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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1963)
MY MOST INSPIRING MOMENT r Lost IH THE THROES OF PERIODIC PAIN Every month Peggy was in tbi Ibms of functional mtmtrusl dhtrm. Now the just tike Midol and goes her way in comon became Midol tablets contain: An exclusive anti-spasmodic that Stops Cramping . , . Med ically. approved ingredients that Rbijbvb Hbadachb and Back achi . . . Calm Jumpy Nbivbs . . . A special, mood-brightening med ication that Chases "Blubs. "WHAT WOMEN WANT TO KNOW" Will Frank, rvMlfng 32-poge book, x plain, womonhood't moil common physical probiMti. Written by o phyiicwn. Wrlla Dopl.M, 80 280, NwYorfc 18, N.Y. (Sent in pwn wrapper .1 Found FAST RELIEF WITH DOCTOR'S FAST RELIEF I You never tried any- I thins ao wonderful for I bunion aa Dr. Sertoli's Bunion Iteducor ofaoft rubber. Relief la immediate. Helps hide bulga, preaorve shape of shoe, 75 each. If not obtainable locally, aend price, anno site, width, atate if for Itivht or Ieft foot. DR. SCHOU'S. feet. ITUS. CkKM 10. III. BUY UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS MisORlGS DeWin's PilU, with positive analgesic action, bring fast palliative relief of symptomatic paini in back, joints and mukici. ucwui s rius arc mildly diu retic and help flush out unwanted wanes icn oy sluggish kidneys. DcWitt's Pills mav be mil what vnu nmi iu relieve oacaacne miseries 1 neip you avoid getting up nights. Biwioiisrm p-r 1 FALSE TEETH KLUTCH holds th-m tlght.r KI.UTCH forma a comfort ctnhion; hold danlal plataa m much Armar and mujtR.r that you can aat and talk with areater cumrort and aacurity; in tnanycaim almcMt wall aa with natural tiath. Klutch lamam tha constant faar of a dropping twkini, chaHm plata ... If your dru gial doan'l hava Klutch. dnn't waste '"I"' n ooMHalti, but and in lot aaa wa will mail you a anaroua trial boa. ,, A famed war correspondent recalls a visit with Winston Churchill during England's darkest hour and the words that were a prelude to glory Any reasonably sane man who .was in London in October, 1941, had to come to the reluctant conclusion that England was al most finished. The Luftwaffe was chipping away at London nearly every night Bombs had put many of the railroad terminals out of action, a hard blow because trains bearing war materiel all had to go through London. A dozen cities had been leveled, and the Luftwaffe seemed to grow stronger. The only news that came from the fight ing fronts was bad news. The Germans had occupied Greece, Yugoslavia, and Crete. On the Eastern front, the Germans were only 50 miles from Moscow, and most military observers thought that Russia soon would be knocked out of the war. This would release thousands of German planes to concentrate on bringing England to her knees. Rommel's Afrika Korps was clobbering British troops in the Libyan desert. Lend-Lease had brought England only a trickle of planes, tanks, and guns. It was difficult for a correspondent like myself to write anything cheerful about the situation. We had exhausted the sub ject of the heroic fighting done by the R.A.F., and the courage of London's civilians was now an old story. Many correspondents already had made up their minds that the Germans would soon invade England and that England had no adequate artillery or armored forces to stop them. The U.S. was not in the war yet, but there were a great many American military observers in England, and those to whom I talked were unani mous in saying that she was finished. It was hard not to share their views. IT WAS DURING this dark period that I re ceived an amazing telephone call. It was from Mrs. Winston Churchill, asking me to have lunch the next day at Chequers, the traditional country home of British prime ministers. I was delighted but puzzled. I had never met either the Prime Minister or Mrs. Churchill. But I was ready when a car called for me. Less than an hour later, I was being greeted by a grinning Churchill. "We have a friend of yours staying with us," he said. "Harry Hopkins. Hopkins is going to deliver a radio address on the B.B.C. next Sunday. He has had a long flight from Washington, and he thought you might help him with his speech." That solved the mystery of why I had been invited. Only the Churchills, Harry Hopkins, and Averell Harriman were pres ent at lunch, which, to my surprise, was an informal, almost gay, affair. The war was hardly mentioned. The Secret of Victory By QUENTIN REYNOLDS AjS Author of "London Diary," "DrM Rohoareal," ' Courtroom," Known But to God," and mo forthcoming autobiography, "By Quontln Raynoldi" US Churchill's proud spirit filled the ronm ' '' Though the Nazis were winning on all fronts, ' .o ivim cuniuenr. oj final victory. 1 so., max Jloa llmlro, N.Y. family Wnkly, May II, Ml