a m atut M t& M N M ásgan# s ia » to s a i NEGLECTED FARM PAYS $5,000 YEAR Ashland News ia Paragraphs Local and Personal Side Lights- Sweet cream for sale, 35 cents a Tamales of quality, served in the 131tf pine. Rose Bros. 131tf husk, a t Rose Bros. B. Stew art has moved from 266 The Christian W orkers band will Fifth street to 247 Third street. meet at the Congregational church at 2:30 Sunday afternoon for an Big >1.10 dance, Gold Hill, S atu r­ 129-3* hour of Bible drill and other work. day, February 4. All Christian young people are In­ B. Y. P . U. M eeting1— vited, The young people of the Baptist church will hold th eir regular m eet­ Arm ory D ance Saturday night, 129-3 ing Sunday a t 6:30 o’clock sharp Their subject will be “A B etter B. On Streets A gain— A ttorney W. J. Moore" was able to Y. P. U.” Come and learn the sec­ be on the streets again today, but Is ret, they say. going very slowly for the present. fatftnlar, aàhùiy 4, itá l 00312425 BOOKS FOR BLIND JOMPJNDEMAND Blueberry Bushes Provide Profit­ able Crop in Maine. Standard and Modern Fiction Is Being Called For. Bible D r ill— Orres cleans clothes. Phone 64. C hristian E ndeavor Party— A union Christian Endeavor party was held last night at the Congrega­ tional church, members from the Presbyterian, C hristian and Congre­ gational rocieties all joining in the fun. Since the party was in cele­ bration of Christian Endeavor week, the organization being 41 years old at this time, hoop skirts and curls m arked the hostesses and reception committee. Games, fortune telling, singing, and taffy pulling made the tim e fly and when at a late hour the party broke up, every one went home feeling th a t they were glad they had come. Whipping cream th a t WILL whip. 131-4 Enders Confectionery. Civic Im provem ent Club— The Civic Improvement club will meet on Tuesday afternoon, Febru­ ary 7, in the parlor of the public library. Im portant business is to come before the club at this meeting and a large attendance is desired. Milk 11c per can, $1.30 dozen, $5.25 case. Plaza M arket. 130-2 A t W o rk Again— OIL WELL IS DOWN 800 FEET Oregon-Cat Creek Synd icate D rillin g Local P eop le Interested W ord has been received from W in­ nett, Mont., to the effect th a t the Oregon-Cat Creek syndicate holdings near there is now being drilled for oil, the operations having begun on January 18. They are now down 300 feet. The following was taken from the Oil Fields Bulletin of W innett, Mont., dated Jan u ary 18: “ Forem an Sprague, of the Absaro- ka Oil company, !was in ARtynnett early this week from the camp in section 34, where his company will drill a well for the Oregon-Cat Creek syndicate, in the northeast q u arter of the northeast quarter. This well will be drilled on a share basis, and if it proves to be a commercial producer, other wells will follow soon, until the 80 acres of the Oregon-Cat Creek are drilled. Spudding in of the No. 1 well is slated for Jan u ary 20 or earlier.” The Absaroka company is the oil operating subsidiary of the N orthern Pacific Railway company and, th ere­ fore, has unlim ited capital which will assure the unit holders of a speedy and thorough development of the property. WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 4 — President H arding has instructed the navy departm ent to stop all con­ struction of ships which would be scrapped under th e naval treaty, it was learned today. No actual scrapping will take place until all the countries have ratified the naval treaty, it was stated, but President H arding, in ordering con­ struction halted, suggested to Secre­ tary of the Navy Denby th a t great economy would result from stopping all construction of doomed ships at once. The saving to the country as a re­ sult o the order will be more than $5,000,000 a month. The following battleships are now in the course of construction; W ash­ ington, South Dakota. Indiana, Mon­ tana, North Carolina, Iowa and Mas­ sachusetts. W ork on the cruisers Lexignton, Constellation, C onstitution, Sarato­ ga, R anger and United States will also stop. Dr. Gerdine Holds Interesting Clinic The Southern