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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1960)
o MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE MEDFORD ORE. FRIDAY JUVS II 1860 4 A MEDFORDSjTHIBWIE "Everyone In Southern Oregon Reads TheMail Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by MKDKORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fir St., Ph SP 24141, ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM Bui Mgr. ERIC W ALLEN JR . MnR Editor KARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT Spotta Editor CLIVE STARCHER Women'! Editor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr An IndeDcndent Newspaper Entered ai second class matter at Mealed Oregon, unner aci oi March 3. 1B07 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bv Mail In Advance. Copy 10c Daitv and Sunday 1 year $15 OC Daily and Sunday 6 moi 8.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 mo 4.23 Sunday Only One year $4 20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville Hold him Phoenix Shady Cove. Rogue Riv r Talent and on '.notnr route, Daily and Sunday 1 year 818 00 Da ly and Sunday 1 mo I SO Carrier and Dealer copy 10c All Terms Cash In Advance "hfllrlal Paner of Cltv of Medfnrd Official Papr of Jack -son County United" Press International Full Leased Wire U P I Telephoto Newspicturea "MEMBER OF AITDIT BUREAU OFCIRCtTLATIONS Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO INC Of flees in New York Chicago De. Irolt. San Frnncisco. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At larln. Vancouver. B NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAI kS(pKTl(S)r. 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 June 10, 19S0 (Saturday) More than 1.000 Lions club members are expected to ar rive in Medford in what prom ises to be the largest state Lion conclave in history. The Medford Rogues down ed the Klamath Gems 8 to 2 in a Far West league baseball game last night. 20 YEARS AGO June 10, 1940 (Tuesday) Secretary of Oregon Coast Highway association tells the Grants Pass Chamber of Commerce that tourist busi ness will be poor this summer because everyone has "war litters." ' From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "A gen. c-rnl thaw started yesterday and the mercury soared to 9B It was so hot they put oat nicnl in the hay-hands' water pail to keep it cool." 30 YEARS AGO June 10, 1930 (Tuesday) Mann's remodeled store opens to public. New city playground opens. 40 YEARS AGO June 10. 1920 (Wednesday) New city directory to be published soon. Petitions filed for recall of two members of the Medford school board. 50 YEARS AGO June 10. 1910 (Friday) Medford police arrest three men for bathing in the nude near the Bear creek bridge and fined them $5 apiece. Many Ashland citizens are opposed to granting a fran chise there for a proposed trolley line. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or fen corrett it superior even or eight is excellent; Nve er til is good. 1. Is the color of a flag of truce white, blue, or yellow? 2. What is the chief agricul tural crop in Cuba? 3. Dues the average annual temperature vary with lati tude? 4. What word expresses a thousand thousand? 5. Was the safety pin inven ted before or after the birth of Christ? 8 What is a vicuna? 7. Who was the U.S. Prcsi dent during the "era of Good Feeling"? 8. Did God Introduce life on earth the second, third or fifth day? 9. Who is known as the "Father of Medicine"? 10. Who originally spon sored the National Foundation of Infantile Paralysis' Answers: 1. White. 2. Sugar. 3. Yei. 4. Million. 5. Belore. 6. Llama. 7. James Monroe. 8. Third. 9. Hippocrates. 10. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Bng Honored as Top Record-Maker Hollywood - il'PH - Singer Bing Crosby Thursday was honored as the "first citizen of the recording Industry" be cause his records have sold two hundred million copies. A platinum recording of his "White Christmas" recording was placed in a copper cap sule with other mementos and buried in the sidewalk at Sun set and Vine. The ceremony was part of the dedication of filmland sidewalks w 1 1 h names of movie stars. The capable was marked to be opened in 2000 A.D, o Triumph in the Making Kansas saved itself $38 million. How did it do it? By spending money. Paradoxical? Sort of. But it is an example of what can be done is being done in the field of mental health these days. Last January, Dr. William C. Menninger, one of the nation's foremost psychiatrists, reported on Kansas' progress in mental health to the Colo rado legislature, which was considering a stepped-up program in this field. What he said makes interesting and cheering news both for tax-conscious citizens, and for those aware of the awful human waste caused by mental illness. J.JERE is part of what he said: "The (Kansas) legislature