-B Guns Impounded
By Medford Police
Three Medford boys had
their B-B guns impounded by
city police officers Wednes
day after they were reported
shooting at passing cars on
the freeway viaduct.
Officers said the youths,
aged 11, 12 and 15, were re
ported about 5 p.m. Witnesses
said t h e youngsters were
standing on Earhart st. and
shooting up at the cars as they
passed. There was no reported
damage to any vehicle, offi
cers said.
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON
The Common Cold III
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY IS, 1963
Remedies Said To
Have Little Effect
On Curing of Colds
Editor's note: Few things
are easier to come by or hard
er to get rid of than the com
mon cold. Modern medicine,
which is making advances in
finding what causes cold, is
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
TVTOTHING like the devotion a dyed-in-the-wool cowboy
I- from Montana will show for his horse. One old hand
led his four-legged charge into the lobby of a new hospital
ill irussuuid. 1QU Can I lfnry
do this," protested the C'!
llustered receptionist.
'This is a hospital for
PEOPLE: You must be
looking for a horse doc
tor." "Ma'am," respond
ed the cowboy, "when I'm
ailin', one of those hoss
doctors is OK. But when
my hoss is ailin', I wants
a people doctor."
Crew Coach Darrow
looked over a bowlegged
freshman and inquired, "So
you're aiming to como out
for the crew, eh? Ever rowed before?1
"Only a horse, sir."
The freshman confessed.
The club's worst golfer was having a particularly bad time on
one hole, when he spotted an interloper watching him in stark
disbelief from the edge of the fairway. "Hey, you," barked the
member angrily. "Only golfers are allowed on this course."
The interloper nodded. "I know it. Mister," he agreed, "but I
won't say anything if you won't, either."
1W3, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
Dennis the Menace
Vi ciin vniiiKfLF IF A KID WAS SOMA BE A S0O0 TRUMPET
player, hb m to swagAaY! "
yt? MAS. 22
-i2"tt. APR. 2C
-T 9-22-39-42
Jy44-78-84-89
, TAURUS
APR. 21
I MAY 21
2- 8-21 -2i
'sV 53-67-69
STAR GiVZER?
GEMINI
TM 8.19-7.1-31
.137-52-79
CANCfR
J w , JUNE 33
V JULY 23
J 34-36-38-40
tV 46-49-50
LEO
JULY 24
yS:-, AUG. 23
D-.59-63-64-65
YV71-73-77
VIRGO
'? fl AUG. 2
I'ifA SEPT. 22
- 3-K-54-74
v75-76-83-83
-By CLAY R. POLLAN-
Your Daily Activity Guidm
According to the Start.
To develop message for Saturday,
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
1 Sciind
2 St- Ljnr
3 Succor
4 S'ccr
5 Vu-.tfer$
6 Dcn't
7 Irvduitry
8 N(
9 Seek
lOTrodes
1 1 Delay
12 Start
13 There'
UOcor
15 D;o!mg
16 A
17 Staunch
1 R Get
19 Full
OM'dkinJ
2' Spares
22 Cooperation
23 Supporter
24 Intormatiijn
25 Of
26 Of
27 At
28 List
29 That
30 Other
LIBRA
SEPT. 23 rfj
OCT. 23
158-60-82-85
31 And 61 Visit
32 Gathering 62 Ptob'ems
33 Of 63 New '
34 Keep 64 And
35 la 65 Romantic
36 Awcy 66 Your
37 Explanation 6? Are
38 From 68 Elbow
39 Ot 69 Flv.ng
40 A 70 New
41 Circulate 71 Thrill
42 Others 72 Place
43 Change 73 Draw
44 To 74 The
45 People' 75 Palm
46 Boisterous 76 Of
47 Friends 77 Neor
48 Meet 78 Obtain
49 Scheming '" 79 You
50 Person 60 R.?ht
51 New 81 Now
52 Before 82 Parties
53 Love 83 Your
54 In 84 Quick-
55 Faces 85 Indicated
56 Family 86 Continue
57 Marital 87 Commodilrc
53 Happy 88 Hand
59 Money 89 Results
60 Home-coming 90 Favored
Adverse )Neumf
SCORPIO
OCT. 24 QJj
NOV. 22
6-TM2-20 P
29-43-80-81 H
SAGITTARIUS
NOV.
