PXGE EIGHT
MEDFOTO M AIL TRIBUNE, fEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1937
MEDFI
MKvrroM I ttnathers Ora .
HMdi the Hall rrlbOM.'r
Dftllj deep arrM.
UflliniRD PRINTING CO.
n-if- n. nr su boa n
ROBJDRT W.RUBU Ml SOT.
BRNEST R. UlLtTRAP. Ucf.
4e Cnlpndo Newspaper.
Cor. Orfoa, softer act of March I, tT.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
Bv MbM In Arianet
Dslljr. od var..... -
Datlv.' la months
Dally, on month
Hv (!rrUr. in Ail itnM Mtdrord. 4n
Uod. Jackson-Ilia, Cntrtl PoloL
phonli. TaltBt. Oeld Bill u
Daily, on rr ....0
Dally, ill monthi. .
Dally, on mootb
All tirmi, oaab IB adraooa.
Offlctal Papr ol tba City of Madford
Official Papor of Jarkaon Oooaty
MEM H KB OV I UK AHAOCIA fKD PUKM
Rir1ni raU ImmO wiro Mrvie.
Th. iMMiiiid Pnw la oloalvalf OO'
tlilart to tha un tor Dubltoatloo ot all
newt llapatoba ordttl to II Off etbr
wis orr1ltl to this papar, and alao to
tfaa local nwi pabllanao naroin.
All rlBhta (or oubllcatlOO O
dttpatohaa haraln aro alao raaarvod
MEUBBR OF ITNITBD PRESS
MEMBER or AUDIT BURBAU
Or CIRCULATIONS
Advertising RaproaraUUvao
Officii In Naw York. Chleaso, Detroit
San rranclaoo, lx Anfataa, fl 1 1 I
Portlatid. St. Lou la. Atlanta, Vaneeavar.
B. 0.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry,
The Klegsllty of the appointment
of an Alabaman Klansman to the
high, court waa argued vociferously
by natives, most of the past week.
The first flu of the season has hit
av number of citizens, and the ail
ment sure picked fine weather for It.
...
V. Brophy et ux of Lake Ork., and
X. Ulrlch et ux of Prospect went up
to Portland last week to see the live
stock show. These cowmen enjoyed
looking at cowa they did not have to
worry about and wonder where their
next forkful of hay waa coming from. ,
...
Pioneers met at Ashland Thura.
and ate and talked, and elected Ev
Reamea president.
...
Jens Jensen's grandson from Calif.,
la visiting him and ahowlng Orsnd
paws' bird dog how to be busy.
J. Kort Ball, the fretting horticul
turist has moved to town and rapid
ly becoming hardened to city life.
.
The afternoons are still too hot for
the fair sex to wear their fur coats
downtown to buy a head of lettuce
but they do.
s
The Governor came out against
demagogues and Ims,' in a speech
Thurs., and several found the shoe
tit. '
...
Older girls have taken a census of
the days till Christmas, and find
they are It, in which to knit and
mail their handicraft.
...
The New York Olants In the world
sertea showed up like the Portland
ball team, or the Democratic party,
when not Impersonating Santa Claua.
A number of tillers towned Sat.,
threatening to do their fall plowing
...
Justin (Up-to-School) Smith saw
his alma mater crush Stanford 7-e.
He was plesied with the victory, but
dark future made him blue.
...
The CofO. has put up a neon sign
to pierce the night. This Is quit, a
Jump from 1033, when a stove-pipe
ran out an end window, as an econ
omy move.
...
Pry, the chlnwhacker la back
from the primeval brush, where be
accumulated some on his phis.
...
Jack Enders has been named chair
man of the handshaking committee
at Old Oregon. The experience gained
will come In handy, if he ever runs
for anything.
...
1938 autos are ahowlng up. like
aprlng hats In January, and Sunday
papers on Tuesday. The new models
aport many changes, but still hsve a
wheel on each corner.
.
The C. Phessant season opens the
end of the week, and nlmrods can
hardly wait. Some don't.
...
The Slka cat Is now on a winter
bssls. and haa ceased shedding tom
cat hair all over the temple,
...
Bicycles sre now equipped with
motors, ensbllng the rider to keep
hla mind on where he Is going, with
out leg pumping.
e
H. Luy of the Antelope sowed fall
grain In town Prl.
