PAGE SIX -DFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, MDFORl). OREGON, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1935 medford5&Tribune "ETrrriH lo Southern Oresos Beads the stall Trlbun." Dally Eseept aaturdar. Pubinn.a nr . MEDFORD PBINTINO CO. 11-11-2, N. Fir St. Pnoo 11 ROBERT W. BUHL, Bailor. AD independent Nwppor. Eot.r.d second-class "J""" "Ai ford, Oresoo. under Act 01 MreH I. I SUBSCRIPTION RATES By MU In Advance: Dally, one year pally, el month!.. 11.00 . ' Phoenix. TaUnt. Gold Hill and on Dally. one year Dally, all montha rtaiiu nni mnnth ....... ,vv Ail terma. ca.b In advance. Official Paper of the City of Bedford. OinciBJ raper ui UEMHKH OFTHB AS8O01ATEU PHtBS Receiving run woi Tne Aaaoclated Preat le excluilvely en. titled to the uae for publication ot ell newa dlipatcbea credited to It or otner wlae credited In thte peper. and elao to the local newa publlahed herein. All rlshte for publication of speelal dispatches herelo ere elao reeerved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Advertising Rpren t tlve) U. C. MOOENSEN COMPANl Office, in New Tork. Chicago Detroit San Franclaco. Los Anfelee. Seettle, Portland. MEMBER. Ye Smudge Pot I By Arthur Perry. Ethiopian tribal chieftains have deserted the cause of Emperor Halllle Selassie to swear allegiance to Mua ollnt, and fight for Italy. Thl. la the Abdubba Wahcrossah, familiarly known In America, aa the double cross. e e Astronomera looking through the world's largest telescope at Mt. Wll aon, Calif., into atarry apace, have discovered "there la not one sign of e, void in any direction." No pocketbook wa In range. Very likely aome Mahoney oratory will be turned loose In what It already known at the Windy City. (Klamath Falls Herald). A neat and dignified backhanded Jab. e e Huntere who have successfully hidden their resemblance to a deer, should not forget It la now dang erous to look like a Chinese pheas ant. .a e e Snow In the Crater Lake region h halted road construction work, and the Prospect team playing ball. e The new Blue Book has cuts of the members of the legislature and the new brldgea aa they will appear when finished. (oorvains u", Times). A nifty trick. A lady late to a bridge game skedsddled up East Main atreet yes terday pro. at fast aa the oldest Roosevelt boy, la alleged to have gone In Connecticut, tre nabbed by a vigilant Republican speed-cop. a e e Indiana are In attendance on fed eral court once more. Economlo con ditions have Improved to the point, h,n there la no aentlment to have another Indian war to make the Indiana take the country back. e JOl'RNAMSMS WEEK IN SUN (Red Bluff. Cel., Newt) Thle la Newspaper Week. Nothing particular la required of the publlo that It hasn't been doing. It will be a painless week for all of you. No admonition la !ld upon you to read more newspapers, quit borrowing ysur neighbors, getlng -peeved at the editor for too much crime news, too much church newt, too much sports or society or twad dle. Oo right ahead reading your dally paper. Leave all the de tails of Newspsper Week to the newspaper men. - e e The lighting facilities of the new go-carts are atupendoua. They pierce the night for three blocks on both aldea of the road, and two miles straight ahead. e e e Daniel Boone. Jr., while wander ing in the great outdoora late Mon day, ahot a movement behind a bush. Fortunately no human - was back of the movement. e Older Girls protest, thst new fsli hats reveal too much of the hesd. but there Is nothing they csn do about It. see WHILE THE GROOM'. SHAKE (Palo Alto, Calif., Times) An engaged girl who hed planned a picturesque and cer emonial bridal march down an Impressive flight of stairs for her wedding, chsnged her plena quite abruptly the night before the great event. It seems thst at the rehearssl she discovered that her knees popped quite noisily at every step downward. see The first lsdy of the land reports she has found a way to avoid the stares of crowds, via: look over their hearts. Another way to avoid the stares of crowds. Is to svold crowds. a e WAR WHOOPS TO BE HEARD AT LUNCHEON (Hdllne Portland Oregonlan). Cause and effect, ana what have you. e e e Orandms's fancy bulbs havs vsn lhed. As there are no gypsies In sight, the