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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 1960)
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 14. ISIS MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. "Everyon In Southern Oregon Readi The Mall Tribune" Published "Daily "except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North Fir St., Ph SP3-141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advei'tislng Manager ERIC W ALLEN JR., Mne Editor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Telee Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER, Women'i Editor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr An Indeoendent Newsoaner Sntered as second class matter at McdioTa, Oregon, unaer aci ox March S. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES My Mai) In Advance. Copy 10c Daily and Sunday 1 year sia.uo Daily and Sunday 6 mos 8.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25 Sunday Onlv One vear $4.20 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 SIB 00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.90 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c Ail Terms casn m Aavanca "Official Paper of City of Medford jOfflclal Paper of Jackson Cotintr United Press International Full Leased Wire U.P.I. Telephotq Newsplcturea """MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU5-" OF CIKUUL.AT1UW3 AHvArtklnir Renresentntfve: WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC Of fices In New York. Chicano. De. troit. San Francliico. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland, at. umis. At lanta. Vancouver. B.C. Flight 0' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files ot The Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Aug. 24, 1950 (Thursday) Final arrangements were being completed this afternoon for tonight's fall opening event in Medford's business district. A threatened nation -wide railroad strike set for Monday would do untold damage to the Rogue valley's pear, apple and peach crops which are just now starting to be har vested. 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 24, 1940 (Saturday) Senator Charles McNary (R-Ore.), candidate for vice president, said he will leave the major campaigning to his running mate, Wendell n Wlllkie. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "A par ty headed by H. Flewher, the demon baker, journeyed to tne top of the Cascades over tne week-end. Dock Durno went along." 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 24. 1930 (Monday) The entire town of Prospect was threatened for a while by an early morning fire that destroyed a sawmill. The new Holly theater will hold lis grand opening next Friday. 40 YEARS AGO Aug. 24, 1920 (Wednesday) ' Ton Army planes were on hand yesterday at the dedica tion of the fairgrounds field. Governor Olcott has named a committee to investigate conditions at Crater Lake lodge. SO YEARS AGO Aug. 24, 1910 (Wednesday) The winds suddenly chang ed their direction and increas ed in velocity yesterday and are now driving a raging for est fire towards Ashland. Hikers yesterday discovered a caved-in gold mine near Gold Ray and it is thought to contain the body of a missing miner. What's Your 10-7 Nine er ten correct Is superie mven er eight it excellent; He i tin (a geod. 1. Was Solomon's throne made of gold, ivory, or silver? 2. Is Louisville or Lexing ton the capital of Kentucky? 3. Name the Indian princess who married John Rolfe 4. Name the five senses. 5. Name the strings on a violin. 6. Is asphalt insoluble in water, or gasoline? 7. Rabbits belong to the ro dent family; true or false? 8. Genuine Roquefort cheese is made principally from the milk of cows, ewes, or goats? P. Which U.S. President is sued the emancipation procla mation? . 10. Name the author of the novel, "Oliver Twist"? Answers: 1. Ivory. 2. Nei ther, Frankfort is the Capital., 3. Pocohontai. 4. Sight, smell, hearing, taste, touch, 5, 1 E. A. D. C. 6. Water. 7. True. Ewes' 9.' Abraham' Lincoln.' 10. Charles Dickens. V rtyJA PUll$HE$ m JA-SSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAI Three Thi 'ee men died this week, and the loss of each is a loss to people tnem, or wno nad enjoyed or profited by their work. They lived and worked in entirely unrelated tields, and only by the all reported within two ment on tnem togetner. One was Oscar Hammerstein II, 65, the giant ox tne entertainment worm, wnose musical come dies and songs have had Americans whistling for years, Another was Oswald West, 87, governor of uregon irom 1911 to 1915. The third was E. B. MacNaughton, 79, one of Oregon's most distinguished businessmen and men ot atiairs LJOW many brighter homa!" "South Pacific." And a dozen others, beloved, and played and sung, His was a touch of tnat ereat