...
Repairing of streets on the East
Side Is rampant.
...
Valley Democrats sre stiu plentiful,
but not aa proud of It aa formerly
Special nelnn Needed
PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. . (API
Senator McNary, visiting the Pacific
International Livestock exposition to.
dey. said there la "some need" for
legislstlon that might compensate for
a special session of congress, aa has
been hinted by President Roeevelt.
Cloning time lor too Lata to Clas
sify Ada la 140 p. m.
What Is a
AS tbU ii the "grand jury" season in Jackson county, we
believe tlio following extract from an article by J. C.
Furnas will be of local interest:
"Lucky" Luciano waa put behind bar. for the reat of bl.
Ufa becauaa b. waa czar of New York's vice racket. The power
that put him then, along wltb 100 other racketeers, waa that
docila old Juridical wheelhoree, tha grand Jury,
The notable fact la thla: the aubitantlal cltlzena of practi
cally every community In the United States legally have a
weapon with which to attack civic corruption In any form as
effectively aa waa done In New York. For the famous Dewey
prosecution waa Initiated not by an elected public official, but
by a group of independent citizens among them eight merch
ants, three bankers, thiee Insurance men, two manufacturera,
a warehouseman, a butcher and an engineer acting under
powera aa old aa common law and as fundamental as freedom
of speeeh.
The grand Jury was an eatabllshed Institution of English law
long before the Norman conquest,
e
Today Its use for the routine Indictment of crlmlnala Is
familiar. But Its potentially greater function, aa an Indepen
dent body of citizens Inquiring Into the condition of their
government, naa been too commonly neglected. Aa a board of
Inquiry, It may aummon witnesses and public officials, who,
because the sessions are secret, may testify fully without fear
of reprisal. It may Instruct the district attorney to gather
evidence; It can call him In and kick him out of Its sessions;
It csn go over his head, and, If his conduct Is wholly Improper,
Indict him for malfeasance In office. 80 long as It la looking
for evidence of crime which takes In an Immense territory It
can dig Into anything without so mucb as a by-your-leave
from Judge, district attorney, governor or political boss.
Xn this power to conduct general investigations lies the real
dynamite of the modern grand Jury.
How does It happen, then, that thla potent weapon haa
not been used more often before? Because ordinary citizens,
swept as grand Jurors Into an unfamiliar world of Juridical
procedurs, are not aware of their powers. Judges and district
attorneys frequently take pslns to see that they remain
uninformed, for nothing can throw a well-greased political
machine so completely out of kilter aa a grand Jury that knows
Its strength.
New York's "runaway grand Jury" of March, '35, which waa
directly responsible for the Dewey prosecution, Is an object
lesson In public service.
Is Russia Going Fascist?
USSIA is in the midst of
month brines the Soviet
fascist states in Germany and
years United I'ress correspondent in Moscow, charges in his
autobiography, 'Assignment
tional trials and executions fcr former Soviet leaders, Mr. Lyons
declares, "reotted with the crude melodrama of the police
mind," and "(ho working of dreadful pressures is so clear that
only the desperation of unreasoned faith or the cynicism of
self-interest can compass credence in those trials."
"The central fact of these
"has been the intense entrenchment of the new ruling political
and economic groups on r. basis of thoroughgoing conservatism.
There hag been a constantly stronger reaction against modern
ism in every department of
socialism-in-construction, with its bureaucracy, its sharply
stratified populntion, its contrasts of poverty and case, has
emerged as fixed static, one of the great forces of conservatism
in the present-day world."
IN view of the critical situation in the Far East at this time,
particular interest attaches to Mr. Lyons' disclosure of the
facta now published for the first time, behind his recall from
Moscow, early in 1934, at the insistence of Maxim Litvinoff
contraissar of foreign affairs. The recall followed a startling
Moscow dispatch about the destruetion of Japanese rcconnoi
tering planes which had allegedly flown over Soviet territory.
That disputed dispatch, Mr. Lyons reveals in his autobi
ography, was based on information brought to him by two
highly placed Soviet officials.
developed over the story, he refused to divulge the source for
fear of getting these officials shot, Mr: Lyons records how
every attempt to verify the facts thereafter was blocked by the
Soviet government; Russians who were in a position to help
him were arrested or in hiding until Litvinoff had succeeded
in accomplishing the American correspondent's withdrawal.
