Show FOR 30 DAYS So different that tf$ patented by the UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT patent number 32£?&f1 Maqc to This top grade Med- eliminates breaklng-i- Tars n sludge bite and bitterness never reach your mouth You get cleaner thorcooler tastier moisture-fre- e oughly enjoyable smoking You can try it before you buy It’s the first pipe in the world that’s guaranteed to give unadulterated pleasure to smokers Give H 30 days — No cigarette no cigar nor any other pipe can give you the full rich flavor aroma deep down satisfaction enjoyment and peace of mind that you get from a Carey Pipe You may be a pipe smoker with a rack full of pipes and stiii searching for the idea! smoke or perhaps you would like to switch to a pipe to cut down on cigarettes or expensive cigars The Carey Pip© may look like any ordinary pipe but It’s a lot different! In fact there’s nothing like it in the whole world The Carey Pipe is made of the finest aged Mediterranean briar— but its big secret lies in the exclusive patented “MAGIC INCH" cleverly concealed in a bite proof nylon stem It’s Not a Filter The “Magic Inch" is notafilterthat gets soggy and loaded with foul smelling goo A soggy foul smelling filter transmits its stale foul odor into each successive puff of smoke creating more problems than it solves It’s Not a Trap The “Magic Inch" is not a trap collecting moisture that gurgles with every draw It is not a trap that must be cleaned after every smoke It’s Almost Magic Not my magic but NATURE’S OWN MAGIC Yarm winds pick up moisture by evaporation from the oceans lakes rivers and streams lift it high into the atmosphere where the cooler upper air squeezes it into drops of water that fall back to earth In its most perfect state of purity Just as the colder upper air of the atmosphere causes rain the cool air E A CAREY DEPT 285H 3932 N W entering the “Magic Inch" chamber through the special louvers of the patented Carey stem causes immediate condensation of the moisture in the smoke where it drops to the bottom of the chamber is absorbed by the natural fiber sleeve of the "Magic Inch" and in turn is evaporated into the outside air No accumulation ever remains to form sludge or slugs of bitter tasting goo The "Magic Inch" also mixes purifying oxygen with the smoke from the tobacco in perfectly controlled proportions cooling the smoke eliminating all tongue bite and creating MILDNESS and MELLOWNESS SWEETNESS that was never before enjoyed in pipe smoking Today over one hundred and fifty thousand pipe smokers smoke Carey Pipes almost exclusively They ail got started by accepting my most unusual offer to test a Carey Pipe for 30 days without any risk on their part whatsoever They were all granted the same option which Is yours also After 30 days if you agree that the Carey Pipe is the best smoke of your life you may keep it if you don’t agree whack it with a hammer and return the broken pieces to me The trial has cost you nothing! How many businesses are that sure of their product? Make Your Own 30 Day Test Clip out the coupon below Fill in your name and address and send it to me TODAY I’ll send you a full color brochure absolutely free so you can select your favorite style and shape for your 30 day trial KILPATRICK CHICAGO ILLINOIS 60841 Carey Dept 285H 3932 N Kilpatrick Chicago ill 60641 Okay Mr Carey Send me your full color brochure so I can select a pipe to smoke for 30 days on a free trial basis E A j I Hime J Address City Pusser iterranean briar incorporates a sensational inven- tion that contradicts every idea you've ever had about pipe smoking It completely SEND TO: Slier i IT Iluford f State Zip Continued seemed willing to do anything about it so I decided to run for sheriff" The crime ring laughed when Pusser entered the campaign But when a? the age of 26 he was elected they decided that if they couldn’t lick him they could buy him “I was told that if I played along" says Buford “I'd find $250 in my car esery week” When he replied by confiscating two new cars filled with illegal whiskey he was offered $500 and then $1000 a week "1 just smiled and walked away” Buford recalls “I guess 1 was set on showing them there was somebody ready to stand up for his beliefs When you grow up in a family that taught you right from wrong you are going to know it always and do it always" For the next six years (he was reelected twice) Buford Pusser lived with violence and death "There were at least 30 joints running wide open-gi- rls booze gambling” he says “People by the hundreds would pour in from three states and every weekend there I’d go round were fights shoot-out- s alone later he had deputies and arrest as many people as I could get into my sheriff’s car” When the syndicate realized they could not buy Pusser they tried to scare him off At first they harassed him with phone threats and trumped-ulegal charges Then they attacked him Once Buford stopped a car for speeding and the couple in it fired four bullets into him A girl posing as a hitchhiker stabbed him Another car simply tried to run over him His home was shot into Flis dog was killed All of this unbelievable onslaught is in the movie with Joe Don Baker playing Pusser "I had no choice but to stand and fight” says Buford quietly “Even my wife realized that if I quit or ran away it would have been too much for me to bear-- to be unable to live and hold up my head in the town where I was born!” Buford worried about his wife and children (his daughter Dwana was six years old then and his adopted son Michael was 12) “but I thought ‘Surely they w'on’t be so vicious as to hurt my family’” To his horror and despair Buford learned differently One day when Pauline was in the car with him gunmen ambushed them A fusillade of bullets cut Buford down destroying his jaw Pauline was killed Up to this point the movie closely parallels reality (80 percent of it is true to life says Pusser) but after Pauline's death fact and fiction diverge In the middie-of-the-nig- bt p 6 FAMILY WEEKLY July 14 1974 picture the sheriff his face in a grotesque cast drives away from the cemetery to confront the killers In fact Pusser was hospitalized for months One of the gunmen was killed sears later in a gang war and another is in jail for a different crime So far as Pusser knows the syndicate's ringleaders were never caught On the other hand the ambush did set off a civic uproar People who "didn’t want to get involved” suddenly realized they had to A whole new set of town officials was elected in a "clean-up- ” campaign The state-lin- e joints were closed down "It's just too bad” says Pusser “that it takes such a tragic event to make folks willing to take a stand” Passer’s story has raised a storm of controversy Mainly those who criticize the film say it glorifies violence making it seem necessary' and just Is that reaily the message? I asked Buford Is that what your life tells all those youngsters who see you as a hero? “I don’t advocate violence” he replied "I’m basically a gentle person But you have to stand up strong for An Epic View of the Sheriff Photographer Daniel Kramer who spent a lot of time with Buford Pusser while taking our cover picture had some interesting impressions of his subject: “Buford Pusser struck me as a heroic figure right out of the Old West Like Wyatt Earp or Bat Masterson he acted think alone out of nis own conviction he is a simple honest average guy He didn’t want any trouble but the trouble came to him The difference between Pussc--r and the classic American Western characters who have been our heroes is that Pusser is stilf alive and real and lecturing about his experiences aii over the country don’t think he sat around and decided to be a!! the things that he is Pusser seems to live by the philosophy that if anybody wants to get rid of him they’ll have to be bigger and better and stronger than he is I suspect he learned some of his behavior from the old movies I I of Gary Cooper and Randolph Scott” your principles defend yourself against those who threaten your survival If you could only see the reception I get when I travel I don’t get that kind of treatment for being violent I get it because I stood up for my principles I don’t say that what I did was right Possibly it was wrong But it was what I thought was right — the only thing I knew to do at the time If I could hae foreseen what would happen to Pauline I would have moved away As for what it cost me physically— well I can’t say it was worth it but I couldn’t have done otherwise without hating myself the rest of my life” Pusser admits some folks in Adams-vill- e don’t approve of him “They'll tell Continued on page 25 |