artists are stein has achived immortality through his songs Music is magic, and entitled to our humble "S WEST made no music. But his work in one short term of office wrought benefits to the people of Oregon which will be enjoyed for decades, or centuries, yet Best-known of his achievements was the Ore gon law, which he pushed and bullied through the legislature, which placed in public ownership forever almost all of Oregon's 400 miles of mag nificent Ocean beaches. His, too, was the brought to public ownership the streambeds of most of, Oregon's rivers. And the list of his ments goes on and on governor contending with a legislature of another party. At Os West State Park, just north of the Neah-Kah-Nie headland, a sign reads: "If Sight of Sand and Sky and Sea has Given Respite From Your Daily Cares Then Pause to Thank Oswald West' AI7HENEVER we visit the coast we do so. ' And we recall with joy our few personal contacts with the man. On one occasion in 1946 or 1947, we drove the car which took him to the races at the State Fair in Salem. Years later we dropped him a note and recal led that incident, saying we didn't suppose he would remember it. His reply was typical. He said: "I never forgot anyone that drove me to the races. rRNEST Boyd MacNaughton was never a pub-- lie figure in the same sense as were the other men. But he played a big of Oregon over the past half-century. A builder, banker, newspaperman, educator, philanthropist, churchman, 1 1 i - , -pi- t; me use oi nts aeiiteveiiienus anu awviuieo guea on and on. Everv area of human interest. And when he unique combination of talents took him to the top. . i . it. i. -i l- -1 He was president ana later Doara cnatrman of the First National Bank, president of the Ore- gonian Publishing company for some years, presi dent of Keed college ior a aniicuii interim period, head of the Blue Cross in Oregon, moder ator of the Unitarian church in the United States. And a list of his lesser fill columns of type. THESE three men musician, public official, onrl ViiioinoBsman nnrl piviV sprvHnt. nf mnnv talents will be missed. Their honors came to them, not through no toriety nor money nor flashy short-lived achieve ment, but through honesty of purpose. Each was touched by a genius of a different sort, and backed it up and lntecrnty. The world is much richer because they lived. And that is the most that can be said of any man. E.A. Powers Condemned Francis Gary Powers, the Uz plane shot down by Russia last May, has come in for considerable criticism lately. "Why did he have to go and plead guilty?" is one question heard. The answer is, he had no other choice. He had already been pleaded guilty, and by his own government, no less. QN MONDAY, May 16, the Mail Tribune car ried a story by Lvle Wilson, United Press In ternational writer and vice a good thumb-nail sketch "incident." Wilson said : "The first (U.S.) policy was to deny that such espionage had taken place. The second policy whs to admit it and to insist that It was essential for national defense, and therefore, might be continued. "The third policy ... is that espionage flights over the Soviet Union have been suspended and will not oc resumed . . . With this sorrv record of confusion, what else coultl Pilt Powers do? He was already con- demned. E.A. Deaths who knew them, or of fact that their deaths wei days is it possible to com. hours has Hammerstein "The Sound of Music." older than these but still replayed, sung and re- genius, and. in the sense trulv immortal. Hammer those who create it are gratitude. to come idea for the law which other lasting accomplish miraculous for a one-term role in the development leader in civic projects i -. i i , activity engaged his started something, his - known activties would by hard work, courage, the hard-luck pilot of president, which gave of the events of the Dennis the Menace ' U goHHAGSTA J06 0.64NIN' SWlvVWIN POOLS. WHEN I LEARN HOW TO SWIM." r"- Communications Letters to the Editor must bear 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 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 Agriculture and Prayer To the Editor: In 1934, Sec retary of Agriculture Henry Agard Wallace expressed his philosophy regarding agricul ture in his published book, entitled the "New Frontiers." Secretary Wallace was in terested primarily in agricul tural experimentation, such as hybrid corn, rather than eco- omics. News reporters remember the Chicago convention in 1944, when the "Reds" were the Chicago stadium pledged to Mr. Wallace for the second term as vice presi dent. However, the "voice of the sewers" began to holler, We want Truman," and Sen ator Harry Truman was nomi nated in place of Mr. Wal lace. On March 1, 1945, Mr. Wal lace was named Secretary of Commerce by President Roosevelt. Speaking in New