A PHASE of the reign of terror in the Soviet Union ignored
h' ntlinr U'iitii. ni ti.ii.tliA.l unnn ,.. !ni,,pl,i : .1a.
scrihed in harrowing detail by Mr. Lyons, namely the so-called
"valuta" arrests and tortures. At the height of the first Five
Year Plan, he charges, tens of thousands of Russians of all
classes, not excepting ordinary
foreign currency or precious stones, were arrested and physi
cally tortured until they "contributed" their possessions to the
plan.
In a chapter titled "Gold Mining in Torture Chambers" the
author describes the entire process, including the sweat room,
conveyer and. other methods of breaking down the victims.
The most tragic plight, he indicates, was that of people who
did not have any money or treasure to "contribute" but went
through weeks or months of this
the G. P. U. of their innocence.
"I could not bring myself to
G. P. U. and the heads of the
such things or countenanced them'" Mr. Lyons writes. "Only
aa the evidence piled up. month after month and year after
year, was I driven to recognize that the practice was nation
wide, deliberate, and systematized.
the conduct of the 'gold milling' department of the G. P. U.
in all the ripeness of its corruption. The extortions went under
the ephemism cf 'mobilization of hidden valuta resources' and
were, in effect, an unwritten adjust of the Five Year Plan.
mr,.:
LYONS mukoa tlio cleun
mine of lOH'J.;.;, whieh
vfm a crime committed by the Stnlin regime. The foreign corre
spondents, the Kremlin, everyone in Russia saw the disaster
renting, but tl.e novernmont let hunger take its course, and
prevented the outside world from bringing help.
The failure of the press representatives to report the famine
fully, Mr. Lyons ussortn. "reflects little glory on world journal
ism.' Not a single American newspaper or agency protested
against the confinement of its correspondents in Moscow or
troubled to learn the cause of this unprecedented measure of
concealment. The foreign pres allowed itself to be driven to
use makeshift words like "undernourishment" to hide the
raging famine.
These philological sophistries," he writes, "served Mos
cow's i,rpoe of smearinv the fafs out of recognition and be
clouding s situation which, had we reported it simply aud
Grand Jury ?
"a reaction which with every
state closer in essence to the
Italy," Eugene Lyons' for many
in Utopia."' The recent sensa.
last Bussian years," he writes,
Soviet life. The status quo of
When, an international storm
workers, suspected of possessing
pressure before they convinced
believe that the heads of the
communist party knew about
In the end I came to know
- cut neeiiSHtion that the Ku.smhii
cost at leant four million lives.
clearly, might have worked
to force remedial measure
his own measure, was guilty
bbax on the vorld."
IM summarizing the present
"The moral collapse 0? Europe is far more terrible than its
economic collapse. It could not be claimed that the contempt
for men and women as such derives from the philosophy of
Hitlerism or fascism or communism, since that is their common
clement. Precisely the reverse
philosophies all radiated from
dignity of life, the importance
for truth, and a horror of slavery under any guise are restored
as motivating ideals if not as
or racial or national Utopians
ties
"I am convinced that any
which does not rest uncompromisingly on respect for life, no
matter how honest its original intentions, becomes brutalized
and defeats its own professed
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
Signed letter! pertainlnf to personal
dlagnuati or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brad if s tumped self-
addreaaed envelope la enclosed. Lectefi should be brief and written in ink
Owing to the large o umber of letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply fan be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address
Dr. William Brady, 286 CI Cam loo, Beverly, Calif.
A Paste for
Men and women employed In the
printing and engraving trades, and
their assistants who have to handle
oris, solvents, alkalis and other Irri
tants In cleaning
plates and remov
ing 1 n k stains,
often suffer from
severe dermatitis
(skin lnfl&mma
tlon, eczema)
which does not
respond to the
usual remedies,
mainly because
the trrit a 1 1 o n
which causes the
trouble continues
as long as the
patient remains
at work.
