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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. THURSDAY. JUNE 23. 1110 "Everyone In Southern Oregon Readi The Wall Tribune" Published Dally except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO .33 North Fll St.. Ph SP 2-HU1 ROBERT W. RfJHL, Editor HERB GREY Advertltlne Manager CERA1.D T LATHAM. Bui. MKT. ERIC W ALLEN JR., Mnl. Editor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Soorti Editor OLIVE STARCHER, Women'! Editor DALE ERICKSON. circulation Mgr An Indenendent NewsDHD Xntered m second class matter at Med ford, Oregon, under Act ol March 3. 1897 SimSfRtPTTON RATES Bv Mai) In Advance, Copy 10c Daily and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Daily and Sunday -6 moi- 8.00 Dnilv and Sunday 3 mo. 4.25 Sunday Only One year 14.20 rnrrimr In AHuorrK Medford Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix, Shady Cove, Rogue Rlv- II ally and Sunday 1 year S18 0d Dally and Sunday 1 mo. 1,50 Carrier and Dealers oopy 10c All Terms Cash In Advance "Official Paper oMMty of Me'dforeT Official Papar of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire U P.l. Telcphoto Newsplcturee "Themrfr OF AUDIT BUREAU Or CIKCUL.AT.lWa Artcnrttclnir Rpnrentatlve ; WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC Of fices In New York. Chicago, De troit. Son Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland St. Louis, At lanta. Vancouver. B.C. NEWSPAPIt PUBIISHEIS 'ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAI Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Jim. 23, 1950 (Friday) For the second time this month Central Point voters have rejected a proposed city budget which would exceed the 6 per cent limitation. The federal communica tions system yesterday ap proved the sale of radio sta tion KMED to Radio Mcdford Inc., for $290,000. 20 YEARS AGO June 23, 1940 (Tuetday) The third Jackson county logging operation was closed down by the stale yesterday because of lack of compliance with state logging regulations. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The status quo in the Orient is be coming more so. Every time smoke pours from the stacks of a Japanese battleship, the Philippines and Indo-China arc again endangered In Wash ington, D.C." 30 YEARS AGO June 23, 1930 (Wednetday) The Central Point Grange Is rated the third largest in the state. Dedication of Medford's new municipal airport is set for August. 40 YEARS AGO June 23, 1920 (Friday) Tourists who have been liv ing at the city's free auto camp here for more than three weeks, have been asked to leave. Ashland is readying for its three-day Fourth of July cele bration: all males will wear 10-gallon hats. SO YEARS AGO June 23. 1910 (Thunday) City officials are giving serious consideration to a police department request that Mcdford police officers be uniformed. Local boosters are report edly having success raising money for the Crater Lake highway in Portland; more men leaving here tomorrow to strengthen campaign. What's Your I.Q.? ui. . I. tuDtrlert even ol eight it eictlltnt) tiro w Hi li good. 1. Upon which mountain did the Ark rest? 2. Is Yale or Princeton the oldest university in the U.S.? 3. What degree is Indicated by D.D.S.? 4. What is the longest word that can be made from the top alphabetical keys of the type writer? 5. The portrait of which wife of a U.S. President ap pears on a postage stamp? 6. Is the plasma of blood a watery or heavy sluggish fluid? 7. The Treaty of Ghent marked the termination of which war? 8. Pie - plant Is another name for what garden plant with edible leaf stalks? 9. At what average age do cows usually begin to produce milk? 10. Wat Henry Ward Beech er an American diplomat, clergyman, or painter? Anawerit 1. Ararat. 2. No. Harvard it. 3. Doctor oi Dental Surgery. 4. Type writer. S. Martin Washing ton. S. VJfclery fluid. 7. War el 1112. I. Rhubarb. 9. At .a of three. io. clergyman, Charlie Porters Choice Back on June 8, the Oregonian printed an editorial entitled "Porter's Peace Subsidy," in which it gave Congressman Charles 0. Porter a written lambasting, based on his acceptance of some $1,000 from Industrialist Cyrus Eaton to at tend a meeting in Stockholm. Knowing Congressman Porter, we awaited with interest his reply to the Oregonian. In due course, tne reply was forthcoming. And, since Porter is the Congressman from this district, because this is an election year, and be cause he has been heavily criticized for having made the trip, and otherwise having shown an interest in peace, disarmament, and foreign af fairs, his views should be of some significance locally. LJERE are excerpts from his letter to the editor of the Oregonian : You write that in going to