acted by providing a 60 per cent increase in the budget in 1949; 118 per cent in 1951; by 1955, three times what we spent in 1948. We began to recruit a professional staff and set up a training program. In addition to doctors, psychologists, social workers, nurses and occupational therapists were recruited and trained. The number of attendants was doubled. Occupational and recreational programs were started. "A new philosophy about and understanding of mental illness arose. A very extensive volunteer sys tem was developed through the help of the citizens of the community. "Within two years the Topeka Hospital population dropped to 1,500 (from 1,800). Today the population is 116238 per cent reduction. Since 1959, 729 pa tients have been discharged who had been in resi dence in the hospital for 10 years or more, 128 of them for 20 years or longer. A recommendation that a new hospital be built was never carried out, saving $38 million . . ." AS A RESULT, Dr. Menninger said, Kansans are proud that the mental hospital population in that state is down 30 per cent, in contrast to an average increase of 15 per cent in 15 other states. Even with the hospitals not vet adequately staffed, 74 per cent of stay long. Most of them go home within six months. Similar miracles of healing are being per formed elsewhere in the nation. A new concent of therapy, accompanied by the development of new drugs, is giving mental illness one of the highest cure rates of any disability IF and WHEN adequate treatment is provided. uregon is sharing in it has not yet gone as far as it should go. DR. MENNINGER described the conditions in fVio Tr.ni,n v,,;fi n.. t iuiycn-a uuoiniai uciui c Hie cilclllgc a, description which unhappily fits many mental lnsuiuuons even tociay: "Men endlessly pushing mops on already over polished floors. Gloomy wards with old rocking chairs lined up against the wall. Beds in the halls and mat tresses on the floor at night. Uniform and drab, ill fitting clothing. Inadequate and ill-prepared food, unattractively dished out. Patients cooped up for days on end or literally herded out in large groups on park benches. Physical restraints straight-jackets all over the place. Untrained and often brutal at tendants." Not a pretty picture. ' "J .oh, ptci-- Ml V ItUOJJlMUO V 1111.11 are hospitals, clean, fresh, open, cheerful, not iail-Hke custodial institutions Trip r.ih'n nf rlnn. tors to patients is increasing. Intensive treatment i i i , , is replacing nopeiess custody. A ND the benefits resulting are staggering. Oregon, now completing a new mental hos pital not far from Portland, probably never will nave to build another. Instead of facing a lifetime in an institution. most mental patients can now look forward to returning home relatively soon, and continuing to receive neip ana treatment there. (Increasing use of "half-wav houses" insti tutions which can help was described by Dr. What all this means in the general health of society, in the rescue of productive, tax-paying citizens, is snnpiy incaicuiaoie. A LL this takes money lots of it. But it is one of the cases where the exnen diture of money will bring rewards far in excess of the amounts spent, rewards which are both visible and invisible. Much yet remains to be learned about mental illness, for the human mind is the most obscure of all the organs of the But cures do not have prolession is m the midst of a ereat break through in mental illness, and men and women are being healed, even their illness are not yet It is a triumph in the are here already. L.A. Milking v.. M. jucKor, whose inventive mind gave birth to the internationally famous Sno-Cat, once had another idea the manufacture of "glaciers, by spraying water into winter, where it would available as run-off during the dry summer. Despite some talk came to anything, which But now we read of ning to nnd out whether similar use can be made of natural glaciers, "milkinir" more water from them in dry years, slowing their melting in damp years, and perhaps speeding their growth in winter months. By using cloud-seeding, and various dusting preparations to speed or gree ot control may be short western America, considerable interest, and fltomise. h.A. new admissions do not this revolution, a thouch convalescent individuals Menmntrer.) body. to wait, for the medical when the basic causes of fully understood. making, and the benefits Glaciers deep canyons during the freeze, and then become of experiments, it never is a pity. scientists who are plan f etard melting, some de established. In water their experiments hold Dennis the I OON'T kmow her number. 