DEC
13-16-17-23C:
JAN. 20 VtyCi-
U -48-51 -55 (T
k) -70-72
AQUARIUS
JAN. 21
FE, n &
4.14-25-30531
45-57-M Val
hsces
FEB. 20Y?
MAR. 21 (-,
1- 5- 7-10,
H5-35-87.90'
hiving tougher going in find
ing what to do about it. Tho
following dispatch. th last
in a thret-part striei on the
common cold, reports the lat
est information on what can-
and can not be done about
a cold.
The Family Counci!
Editor's note: The Family Council consists of a Judge, t
phychiatrtst, three clergymen, three editors and a women's editor.
Each article Is a summary of a family disagreement presented to the
Council. The Council deals with problems, major and minor,
encountered by guidance counselors and social workers, tdlted by
Mrs. Alma Denny. (Copyright by General Features Corp.)
Don'! MtS
Hiss S)
It! Jn
Iff 21 fi I fa
U AUU
Crater Lions Club's
TiOfl
Sunday, Feb. 17 From 12 to 2
CHANNEL 5-KBES-TV
For Benefit of Jackson Park Diving Pool
MEDFORDvJ&iWrniBlNE
By BARNEY SEIBERT
Chicago -HTD- There's an
old saying among physicians:
"Treat a cold and you'll be
over it in seven days. Leave
it alone and it will last a
week."
Despite the $350 million a
year spent by Americans on
nostrums and remedies to
cure the common cold, that
old rule still applies, the
American Medical Associa
tion says.
In an age of "wonder
drugs" man is no more able
to cure the common cold than
were the ancient Chinese,
who inhaled vapors from a
broomstraw plant; the Indian
medicine man who shook rat
tles and chanted incantations;
or the Medieval physician,
who drained off a pint or so
of the victim's blood.
Patent cold remedies some
times ease cold symptoms.
They generally consist of pain
killers, fever reducers, anti
histamines, decongestants, vit
amins, cough medicines, rubs,
gargles, antibiotics.
Comments on Remedies
In the January, 1961, issue
of its magazine, "Today's
Health," the AMA made these
comments about ingredients
in cold remedies:
-Pain killers: Make you feel
better but does nothing for
the cold. May cause nausea,
dizziness or more dangerous
side effects.
-Fever reducers: Fever
hardly ever accompanies a
cold; may bring on ills even
worse than the cold.
-Antihistamines: Help f u 1
for allergies but useless for
colds; can impair judgment,
cause dizziness, drowsiness,
headache.
-Decongestants: May tem
porarily stimulate freer
breathing but boomerang con
gestion may occur, starting a
cycle of pill-congestion-pill;
may cause sinus infection;
nose drop form can allow oil
to slip into lungs, causing
pneumonia.
-Vitamins: Supplementary
vitamins-in or out of cold
remedies - can neither keep
you from getting a cold or
help you get rid of one.
-Antibiotics: Worthless
against virus-caused disease;
may cause allergy; may cre
ate bacterial immunity, mak
ing them worthless against
germ-caused disease.
-Cough medicines: You can
get the same effect by suck
ing a lemon drop; other in
gredients may cause stomach
irritation, lung infection.
Gargles: Worthless against
a cold because the infection is
deep inside the body.
-Rubs: "Application of oint
ment to the chest is foolishness."
Misuse of cold remedies can
mask serious illness, the AMA
said. Measles, polio, influenza,
parrot fever, Q-fever and
streptococcal infections begin
with cold symptoms.