the Stockholm "disarm ament rally" I was "lending my name to an activity not in keeping with U.S. foreign policy." You are in error. Disarmament has long been a major aim of our foreign policy. Moreover, the President rightly continues to stress the need for East-West contacts at all levels. You say you don't challenge my "right ... to join In these international gatherings chiefly sponsored by Communists, Socialists and pacifists which usually make propaganda for the Kremlin." The East-West Round Table was started by west Europeans, social ists, yes, but most of them are. Meaningful discussion of disarmament and other problems having to do with peace requires the presence of your opponents. At Stockholm, of the eight conferees, all came from NATO nations except our Swedish host and Ilya Ehren burg from the Soviet Union. The Labor member of Parliament in attendance at the Stockholm committee meeting is, I suppose, a pacifist, but then so are about half or more of the British people these days. Your assertion that these groups "usually make propaganda for the Kremlin" is a snide slur. And East West contact can be used by the Kremlin to make propaganda. This is no reason why we should break off such associations. We can and do make our own propaganda. You criticize my acceptance of Stockholm travel expenses from Cyrus Eaton. You call him "close pal of Nikita Khrushchev" with as much reason as you could put the President in that category prior to the U-2 incident. You compound this slur in the next para graph alleging that Eaton and I want "an open-arms policy toward the Soviet Union. ..." Like the President and many others, I want com munication, contact at all levels, but not in any way to suggest that we approve police stale methods ... . You say it is "questionable" for me to accept money from Eaton because "he has identified himself so closely, in business and politics, with the Commu nist dictatorships." I say baloney. Eaton is a capitalist, make no mistake about that, and a firm believer in freedom. He believes that men of good will have to work hard to make reason prevail if we are to avoid disastrous nuclear war. So do I. ... It would seem that blunders of Republican lead ership have made you Republicans a little touchy about international conferences. This is too bad be cause there is no other way to make peaceful adjust ments. . . . Your attitude with respect to my trying to help, in whatever ways I can, to further the cause of peace is deeply disappointing to me. I would like to think that you wrote the editorial out of sheer par tisanship. 1 suspect, however, that the origins go deep er, namely, (hat you are ignorant where you ought to be informed, and indifferent where you ought to be concerned. THERE are three alternatives facing the world n f t r, rvi r ri i- it 4 Ob Wilt 11 millCU be 1. We can have a nuclear war, which will wipe out civilization as we know it and some scientists say the human race along with it. 2. We can have a continuation of the cold war, with its constant threat of hot war breaking out, through design, lluke 3. We can seek to now wrack the relationships between the East and the West. And then, if this is accomplished, we can work toward political and diplomatic structures to tacilitate the preservation of peace WHO wants the first choice? Anyone? Civ tho sppnnH? And, if one picks the third as the most logical and sane of the three choices, one must face the fact that an easing of tensions doesn't just hap pen all bv itself. Talk is necessary. It is the official policy of the United States government, enunciated over and over, that in creased contacts between east and west are de sirable. Only in this way can tensions be eased. DORTER frankly acknowledges this situation, and is doing what he can to make the third choice become possible. In this he contrasts to his opponent in the coming election, who solemnly promises that he "will not meddle in the affairs of foreign coun tries." One need not go into increased east-west com munication in starry-eyed gullibility and inno cence. One must realize we're up against tough, shrewd, unscrupulous adversaries, a fact that Congressman Porter well knows. And it's kind of refreshing to find a man who has the courage to act on his convictions; to believe that he, as a member of the govern ment, has something to offer; and to do some thing about it, despite the pompous criticism of the staid Oregonian. E.A. Air Force The U.S. Air Force does wonderous things. It soars to new heights and it travels at speeds that were the science fiction of only a few years ago. It's a great outfit. Perhaps tfiat's why it's a source of satisfaction to the rest of us to know that the Air Force is having a