York, on Sept. 12, 1946, Sec retary Wallace castigated President Truman's foreign policy, urging a contrary pol icy of "appeasing Russia." President Truman requested and accepted Mr. Wallace's resignation. In July, 1948, Mr. Wallace was nominated by the new third party, the Progressive party, receiving only 1,116,- 379 votes in the November election. The "farm problem" has not been solved by either party. Many "constitutional lawyers believe the farm problem" will not be solved until Congress returns agri culture - the "farm problem" - to the states where it con stitutionally belongs. The 13 original sovereign stales, in granting the "ex pressed powers" to Congress in Ariclc I, section 8, listed 18 "expressed powers" sur rendered to Congress. The Tenth Amendment of the Bill of Rights expressly reads: "The powers not dele gated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibit ed by it to the states, are reserved to the states respect ively, or to the people." The late Will Rogers offer ed a solution to the "farm problem": "Plow under every other farm politician." Domestic and world prob lems may be solved when we acknowledge the Supreme Absolute, such as: "Lord make me an instru ment of Thy peace; where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is dark ness, light; and where there is sadness, Joy." "O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console; to be understood, as to under stand; to be loved, as to love; for it is in giving that we receive, it is in pardoning that we arc pardoned, and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life." ( Francis of Assissi. 1273) Stephen E. Gillis White City, Ore. Welfare Drug Plan To the Editor: It was with considerable surprise that I read in your paper of Aug. 7, I960, the statements by Mr. Gordon Hudson regarding the list of basic drugs recently adopted for welfare use. This drug plan was devel oped in close cooperation with representatives of the Oregon State Pharmaceutical Assoeia- lion, the Oregon State Medical Society, the University of Ore gon Medical School, the Ore gon State College of Pharm acy, and members of the prac- the name and address of the often the case. ticing professions of pharm acy and medicine. We nave been assured by these able and responsible rep resentatives that: 1. These drugs without ex ception are available on the shelves of most pharmacies in Oregon. They are regularly used in filling prescriptions for quality materials where no special trade name require ment 'is included in the phy sician's prescription. To refer to them as cheap or untrust worthy is a serious reflection on the integrity of a large part of the pharmacy profes sion in Oregon and on the business ethics of several well established and highly regard ed wholesale drug outlets. 2. With regard to prices, it was the purpose of the State Public Welfare Commission to set up a price schedule which would permit a fair return to e s t a b li s lied pharmacies when providing drugs of re liable quality to welfare pa tients. The prices are not based on wholesale quotations from fly-by-night sources, but on wholesale costs of reliable drug materials available from Oregon wholesalers of estab lished reputation who have been in business in our state for many years and who have always, been known to stand behind the quality of their drugs. Pharmacists developed the price schedule, and repre sentative members of the pharmacy profession have re peatedly assured us of its fair ness and adequacy. 3. It should also be pointed out that the door is open for provision of a drug outside the basic list whenever a physi cian establishes by clinical findings that his patient re quires an exception to the Basic List. All the doctor has to do is send to the reviewing physician in the Welfare De partment a brief clinical state ment demonstrating his pa tient's special reauirement and the reasons for it. Finally let me say that (he present plan for drugs was de veloped solely for the purpose of making the limited welfare budget do a good iob of Dro- viding for the essential drug needs of all the aeed and un fortunate sick who must look to public welfare to pay for (heir necessary medical care. It is particularly distressing to think that the statements against the plan may have the effect of arousinc noedlpss fear and anxiety In the hearts of those for whose benefit the program was developed State Public Welfare Commission By (Miss) Jeanne Jew- ett, Administrator State Office Building Portland 1, Ore. The Devil's Tools , to the, Editor: I want to share with you and your read ers a few helpful paragraphs that a very dear friend has had put down in print. This well known radio pastor has put out a little booklet en titled, "Be Not Afraid." Here are a few lines that have been especially helpful to me. "You