What to Do
What to do if you are
among the 85 per cent of the
population which gets colds
each year?
The AMA advises: Take -a
hot bath, drink a glass of hot
milk or lemonade, go to bed,
use steam as a vaporizer,
avoid spreading your cold to
others.
Dr. Noah D. Fabricant,
writing in the March, 1958,
Journal of Otolaryngology, re
ported that alcohol reestab
lishes circulation in nasal
membranes, provides comfort,
induces drowsiness and pro
motes a desire for rest.
Although . . . alcohol is
obviously not a cure ... its
beneficial role ... can neither
be minimized nor dismissed,"
he said.
In any case, many a phy
sician's own cold remedy is
an aspirin tablet, a shot of
whisky, and bed.
American Workers
Mainly Use Cors
New York - ItPD -Most
Americans RO to and from
work each day by car.
Forty-one million men ana
women, representing 64 per
cent of the nation's work
force, commute this way, re
ports Oil Facts, a publication
of the American Petroleum
institute.
Herman Y. - Studying is
only one of a dozen things I
must do.
Mr. F. Y. - At 15, it should
be at the top of the list.
Herman Y. - I wish my
father would get off my neck
about school. I'm 15 and a
high school sophomore. I
manage to get by, even
though I'll never understand
what geometry is all about.
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ORDER DIRECTING HOLDING
OE SPECIAL ELECTION
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR
JACKSON COUNTY
IN THE MATTER OF THE FOR
MATION OF THE EVANS VAL
LEY RURAL FIRE PROTEC
TION DISTRICT
WHEREAS on the 30th day of
January. 1963. at 2:00 o clock
R.m., there was held a public
earing pursuant to prior notice
duly given and in relation to a
petition previously filed with the
court requesting the formation of
a rural fire protection district in
Jackson County, and at said hear
ing no objections to the petition
having been heard; now. therefore,
it Is
CONSIDERED and ORDERED
that a special election within the
above named proposed district be
held on the question of forming
the proposed district, said election
to be held within the boundaries
of said district hereinafter de
scribed on the 15th day of March.
1963, at the Grange Hall in the
City of Wimer. Oregon, between
the hours of 8:00 a.m. and S:C0
p.m.
CONSIDERED and ORDERED
that the Jackson County clerk pre
pare the required ballots titled
and described as provided in ORS
478.041. and shall further appoint
three or more clerks of election to
be electors within the district. It
is further
CONSIDERED and ORDERED
that Robert J. Carstensen, County
Engineer, he be. and he is. hereby
designated to post requisite notice
in three public places for four suc
cessive weeks prior to the election
within the proposed district, and
the Medford Mail Tribune Is here
with designated a newspaper of
eneral circulation In the county
TAX BITE
New York - (LTD - The Fed
eral tax bite on toilet prep
arations in 1962 was $141 mil
lion - up $11 million from the
previous year, according to
Tax Foundation, Inc.
MILL TO RESUME
Coos Bay -f Hi- The former
Scott Paper Co. pulp mill at
nearby Empire is scheduled
to resume production March
4. officials of the Coos Head
, Timber Co. announced
I Wednesday.