6ut her name IS AW&ARBT AN' SHE WEARS GLASSES Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name end address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication if permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for pub lication 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. Questions To the Editor: Good Nightl What next is going to happen to the Jackson county proper ty owners? Now someone dreamed up Home Rule Government possi bility of County Bonding or Bancrofting for county im provements. I am a college graduate but I don't understand the mean ing of the above. I would like to know more about it. Who are the people that are on the committee, where do they live and what do they do for a living? This Home Rule business sounds like another "Booby Trap" to me. The paper states with the Home Rule for Jack son County, advantages as more central control through a board of supervisors or the county court. Why, the two? One is enough - the county court. The board of supervisors just means an added expense to the county. I would like to know about "Bancrofting." What is its exact meaning and how and why it would benefit Jackson county prop erty owners? Docs any one else think the same as I do? Mrs. Lillian Green, 2411 Sunset Court, Medford. Editor's note; These are le gitimate questions, deserving an answer, which we shall attempt: 1. "Home rule' is a plan whereby county government can be adapted to the needs of the particular county. A con stitutional amendment was passed by a vote of the people in 1958 permitting counties to draw up and esta blish, through a vote of the people, such home rule charters. The county court here plans to es tablish a committee to STUDY such a proposal, but they have not yet been chosen. 2. '"Bancrofting bonds" is a phrase derived from Oregon's Bancroft law. This simply pro vides that bonds issued to pay for local improvements (streets, sewers, etc.) can be retired over a period of years, with the assessments against property paid over the same period of time, rather than all at once. It enables residents to pay a $100 assessment, for in stance, at a rate of $10 per year for 10 years. 3. The form of "home rule" in county government is not specified, and can take any one of several forms. For in stance it could be an adapta tion of the county court sys tem, or a county manager sys tem, or a board of supervisors system. In any case, it would have to be voted on by the people before being adopted. 2 Bridges at U-2 To the Editor: Less knock it off! Less knock it off! Drop the U-2 deal now, that's his tory. The UP and the AP and the YP and the HP have really racked Uiat one up. Let the freelancers dig out something else now, or fill that space with something like that Eighth st. bridge! It'll have to be widened and straightened out next year, won't it? And I notice the curve on Uic new 10th st. bridge is to the South, that's some kind of harneony Isn't it? New things every day, shows how we real ly get along: one curves North, other curves South, wcq al ways have plenty of time to analyze the traffic problems after wpbulld the bridges. (Name on file) lirdford.1- o Menace Emergency Service To the Editor: My husband and I operate a neighborhood grocery store. One of our friends came running to the store looking for something to revive her husband who was unconscious. She and a neigh bor had tried without success to contact several doctors, as they had no family doctor. It was Saturday afternoon and a doctor could not be located who could come to the house. My husband went home with her and upon seeing her hus band realized that he was in desperate need of help. He called the fire department for a resuscitator and ambulance. Promptly the fire depart ment arrived and we were as tounded to see a regular Fire Engine with firemen in full dress and equipment to fight a fire instead of the emergen cy rescue truck we had ex pected. The firemen plus am bulance crew did a wonderful job trying to revive the pa tient, but he was beyond help. What bothers us is, could this life have been saved if a doctor had been reached in time? The same situation came up again the next week when a young man had a heart attack and his family after repeated attempts, secured a doctor. De lay In this instance also could have been disastrous. - In talking this situation over with our personal doctor, I was informed that in the yel low pages of the telephone book, under Physicians and Surgeons, is a boxed-in notice of what number to call if doctor is needed in an emer gency. In the years that I have lived in Medford and vicinity, I had not known of the serv ice. Upon inquiring among friends and customers, I found no one else who did either. Above our telephone on a card written in large letters (easy to read when excited) are these numbers: 1. Doctor's office. 