Oregon Osteopathic society held its first circuit clinic of this year in Medford yesterday. In the forenoon a clinic was held for nervous and m ental cases. The clinic was very interesting in th a t the cases examined were so varied, including both functional and or­ ganic nervous and m ental diseases. Dr. L. Von H. -Gerdine handled these cases as only an em inent specialist could. The doctors of the society were enthusiastic oyer the clinic, while the audience were enthusiastic over the lecture given by Dr. Gerdine at the public library, which was very well attended by Medford and Ash­ land people. The members of the association took lunch together a t the Hotel Medford. Mrs. A. Bullen, who operates the Dew Drop Inn, and has been unable JACKSON COUNTY SCHOOL NOTE to be her place of business for sev­ eral days, Is again on her feet and There were 3039 boys and 2905 supervising the work a t the popular girls reported on the school age cen­ lunch room. sus for Jackson county in 1919, or Candy! Candy! Candy! W atch a total of 5944 children. At the Rose Bros, windows. 131-tf close of 1921, 3576 boys and 3448 girls, a total of 7024 are reported. C lass Party— . No wonder our schools are fuller, The Philathea class of the Baptist with 1080 more children than two church entertained the Sperro class years ago. of the same Sunday school a t the • • • D IPTH ER IA SEASON church last night. About 15 young Instead of large local institutes, people were present and enjoyed the the plan for teachers* councils, form ­ This is the diptherla season. Rec­ evening, which was spent In games. ed in six different zones of th e coun­ ord of the United States public Refreshm ents were served a t (the ty, is being adopted. This brings to­ health service show th a t 16 states close of the party. gether sm aller groups of teachers reported over 5000 cases in October for more pracUcal conferences and and more in November. Don’t wor­ W ire auto wheels fixed. Flxit definite work. Patrons and direc­ ry about the “ flu ” this w inter; it Shop. tors, also, will be welcome to these is unlikely to return. W orry about meetings. The February and March diptheria: worry enough, anyway, to TH IRD AND FOURTH schedule of meetings is as follows: have your doctor determ ine by a BALLOTS FOR NEW February 4, Ruch; February 11, simple test w hether you and your T rail; February 18, Gold H ill; Feb­ children are immune. If they are PO PE A R E FU TILE ruary 25, Eagle Point; March 4, not, protect them by the new method Proenix; March 11, Belleview; of immunization. Every sore th ro at ROME, Feb. 4.— Again a black March 18, Applegate; March 25, Cen­ is a danger signal and may indicate column of smoke Issued from the tra l Point. Sessions open a t 10 some acute, infecious disease, such chimney over the Sistine chapel o’clock a. m. All teachers of the as diptheria or scarlet fever. Take twice during the day. Indicating th a t the third and fourth ballots for the county> outside of first class dls- no chances. Have a physician make new pope to succeed the late Pope tracts, are included In these couqg an im m ediate exam ination. A few Benedict XV by the conclave of car- cila‘ And a11 f,r8t cla®8 teachers are hours’ delay may cause death.— dinals in the Vatican had been taken cordlally Invited to attend any coun- H ealth Nuggets. w lthout any candidate receiving the c11 sessions they desire to. tw o-thirds m ajority necessary to » • * DIRECTOR’S BODY elect. The following pupils of ru ral CAUSES NEGRO Fifty-three cardinals participated schools completed eighth grade work TO COLLAPSE in the rote. During the initial p a r t i 1“ J a n u a ry : Raphael G ardner Jr., of the conclave ritual only 52 cardi­ Lake Creek; Wyvette Conley, E ure­ (Continued from Page 1) nals were present, but subsequently ka school( near B utte F a lls); Beu­ Cardinal Marini, who was ill with lah Medley, Belleview '(n e a r Ash­ between us— never. I loved Mr. Tay­ Eugene Clarke, Highland lor as a good comrade— a pal with influenza, was carried into the Sis- la n d ); tine chapel and put to bed. He is i sch° o1 (near Prospect). whom I could