vandalism Is blamed on a premature outburst of the Hallo we'en spirit. e a e Jack Hottendorf, the Blue Ridge lookout, with the eagle eye and black moustache, has finished up his duties on the fire protective force for this sesson and we are pleased to see one smiling face, repound for bacon. (Sawyer'a Bar Items). Cruel and unusual. For Hoee thst Wear ouy NOLO! at HOH87 SUMlwra B. UoIIlCAtta, The 30 Hour Week S a measure to decrease unemployment the 30 hour week is probably desirable. And as most experts agree of work, for many years, now institute the shorter week, in those industries where the stagger ing of labor is practical. But where agitation for the 30-hour week, is really nothing but an effort to increase wages, on one hand ; and provide more leisure for the workers on the other, we regard the movement as neither good sense nor good policy. We don't care whether the his hands, five hours of work out of the 24 is not enough. This country never grew great on such a schedule and never will maintain its greatness on it either. This country has been developed by men and women who had their eyes on something check. . ' In fact practically all the things worth while have been done by those who concentrated things done and paid little or to do them. As a temporary measure to the 30 hour week is all right; as a permanent program and partJtularly as a symbol of the American SPIRIT of accomplish ment and endeavor, it is all wrong. The Football NOTHING succeeds like success. This is true in all walks nf lifn including; football. When U. S. C. was carrying Jones was regarded as the greatest football coach in the country. His word was the law and the cial secretary to handle his fan mail, and acknowledge gifts and honors that showered upon him. Last season was a dismal one promises to be little if any better. For some timo we have been Jones's scalp to rise from the and have been surprised at the that end, since U. S. C. started It took last Saturday's defeat ently, to start the ball rolling. NONE other than Charley Paddock, former world champion sprinter, distinguished Southern California graduate and present business manager of the Long Beach Sun, rises to de mand the head of his former pal Howard Jones, because he is getting nothing out of his fine claims Jones has the speed, brains, passing ability, line charg ing, nnd football genius, that any poor. Howard has lost his punch. Unless something happens soon, presumably against Oregon State this Saturday the well sharpened axe "will come tumb line? out rarin' for action" and if Howard Jones wishes to escape decapitation he better make a run for the dog house. SO it goes. The plain truth is Southern, California HASN'T the material. Three or four years ago, a "build-up" for U. C. L. A. was started by certain powerful business interests in Log Angeles. There was no intention to desert Jones, but there was a determination to concentrate upon the University of California at Los Angeles. Since that time promising football material has had a way of moving in at U. C. L. A., and giving U. S. C. the cold shoulder, that's the explanation for the for mer's rise and the latter's decline, not any vital difference in their respective coaches. But results are what count. Unless Jones can snatch a row of victories to smother his defeats, the man who was once "the greatest football coach in the country" will no doubt find it desirable to move elsewhere. Which only goes to show football coaches arc important, but the material they have to work on is more so. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Oct. IS. They tre madly fsnnlng the scattered embers of Brosdway In hope of a flame that will again become The Great Blate. Men and women to whom the atreet means a livelihood will tell you the d e p t h a have been touched and Broadway Is n the upbound. They profess to believe It will again become the boulevard of boulevards, the light-hearted at rue n once a definite part of the national consciousness a playground wltn the finest of cafes, theatres and sundry frothier relaxations. That is their chant. But such optimism Is not visible save for spurts such ss engendered by the Bser-Louls scrap. The fact Is thst Broadway has dwindled to