A good deal could be done In the
way of prevention If such workers
would trouble to prepare their akin
at trie beginning of work every day.
and again after washing up at the
close of the day'a work by rubbing
Into the skin a mixture of equal
parts of lanolin and olive oil, to
replace the natural akin oil removed
by the harsh chemicals or solvents
or Inks with which the skin of hands
and arms is more or less constantly
in contact while at work. After a
thorough application of such a pro
tective, tne excess may be wiped
away with clean cloth, and the
Individual Is ready to begin work.
in bad cases of long-standing der
matitis a paste dresslne uwd nr.
cording to the following directions
naa Deen round most satisfactory
treatment:
Zinc ore (calamine and a silicate
of alnc) pulverized and pnssed
through a 100-mesh sleve....3 ports
Gelatin....- .... 4 parts
Glycerine A parts
Water 'A Darts
Melt these together In a double-
saucepan, the outer pan of which Is
filled with . water and heated on fire
or gas plate.
Stir with a stiff paint brush. If
too stiff, add a little water and stir
again until proper consistency Is
obtained. When It Is a thick paste,
paint over the afflicted area of skin,
and before this thin layer of paint
sets tap It lightly all over with bits
of cotton so aa to form a felt work.
Let it set completely before putting
on any clothes over it. This dressing
may be left on for many daya at
a time. Only when It begins to come
loose should It be peeled off and a
freer, one applied.
A similar dressing In the form of
a lffTRlnB or boot hns been found a
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
THE American Federation of La
bor, which Is holding lta annual
convention at Denver, haa behind it
a record of mora than 40 years ot
successful labor leadership.
During thla time, it has increased
tremendously labor's share of tne
national Income and speaking broad
ly and with regard for unavoidable
minor exceptions based upon human
nature In the rough It haa won the
respect of employers.
THIS writer, during all his busl
1 uess life, has dealt with
an
A PL craft union the printers. There
have been differences ot opinion,
such aa always arise when men are
bargaining with each other, but
always when a contract has been
finally agreed upon It haa been
lived up to. Years bf such dealings
naturally build up confidence.
Moat of the ArL craft union nave
similar records.
AT THE present moment, the Fed
eration of Labor Is engaged in
a serious struptttr with a rival labor
orftRnlratton the CIO (Commute
for Industrial Organisation). In this
strugKle. whose reverberations are
filling the atr from the Atlantic to
tha Pacific, the sympathies of tms
writer are with the AF1.
UR1NO their long history, the
craft unions of the APL nave
built up a record tor living up to
contract. There haw been excep
tions, of rourw. hut their number
la relathely insignificant.
up enough publio opinion abroad
And every correspondent, each in
of collaborating in this monstrous
world situation, the author states:
seemed to me the case: these
a common center. Until the
of human happiness, a respect
functioning realities, the economic
will remain inhuman monstrosi
philosophy of human progress
purposes."
bealtn and Hygiene, not to disease
Dermatitis
happy solution of the problem of
healing obstinate varicose ulcer In
many cases.
Slowly heat a double -saucepan,
constantly stirring until a smooth
rubbery mass Is obtained.
Gelatin .. 6 ounces
Zinc oxid . -....3 ounces
Glycerin M 10 ounces
Water 10 ounces
If necessary add more water to
make It the consistency of thin paint,
Wash the ulcer and the skin of
leg with plain soap and water, rinse
with clean boiled and cooled water,
dry thoroughly. Apply a coat of the
paint, preferably the first thing In
the morning.
Aa soon as thla coat la applied,
apply a gauze bandage smoothly from
great toe Joint to Just below knee,
then a second coat of paint Imme
diately, and a second bandage. Fi
nally a third coat of paint, a light
finishing coat.
Then forget it, until Itching or
Irritation from the discharge under
the dressing becomea annoying, per
haps not for a week or two. Then
cut off the old cast along a line
opposite the ulcer, wash wltb plain
soap and water aa before, dry, and
apply a new boot or cast. If neces
sary. In some cases one such cast
remains comfortable for several weeks
and when It la finally removed the
ulcer and dermatitis around It will
be found completely healed.
Of course, hot paint hurts like
hot paint If applied to an inflamed
or raw surface. The paint should be
warm, not hot, when applied.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
FrlRllt
Will sudden fright cause Immediate
great Increase In sweating In the
palms? Working on Invention that
depends on Instantaneous sweating
of palms when person is suddenly
frightened. (R. L. C.)