say you are discour aged? Has somebody disap pointed you? Have you had reverses in business? Has your health failed? Has your dear est earthly tie been severed by the cruel hand of death? Have you tried and failed in living the victorious life? Have the cares of life seemed to overwhelm you? Does ev erything seem to go wrong? "Discouragement is one of the Devil's most successful methods of keeping men and women from the joys of fel lowship with God. "There is an old story that tells of an announcement that Red China Exchanges; Trade Proposals Said Lagging I . - At.: ,J nan. i irncs urtth nin firm By PETER CRAIGMOE Tokyo - (UPD - Communist It is trying to capture the China is vigorously trying to imagination of the Japanese woo Japan away from her ties masses through two popular with the West, particularly appeals: travel and cultural the United States. Already exchange. Peiping has offered some The new trend, in sharp tempting bait. contrast to the days when Peiping still has not madeNobusuke Kishi was premier, any concrete economic or has been interpreted here as trade proposals-which would an attempt to gain willing Editorial Comment Os West Never Another Like Him Once in a century, perhaps, comes a man so colorful, so courageous, so wise in the ways of his fellows and so mindful of their welfare that the memory of his deeds and wit-spiced sayings stands out like a beacon in the history of his state. Such a man was Os West, whose turbulent yet pro ductive career ended quietly-ironically so-in his bed with his boots off-Monday morning. He was 87. So much has been written and said about Os West, so many adjectives have been used to describe his characteristics and accomplishments, that one hardly knows where to begin in paying tribute to this man. " Inimitable. Indomitable. Bizarre. Tragic. Heroic. Lovable. Great friend of the people. They all fit Os . West and the Os West saga. But to describe him adequately, his purple prose, his crusty exterior which partly concealed his abiding faith in his state and the eternal verities to which he clung, you have to judge him by his pet hates. They represented in reverse the things and people he ad mired and loved and fought for all his life. For Os West, you see, devoted almost all of his career to fighting the stuffed shirts, the spoilers, the fakers, the racketeers, the hypocrites and the all around bums of his era. Largely self-educated, from grammar school to his bar exams, he never forgot the tribulations of his youth, poverty, hardships, a drunken father, nor the inspiration of his sainted mother. This accounts for his abiding haired of liquor and the two promises he made his mother-never to drink, and some day to become governor of Oregon. These promises he kept. But the other promise he made in his youth, half serious, half jest-to shoot a bartender-he did not live to fulfill. Oregon will remember Os West for the history making term he served as Democratic governor-four hectic years in which he jammed widespread reforms through an unwilling Republican legislature. And while Gov. West always derided "the do-gooders" of his time, he became one of the really great do-gooders of Oregon history-prison reform, improve ment of state institutions, saving Oregon's beaches for the people for all time, protection of women and chil dren in industry, creation of the state board of control, the state game commission and the office of state printer, to name a few. And no one will forget his single-handed expose of the school land grabbers and the recovery for his state of almost a million acres of valuable timber land. But we shall remember Os West as a friend who made history live, whose worldly wise advice and pithy comment inspired and enlivened our days. Like ' thousands of others, we are proud to have known Os West, the incomparable. There will never be another. -Oregon Journal,- Portland the devil was going out of business, and would offer all his tools for sale to whosoever would pay his price. "On the night of the sale they were all attra-clivcly dis played, and a bad looking lot they were. Malice, hatred, envy, jealousy, sensuality, and deceit, and all the other im plements of evil were spread out, each marked with its price. Apart from the rest lay a harmless looking, wedge shaped tool, much worn, and priced higher than any of them. "Some one asked the devil what it was. 'That's discour agement,' was the reply, "Why do you have it priced so high?' " Because,' replied the devil, 'it is more useful to me than any of the others. I can pry open and get inside a man's consciousness with that when I would not get near him with any of the others; and when once inside, I can use him in whatever way suits me best. It is much worn because I use it with nearly everybody, since few persons yet know it belongs to me.' 