a catch-penny tawdrlness with all the brightness preceding coma. It must be cleansed of carnival tempo and honky-tonk blatsncy. It haa no class restaurants such ss Rector's, eThanleys and Church- Ill's. Done are such theatree aa the Criterion. Olone and Gaiety as once flourished. No more hotels like the Knickerbocker or tony night clubs like Bustsnoby's. Only the shell re mains. Perhaps Broadway's decadence Is largely due to the process of ress oning thst Wilson Mlrner used to delight In telling. One of his hard boiled cronies once observed with greet esrnestnes: "Thst. trie. I al wsvt try to deal legitimate, espec ially at first!" A few hurdy-gurdvs cne under aaaaaass .,Aerl --IMIIM 'Illl.l' my window now ue lelt despitt there will be millions of men out is undubtedly the proper time to individual labors with his head or but the time clock and the pay upon accomplishment getting no attention to the time required cover an economic emergency Pendulum everything before them, Howard gospel. He had to employ a spe for the Trojans. This season expecting the cry for Howard environs of Los Angeles county, absence of any agitation toward down the toboggan. at the hands of Illinois, appar material at IT. S. C. Charloy coach in the country has but , promises of banishment by a may oralty decree aome time ago. To many from the outland the barrel orfc.n la as big city aa the two wheeled Victorias that circle the park. There Is a blending of old world Industry and peasant obae qulty about the Impresarios one grinding out tunea and the other bowing, scraping and smiling for tossed coins. It might not be music but It beata most of the street cacophony about which nothing la ever done save talk. On the now busy Hippodrome cor ner a one-srmed shoe shiner does the best business among hla guild. His lightning dexterity, uncorking bottles with hla teeth, flipping rags and carrying on a running conver sation is a show In Itself. He claims to have been born In Ethiopia and lost his srm from Infection follow ing a camel bite. True or not. a good atory from a good locale at the moment. Arrangement In black and white. A coal black copper In Hsrlem handing a ticket to a white motor ist whose csr bore sn Alsbama li cense plate. Incidentally. Harlem's hon-ton ledge. Sugar Hill, received fresh soc lsl impetus being the scene of the wedding of Joe Louis. There Is riv alry between The Hill and Strlver'a Row. where Florence Mills and Tsui Robeson used to live, to the south ward. When Duke Ellington end Cab Calloway, the Jar conductors, took apartments on Edgecumbe ave nue or Sugar Hill It notched that "dlcty" status higher, but with Louts taking his bride there the eclipse of Strlver's Row was complete. Louis, by the sheer magic of his prowess, becomes automatically the colored social lesder In both New York end Chicago. And. of course. Louis' bride made a hit with almost everybody riding home from the fight on a atreet car. Psychiatrists do not recommend the mystery and detective novel for mental relaxation for the high strung. I have a tense friend who just csme from one. He was told to get a eppv of OH'bon'a " Rme" Aod read It during t Jet at tot i Personal Health Service By William Brtdy, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and nyglene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will he answered by nr. Brady If a stamped teir-ad-dressed envelope Is enclosed Letters should be brief and written in ink Owing tn the large number ol lettera received only a ten can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 268 El Csmlno, Beverly Hills. CaJ. ARB YOU WINTERI Outdoor air In winter with a tem perature of zero and a relative' hu midity of 50, will have a relative humidity of only 37. wheri heated up to 70 degrees F. This Is drier than the air of the driest climate known. In the Orest Sahara desert the Tela-, tlve humidity may be aa low aa ST.. The average relative humidity In Yuma, Arizona la 35", In the dri est month of the year, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, It Is 29, In Pueblo, Colorado, 38 r.. In Death Valley, California, 33, In the Mojave Desert, California, seldom low er than 30, In England the relative humidity averages 75. The mean dative humidity