V
Si
tnr nnhlication of notice reauired
by statute. The boundaries of the
proposed district are described as
follows:
Beginning at the section corner
common to Sections 28, 29. 32
and 33, in Township 35 South,
Range 4 West of the Willamette
Meridian, in Jackson County,
State of Oregon, thence North
5280 feet to the Section corner
common to Sections 20, 21, 28
and 29; thence West 1320 feet
to the Southwest corner of the
Southeast Quarter of the South
east Quarter of Section 20;
thence North 1320 feet to the
Northwest corner of the South
east Quarter of the Southeast
Quarter of Section 20; thence
West 1320 feet to the Southwest
cornei of the Northwest Quarter
of the Southeast Quarter of Sec
tion 20; thence North 3960 feet
to the Northwest corner of
Northeast Quarter of Section 20;
thence West 2640 feet to the
sort inn corner common to Sec-
linn 17. 18. 19 and 20: thence
North 21120 feet to the section
corner common to Sections 29,
!WV 31 nnri 32. Townshin 34
Smith. -Ranee 4 West of Willa
mette Meridian; thence Enst
5280 feet to the Section corner
common to Sections 28. 29, 32
and 33; thence North 5280 feet
to the Section corner common to
Sections XV. zi. ann
thence East 2640 feet to the
Southwest corner of the South
east Quarter of Section 21
thence North 2640 feet to the
Northwest corner of tne uouin
east Quarter of Section 1;
thence East 2640 feet to the
Northeast corner of the South
east Quarter of Section 21;
thence North 2640 feet to the
Section corner common to Sec
tions 15. 16. 21 and 22; thence
East 5280 feet to the section
corner common to Sections 14.
15. 22 and 23; thence South
5280 leet to the section corner
common to Sections :!2. 23, 26
and 27; thence East 5280 feet to
the section corner common to
Sections 23. 24. 25 and 26;
thence South 10,560 feet to the
section corner common to Sec
tions 35 and 36, Township 34
South. Range 4 West, of the Wil
lamette Meridian, and Sections
1 and 2, Township 35 South,
RanRe 4 West of the WillnmHte
Meridian; thence East 3960 feet
to the Northeast corner of The
Northwest Quarter of the North
east Quarter of Section 1; thence
South 3960 feet to the Northwest
corner of the Southeast Quarter
of the Southeast Quarter of
Section 1; thence East 2640 feet
to the Northeast corner of the
Southwest Quarter ol tne bouin
west Quarter of Section 6.
Township 35 South. Ranee 3
West of the Willamette Meri
dian; thence South 1320 feet to
the Southeast corner of the
Southwest Quarter of the South
west Quarter of Section 6;
thence 1320 feet East to the
Southwest corner of the South
east Quarter of Section 6; thence
North 5280 feet to the North
west corner of the Northeast
Quarter of Section 6; thence
East 10.560 feet to the Northeast
corner of the Northwest Quarter
of Section 4; thence South 1320
feet to the Southeast corner of
the Northeast Quarter of the
Northwest Quarter of Section 4;
thence West 1320 feet to the
Southwest corner of the North
cast Quarter of the Northwest
Quarter of Section 4; thence
South 1320 feet to the Southeast
corner of the Southwest Quarter
of th Northwest Quarter of Sec
tion 4: thence West 1320 feet to
the Southwest corner of the
Southwest Quarter of the North
west Quarter of Section 4;
thence South 1320 feet to the
Southeast corner of the North
east Quarter of the Southeast
Quarter of Section 5; thence
West 3960 feet to the Northeast
corner of the Southwest Quarter
nf the Southwest Quarter of Sec
tion 5; thence South 2640 feet
to the Northeast corner of the
Southwest Quarter of the North
west Quarter of Section 8;
thence East 1320 feet to the
Northeast corner of the South
east Quarter of the Northwest
Quarter of Section 8; thence
South 1320 feel to the South-
east corner of the Southwest
Quarter of the Northwest Quar
ter of Section 8; thence West
13 200 feet to the Northeast cor
ner of the Southeast Quarter of
Section 11. rownsnop jo noum,
Rjnffe 4 West of the Willamette
Meridian; thence South 260
feet to the section corner com
mon to Sections 11. 12. 13 and
14. thence West 5280 feet to the
section corner common to Sec
tions 10. 11. 14 and 15; thence
South 15.840 feet to the section
corner common to Sertions 26,
27 34 and 35; thence West 6600
feet to the Southwest corner
of the Southeast Quarter of the
Southeast Quarter of Section 2B;
thence North 2640 feet to the
Northwest corner ot ine ixorm'
we.tt Quarter of the Southeast
Quarter of Section 28, ihenci
lTn feel West to the Northwes1
enmer of th Southeast Quartei
of Section 28; thence South 2640
feet in the Southeast corner ot
the Southwest Quarter of Section
28; thence 2640 feet west to in.