discuss subjects in The above pupils will not receive which we were m utually interested. under the care of a physician, and his ballot is conveyed to the ballot diplomas now, because of a plan for I seldom saw Mr. Taylor except at a chalice by a committee of three car­ a county-wide e ig h th grade com­ gathering of friends, it’s true. But mencement day in May or early I freqhently conversed with him over dinals appointed for that purpose. June. The county educational board the telephone.” went on record Ju n e 24, 1921, as “ W ednesday was th e first tim e I follows: have ever called upon Mr. Taylor “This board favors an annual cele­ alone,” she said. “Then I stopped in A MULE KICKED ME 5 0 ' bration for the eighth grade g rad u ­ for a few moments on my way home ates of this county in each year__ in response to a message left with MAHD T Ö T K E R DAY, the same to take th e shape of a my secretary. DOCTUH SAY AR L O S' community m eeting in some pleas­ I arrived at Mr. Taylor’s home at MAH C O N SC IE N C E BUT an t central locality, when diplomas 7 o’clock W ednesday evening and JED 6IN ’ funi de bill he would be handed to the graduates, left a t 7:45 and he accompanied me SONT N\E , D A T MULE with appropriate exercises and ad- to my car on Alvarado street and ! dresses suitable to the occasion. It chatted w ith me a few moments. Mus’ er done kick ! is the 8entim*ent of this meeting of “A fter he had said goodnight and HIM T o o ! x ^T“”V the board th a t the city of Ashland, promised to telephone me w ithin an and its beautiful park, would prove hour, I directed my chauffeur to a most desirable place for such drive me home. I heard of the tra ­ m eetings.” gedy on the following m orning.” So watch for further news about Taylor’s body was found seated at Jackson county school day, with Its a desk facing a picture of Miss Nor- speakers, outdoor events, basket din­ mand. On a nearby table were found ner, music and all sorts of things to glasses and a decanter containing gin make It a memorable day for the and orange juice. The fact th a t more eighth grade graduates of Jackson than two glasses contained a bit of county. orange juice In th e bottom showed • • • th a t Taylor had not been drinking by Miss Cowgill, assistant state club himself. leader, from Oregon Agricultural Newspaper men unearthed more college, will be In the county on Feb­ liquor upstairs jn Taylor’s home be­ ruary IB and 16 to meet with club fore It was hurriedly removed by members and their leaders. friends. HAMBONE’S MEDITATIONS MOST OF SUPPLY IS CANNED 140,000 Acres Devoted to Production and 14 Canneries Pack It— Farmer Gives Up In Disgust When Fire Sweeps His Farm, Two Years Later He Returns to Find the Place Cov­ ered W ith Blueberry Bushes, Now He Takes It Easy and Makes $5,000 a Year. ‘W E MUST AVOID ATTITUDE THAT TH ESE VESSELS ARE SUPPLY CUT BY HIGH COST SUBJECT FOR CONTEMPT,” RE- Committee for Men Blinded in Battle FERRING TO BALFO UR’S VIEW •They A re Form idab le E n gines of W ar and R equire to be Treated as S u ch ,” Says Vice A dm iral o f the B ritish N avy.” Makes Appeal for Publications of More Books in Raised Type— Aver­ age Novel Is Done in Braille for $10— 1,100 Active Readers Use One Library for the Blind in New York. All over the country an amazing In­ By EARL C. REEVES crease Is noted by librarians In the LONDON, Feb. 3.— “ Subm arines demand ______ ___ Bangor.—Five years ago a man try­ for ____ books ___ for _________ the blind, , „ ac- ing to get a living out of a rocky have come to stay, w hether we like cording to a recent statement of the farm In Washington county set Are to it or not,” is the em hpatic declara-i secretary of the Committee for Men some brush. The fire got away and tion of Vice Admiral G. A. Ballard, Blfnded in Battle, which makes its swept over the entire place—fields, headquarters at 111 East Fifty-ninth wood lot and all. The farmer gave up form er director of operations in the street, New York, which is making an appeal for the publication of more In disgust, getting a job In the woods. British adm iralty. In more dram atically phrased, if books