of Colorado Springs the year around Is 45. at San Diego 73, at Los Angeles 86. Actual teat of the air In a steam- heated office building In Topeka, Kansas, showed an average Indoor relative humidity of 23 when the temperature waa 73 degrees p., and the outside winter air had a relative humidity of 82. No matter what method of heating Is employed, the heating of winter air necessarily dries it out at the same time. . This warmed and dried atmo sphere gives a sense of chilliness, due to excessive evaporation from the skin surface and the common impulse is to turn on more heat and shut out any draft or current of fresh air which may be entering the cell. This too bad for health, good nature, working efficiency, complexion, grow ing plants, book bindings, furniture, respiratory mucous membranes, but it Is fine for the fuel business, the nos trum business, doctors, lawyers, the cosmetic Industry and the furniture trade. I know no more about the tech nique of alr-condltloning than I do about what makes an automobile go when you press this button and pull that gadget. But I know It works. I tried It, crossing the continent this summer. Practically no dust, and per fect comfort, even thru the hot des ert. The railroad companies are a long way ahead of the general public In the Improvement of living. Few of even the more pretentious modern homes have efficient atr-condltlonlng equipment. The three factors of air-condltlon-Ing are temperature, movement and moisture. Oddly enough, the popular notions about these factors- are generally wrong; people assume the air tem--perature of the home, office or ahop Jimmies. The classic general prescription. has become a Just when a columnist feels he might be making the grade, he is likely to receive a twittering letter such as this that gums up the works: '"Your writing is oftlmea re dolent of aqultter-squatter, stippled with silvered chit chlrruplngs. A sort of echo leal spume of satirically car bonated eclat." (Copyright, 1935, ' McNaught Syndi cate) (Continued from Page One) wire which runs half way. The other half of the way Is traversed by na tive runners, who have been known to pick up a few rumors olf the treea as they wslk along. At least, persons centered In Addis Ababa have complained privately to Washington authorities that they mtRht aa well be In Siberia. This situation would only be a delaying annoyance to such excellent observers as have been sent to the front lines. If It were not for one fact. The normal method of com munication between Addts Ababa and the worl (touts I dels a radio station, controlled, more or less significantly, by the Brttlsh, and operated by a Frenchman whose Interests In life are reported to Include work. On top of this peculiar Inside set up, the Ethiopians have Imposed their own censorship, which already has caued foreign newsmen to protest of ficially. Authorities here were sent spin ning when they received the first news that the Italians had started the war by advancing northward from Somaliland. The news came from a city which was at least four weeks away from the Somaliland bor der by the swiftest Mercury of the desert the camel. A council of officials was called here to figure out what the news means. It was agreed that the border waa indefinite, unmarked; that prob ably some Itallnns had moved from their side of the mountain over to ths other side several weeks before and that the camel rephyrs had Just reached a cc-mmuntcations line with the Information, Propaganda specialists here believe that, of the two warring censorship regime h TicrUn Is by far the best. No one knows exactly who Is responsible for It. but everyone seems to agre that It is not the Ethiopians Some are Inclined to give credit to the British and French, but most Mame an American. He la Hatle Se lSMie'a financial artvter. but he known, more thnn finance a Mr. Kv erett A. Colwn. native of Warren. Msinr. now in his fittic. Hi bark cround in-luds prhate hanking tn Ethiopia, ncild aar eiwc. several filllilliii NO IN THE SAHARA should be kept up above 70, that there should be as little perceptible motion or draft as possible and that dampness Is undesirable. In fact the temperature should be kept below 70, preferably between 84 and 68 degrees P., provision for constant movement and change of air should be made, and the moisture or humidity should be kept up to 60 per cent, or more. In a home of ordinary size, without alr-condltloning equipment, the most satisfactory way to maintain a fair humidity la by having open tanks of water on all radiators, or In all regis ters, or on the back of the stove, each tank holding three or four gallons and having yards of absorbent wlck lng suspended above and dipping In the water. Prom IS to 30 gallons of water must be evaporated dally In the average home. