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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1962)
jv St a i Shrinks Hemorrhoids New Way Without Surgery STOPS ITCH RELIEVES PAIN For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hem orrhoids and to relieve pain with out surgery. In case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place. Most amazing of all results were so thorough that sufferers made astonishing statements like "Piles have ceased to be a problem!" The secret is a new healing sub stance (Bio-Dyne) -discovery of a world-famous research institute. This substance is now available in suppository or ointment form under the name Preparation H9. Ask for it at all drug counters. Callouses Pain, Burning, Soreness TttCf- Apply oft, ano thing, cushioning, protective Dr. Scholia Zino lads. 'Iltey put you right hack on your feet immensely re lieved. Hani with the aeparnte Medication included, ino-iwuls remove rallouaea in a hurrv. Trv them! Woman Tortured by Agonizing ITCH ' I mtarly itcbtd to at alb lYtytaru'l html found a mew u omdtrrrfMf.rsoU i i I'm babpt," writes Mrt. 1 P. RamtayoflA. Calif r Meres niriMii rniri iroiti' torturei of nt h in mimrn. chjfina. rrtial iirh. nth and eiirma with an ambling new vcientinc & fonnulscillrdl ANAL AN. Thiif.tu ..cling medicated (rrmckiMihjrmfulh4tcrMKrrmi while n tooihri raw, irritated and mlTimrd nuue. Stop Mtaiihinc to tpccdt healing, jjj Qno't suffer ! Oct L AN AC AN k ji druggm. jj FALSE TEETH I KlUTCH holds them tighter KI.ITTCH forms a comfort cushion; holds -j dental platen no much firmer and snugger is that you ran eat and talk with greater 2 comfort and security; in ninny caw almost tS as well as with natural teeth. Klutrh S lenHem the constant fear of dropping. rocking, chafing plate ... If your drug- IS gist doesn't have Klutch, don't waste 2S money on substitutes, but send us 10 3 and we will mail you a generous trial box. KlUTCH CO., Box 2tOO, llmlro, N.V. Plagued Day And I Night with Bladder Discomfort? I I'nwlur eating or drinking may be a source of mild, but annoying bladder irri- SJ tal tons making you feel restless, tense, ;; and uncomfortable. And If restless nights, with nagging backache, headache or mns- jS rnlarache and painsditetoover-evertton, 7St train or emotional upset, are adding to -j your misery don't wait try Doan's Tills, I loan's Tills act S ways for speedy re- jjj Hef. I They have a soothing effect on bladder Irritations, S-A fast pain-reliev- 3 In' action on nagging backache, head jg aches, muscular aches and pains. S A wonderfully mild diuretic action thru the jg kidneys, tending to Increase the output of the 15 miles of kidney tubes. So, get the jS same happy relief millions have enjoyed for over tiO years. I,anre, economy slse save money. liet Doan's Tills today I MY MOST INSPIRING MOMENT From the Ashes We Rebuild "- tonsieur maurois!" said the 1VL concierge. "What a joy to see you after such a long time !" I had not set foot in my house for five years. I had left Paris in 1940, the day before the Nazis entered the city. In the meantime, I had lived in England, Amer ica, Algeria, Tunisia, and Italy. In 1943, I had belonged to the small French ex peditionary force that reconquered Cor sica. But Corsica was not my home. A return to Paris was quite a different thing and much more moving. "Your poor mother! She would have been so happy to see you!" My mother had been arrested by the Gestapo though she was over 80. She had endured her imprisonment with patience and courage. Then the excitement and happiness of liberation had been too much for her. A few days after her re turn to this house, where she used to live with us, she had died of a heart attack. The concierge continued: "Her last words were: 'I must live until my son comes back.' Now you are back and she is not here to greet you. Such a brave old lady! It's unfair." I had, of course, been informed of her death, but it was painful to realize that the dear wrinkled face would smile lov ' ingly no more. OUR apartment was on the fourth floor, overlooking the Hois de Boulogne. It had been occupied by a Captain Goering, nephew of Hermann Goering. "For a while he behaved decently enough," the concierge said, "but when he understood their armies were beaten and had to run away, he became furious. He ordered his men to break your f urni- -tu re and to burn your curtains. We cleared the mess the best way we could." So I was prepared for the worst. Yet when I entered the apartment, I could not help shrieking with pain. My walls had been lined with books, thousands of books chosen with love and care, year in and year out, most of them required for my work, many given by fellow-writers with friendly dedications. My books had been my most precious treasure. I lived with them, knew every one of them and where to find it. Bal zac's place was just opposite my desk, under Dickens. Stendhal was behind me and I had only to stretch out my arm for his novels. I would have been able to find His country devastated, his home looted, this famous author faced the future in despair yet from despair came something "finer than ever" By ANDRE MAUROIS stood liere. my heart shrieking with poin. But my wife was rcsoute: she would rebuild my library. family Wrtlclv. July I, IM2 IllUSttAtlON IT ISA IAINETT