nrtint of heeinninc
Dated at Medford. Orefon. thii
Kr. H.v nf Fi.hrilft.-V lfh3
JACKSON COUNTY COURT
EARL M MII.I.KK
Coun'v Jude
E II TAYLOR
Countv Commissioner
DONALD E FABKR
County Commissioner
By luck I passed the mid
year exams, and I want to
get to some of my other inter
ests. I'm trying to perfect a
pitching curve I figured out,
and I'm helping a friend fix
his motorcycle, and 1 like to
keep up with the Hit Parade
recordings. There's so much
more to life than just doing
homework.
But you wouldn't think so
to listen to my folks. Now
they're insisting that I stay
in my room every night be
tween eight and ten. I'll stay
there, but I won't waste all
that time studying.
Mr. F. Y. - How can you
impress a boy with the won
derful chance he has? These
are Herman's precious years
when there's really nothing
to stop him from soaking up
knowledge. It's never this
easy again. And what chance
will a kid have in the com
plicated world of the future,
if he doesn't know anything?
Maybe he can be a crooner
for a while, but even then
he'll wind up paying his mon
ey out to the fellows with the
good education - the lawyers,
writers, agents and account
ants. I'd be an accountant my
self today instead of a ticket
agent. But I had to go to
work when I was Herman's
age. And I was always too
tired to get much out of eve
ning classes. Now is the time
to put study first.
The Council -1 Mr. V is
right, but being right isn't
the same as being convincing.
He and Herman need all the
help they can get to bring
his point to pulsating life.
The point is clear: Just as
his Dad goes to work each
day to support the family,
(It's duty and nevermind
pleasure!) so Herman must re
gard school as his Main Oc
cupation, again as duty and
never-mind pleasure. Every
thing else must fall into place
around these cores, including
the pursuit of pleasure, hob
bies, housework, outside jobs,
and sports. Never must any of
these addenda be worked at
instead of the one big assign
ment.
While Mr. Y. and his wife,
as parents, can force this view
They'll Do It Every Time
sn-... By Jimmy Hatlo
G-3IMSHAW.THE PURCMAStNO A6ENT.
SAVES HIS COMPANY PLENTY IHGOUOM
HIS JUDICIOUS BUYING-
But a stoet peddler can
ScU HIM TWE TOWN JAIL M0
WELL NEVER KNOW HE 6OT SWC.
-f IN HALF- PESTVLE W Sffi-A F . 2OO-PR0Op XSTt WOtvA
J VOUR PRODUCT TO LLVVE DO) M4CWILOM4 PAPFUM.' YEAH I )
OUR SPECIFICATIONS." I E & UO TAX RIGHT OFF J LEMME
I THEN TEN PERCENT ift'" THE 60AT..$30 I SMELL IT '
OFF FOR CASH AND v AH OUNCE-' ff HOW 'MANY J
jp
upon Herman for a while by
standing guard outside his
room, by withholding privi
leges, by nagging and begging,
they can certainly use any co
operation of teachers, commu
nity leaders, and other teen
agers to drive home the vital
message. For Herman must
see for himself that youth's
a-fleeting and time's a-wast-ing.
It's really the old story of
the dilettante, Herman. He
flits. His days arc devoted
to the delights of the mom
ent. He spreads himself thin.
He knows nothing of the pain
of hard work, the restraint
of postponement, so as to en
joy a deep solid pleasure la
ter, one that has been truly
earned. And he winds up the
eternal amateur, master of
nothing.
Your better course is to
put first things first. That bi
cycle can wait to be fixed,
or be fixed without your aid
if the Job cuts too deeply into
your Main Occupation. You'll
admit that you're not giving
you school-work you "all."
We'll settle for giving it your
almost all, leaving some of
your attention for fun and so
cializing.