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Infantile Paralysis Please iell me how infantile paral ysis sets in. Our four year old boy complains of a pain in his right leg quite often. He la very active, eats well, sleeps weir, except when his legs ache . . . (Mrs. M. M. Answer Usually with what the parenta call a "feverish cold", perhaps with sore throat. Such periodic com plaint of leg ache or "growing pains" rather suggests that the child has in fected tonsils which should have the attention of your physician. Tpngue Chewing Daughter, 12 years old, unconquer able habit chewing tongue. I have tried discipline, mimicry, rewarda In vain . . . (Mrs. T. P. R.) AnswerHave dentist make a flange or guard to be attached to the teeth to prevent tongue from being thrust between teeth. Let her wear this untU from personal pride she breaks the habit and discards the appliance. Poisoning the Beans -A neighbor tells me It will be un safe to eat green beans which we sprayed with arsenate of lead about two weeks before we picked them. (Mrs. H. S. E.) Answer I should not care to eat them. It is unsafe to use poison sprays on vegetables or fruit which are nearly ready to harvest. Burnish Your Teeth j Have been taking Iodine and find It has discolored my teeth. Can thl6 6taln be removed? (O. S. B. Answer Yes, rinse the mouth and teeth with a few drops of aromatic spirits of ammonia In a little water. To keep the teeth white and give them a luster, try burnishing them dally with Dr. Carmlchaels tooth napkins. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Urudy should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. I)., 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. years In Haiti, a V. 8. marshalship at Canton, China, a civil service direc torship m the Philippines. The advice which experts here give as to the relative merits of confusing war information is this: American correspondents at the front on both sides are sending the most authentic Information available. They may be delayed by transmission difficulties and subjected to censor ship, but should be trusted as against stories from any other sources." They will usually have the right atory a day or two late. Stories from Addis Ababa concern ing happenings at the front should be subjected to microscopic Inspec tion. Yarns from Rome about develop ments at the front are hardly forth reading, as are also the stories writ ten by European correspondents, pub lished in London, Paris and relayed here. These are generally overfla vored with their own particular po litical absinthe. TOPS TARGET DRILL ASHTjAND, Oct. (Spl) The highest msrk in the United States waa chalked up In the 1934 target practice at Port Canby by Ashland's Battery B, according to Information received Tuesday by Captain Clyde O. Young, battery commander. The Ashlsnd outtlt scored direct hits on a hypothetical target with eight out of 13 shots with the 6-lnch disappearing carriage gun and made a score of 120.1, almost 10 points better than the next battery. Great credit, ssld Csp'.aln Young. Is due Sergeant Kendrlck K. Wat son, gun pointer tor the local unit. JOURNAL AD MANAGER DIES WHILE ON TRIP PORTLAND, Ore.. Oct. 16. AP) Word of the death in Chicago of Will P. Hessian, national advertis ing manager of the Oregon Journal, waa received here today. He was stricken with pneumonia while on a business trip. He wa& one of the veterans of the Journal organisation, and was associated with the late C. S. Jackson in publishing the East Oregonian at Pendleton lefore Jackson came to Portland to found the Journal, 4 . tlse Mall Tribune want ads. Vicks Va-tro-nol tfciuat S';j 30c OFF TO MEET ITALIAN