dickens of' a time with the poison c&k at Camp Adair. Eugene or accident. ease the tensions which Problem Register-Guard. Dennis the IU BE (2A0 TO HEP W CATCH Communications Letters to the Editor mutt bear the name and addrets of the writer, although under certain circumttancet the ute of a pen name or initial for publication it permitiible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condentation. Letters tubmitted for pub lication mutt not exceed 400 wordt. The lettert printed in thit column do not necettarily represent the viewt of the paper; in fact the contrary it often the case. He's Gone To the Editor: "Hurry up, Lillian we are getting snow ed." Those words are most pre cious to me, now more than ever. That voice I will hear no more. Shorty and I worked side by side for many years in the packing house of Rogue River Orchards. He was a loyal and trusted friend, never too busy to lend a helping hand. Now, he is gone, never to return, for Shorty (Wendel J. Tolle) was killed in a logging accident on June 20, 1960. So, Goodby, Shorty. I'll al ways remember, you. Thanks for everything. I'll be seeing you some day, again. Lillian Green 2411 Sunset Court Medford Comment on Article To the Editor: Regarding your article about the 'asiatic" who arrived here in Medford recently, I would like to comment as follows. Being a citizen of the Neth erlands myself, and also born In the former Dutch East In dies, I certainly do not con sider myself as "asiatic," nor as an Indonesian. Furthermore, I would like to point out that there is no "lack of personal freedom" in the Netherlands like Mr. Van Aagten says. The Dutch government pro vided free air transportation for me and my wife from Amsterdam to any point the U.S.. in our case to Los Angeles. Without their assist ance it would have been im possible for us to come to this country. I certainly do not agree with Mr. Van Aagten. as most ! tt his alnlnmiintf Bra knnnrf to create a false impression about the Netherlands. Thank you for your time. Mr. and Mrs. P. H. J. Lawlck 210 Lozier Lane Medford. Quasi. Nee Hybrid To the Editor: Congressman Charles O. Porter seems to be hot and bothered about a let ter to the editor written by M. J. Olsen. Both seem to be splitting hairs on the word "Socialism." We can understand how a politician might have the Jit ters in a brainwashed nation, such as ours, on a word that smacks with the connotation of sedition. And to make mat ters worse there was Just Just enough fact In Mr. Ol sen's fancy to carry ample conviction to confuse the great brain washed. Both seem to be engaged In the enterprise of making molehills out of mountains. We would admonish both Mr. Porter and Mr. Olsen to be of good cheer, for as all roads lead to Rome, all trails lead to some sort of socialism. There are only two social orders of an economic nature. One is private enterprise and the other is public enterprise. A public enterprise Is called a social iastittitlon. A private enterprise is called a private institution. Any thing else Is quasi, or neo a hybrid. As private enterprise, as a social Institution, is disinte grating, an element of social ism must follow. If Mr. Porter is not aware of that fact, he should revamp his logic. As for Mr. Olsen, It appear! that he fears the process of evolu tion. Mr. Olsen seems to :ant to stop the clock, and Mr. Porter teem to resent the Im Menace SOME DIRTY &KOS'. plication that he is responsi ble for it running. But Mr. Porter's defense of taxing the American public to maintain and support every ragtag and bobtail dictator ship in the world in the name of life, liberty and the pur suit of happiness and the sur vial of Mr. Olsen is an enigma. We have reached the point in political evolution where we are a welfare state. Not a high degree of welfare, but none-the - less welfare. We have a state managed econ omy but not a planned econ omy. Ours is a second handed socialism. , One of these politlcan-knows-best affairs. Walter Reece Galice rd. Merlin, Ore. Loam and Credit To the Editor: I have been told that loans are hard to get. This I did not believe, as credit is being given to every one now days. So I tried to see if I could get a loan for just a day on making the down payment of a car. I said I would pay the money back the next day by selling a cow and calf. I went to a few people I know, and friends, this is what I found out. Some of them said I wasn't giving them enougn time to get it for me. Others said the way things look right now I may need every dime I have. Also some thought I was crazy. What I learned out of it was this. Times are getting bad and loans are hard to get. I Just couldn't believe that we worry about getting a new President and start running up our