Answer Pear or great anxiety com
monly causes sweating of the hands
and the forehead.
Foot Trouble
Please Instruct us how to manage
weak ankles In a 10-year-old girl.
She seems to tire easily. (Mrs. R. W.)
Answer Send 10 cents coin and
stamped envelope bearing your ad
dress, for booklet on "Care of the
Feet."
(Copyright 1937. John F. DUle Co.)
bd. Note: Pertuns wishing to
communicate with ur Brady
should tend letter direct to ur.
William Brady. M D U EJ
t'amino tteteriy Hills, Calif.
During Its short history, the CIO
has built up an unenviable record
for contract violation.
THE craft unions of the AFL have
always upheld the sound busi
ness doctrine that the employer
must earn a profit if he la to oe
able to pay good wages,
Speaking in Seattle a few months
s go, Harry Bridges, one of tha out
standing leadera of CIO on the pa
cific coast, said in substance:
"What do wc care whether
the employer makes a profit or
not? If he doesn't, and can t
pay us our wages, we'll TAKE
OVER HIS BUSINESS and run it
ourselves."
THROUGHOUT all Its long history,
the American Federation ot La
bor haa been a staunch upholder
ot American institution and an
implacable foe of all these wno
would tear thew institutions down.
tt has been repeatedly charged
and NEVER DENTED that CIO in
cludes among Its leadera organ) rers
and agents, more than 900 com
munists. IN ITS more than 40 years, the
Federation of Labor has estab
lished a record for fair dealing tnat
has won the respect of the majority
of employers. At the same time, it
hs BETTERED VASTLY the con
dltlon of workers generally. No one
even suspect Its Americanism.
In Its short history, CIO certainly
hasn't won the confidence ol em
ployers, and it Americanism is open
to suspicion, to aay the least.
IN THE long run? workers will pro
fit by dealings whose fairness
win the respect of their employers
and will suffer from leadership that
destroys the confidence of employers
and the public.
Massachusetts !. the second moM
densely pjvi'Atf.l "te (n the union
witb 5U person to the square mile
iO.Mclntyre
NEW YORK, Oct. 9 To my notion
no book has the power to roll back
the years like Mark Twain's Tom
Sawyer. After putting it down last
evening I spent
a pleaaant hou:
in the honeyed
oblivion of Boy
vine. Back In the
daya when the
back yard, kitch
en stoop and old
barn seemed
especially haloed.
Not many chil
dren of thla gen
eration, even In
the small towns,
know the simple
charm of a back
yard. Today there are playgrounds,
where frolic la regimented and lack
ing abandon. Also there are the
movies. All tending to make the
back yard seem run down at heel and
tacky.
But for another generation the
back yard was boys' domain, where
we fought Indians, searched for pi
rate gold, played baseball, gave our
circuses and pin shows. Back yards
kept boys off the streets. Wa only
appeared on the front porch, aU
scrubbed and shining, after sun
down. There was a lure about the tou
seled back yard with Its ash pile,
coal shed and chicken runway that
years cannot dim. It was a cloister
for looking Bad when It appeared as
though we might not get to go to
the circus. Where we mooned when
the only girl gave us the mitten.
There waa something enchanting,
too. about the aromatic old barn,
especially the hay mow, where moat
of us of all placea got all dizzied
up with our firat clgaret. The hay
mow could in an Instant become a
robber's den. a haunted house or a
fort behind which we resisted the
attack of outlawa. Sometimes in
climbing the ladder to the loft, the
barn became a sailing ship, and,
holding to the spar, we rode through
mountainous waves, shouting order
to sailors against the boom.
Every boy goes through the per
forming period, following the visit
of the circus. One of my specialties
waa the slack wire, stretched from
the walnut tree to the high fence. I
mastered it, that la to the extent of
walking forward and backward.
kneeling and crawling through a
hoop. But not without suffering a
series of Jtmdandy falls, any one of
which today would trundle me, feet
up, to a hospital.
My greatest proficiency, however.
was trick bicycle riding. So profici
ent I came nearly making it a career.
A repertoire show made an offer. I
waa to appear In the olio and double
In the orchestra. But mandolin play
ing waa my only musical accom
plishment and that balked the deal
that and grand ma 'a threat to give
me a dose of her famous "birch tea."
