not wish to com
ment on the statement of oth
er people.)
HPHERE is another reason
why Nixon is not dancing
in glee. The effect of the pres
ident's statement (and perhaps
his intention) was to tie Nixon
ever closer to the outgoing ad
ministration. The vice presi
dent does not care to be tied
quite so closely.
He cannot, for example.
stand 100 per cent with an
to elaborate-on his own time,
of course.
As I understand his thesis,
the average child, deep down
in his pure little heart, is
nursing a grudge against his
old man. Suppose your sibling
is engaged in some innocent
pursuit, such as using your
favorite pipe as a launching
pad for soap bubbles. You
naturally tell him to knock
it off and get to bed.
Junior's immediate instinct
is to pounce upon dear old
dad and commit mayhem.
This he realizes is impractical,
you being bigger than he is
and very likely stronger. Be-
ready has been considerably
enhanced by his U.S. visit,
Heirs Apparent
With Nationalist Chinese
President Chiang Kai-shek's
return to office a foreeone
conclusion, political sources
are predicting a cabinet shake
up. Primary result would be
to increase the duties of vice
president and Premier Chen
Cheng to prepare the way for
the day he may eventually
take over from the aging
Chiang.
It also is believed a possi
bility that Syngman Rhee, 84-year-old
president of the Re
public of Korea, might step
aside for his heir-apparent,
Vice President-elect Lee Ki
Poong. Lee has been hand-
picked by Rhee and would
be expected to go down the
line for Rhee's program.
Air Rights
The U. S.-Philippines nego
tiations for a new air treaty
S. WHITE
Eisenhower farm program
against which many farm-belt
Republicans are crying, "No,
No!" He does not propose to
be bound in advance to every
possible evolution in an Eisen
hower policy of negotiation
with the Russians which
might go farther in accommo
dation than Nixon himself
would go.
And a final truth is this: It
is not Mr. Nixon who at this
point owes Eisenhower a debt.
The vice president today is
incomparably the stronger
within the Republican party
organization, though not in
the country. And it is the vice
president who for seven years
has done the slogging, front
line fighting for the G. O. P.
which the president has so
consistently avoided.
TNDEED, the Eisenhower-
Nixon relationship has
been oddly mixed from the
start. On the president's side,
it has been alternately cordial
and chilly. On Nixon's side,
it has been simply correct.
He has been failthful to his
chief, but there is no deep
warmth between these two.
inere never has oeen since
the 1952 campaign when Nix
on got into difficulty over po
litical contributions. He got
no sympathy from Mr. Eisen
hower until in his celebrated
broadcast with his dog Check
ers he swept the country by
emotional storm.
He won the nation's forgive-iess-and,
only then, Mr. Eis
enhower's. (Copyright, 1960, By United
Feature Snydicaie, Inc.)
Every service we conduct is a result of
infinite attention to details and your per-
sonal
wishes.
Planned with devoted care even modestly
priced services are brought to a single im
pression of reverent beauty.
j sides that, patricide is illegal
m most states.
Unable to use you as an out
let for his hostility, the child
becomes frustrated. Frustra
tions can lead to big trouble
and this is where television
comes in.
Seeing all those outlaws be
ing gunned down by the mar
shal provides him a means of
releasing pent - up emotions.
Subconsciously, he is aiming
the slugs at you-know-who.
This all sounds logical to me
but perhaps I should add a
qualifying sentence. The pe
diatrician I quote is a bachelor
who never watches television
himself.
may develop into another no
table squabble. The Philip
pines cancelled the old treaty
as one-sided earlier this year
and think they have every
thing to gain and nothing to
lose by being tough. They fig
ure they have have the United
States over a barrel-particularly
Pan American Airways
whose franchise to operate in
the Philippines expires soon.
Brass Tacks
This week two international
conferences get down to tough
bargaining in Geneva, Switz
erland. But at least in the case
of the 10-nation disarmament
conference no firm results are
expected soon. Predictions are
that it will take a year, and
possibly years, before the dis
armament conferees can reach
any sort of conclusion. The
other meeting is the 89-nation
law of the sea conference
which, among other things, in
volves important fishing
rights.
ATTORNEY NOMINATED
Eugene - (UPD - Joe A. Mc
Keown, a 1929 graduate of
the University of Oregon, has
been nominated for the posi
tion of president of the Uni
versity Alumni association.
McKeown is a Coos Bay at
torney. How To Hold
FALSE TEETH
More Firmly in Place
Do your false teeth annoy and em
barrass by slipping, dropping or wob
bling when you eat. laugh or talk?
Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on
your plates. This alkaline (non-acid)
powder holds false teeth more firmly
and more comfortably. No gummy,
gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does cot
sour. Checks "plate odor" (denture
breath). Get FASTEETH today al
any drug counter.
Have Your Doctor
Phone Your
Prescription
Then you can pick it hp
while you PARK & SHOP
or we'll
DELIVER IT FREE
Open 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Daily
CLOSED SUNDAYS
Green Stamps
Main and Central
...A
Gratifying
Assurance
PERL
Funeral Home
SPACIOUS PARKING LOT