credit and loan deals like we do. Do people fear what is com ing? Don't people know that we can't stop living? Who started credit and loan deals anyway? . Doesn't our government have credit and loan deals? Could everyone do without credit and loans? Many people have never even thought of things like this. Check this over and see what you think. Are we parking for a while or slowing up slowly to a stop? I hope Mr. Editor you will print this in the paper as everyone I talk to is talking about this subject. Iris Huff, Talent, Ore. Uncle Charlie To the Editor: Reading the letter "To the Editor" Tues day by Pearl Vesey (Spack man) of Jacksonville, recalls to mind that my last perusal of "Comfort" magazine was In 1920. Some 11 years prior to that, 1 owned one of "Uncle Charlie" Noel Douglas auto graphed book of poems, writ ten when the author had been an Invalid for 17 years pre vious caused by a stroke. Mr. Douglas formerly had been a stage actor beforj being stricken to a hospital bed In Brooklyn, New York. His hospital nurse was quick to recognize "Uncle Charlie's" literary talent and after a struggle of gaining a ready market for the comic prose and song book melodies, Mr. Oannet, the publisher of "Comfort," In Augusta, Maine, capitalized upon all the opportunities to publish several pages cjj... Douglas answers to the thousands of "cousins club" lettert etch month. One ot "Uncle Charlie s" Sound and Fury of International Affairs In 1960 Reminiscent of Those in 1956 By PHIL NEWSOM ' UPI Foreign Editor "We consider that an agree ment between the powers con cerning the termination of atomic and hydrogen 'M ..... woum be tne Jf fcf first impor. 2 FI tant sten to- warA tVi. Iin- iviff e o n d i tional p r o h i bition of these types of mass de struction wea pons . , , " PHIL, NEWSOM Sound like 1960? Guess again. It was 19S6. ri IV T. I Politicos Descend (Or Arise) To Level of Limericks Today By DICK WEST Washington IUPD - Since all the comedians are telling po litical jokes these days, I guess you can't b 1 a me some of th e politicians for trying to be comedians. One politi cal group that likes to be the life of the par ty, provided it's the Grand Dick Wait Old Party, is the Republican committee. It congressional has been limbering up for the coming campaign by compos ing election year limericks. 'all I Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop KENNEDY ON THE FIRST? Washington-The signs now suggest that Sen. John F. Ken nedy of Massachusetts is very close indeed to his grand goal, which is to secure the Demo cratic pre sidential nomination on the first or second ballot at the conven tion in Los JOSEPH ALSOP Angeles, there was an On Monday, important public sign in New York City. Mayor Robert F. Wagner, who will be chair man of the massive New York state delegation, buried his own vice presidential ambi tions and came out for Ken nedy. It is now a well-informed guess that Kennedy will get no less than 105 of the 114 New York votes. Until a fortnight ago, the best the Kennedy forces hoped for was about 95 votes from New York. If Kennedy con now count on 105, his recent New York gain, though less dramatic than the capture of another state, is really about equal to picking up the entire delegation from Delaware. rpHERE are at least three A chances in four that anoth er gain of the same character is in the making in New Jer sey. Here the 41 delegates are pledged to Gov. Robert Mey- ner, as their favorite son. Yet Kennedy sentiment is exceed ingly strong in the state, and Governor Meyner's favorite son candidacy has come to seem more and more pointless in recent weeks. There have also been several warmly friendly exchanges between the governor and Kennedy. As a result, it is likely that Gov ernor Meyner will also declare for Kennedy after a meeting with the New Jersey county leaders which he will hold just before he heads westward to the Governors conference, Kennedy already has pow erful second-round backing in New Jersey. But the psycho logical impact will be very powerful indeed, if Governor Meyner declares for Kennedy As a practical matter, too, such a declaration by Meyner will mean that Kennedy will have all of New Jersey's 41 votes on the first ballot. And he will thus pick up six or eight New Jersey delegates he had not been counting on, who might otherwise have been denied to him even on the second ballot. rnHERE are clear hints, too, A that a comparable process is at work in still another big decisive state. In Illinois, May or Richard Daley of Chicago, though not publicly commit ted, has long been expected to lead the 52 delegates he controls into the Kennedy camp on the tint ballot. Two and a half of the Ulinoit dele gate votes belong to draft Adlai Stevenson enthusiasts. Until recently, the other dele- latest secretaries before his demise was nicknamed "Bil lie," the goat, who carried on the good work for editor and publisher Gannet. I never leatRed when the magazine $ispendl4i publication. Bert KisiingV , . 