2. Doctor's home phone 3. Medford ambulance 4. Hospital 5. Fire Department 6. Police Department 7. Doctors' Exchange Emergency Number If you do not have a doctor of your own, call Doctors Ex change (SP. 2-7644) or call an ambulance or take the patient to the hospital. There is al ways someone to help and each doctor donates so many hours each month so a doctor is always available. Our doctor also Informed Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF A BEARDED BEATNIK occupied a one-room Hat in a cold-water apartment whose furniture consisted solely of a rickety bed and one chair. A visitor appeared one evening and discovered two old magazines on the floor. "So," she sneered, "you hired a decorator!" Disneyland hotel receiv ed a phone call from an ebullient Texan, who de clared he was headed in that direction with a few friends and would require 14 double rooms. He added that he waa traveling by car. How," demanded tha elerk.o'can you transport 14 rooms full of people by car?" Son," explained the Texan, O Russel C route, co-autrejv of Sound of Mutie," confesses that he's partial to operettas-, tourte," he adde, "I mean telephone operettas." C Mtfc hr Buatlt Cert Dittributtl j King Features Syndicate Man-of-thc-Week: Premier Kishi, Who Faces Opposition From Friend By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor The man of the week: Premier Nobusuke Kishi of Japan. The place: Tokyo. The quote: "If I resigned under pressure of violence. Democracy in Japan would be destroyed." Democracy is a word used often by Kishi, a small man with protruding teeth and a perpetual smile, whose World War II record is a favorite target of his political opponents. Kishi was one of those who signed eJ the dec 1 " r PHiLNiswsoN tion of war against the United States in 1941, and it was he who, in 1939, designed the mili- IS? West Marks 20th Milestone; First News Job Recalled By DICK WEST Washington -IUPD- It was 20 years ago this week that I first fell in love. That was when I got my first newspa per job. I know what you think I am going to say now. You think I'm go ing to say I fell in love with my work. But you've been reading too many Hora tio Alger books. What I fell in love with was a lady linotype operator named Toulouse La Schwartz. As for the job, I was ready to chuck it the day after I was hired. Toulouse had a fiery artis tic temperament. I doubt that many newspaper composing rooms have seen her equal as a virtuoso on the typecasting machine. She was named after her great great grandfather, Bene dictine La Schwartz, an ob scure Italian artist who paint ed in a florid, fluid style. Art critics denounced his style. In France, they called him "Tou louse." H Wat Sorry This newspaper job I had paid S12.50 a week. I was a proofreader. I was Immediate ly sorry I had quit my job in a filling station. The station job only paid $12 a week but the hours were better. I went back there a couple of days after I started work as a proofreader but the sta tion had already hired some one else. Had It not been for that, I might now be president of Standard Oil. I worked from 4 p.m. until 1 a.m., during which time I proofread the entire morning edition of the paper. I also an swered all the calls coming into the city room and took classified ads over the phone. In a few weeks, I took on an additional job as morgue keeper, or librarian, and my salary was increased to $15 a week. Toulouse and I began to speak of marriage. I worked at a desk with an older man who served as tele graph editor, make-up editor, us that several times some form of emergency service has been looked into, but has been unsuccessful because it must come through taxation and people are against any added taxes. Can we do anything to im prove this condition? Mrs. Howard G. Davis, 1501 Prune St., Medford. "It's a railroad car." "Life With Father" and O "Tha "Of Dick West taristic economy that enabled Japan to build and maintain her guns, planes and ships. Kishi The Powerful - His word was one of the keys to the decision that Japan could afford to attack the United States, and it was he who directed the huge in dustrial complex in Japanese held Manchuria that helped Japan to carry out that attack. But it was this same Kishi, replying to Socialist criticism in the Japanese Diet (Parlia ment), who said 16 years later: "I have fully searched my soul concerning my wartime responsibility, and today I am resolved to devote myself as a Democratic statesman to the building of Japan with the people." This week, Kishi, friend of the United States, was in the midst of one of his toughest fights. With the help of his Liber copyreader and headline writ er. He developed a habit of pulling out his eyebrows, one at a time. Before the summer was over, he became the only newspaperman I ever knew with bald eyebrows. This made him neurotic. I offered to let him pull my eyebrows but he said it wouldn't be helpful. Skipped Classified I had so much proofreading to do, I began to skip over the classified ads, which were set in small type and hurt my eyes. Toulouse was operating the classified linotype and