You won't like every
course. This may be the
teacher's fault as well as a
matter of your own bent. But
we urge you to get the most,
rather than the least, out of
them all because you only
pass this way but once.
Motorists Reminded of
Over-Confidence Mishaps
Over-confidence is a tve-
qucnt cause of traffic acci
dents and traffic deaths,"
Medford Chief of Police
Charles P. Champlin has re
minded area motorists.
Too many drivers consider
themselves "experts" behind
the wheel when they are only
"laymen" drivers, he said.
Over-confidence in driving
aften stems from years of
driving experience during
which the driver fancies him
self becoming more and more
skilled. "The mere passage of
time doesn't make a person
an expert driver," Champlin
said. "In fact, it sometimes
serves to develop careless
habits or Ingrain them more
deeply."
The dangers of over-confidence
in driving are many
and varied. The driver who
fanccs himself an expert oft
en fails to take the necessary
safety precautions during in
clement weather conditions.
Among other common
faults of "inflated-ego" driv
ers includes mis-J u d g i n g
their car's capabilities for
rounding curves or accele
rating. "We don't know how many
accidents, injuries and fatali
ties are indirectly caused by
driver ove r-confidencc,"
Champlin said, "but we do
know that this threat to safe
ty can only be conquered by
each individual motorist tak
ing a personal inventory of
his own attitude and actions
behind the wheel. If over
confidence has started to gov
ern your driving behavior,
it's time for a change."
-B .5
SHAKE raSftt
PAINTEwD
Volut S6 per gal
lon! Double your
paint dollorl
$C98
GAL
2nd GALLON FREE!
r
TEX PAINT 41
Our HM ttsltn I
(Ion ii tick dry. j
, aihabi tH i
'!. (tvits m 1
(Ml! DOUIIE TOUI I
0OIUI! I
AA
GAL
2nd GAL.
FREE!
REDWOOD STAIN
Wltlnq flftfili.
item for tuillint
(mat.
98
GAL
S3 98 Value!
REDWOOD LOG 01 1,
tig. SS.SO pit gallon.
FREE
Cap C. Vandagrift
REAL ESTATE APPRAISER, CONSULTANT 8. NEGOTIATOR
ANNOUNCES
HIS NEW LOCATION
1 King Street Phone 779-1666
Medford, Oregon
OUTSIDE!
WHITE
Manning MirthtHB
10Qfuii,uiual!y
wtit m 1 toot,;
iill-leyilinj, laiy S
niuihmg. Looks ntwl
iaryiant Gal.
$7
2nd GALLON
FREE I
COST VUIJ1UE linilB
13 WvitMi to Kent
Dairy farm
Oi'.ni it yetri
WANTf::!': liouae, t rooms or
atom wliN ttrnjtv t'.r mnnu
WAXTKD TO X.KASK - 375 .
ft uffff; tiBf JiuJi:: I:w
trtftt OU-. KiL ouinn
p.m KHT Ktv. 1. J.
K-rf jnt-'imflti-n ana A
form call v-rv.
iiKNK'UAl SKKVK'Ktf APMI.'S
IMTIUTION. I'ut-iiC livUHilnti
Hervicr. i
U-iMimn
It one-ft ofck tl dtmftnrloni.
.VVtiJa- Farmer Kx-iuk ,
tU W Main, ,nm, P. Oil T-XQQt
23 HouiaTiqM Goods
KAfil-T Arjv.rlron ct
N.ti recovered, ftOT-iat.
24 MiiflMOU fat $k
Oil liftatlnfr itoriy
tea. pfjmpiflte. irt
-
hti
V,
jsswwt'WrWC riKiittie
FREE APPLES
fttlJ'f.K KrtKl 11 J for toiJff
tar vIvg'n'$ft l 1 bushel of xnaH Grimc Gotten
l.ttSITK HfeirirtV.mafiV nil h Ml r. , ,r . .. A.