520 Boardman si. Medford. .': This correspondent, to sat isfy his own curiosity, went back into the records to check the state of world affairs dur ing another United States election year. The quotation above came from a note from President Eisenhower, replying to one from Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin. Some of the names changed in the following four years, but the script remained al most unchanged. In 1956, the United States was preparing to elect a president, and the Soviet Union was trying mightily to take advantage of any uncertainty that might "The limerick long hat been a means of condensing issues pointedly and succinctly in poetic form," the committee said as justification for its action, "Just as the limerick de scribed the people and issues in the days of its chief patron. Edward Lear, so today's elec tion year campaign lends it self to limerick descriptions of candidates and issues. ' I have noticed that when politicians set out to emulate Edward Lear they usually wind up sounding more like King Lear. For this reason, I was leery about the commit tee s limericks. However, I found that they gates, mainly from southern Illinois, were expected to go to Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri. In the last fortnight, how ever, the Symington group has shown obvious symptoms of a trend to Kennedy. The southern Illinois politicians expect Mayor Daley's guber natorial nominee, Judge Otto Kerner, to carry the state in November. They want to stand well with the new Dem ocratic governor. Desertions from Symington may there fore bring Kennedy's Illinois total to 63. In normal circumstances, no great significance would be attached to these Kennedy gains, coming as they do in relatively small packets of eight or ten delegates. But the circumstances are not nor mal, because Kennedy's vote count was already so high be fore these recent gains were even in prospect. Even the most optimistic stop Kennedy leaders have long conceded that Kennedy would start the fight in Los Angeles with close to 700 votes. Only 761 votes are needed to nominate. Suppose, then, that the signs above-described are not deceptive. If Kennedy starts with 700 votes, and gains eight votes in New Jersey, ten in New York, and ten in Illinois, these modest bodies of new recruits will all but put him over. THE contest still rages, of rnnrap. in th two ffreat uncommitted states, Califor nia and Pennsylvania. The de cision of Minnesota, formally committed to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, is also in dispute; and it will be significant when it comes. .With really stout and active support from Penn sylvania's Governor Lawrence and Senator Humphrey, and with some cooperation from California's Gov. Pat Brown, a stop Kennedy movement might still succeed. But there are no indica tions that these leaders and all the others who would have to join them, are forming the kind of solid, determined, wholly united front that is needed to stop Kennedy at this stage. Instead, although the draft-Stevenson movement is particularly -strong in Cali fornia, there are pretty clear signs that Governor Brown will alio end in Kennedy's corner. In short there Is only one feature of the situation that warns against a flat predic tion ot Kennedy's nomination on the first or second ballot, His true oponent is not Ste venson but Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, and John son's power to work miracles It an established fact, (c) 1960 New York Herald Tribune Inc. PURITY PROSE London-fflPD-The Institute of Sewage Purification awarded the Fowler Ardern Lockett prize to J. H. Edmondson for the most outstanding con tribution to literature for his writings on the activated sludge process. TEXTBOOK AUTHOR DIM Lot Angeles-JOT-Dr. Hky E. Baber, author of the popular college textbook "Marriage and the Family" and retired professor of sociology at Po mona college, died Tuesday. develop in the transition from one administration to the next. The year 1956 also was one of recurring crises. It was the year of the Hun garian revolt, the bread and freedom riots In Poznan, Po land. It was the year that Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal, paving the way for the abortive Anglo-French-Israeli attack on Egypt. Here is a brief rundown of that year: Feb. 14-21: Marshal Georgi Zhukov tellt the Communist Party 20th Congress that Rus sia has the means to deliver an atomic weapon to U.S. soil. at