I trusted her. One day the paper's largest automobile advertiser ran a sale on old cars. His ad came out in the paper as "old cans." The publisher came up to see me and Toulouse and I broke up. So that's the story of my first love, folks. Thanks for listening. I figure that when a man starts passing 20-year milestones he is entitled to a little reminiscing. In the Days News By FRANK JENKINS As this is written, with 80 per cent of California's pre cincts heard from in part or complete, these are the fig ures: Nixon 1,017,764 Brown 922,636 McLain 437,391 THAT is to say: As of now. Republican Nixon has 10 per cent more votes than Democrat Brown. But Democrats Brown and McLain, combined, have 36 per cent more votes than Re publican Nixon. What that means is that in California (as in Oregon) there are more registered Democrats than registered Re publicans. In the primary elec tion, California voters voted by party label. In the general election next fall, they will vote as individuals. WHAT it amounts to at the " moment is that y ester day's election pledges Cali fornia's 70 Republican CON VENTION votes to Nixon and her 81 CONVENTION votes to Brown - who says he Is not a candidate for the Demo cratic nomination but hasn't yet determined his choice among the avowed Democratic candidates. SOMETHING new was added to the situation when New York's Governor Rockefeller issued a statement calling on Vice President Nixon to de clare "precisely" what Nixon believes and proposes to meet GREAT MATTERS confront. ing the nation. He adds that he had hoped that anyone aspiring to lead the Republi can party would make such a declaration, but it "has not been done." Mr. Rockefeller made his statement to a closed-door meeting of Republican leaders a few hours after he had told President Eisenhower at breakfast that he planned to make the statement and also that he is critical ot current national defense policies. He also told the meeting that he will lead the New York delegation to the Repub lican national convention In Chicago. rpHE Associated Press says "The tenor of the state ment Indicated that Rockefel ler Is. STRIKING OUT ON HIS OWN AS A REPUBLI CAN SPOKESMAN INDE PENDENT OF THE EISEN HOWER ADMINISTRA TION." WHAT of that? Well, this is a free coun- try. If Mr. Rockefeller wants al-Democratic party s huge majority in Parliament, he had rammed the U.S.-Japan Mutual Security through to ratification over the violent protests of his Socialist oppo sition. Unless he can be forced from office in the meantime, the treaty automatically be comes law on June 19, the same day President Eisenhow er is scheduled to arrive in Tokyo for his Japanese visit. Kishl's difficulties come from both left and right. The Communists opposed the U.S. treaty for obvious reasons. The Socialists are committed to support a no-war Japanese constitution and profess to see in the treaty a danger that Japan will be dragged into a new major conflict. Within Kishl's own party, there also is opposition-not to the treaty but to Kishi him self. These intra-party opposition Washington Report By WILLIAM POLICY DANGERS Washington -The party platforms so solemnly adopted by national political conven tions usually are about as important t o he subse quent p r e s i dential cam paign as are the limp post ers left hang i n g in the hotel suites of defeated can didates for the nomination. Things will be different this time, specifically for the Dem ocrats. For not only civil rights will embroil them. It is now certain that a far more profound issue will bitterly engage the Democratic na tional convention in Los An geles. This is foreign policy. The Democratic party today is deeply divided over what line the convention should take over the broken summit conference and what cold war policy should be recommend ed for the future. T HE SIMPLE truth is this: the less restraint and wis dom shown by the Democrats in handling this question the more likely it will be that whoever they choose for presi dent will be beaten by Rich ard M. Nixon. A Democratic group center ing about Adlai E. Stevenson and Sen. John F. Kennedy, the presidential front-runner, seems determined to carry summit criticism of President Eisenhower past the point of no return. Some of this criti cism is valid, academically. And it may wow the college audiences and the 1 a d i e s' study groips as Stevenson losing presidential elections. If it goes much further in its present waspish tone, how ever, there will be two cer twice wowed such groups in tain consequences: (1) the to be a candidate for the Re publican nomination for Pres ident, he has a perfect right to be a candidate. If he dis agrees with the so-called Ei senhower-Nixon policies, he has a perfect right to disagree. Besides, if he decides to be come an active candidate for the nomination it will remove from the Republican conven