But 1 Immediately subscribed for the
New York Dramatic Mirror and
watched the "Wanted On Tour"
column.
I never see a jutler, Indian club
swinger or artist ol the flying trapeze
and horizontal bara without reflect
ing that most of them save those
from the circus families are pro
ducts of the back yard pin shows
w. c. Fields, Joe Cook, etc., are
alumni. And it would surprise how
many stars of the stage and screen
had their genesis In the penny parlor
show.
Boys In our neighborhood were
known as the Court Street gang.
First to go bare-foot and last to don
shoes. Our summer costumes con
sisted of a 25-cent ahlrt, blue denim
pants and a ten-cent straw hat. Boys,
even back In the hollow, do not
dress that way today. I am told that
going barefoot la almost a lost cus
tom. That's too bad. Going bare
foot should be a part of a boy'a
heritage.
Th ol swlmmln" hole, too, la most
ly memory. But I am one of the die- I
hards who does not believe the 30th
century sanitized swimming pool la
comparable to the thrllla of that
mirror-like pool, shaded by the
mighty- oak, under the creek bank
There we shucked our clothes a
quick as a wink and plunged au
nature!. Sometimes a town constable
would appear on the brow of the
hill and. grabbing our clothes, we
would scamper through a neighbor
ing cornfield, dressing on the run.
Pausing after a time to catch our
breath and perhaps raid a nearby
watermelon patch. It would be diffi
cult to make the modern boy in his
Ft?n Jacket, with all his nosey
gadgets. Including stunty roadster,
believe those were the good old days.
Perhaps they were not, but we still
nave a hunch they were.
10
PORTt-ND. Oct. B (API The
board of higher education, meeting
here Mondav. will cnnMder recom
mendations of Chancellor Frederic M
Hunter for a new president of the
1'nlverslty of Oregon, succeeding C
Valentine Boyer. rcswned. but no
.bolce atll be made for several weeks,
the Journal said today.
The Journal said tour noted edu
cators are on Dr. Hunter's list. They
are Dr. Charlea p. Remer. profe.sor
of economic,. University of Michigan.
Dr. Homer Dodge, dean of the grad
uate school. University of Oklahoma.
Dr. David Favillc. economies staft,
Stanford university, and Dr. Clarence
Upcicimtf. awiftnu: of the president
of the University of Icwa.
r:iH,.i; time i. i i x Utt to ciaa
Ufy Ada u 1.30 p. m.
DRAWS PLANS FOR
Celebration To Get Under
Way October 29 With
. Traditional Bonfire-
Show And Game Features
SOUTHERN OREGON STATE NOR
MAL SCHOOL, ASHLAND, Oct. 0
(Spl.) Plans for the eleventh annual
I Homecoming of Southern Oregon State
Normal school graduates, to be held
in conjunction with the educational
conference on October 29 and 30, have
been mapped out by the student-faculty
committee In charge.
Ml&s Marlon Ady oi tne art depart
ment is general chairman, and stu
dents on the committee Include Es
ther Carter, Elmer Ayres, Anita Cooke
and Harold Reedy of Ashland, Al
Simpson of Cutten, Calif., Harry John
son of Eugene and Larry Kaiser of
Applegate.
Faculty advisors for the different
activities, besides Mlsa Ady, Include
Angus Bowmer, Jean Eberhart, R. W.
McNeal, Virginia dales and W. W.
Wells.
Bonfire Friday
Celebrations will get under way Fri
day evening with the traditional bon
fire and pep parade, with floats rep
resenting classes, fraternities and
clubs. "Three Men on a Horse," writ
ten by John Cecil Holm and George
Abbott, directed by Angus Bowmer,
dramatics coach, will be presented in
the school auditorium by the asso
ciated student a the "Midnlte Mat
inee." Saturday afternoon the Sons will
meet the Monmouth Wolves on the
local high school field, end Saturday
evening the "grads" will convene at
the traditional banquet. Festivities
will close with the alumni mixer af
ter the banquet.