'It hardly need be added that the devil's price for dis couragement was so high that it was never sold. He still owns it, and is slill using it." wen, l thought these lines would be appreciated by some of you readers. If any desire a free copy of the complete little booklet, a non-sectarian compilation, you can se cure it by calling me or writ ing direct to Pastor Tucker Box 323, Redlands. Calif. Henry Johnson Jr. 2400 Highway 66 vsmnnci. ore. Social Production To the Editor; Who furnish es the food for the poor, the helpless, the blind, the aged, even the criminals? How much, what kind.' Their clothing, the bedding, iheir care, etc.? Does the county, state, or the federal govern ment? No doubt all contribute a portion, but in what propor tion? It doesn't matter too much but it's all paid bv thr. DISCOUNTS UP TO 35 ON NATIONALLY ADVERTISED MEN'S CLOTHING BARKER'S Main-Central Wooing Japan With aDoeal lareely to big business. dollar. Well, you say, I don't pay any taxes. Well, let s see Every time you eat, every time you wear out your old clothes, every time your wife buys a new dress or a pair of new shoes, every time your wife becomes pregnant and goes to the hospital, or you get sick or meet with an acci dent, you pay a form of profit in the shape of taxes. Well, of course you don't like to pay taxes, neither do I, but how are you going to avoid them? There is no pro vision made under this old capitalistic sun to keep up the expenses of this government, except by taxation. And there fore, the thrifty and the able must pay them on the basis of their wealth that they are supposed to own. There is only one solution to the problem, and that is social means of production and distribution of the means of life democratically man aged, and then the labor time or hours could be regulated according to the needs or de sires of the people s social production needs. Then I would trust that the people would see that all the people's needs would be adequately taken care of. Even the crim inals, which would be rapidly reduced under a just social system, when everyone that is able and willing to work for the full product of his toil, could be employed, as labor time could be reduced so as to employ every person that wanted to or could work. Friends: I'm not able to walk yet without crutches, said it might be a year yet, Ihen it might require another operation. Yet, I manage to do my own cooking, under stress.' John P. Wirth, 3022 Butte st. Klamath Falls, Ore. (Formerly 120 Laurel St., Medford) Amateur Preachers To the Editor: To the few would-be preachers, who bab ble on about the existence of a devil, and religion, we do have too many devil-explaining, devil-blaming and Bible friends for China and cap italize on anti-American prop aganda in recent months. Agreement Signed An agreement signed in Peiping last week- between the Japanese and Communist Chinese cultural exchange as sociations received major bill ing over Radio Peiping. Red Chinese Premier Chou En-lai even welcomed Japanese cul tural delegate Kenzo Naka jima at a luncheon, a relative ly rare tribute to a non-diplomatic officials. The exchange provides for a Japanese chorus to give per formances and for exhibitions of Japanese arts, photography and calligraphy (artistic writ ing) in Hed China. Peiping's price for this is a series of exhibitions in Japan of Red Chinese workers and peasants, Communists Chinese cartoons and grapnic arts, children's paintings and pho tography and calligraphy These exhibits will likely be undisguised propaganda This was admitted in a meet ing of Red Chinese writers and artists earlier this month when Peiping emphasized that art and literature were to be expressions of the Communist party line, Observers here feel the Peiping propaganda campaign will have little immediate ef fect. Until Red China comes quoting letters to the Editor. Of course, there must be a devil, imps and all, because who else could be responsible for such foolishness? Without the Bible to quote from, you all would be tongue-tied and helpless, be cause you can't think for your selves at all. With your preacher's itch, and for the want of a church, you use the Mail Tribune to do your preaching by quoting from the Bible in letters to the Editor. No, we don't have to read it. But it takes up good space that could be used for letters that belong in that part of the paper. You are in the right paper, but the wrong page. There's a special page in the paper for religious news. So, whatever church you belong to, stay in your seat where you belong, and do the listening, not the preaching. You amateur preachers do more harm than good. Why don't you let your pastors do the preaching? William Helpher co Addie D. Train Route 2, Box 312-A Gold Hill, Ore. Gold Tales To the Editor: Perseverance was rewarded