INVADERS " l " ' ' ' Well trained and well equipped Ethiopian Infantry (top) marching through the streets of Addis Ababa enroute to the frontier, center: Abyssinian troops with mutes and supplies on their way to battle. Be low: Fierce Mohammedan tribesmen from Somaliland who crossed the border to serve Emperor Halle Selassie in Addla Ababa with their rifles. (Associated Press Photos) DOCTOR FOR MAKING, FREE TO ALL OT DEL RIO. Tex., Oct. 16. (AP) Dr. John R. Brlnkley, Mllford, Kas., gland specialist and politician, announced a campaign platform to end all cam paign platforms here today, offering himself for president on a promise of "laziness for all." Dr. Brlnkley was an unsuccessful candidate for governor of Kansas against Alf M. Landon. "Give the people all the money they want by putting a money box at eacrfpostofflce so they can grind out the amount they, want to spend," he urged. "Nobody should work. Nobody ahould(have to work. "My 'platform Is entitled the 'Dr. Brlnkley Association to Abolish Wfork and Create Laziness.' "I am going to give a pension to everybody when they are weaned. "I claim inmates of asylums In this country are not crazy, but Just smarter than we are. "I suggest we turn all Inmates out of the Institutions and put them to work because they do not know any better. They can work while the rest of us go fishing." 4- Guests From World Points Are Guests of Olympla Brewery That people from all parts of the world are visiting the Olympla Brew ery is an Interesting fact disclosed through the register maintained by thl organization In their plont at Tumwater, near Olympla. Wash. Ten thousand persons from 33 states, the District of Columbia, Alas ka, the Canal Zone, and the foreign countries of Canada. China. Manila. Austria, Czechoslovakia, Japan, Ire land, Italy, Germany and Honolulu, all have been shown through this Institution since April 1st. 1934. "These people, after visiting the state of Washington and the state of Oregon, are returning to their homes with a most favorable Impression and story of the northwest." said Peter O. Schmidt, president of the Olympia Brewing company. "Many of them would like to live In this part of the country and are con tempi at in t returning to the northwest to make their permanent home," he con tinued. The Olympla Brewery, which has attracted the attention of so many visitors, was first established by Leo pold .Schmidt in 1806. The ne-jr plant opened in p one of the most modern and sanitary breweries in the I United States. NEWBERG POST OFFICE CONTRACT IS AWARDED WASHINGTON, Oct. 16.-(AP) H. J. Settergren of Portland, Ore., wss awarded a contract today for building a new postofflce at New berg. Ore. The amount of the con tract was I39.277 and the time for completion of the work 250 calen dar days, Dse Mall Tribune want ads. To Help You AVOID MANY COLDS At the first nasal irritation or sniffle, apply Vicks Va-tro-nol just a few drops up each nostril. Used in time, it helps prevent many colds entirely. DO'Jtlt oimniity 50e Meteorological Report October 16. 1935 Forecasts Medford and vicinity: Increasing cloudiness tonight; railn Thursdsy; not much change In temperature. Oregon: Increasing cloudiness with rain in northwest portion and in west portion Thursday: frost or freez ing temperature in east portion to night. . Temperature a year ago today: Highest, 61; lowest, 28. Total monthly precipitation, 1.74 Inches; excess for the month, 1.22 Inches. Total precipitation since Sep tember 1, 1935, 2.00 inches; excess for the season, 0.96 Inch. Relative humidity at 5 p. terday, 90 per cent; 6 a. rr 100 per cent. i. yes today, Sunrise tomorrow, 6:26 a. m, Sunset tomorrow, 5:27 p. m. Observations Taken at 5 A. M., ,120th Meridian Time u tr S i si S 9 23 WO Boise GS 40 T. Clear Boston . 60 .... Clear Chicago 60 48 .. P. Cdy. Denver - 83 Eureka . 60 44 .06 Foggy Helena .. 46 38 .14 P. Cdy. Los Angeles 70 P. Cdy. MEDFORD ... S8 40 .13 Poggy New York 66 ... Omaha 82 .... M Phoenix 84 56 Clear Portland . . 60 48 .14 Cloudy Reno 53 Roaeburg 60 44 .08 Foggy Salt Lake City .... 58 36 .04 Rain San Francisco . 64 54 .01 Clear Seattle 68 48 .... P. Cdy. Spokane . 52 34 .... Clear Walla Walla 60 48 T. Cloudy Washington, D C. 72 44 .... Clesr HUNTING WOUND FATAL FOR LA GRANDE YOUTH LA GRANDE. Ore., Oct. 16.