tion the onus of being a cut and-dried affair. This nation ha; been built on the founda tion of free competition, and free competition never hurt anybody. BUT U i One hopes If Mr. Rockefeller decides to become an active candidate he will make perfectly clear his reasons for differing with the Eisenhower-Nixon policies and will outline sharply what HIS policies are. That will give us rank-and-file voters something to get our teeth into. ,m---mi t in William 8. White New Hope for the "TIRED OUT" Don't Feel and Look "Old Before Your Tima" Any Longer If you are wearing that look of "false old age", feel tired out, depressed, or suffer from sleep lessness, constipation, lack of ap petite, digestive disturbances, lack-lustre hair, your trouble may be caused by iron-poor blood or a ayatem starved for nature'a essential vitamina and minerals. If to, you need suffer no more. STOP SUFFERING In just one day Drag-NOT Tab let'a high-potency iron, multiple vitamins and blood-building ele ments are in your blood stream, carrying new ttrength and energy to all parte of your body. Then 322 EAST MAIN STREET and Foe leaders see the present anti- Kishi and anti-treaty demon strations not as a national crisis for Japan but rather an opportunity to oust Kishi. Some of these resent the U.S. imposed limitations on Japa nese trade with Red China. But the same Kishi who stood up to the warlord Tojo in World War II, today is standing against the mobs. Questions arising from Kishl's strong-arm tactics in ramming the U.S.-Japan treaty through Parliament, now have been superseded by a more impor tant one. To bow to the mobs might not mean the end of Democ racy in Japan. But to bow to their de mands that the treaty be nul lified and Eisenhower's trip to Japan cancelled could, in the eyes of the administration in Washington, mean the col lapse of Japanese ties with the West. S. WHITE country itself will be made to appear unduly divided amid a world crisis. (2) the Demo cratic party will seem too much concerned with what Khrushchev and others abroad think and too little concerned with what the voters at home think. Every time that Khrushchev hits Nixon makes all this the more inevitable. A SECOND Democratic group centers about such wholly diverse figures other wise as Sen. Lyndon B. John son and former President Tru man. Mr. Truman is no sup porter of Johnson's own presi dential ambitions. He is how ever, much closer to John son's position in this one mat ter than to that of the Tru man presidential choice, Sen. Stuart Symington. The Johnson-Truman group believes extreme foreign pol icy criticism of any, repeat any, president while this na tion is in trouble abroad is neither right nor politically sound. (Mr. Tfuman is some thing of an expert. Remember the partisan attacks made on his policy while the Korean war was in progress?) But it is the Kennedy Stevenson forces which are more likely to control the platform committee. Its desig nated chairman, Rep. Chester Bowles of Connecticut, is a Kennedy man all the way. Any suggestion that any of these gentlemen is an "ap peaser" is, of course, non sense. But the undoubted fact that they are sincere and hon orable does not alter the fact that they are most unwise. THE CENTRAL Democratic necessity is somehow to mute the Stevenson-Kennedy line in the platform commit tee - for the sake of Kennedy himself should he emerge the nominee. Who can keep the committee at least somewhat on the track? The finger points to the one elevated Democrat who led a tiny minority which always opposed the summit - Dean Acheson, Mr. Truman's secre tary of state. Most of the Democrats now belaboring Mr. Eisenhower were the loudest advocates of just such a meeting. Acheson, indeed, may turn out to be Indispensable at Los Angeles. He need not actual ly be on the committee. But many Democrats hope his voice will be strongly heard there. Nobody could charge him with being "soft" on the E I s enhower administration. But nobody could suspect him of proceeding from a need to Justify a personal pro-summit bias of the past by harping on the errors of others. And whatever he might say would come from a man who knows what it is to be actual ly responsible for foreign policy, rather than to criticize from the side lines. (Copyright, 1960. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) watch your elimination. A few daya after you atari taking Drag NOT Tablet the lasy organ will go back to work and you will notice the black, poisonous waste) beginning to leave your body. NEW LIFE Then you will feel a wondrous change: the years will went te lip away and you will enjoy wonderful new pep and vitality, look and feel younger. Get non-habit-forming Drag-NOT Tab leta (rich in Iron, Vitamins B, B, Bit, C, plua other vitamina and minerals) and ee reaulta in 7 dave or your money back. Price only 2.00. MEDFORD o o