by finding ex cerpts and numerous personal records of the successful early day miner and prospector in southern Oregon, dating around 60 to 70 years ago. His way of living was not al ways a customary, easy one. Sometimes before striking "pay dirt" his food supply would almost become nil. One old timer we knew personally said he and his brother had cooked the last pot of beans only minutes before they un covered a $10,000 pocket near the Applegate river divide. Another old placer miner sub sisted on grey squirrels before he could make the i'irst riffle "clean up." One pocket hunter told me all he had for a week was canned tomatoes to eat before he made a strike in five fig ures. That was in compara tively recent years. Here is a true one about a Josephine county prospector. After making a fabulous gold pocket strike, he breezed into Grants Pass, to a high toned restaurant, and ordered a dozen chicken gizzards fried in the best style of a con noisseur, 70 years ago. An old recluse miner in Fiddlers gulch, or Joe gulch, collected live rattlesnakes and kept them in a box under his bunk in a cabin near Woodville, Ore., one time. Bert Kissinger 520 Boardman st. Medford. .THE., BETTER SERVICE . . . Finest funeral home in Southern Oregon. 25 years of faithful service. 100 locally owned and operated. Funeral costs below the average. Only local sponsor of Oregon Funeral Plan Insurance. Only lady assistant in Ashland. Only ambulance service in Ashland. LITWILLER FUNERAL HOME Highway 66 at Normal Ave. Ashland Dial MU 5-4541 Only local member of Oregon & Cultural across with some firm offers of multi-million dollar trade, most responsible officials art going to continue to virtually ignore Mao Tse-tung's scraps' of bait. But if the Communists can plant seeds of good will for their regime, while continu ing to pick away at Japanese ties with the United States, the venture might have soma success. Attack U. S. Policy They will renew their at tacks on the U. S.-Japan Se curity Treaty and continue to link the United States with' the imperialism and war mon gering, observers here pre dicted. They will try to create doubt in the minds of young sters regarding advantages of domocracy and capitalism, then attempt to prove that Communism is a better way of life. The Communists have con sistently used culture as a, selling point and made not able inroads in Asia with this policy. . They ridicule the United States, meanwhile, by distrib uting cartoons of President Eisenhower climbing up a rope ladder from a convert ible into a helicopter.. Th reference (incorrect) it to Eisenhower's June 19 Old-, nawa visit when 2,000 demon strators threatened to block his motorcade. View of Valley To the Editor: I thought" perhaps some of the Rogue valley residents would get as much of a chuckle out of this as we did. Our son Rodney clipped it out of the San Gab riel Valley News. At least this Californian is honest, if not so loyal, don't you think?, Mrs. Ross Twedell 809 Beekman st. Medford. The column sent by Mrs. Twedell was written by Dave1 Swaim, and follows: One great valley salutes an other. Here are a few words about the almost identical beauties and virtues of the San Gabriel Valley and the Rogue River Valley in Oregon. Even similar, as they wend through these lush green lands, are the two great rivers, the San Gabriel and the Rogue. . ; Except for one minor difr' ference-the Rogue has water. And fish. ; And, for a brief time, me. : The tall, shadowy stands, of trees are the same here.aa there. ; Only here (in Oregon)' they're called fir and pine, instead of palm and scrub' oak. ; And what a grand view of the mountains from each valley floor. Here on the Rogue you clearly see the glaciered Cascades many, many miles away. '. There (at home) it s the, same. As far away as Sierra Madre is from the valley, if' you stand on the northern; edge and wipe your eyes you can see a firebreak. Even culture. Here in the' pleasant little town of Ash-: land one of America's great Shakespearean festivals is in progress. : Here one finds a whole summerful of fine Elizabethan! acting. ; ; There in the San Gabriel Valley ... : Well, I'll think of some-; thing. ; Why, then, if these two val leys are so similar, did I com; here, instead of staying horn' for vacation? Are you kidding? : How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Placo: Do your false teeth annoy and int.; barraas by slipping, dropping or wob-: bllng when you eat, laugh or taut Just sprinkle a little FA8TEETH on your plates. This alkaline (non-acid), powder holds false teeth more firrntr and more comfortably. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not lour. Checks "plate odor" (denture' breath). Get FASTEETH today avr ny drug counter. . National Funeral Directors Ax'n 116 C. M. Lltwlller rJrwiller i i