Officers of the alumni organization,
who will take office at this time, are:
Eldred Colver of Phoenix, president;
Wtlma Nutter of Ashland, secretary;
Harry Rice of Bend, first vice-president;
Vincent Barrett of Arlington,
second vice-president; Victor Phelps
of Eugene, third vice-president.
More A tu mnt Expected
Members of the executive commit
tee: C. L. Weaver of Ashland. Mrs.
Rosell a Cllne of Klamath Falls, Fran
ces Schilling of Ashland. Robert Nich
ol of Grants pass, Harold Ashley of
Klamath Palls and Doria Hitchcock
of Ashland.
Since the Homecoming celebration
la to be held this year on the same
date as the annual educational con
ference, which Is attended by all the
teachers In Jackson. Josephine, Klam
ath and Lake counties as well as oth
ers, a much larger number of alumni
la expected than have ever gathered
for the event before,
FOURTHCAR TOMATOES
IS SHIPPED TO TEXAS
TALENT, Oct. 9.-(Spl.)-E. T. New
bry and Sons shipped a carload of
green tomatoes to Texas last week j
Thla was the fourth car of green to- j
matoes sent by Ncwbrys .to the Texas '
market during the current season. I
So popular la boating and so re
stricted the anchorages along Long
Inland sound that many persons who
have yacht club moorings pay to keep
them although they have sold their
boats. They may buy another boat
and don't want to risk waiting In
line for months to get another.
Chives are gaining popularity for
use In salads in place of onions
laMcMtAOnMl
Starts Today - 3 Days
HERE THEY ARE!
SWEATHEARTS!sw$
RhMhm's grand
est gift to (he
screen . , the King
and (jucen of nng
and swing In their
g a j e 1 1 moodl
SFT.FOTFD SFORTSI
Flight 'o Time
Med lord tod Jackson Couoty
histury rrotn the rile o th
Si a 11 Tribune 10 and 80 years
go.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
October 10, 102?
(It waa Monday)
Roseburg man la shot and killed
for deer; boy duck hunters In Klam
ath county wounded.
Harry Sinclair, oil magnate, loses
lease on Teapot Dome.
Ruth Elder, avlatrtx. postpone!
flight over Atlsntlc; Mrs. Grayson
plans hop to Denmark as soon a
weather permits.
Tomorrow is the fourrn anniver
sary of the Slsklyous tunnel attempt
ed train robbery and quadruple mur
ders, tor which the DeAutremont
brothers are now serving life term In
state prison.
Sprague Relgel returna to the city
and valley, after a three years absence
George Neuner, federal district attorney.-
la an old schoolmate of
School Superintendent E. H. Hadrlck.
TWENTY YEAKS AGO TODAY '
October 10, 1917
(It was Wednesday)
Giants defeat White Sox 3 to 0. to
get back Into the world sertea battle.
State department makes public
documents Bhowlng that German en
voy directed sabotage In American
factories.
Permits issued for the Irrigating of
5.269 acres lun valley coming year. '
Fire fighters rushed to Elk creek
forest blaze.
Ideal weather prevails at Crater
Lake, Judge Glenn O. Taylor reports.
Resources of First National bank
paBs million dollar mark.
Three cent postage rate for letter
goes into effect November 1, under
new war tax.
Communications
No Hnlfnaj Measures
To the Editor:
Why doesn't the League of Na
tions or somebody come out and
brand Japan an International scotf.
law?
That blistering term of reproach
would do for the Japs what It did
for the bootleggers under prohibition
put them right smack out of
business.
Drastic, yes but Is this a time for
halfway meesures?
Ramsey Benson
Ashland. October 9.
The University of Mexico waa
founded in 1553 by the Roman Cath
olic church.
SHOTS HELP, TO
PREVENT COLDS
For the next six montha colds are
going to be one of the common sub
jects of conversation even supplant
ing the weather.
The medical profession Is using sev
eral types of immunization for the
common cold. Me carry all of them.
It has been our experience that
these preparations are not 100 ef
fective but persons suffering from
constant colds are very often relieved
by these treatments. If cod liver oil
or vitamin tablet do not prevent
your colds it is our advice that you
try either the oral Immunization or
the cold shots.
Insulin 10 cc U 40 Is 1.18. We give
S. & H. Green Stamps. Heath's Drug
Store, phone 884.
THOSE DANCING
3 ni-Vi
7