- (API Funeral arrangements were being made here today for Donald Barnes. 15. who died yesterday from a bunt ing accident shooting. He waa walking between his father, Bert Barnes, and brother. Harry, 17. when Harry's shotgun accidentally discharged Sunday. The charge struck Barnes hip and coursed throuch his abdomen. Two blood transfusions failed to save his life. BUCKINGHAM'S HOME - MADE CANDY, Malted Milk Sponge. Regular 40c per lb. Special 35c per lb. The Crest, 336 So. Central. PHONE ONE FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL TYPES RE-RO0FINO JOHNS-MANVILLE ASBESTOS RED CEDAR SHINGLES BIG PINES LBR. CO. Flight VTime Med ford and Jackson Count? history rrom the rile of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 Years Agot. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 16. 1925 (It was Friday) Security conference in session a Locarno, Switzerland, sees "era of eternal peace with war outlawed." Women of the state loath to serv on juries, secretary of state reports. Fifty-one applicants to wed helresa who advertises In Salem newspaper for a husband.' Two bootleggers plead guilty In justice court and pay fine of 350 each for possession of moonshine. First home-made sauerkraut of sea Jion goes on sale at public market. Indian summer comes to end witb rain In valley and snow In hills. Leonard Carpenter gives fire ' de partment $75 for good work In bat tling fire at his orchard home. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY -October 1G, 1915 (It waa Saturday) Utah-Oregon Sugar company haa money ready for building sugar fac tory here as soon as beet acreage quota Is signed. Administration to ask congress for 400,000,000 for national defense. I Huge sum stuns nation. Mrs. H. U. Lumsden entertains the 500 club at her home on Holly street. County Commissioner Rufus Hol man of Portland will address a ban quet of the Commercial club next Monday. The ladles of St. Mark's guild will serve young chicken and hot biscuits. Allied forces start invasion of Bul garia; French repulse three German attacks west of Souchez. Medford high defeats Klamath Falls 24 to 6 though outweighed. The eaat side squad waa ouU-iuesed In all de partments. Thursday, October 21, to be ob served as "Edison Day" throughout nation. 4 Bjtte Falls BUTTE FALLS, Oct, 18. (Spl) Francis Smith, who Is attending Bible Institute in Los Angeles, writes home that her work Is In tensely Interesting and enjoyable. , Elmer Oott came home from Ten nsnt, Cal., on Saturday and . return ed Sunday. The Hustlers club will meet with Mrs. Reverend Smith on Thursday, October 16. Morrell Patton, of Lake Creek, visited relatives here on Thursday and Sunday, Mrs. Harold Patton, Mrs. Charlie Patton and Lowell Patton spent Saturday In Medford. Mr. and Mrs. George Csrlson wer Medford callers on Saturday. Mr. and Mra. Ralph Nelson and daughter moved from the SlmervlU house . to one of ; Mickey Evanoff 1 houses. They had a rally day program at the church on Sunday. Mrs. . James O'Donahue returned from the hospital where ahe spent a week. She Is better. Mrs. Al Hlldreth returned from the Ashland hospital where she had a major operation. She Is greatly Improved. Evelyn Cummlngs was called to Washington. D. c. for a civil serv ice position. She left for Wsshlng ton last week. Letters have been received by frlenda here from Jim Tungate. H Is on the U. S. S. Pennsylvania. They are on the water for practice out from San Pedro, Calif. There was a dance at Derby given by the teachers last Saturday night. Ellen Baker. Chrlstene Zlmmerly. and Zella Dunlap arc boarding W.ta Mrs. Elmer Oott. Cyrle Reed and Reverend Duff Jr. sre attending Bible Institute In Lot Angeles. ' - Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith and daughter Carrol, are down from Russler lookout station. Irma Glass la taking a P. O. course In Butte Tallt high school. Louis Glass Is a freshman IB Butte Falls high school. Mrs. Don Smith and dsughter spent Isst week with Mra. Janla Smith In Medford. ECZEMA Itching Fop quick relief from the fiery tor ment and lo control the Incessant itching, use toothing Resinol. It helps nature heal tick, irritated akin. Get a jar today