in raised type. This, it Is After two years In the Northern log­ ging camps at good wages the farmer less vigorous style, he is taking up pointed out, is not only due to the fact returned to the old place to find It the cudgels, after the fashion of the tb“ t the United States now has scores wild. The entire burned area was cov­ late Admiral Fisher, who conducted " ar bBnd> but also to the growing ered with ui little . stunted bushes. But desire of the blind to make the widest v . a famous letter-w riting campaign on they werfe blueberry bushes, and ever , . possible use of the public libraries since then the discouraged farmer has tbe tbes18 tb a t subm arines and air 1 where such books are obtainable free, The revised Braille, says the corn- been getting an average of $5,000 a planes had negatived the capital year in “stumpage"—permits to pick ship. His war cry was “ Scrap the mittee, generally adopted as a stand- blue-berries on his land. This occupies lo t!” ard two years ago, is beginning to be his attention from the middle of Aug­ Ballard does not go so far as his mo& widely studied and used by the ust to frost time. After that he can one-time chief, but he is ham m ering sightless. Textbooks and educational go fishing. matter no longer fill almost the entire “I never knew what a good old farm relentlessly into th e British public field of books offered for the blind that was until I burned it up,” says his belief that the em pire m ust have reader, which wus the case at one subm arines. the baron of the barrens. time. The blind reader now has be­ "W e m ust avoid the attitu d e th at fore him an ever-lucreaslug number Best Paying Crop. With even a fair season there is these vessels are subject for con­ of story books of all kinds. The total more money in blueberries than in any tem pt,” he declared, referring to the figure of raised letter books published other crop in eastern Maine. The ad case against them presented by Mr. yearly is placed at approximately 250, of this ............................................. number a large percentage vantage of the blueberry farm over i Balfour a t W ashington "They are and ” .............. — .— .4 ». »— I B , . to the entertainment of the others •_ Is -v...- that 1 it 4. doesn’t have to bet.. .... . uey y aie now now cater cs farmed. On 140.000 acres in eastern form idable engines of war. re q u irin g , reader. Emboldened by the Increasing num­ Penobscot, Hancock and Washington to be treated as such. Useful Mine Layers ber of titles In the field of modem counties the little bushes grow sturdily fiction and verse, appeals have now and rapidly on lands that have been “ Although in the w ar not a sin g le 1 burned or lumbered over; no fertilizer British or French battleship wasi been made> says the secretary, not Is required, there Is no ploughing to sunk by German guns, more than a '° r , ” V“ ™5 , ““d, do—Just an occasional weeding out of , 4 4. . 4 ! Scott and Daudet, but also tor more other growths so the berry bushes may dozen met th eir fate either in direct; Charles M. Schwab and II. C. Wltwer. not be choked. All the blueberry asks encounter with subm arines or by The last named, whose books are re­ Is half a chance. Many a man who mines th a t subm arines alone could plete with modern slang, received a failed miserably at raising potatoes have placed where they were. letter the other day written in revised or other crops has become rich at “ That in Itself furnishes couclus- Brallle by a Wind girl, asking for the blueberry farming—as riches go down ive evidence of the effectiveness of early publication In raised letter of his book, Pushers.” Mr, East. 1 h n n ik L .4 .4 , • 1 I new iC v v U U U n , “The A 11“ Leather Iu “ * l l I l “ U X U O I H ..X O . *.*1 I . 