' " " . '. . i v, ...1,1,1 j nrAfnfAan onniM mt mi
usrri x ir.anini. . --r-
per Duiaei. uu$ weex uy.
TICmiTGtr ORCHARD
S miles E. of .ia on Rt. 35 rxt
1 1
n
' I 1 1 Oil km (ilM lot
1 11 '"" ,,M "''l
ur
PAINT ROUtR-TRAY
COMBINATION
7'ineh tizt nlltr.
mi
FUSTIC
DJfOP
cioms
2'
Sl l-'iafUDAinK jlniiuo Ail io- L. -
W ,f$fr SELL TMRK7
f ,3Mf with a WANT AD TODAY! ,
jrV; '3tSV I'lH
jS' Fi t 'I ' '.a E ft.jp- mm t
wool - '' V ' (,: - ft , ii I fjJC
iMZk ; DAL 772-6141 p4y ;
ft?".; &,r l&uAt M'Xf""" i
K'fni.l-m M, I wi'.idi. Int-liIVT K.ll I.''"! f .
s 1 : fL t Orlij.Allr vr l?0 MlTOKtllPj
ZZ"-. 3 I
LA I; Y niirits cart-tlm ofllna 41 f tt I.. Ci.
2 fo? 98'
PAINT
THINNER
GALLON r33!
C
in your eontaintr
NO DRIP! NO MESSI
CROSBY 100 Acrylic
iSStMarvelon
USI OUTSIDI
OR INSIDEI
?4
99
GALLON I
SAVE $2.51
Ni, Rial Kit ( ixnl. Tbkk boditi,
dmi hi 10 minvldi wash btsihii in
wait r I Fir ill ovrtid larfstn vaad,
tludi, tancrtlt, alt.
PORCH & DECK
1ufh, titit .iribli, high glots finish
rimlaal Ii mi
t4 viathir. Fiivltr
Hlen. W SIvitur Gal.
4"
SPAR VARNISH
lavfhtii Imiih nadtl Far hat hart
iiitlitf, iK. tapmmi li iltahtU
IflUfl Ht IIHty
I IMltf liM.
W. SF S valut
4
SKYLINE
OUTSIDE WHITE
$5.50
value!
JA.'lKTOH:!: uy:ir tJt
4 room Dt. prlt
bAi -Td tnt, c rjort. 2i I'Oi-a,'-bontti
Kt.
Lcrxcr d'jplex, 3 bdroms. C'Iom
uptown. J'h, Tn 3-23M or DR 2-3903
ftr 3.
TOR rnt t hednom O
UTiif:r n-Kr hft, ctrtmie tllrvl
bath t mnnrtu 1J ill Id Ava
HOUSES AVAILABLE NOW
1 W. 21 St., S roorrw, batemtnt
k iraraR. 7S per month.
WANT to keo tr--'
ch:M !r. mr hotrr 112.114.
HAN t oA4 lhn, V.fl haul,
tne IK J-11S MAri'.n Pradl.
P,viMAN HAiita It riil houioirork
for rour,!e IT2-KH
gooo uisa thadc ihI
S Pc. LMn Bt, Wot im tli
Mr-NMr I. y AdtrWl-ffOfT K
t Pt. Otttl't fc.-ltf "ram W$
in(jvim. Guarntcd. Bln-a
Una I' l or 1 1 ii por watkr
unt'p v.i.i'.rTiiif?
inlaitrml ud HaiitUntial Wlrlnf
fhinucn
PDVinjUPC HEATING
Cinn. At. XnU. O DR Mt1
ivn Micktniry
CUSTOM TINTING
Choosa from ovtr 1 400 dacorator
colon! Wi ll tint tha axoct color
you wont in mmuttil
MONIY-BACK GUARANTEI
You mutt b completely tatiitied
or your money cheerfully refunded.
Major Brands
Paint Outlet
BRUCE
BAUER
LUMBER
COMPANY
765 So. Rivirsida
Mtdford
5.