least are printable, which is more than you can say for most limericks. I'll let you decide from these samples whether they condense the is sues pointedly and succintly: "Little Jack, with his bundle of kale, "Found cause to whimper and wail, "When he and his spouse "Saw at the White House "A sign on the lawn, 'not for sale'." "LBJ said 'I'm deeply dis tressed, " 'For Dixie's a name I detest. " 'Regardless of maps, " 'Can't you see I wear chaps? " 'I'm not from the South, but the West'." "Adlai asked in his way quite disarming, " 'Why do they find me so alarming? " 'I admit that it's true, " 'I've already lost two, " I think a third try would be charming. HST told hit disciple named Stu, " 'My man, let me give you a clue. " 'Just forget this soft sell " 'And start giving them hell, " 'Or the party may abandon U-2'." I try to be objective about political matters and I thought I detected in these lines a slight partisan cant. So if the Democrats have any poets in their corner, I'll be glad to give them equal rhyme. Two Appear in Circuit Court Willard Cherclie St. Arn old, 47, of 349 West Pine St., Central Point, waived a grand jury hearing and was arraign ed on the district attorney's information involving a mor als charge Wednesday in Jack son county circuit court. Judge James M. Main ap pointed Dick Courtright as his attorney. State ' police arrested St. Arnold in a field across the railroad tracks west of state police headquarters. In other court action, Bobby Vernon Wright, 18, Grand ho tel, Medford, was arraigned on district attorney's infor mation charging burglary not in a dwelling. He waived a grand jury hearing and Judge Main appointed Hugh Collins as his attorney. Wright is charged with en tering a church in Medford June 31, 1959. Wi Mtjlou) 1 AaAti ' Jlallualv Aik ut ttxsut the OREGC FUNERAL INSURANCE PLAN which rt heartily recommend end indorse. March 28: Iceland demandi withdrawal of U.S. NATO units from Icelandic soil. Wrote the London Econo mist: "Mr. Khrushchev's prob ing finger has opened the first real crack In NATO's solidar ity." April 18-27: Khurshchev and Bulganin visit Great Britain. May 4: Disarmament talks in London break down. June 7: Bulganin, in a note to Eisenhower, says UN dis armament talks can lead to no results in the near future. He demands that the U.S. match Russia in announcing reduc tion of armed forces. July 2: Communist Party Central Committee accuses U.S. of financing revolt in- Poland. July 10: Russia accuses U.S. military aircraft of violating Russian air space. Aug. 4: Eisenhower reminds Russia of its responsibility to aid in the reunification of Germany and concludes: "I am perplexed as to how wr can work together construc tively if agreements ... do noi seem dependable." Sept. 15: Russia accuses Britain and France, supported by the U.S., of "grossly" con tradicting United Nations principles. Sept. 19-21: The second Sue Canal conference in London. Wrote a correspondent cover ing the event: "The Russians have won time to deal with their troubles at home and plot more mischief abroad." - Oct. 19: Russia says U.S. election campaign has In eluded "obvious distortions" of Soviet policy toward dis armament. Eisenhower's re ply: Oct. 21: "Interference . . , in our internal affairs." Sound familiar? Milk Audit Law Revision Urged Salem-flJPD-A revision in the 1957 Oregon grade A milk audit law was recommended today by a special milk audit advisory committee of the state agriculture department. The committee approved in principle a policy providing for appeal to Circuit Court if a milk handler does not agree with findings of the agricul ture department after the original milk audit and a re audit. The committee killed a plan for a seven-man milk audit council. FAT OVERWEIGHT Available to you without a doctor prescription, our drug called ODRI NEX. You must lose ugly tat In days or your money back. No stren uous exercise, laxatives, massaga or taking of so-called reducing can dies, crackers or cookies, or chew ing gum. ODRINEX is a tiny tablet and easily swallowed. When you take ODRINEX, you still enjoy your meals, still eat the foods you like, but you simply don't have the urga for extra portions because ODRI NEX depresses your appetite and decreases your desire for food. Your weight must come down, be cause as your own doctor will tell you, when you eat less, you weigh less. Get rid of excess fat and liv longer. ODRINEX costs $3.00 and is sold on this GUARANTEE: If not satisfied for any reason just return the package to your drug gist and get your full money baeke No questions asked. ODRINEX it sold with this guarantee by: Western Thrift Store, 30 N. Can tril. Mail erderi filled. we just do our best-always SNeeotMs, meal eeeaeea