11 riñes, e\en w íen used in a w itw er was very much interested and In the old days blueberry picking was a casual Industry or enjoyment perfectly legitim ate way, as we used caused bis answer to be done Into Indulged In by the natives who wanted them ourselves. Moreover, this evi-l Braille also. “The Mirrors of Wash- some berries to “put down” for the dence does not stand alone, for the bigton” has recently been asked for winter or to make pies in summer moral effect of subm arines is very i by SOIne who are Interested in political and maybe to sell a few In Bangor great, ap art altogether from their i 1 gossip, who have read the London prototype of the book. market, where a box containing six th reat to m erchant ships. quarts was worth abodt twenty-five Revised Braille Widely Used. “ Had they never existed it is al-' cents. People journeyed from dis­ It Is the opinion of the Committee tant parts of Maine in long caravans most certain th a t we should have for Men Blinded in Battle that re- of covered wagons, whole families forced our way into the Baltic and « * » ■ * * ¿ » M tb , old-time! by atto rk io g or menacing Ibe GeV-l X « ^ “i'l% tb “ f i r X “ C d S “ X )S ^ " d i " I ; a ltere‘l ,,,e e',tlre cour4 " 8 j 01 u *e war. | ttou of one other sort of raised print, easy days anybody could go anywhere M ovem ents o f F leet which Is formed in Imitation of the and pick all the berries he liked with­ “ Again, it was the fear of subma- «ctual English alphabet. For those out charge. rines th a t affected the whole move- who lo3e the,r slgl,t ufter they bave 14 Canneries Pack Supply. m ents of the grand fleet and com- learned t0 read thia last ls- iQ maDy Now It la all different. The lands, nr, tn i i .. . ° 1U 1 cases’ tbe easiest kind of touch letter In both Incorporated towns and un­ pelled up to drain all other war to learn. organized townships, are privately areas of destroyers in order to p ro -’ “The blind have a greater Interest owned, and pickers must pay stump- tect our battleships, with the result in libraries thau any other class be- age, which usually Is two cents a of seriously weakening our positiou! cause the distribution of raised letter quart, sometimes running as high as ■ *- ** is of are necessity in most four cents, according to how “thick” ! tbese areas- And yet again, it was, 1 books Tbev miite enativ t cases v the German subm arines th a t forced llew’ -* -bey a,e Qa*te costJj to make the berries are. At two cents a quart and their circulation “ ls not “« large. The rn e a family of four persons can earn $20 the withdraw al o t o ur heavily a rm e d !" " “ .h ip . from a d v a n t a a e o n . about «10 to $30 a day. Strictly speaking, blue­ ships from advantageous bom bard­ to produce in Braille, and yet one day berries are not “picked,” but rather ing positions outside the Dardanelles recently three of the four copies of a scooped from the bushes with ghort after the Majectic and the Trium ph popular novel were out when request rakes similar to those used in cran­ had been sunk. was made for It at the library here,” berry harvesting. The rakes take said the secretary. “The claim th a t fifteen million leaves and twigs along with the ber­ Miss Lucille Goldthwalte. in charge ries. Thus a winnowing process In troops were safely conveyed across of the Library for the Blind in the the field and another at the factory the Channel proves very little New York Public library, which has are needed to eliminate the refuse, against subm arines, for these n a r­ the largest collection of works in the and even after that flocks of nimble row w aters are especially favorable Braille system in the United States, fingered girls pick the berries over, for defensive precautions, and our says that there ls a tremendous need so that no green ones or any forlorn precautions were conducted on a for nmre books in raised type for substances may get into the cans. There are fourteen large blueberry specially extensive scale. It was far blind readers. canneries In Maine. Most of the pack­ otherw ise In the M iditerranean,! At tbe Library for the Blind In the ing concerns own extensive tracts of where one troopship after another big Cent raj building on Fifth avenue, blueberry land. destroyer flotilla . . to tbe a allie, N? ' rea(J Y" r,k; the ' t surne kJnd o{ books that . assist . ille s , I ! song Of the blueberry area 100,000 acres a situation would have been reached seeing people read—that is, speaking are In Penobscot county, 360,000 In early in 1917 in which the safety of iu quantity, fiction first and other Hancock county and 680,000 In Wash­ all reinforcem ents and supplies for classes following. A popular book, If ington county. The canneries buy non-fiction class, like Jam es’ “Psy­ the eastern theatres of war would berries in the open market or sell per­ chology,” Is popular, likewise, with mits to harvest on their own lauds have been seriously jeopardized.” _________________ blind readers. In the early days of with the proviso that all the berries MEDFORD BADLY BEATEN i b° ° k3 f° r the blI" d the prevalent ldea gathered shall be sold to their can­ _________ was 1° t ry to give them none but rell- neries. There never ls any lack of • TH EIR HOME FLOOR giOUs works, to the exclusion of all supplies when the yield ls normal. . . ,, ,, . : other literature. However, as the li- This year there were few blueberries, . ledtord s ail-star high school f ir s t; brarian pointed out, naturally, “they a late June frost having killed the young berries before they “set." But team bit the dust in last night’s! like religious books no more and no nine years In ten or oftener the yield i game on the barn floor of the fam less than the rest of us." The material which the library can ls plentiful, and then the canneries, ous Medford N atatorium , against the operating at full capacity, turn out small, suburban city ef T alent’s high buy Is very limited. That ls to say, about 140,000 cases of twenty-four school team. Although the all-star the actual amount of material avail­ cans each, or 3,360,000 cans. In 1919 team was in the pink of condition, able in Braille ls limited. Blind read­ the price was up to $6 a case, but lu the fast appleknockers and basket- ers are greatly In need of more books of all sorts. It takes three or four 1920 k. , there , was a decline to $5, - and ball throw ers from Talent had the big volumes to make one novel the way this years price would have been j . lower still had not the crop failed, in ? Iedford b *gh overpowered from the these raised-type books are printed, addition to an average of 140,000 cuses I eg nninS and ° n their home floor, which accounts for the high cost, It canned, selling for $500,000 to $800,000, Medford surely lost th eir horseshoe was pointed out. it is estimated that about $250,000 Is' and luck was against them, as their 1,100 Blind Used Library. realized from the sale of berries in the thousand and one weak excuses why Active readers to the number of fresh state. The canning process is they couldn’t win seemed useless. 1,100 used the Library for the Blind simple enough, but great care Is exer­ The final score was 25 to 16 in favor In the Central building during 1920, cised to insure perfect condition. of the apple pickers. It would h a r d - ltbe circulation of books for the year ly be expected th a t Medford’s h a y -' belno 35,807 volumes. The collection Remarkable Chickens. wire team could compete with the contalna more than 12,000 volumes “My sister-in-law,” says an Alberta strong, husky farm er boys of Talent lD, the American Braille, Moon, reader of the Montreal Family Herald New York point, line letter, revised and Weekly Star, “possesses a fowl The games to come off between Ash­ Brallle, grade one and a half, and re­ that has a bill like a chicken, a body land and Medford will no doubt be vised Brallle, grade two or European like a duck, feathers like a chicken and so one-sided, as A shland'^ 'strong scores, raised for the study of blind webbed feet like a duck, walks like a high school team has yet to lose a , music readers, * ----------- and ------------- the ------------- library also — af- » — J ------------- duck, but can’t swim. I have a chicken game, th at it will hardly be of gueat ’ fords an opportunity for its readers with all Its feathers turned Inside out. interest, except to give Medford a to • tudy aH embossed magazines and smooth side next to body, and rurned few good pointers in clean, scientific aU ma8azlnes in Ink print relating to outward, wing feathers decidedly so; - - - work with the blind. basketball. she looks very odd.” The Library for the Blind, which is (Signed) A RQOTER. “A" 4 - w w t A t the Churches P resbyterian Church Subject lor the m orning serm on, “It is finished.” in the evening, the service will be Lu charge of the C hristian Endeavor society, and the program is as follows: Opening hymn. Scripture reading, Edith Rob­ ison. Prayer, a num ber of Christian Endeavpr members. Hymu. Two five m inute talks: (1) What the church expects ot the C hristian Endeavor society,” .Mr. Robison; (2) "W hat the C hristiau Endeavor expects of the church,” W alter Miksch. Offer­ ing. Special music, choir. Address, “ The conditions of a successful life,” by the pastor. Special music by the Christiau Endeavor society. Mizpah benediction. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Junior Christiau Endeavor at 4 p. m Young people’s meeting at 6:30. Guild at 6:30. Church night, Wednesday, beginning at 6 o’clock with a "pot luck” lunch, C. K. Koeh­ ler, pastor. Trinity Episcrqial Church V lcar, the Rev. P. K. Hammond. Holy communion at 8 a: m. Sunday school at 9:45. Morning service at 11. Everybody cordially invited. Methodist Episcopal Church Corner North Main and Laurel streets. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m., Dr. G. W. Gregg, superintendent. Morning service at 1 1 a . m.; subject. “ Upon tills rock will I build M.v church.” Epworth League at 6:15 p. m.; Miss Alta Powell, leader. Mis slon study. "The negro and the church.” Evening service at 7:30; an illu (rated son will be thrown on the st.een . Do not fill to hear the mission study class. Over fifty have been enrolled. John Wesley Jr., is some wide-awake young man. Re­ ception into the church membership at the morning service. Charles A. Edwards, minister. F irs t Baptist (lu n c h Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. O. F. Carson, superintendent. Morning worship and service at 11 o'clock. Rev. George H. Young, Baptist state superintendent of religious educat- tlon, will occupy the pultfit both morning and evening. B. Y. P. U. at 6:30 p. ni. All young people are In­ vited to attend this meeting. Even­ ing service at 7:30 p. m. F irst Church of Christ, Scientist Pioneer avenue South. Sunday service at 11 a. m. Subject of les­ son, “ Spirit.” Sunday school at 10 a. m. Wednesday evening meeting at 8 o clock. Reading room open dally from 2 until 5 p. m. except Sundays and holidays. F irst Congregational Church Boulevard and Main streets. Sun­ day school at 9:45 a. ni., with class “ ,or « r“d“ »“* *e«»- Hrl"8 your Bible. Morning service at 11; ' subject, ‘The measure of divine love.” Junior Christian Endeavor. 3:30 p. ni. Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p. m.; subject, "Christian Endeavor round the w orld.” Ps. 107:1-3. Ev­ ening service at 7:30; subject, “C hrist’s estim ate of John the Bap­ tist.” The public is cordially invited to al! these services. There ls a wel­ come here for you. W. Judson Old­ field, minister. Clu-istian Church Corner B and Second streets. Bi­ ble school at 10 o’clock; Frank Pat-^~ terson, superintendent. We are to have “decision day” in the Bible school today. Morning worship at 11. Sermon topic Is. “ The ¡restoration movement; what it is, and what it stands for.” Fellowship luncheon after church, followed by the m onth­ ly business meeting of the church. Endeavor at 6:30, both interm ediate and senior. Evening worship at 7:30. This is the closing sermon of the series which we have been de­ livering. It is called “ From the g ar­ den to the city.” We expect to have a packed house so you had better come early. Monday evening we w lIL have pabtizing services. At this tim e also A. F. Bennett of the Eugene Bi­ ble university will address us. Be sure to plan to hear him. Mrs. Jose­ phine Chample, pastor. — — . . .1 a TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE— Cheap, late model 15- 27 Case tractor. A-l condition. See Robison, Robison’s garage. Phone 40. 131-2 FOR SALE— Two good cows, fresh inside of two weeks. John Tadina on Dead Indian road. 131-2* CHERRO Hartl W heat FLOUR G uaranteed 9 8 .3 0 at your Grocers r