HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMESrHEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 28, 1932. PAGE THREE ONE MAN'S GUESS. New York has been so thick with gloom that we have had to carry flash-lights at mid-day. Men talk about "thirty years of bad business" and "the collapse of the capital istic system" and "the end of the gold standard," etc. Millions of dollars In cash are hidden In safety deposit vaults. Since all the authorities have proved wrong, and one man's judg ment is as good as another's, I ven ture to publish my little guess as to what is and what is not going to happen. It has been the record of history that times of great tribulation re sult In the removal of great abuses. Said Lincoln in 1864: "At the end of three years' struggle, the na tion's condition is not what either party, or any man, devised or ex pected. God alone can claim it Whither it is tending seems plain. If God now wills the removal of a great wrong, and wills that we of the North, as well as you of the South, shall pay fairly for our com plicity in that wrong, impartial jus tice will find therein new cause to attest and revere the justice and goodness of God." If the Civil War had ended quick ly it would have settled nothing. It dragged through four weary years, but it abolished slavery. If the present depression had been easily cured no good would have come of it. It is so bad, so world-wide, that' it is compelling the peoples of every nation to real ize the two fundamentals which were set forth convincingly In Sir George Parish's book ,"The Way of Recovery. 1. We are compelled to realize that the old-time insular, national istic thinking is out of date in a world which has been shrunk to a neighborhood. No nation can pros per unless all nations prosper. Tar iffs and reparations and interna tional jealousies are shackles on trade and mean less prosperity for us all. 2. If trade Is once freed from these shackles, including the worst, which is international suspicion, the future has possibilities beyond our wildest dreams. The' consump tive power of humanity is unlimit ed. Even In the most advanced na tions the standard of living is still low. There are potential markets enough to keep all our resources employed, and to make all of us well to do. I, therefore, am optimistic, not because this is a minor depression but because it is so very serious, so world-wide, so packed with suffer ing for everybody. Before it Is finished we shall be compelled to effect international economic reforms that we never should have considered in prosper ous times. And when we do get business go ing again our prosperity will amaze us. COOLIDGE I heard the latest Calvin Coolidge anecdote the other night from a gentleman who had recently visited the ex-president at Northampton. "Everywhere I go I find an over whelming desire to have you back in the White House, Mr. Coolidge," my informant said to him. "You really ought to run for President again." Mr. Coolidge shook his head, with a faint smile. "No," he said, "It won't do. The basis of that idea is all wrong. They all want to get rich again." Which confirms my long held be lief that Calvin Coolidge has about as sound common sense and as keen an understanding of popular psychology as any living American. HOOVER I think there has been a notice able change in the public attitude toward Mr. Hoover in the past month. At least, I hear less abuse of the President and more express ions of sympathy. People are re alizing that he has been unfairly blamed for conditions for which he was not responsible, and now that he has presented a sound and com plete rehabilitation program to Congress, and Congress has started off by accepting it, I hear less talk about his supposed inaction In the face of a serious crisis. I have not seen the President for several months, but friends who have talked with him lately say he acts and talks like a man who had found the answers to problems that had been baffling him. Washington's favorite Indoor sport is lying about the President, whoever the President may happen to be. Mr. Hoover has suffered from more than his share of mis representation, but he has acquired the philosophical 'attitude of most of his predecessors, who learned not to let pin pricks worry them. UNEMPLOYMENT The town of Peekskill, New York, as a part of Its plan to raise funds for tie relief of the unemployed, put tin boxes at every eating place in town and asked everybody to drop one cent In the box for each meal. The surprising result Is a fund which runs to $1,500 a week. More important than raising money for the unemployed, it seems to me, Is making sure that this money does not go to people who could get Jobs, but who will not take them, The other night in a hotel elevator I heard two men talking. "There were forty-two jobs at $6 a day," said one of them. "The un employment bureau sent us fifty men and thirty-six of them refused to work because they would get their hands dirty." They said they could get money from the unem ployment fund to live on and they would rather do that than do "dir. ty" work. There Is no doubt In my mind that, In the cities at least, a large part of the money which kind hearted people have contributed to help the unemployed Is being spent to keep In idleness men who could easily find work If they were not what Down-Easters call "choosy. DOCTORS Doctors, like everybody else, are not finding It easy to meet their ob llcntinns or collect their bills these rfjivu. Too manv Deorle think that the doctor can wait until everybody else has been paid. ' The American Medical Associa tion has been making a survey of doctors' Incomes and reports that Wedlong My dear. It's no use for you to look at those hats; I haven't more than a dollar In my pocket. Mrs. Wedlong You might have known when we came out that I'd want to buy a few things. Wedlong I did. First Stude Wasn't that a juicy lecture by Professor McCullom on "The Culture of Prunes"? Second Stude It surely was. He was so full of his subject it takes altogether about tert years In college and hospital work and getting a practice established be fore the average doctor begins to earn enough to live on. The next ten years, or a large part of it, his surplus has to go to pay for the cost of his medical training. Very few doctors get to the point of in dependence in less than twenty years after starting their medical studies. Every doctor has to do, and does do, a certain amount of charity work. Those who can afford to pay have less excuse for postponing their doctors' bills than for deferr ing 'payment of almost any other debtst. HOLMES The retirement of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes from the bench of the United States Supreme Court at the age of ninety-one removes from public life not only one of the ablest and most distinguished of jurists, but the only surviving vet eran of the Civil War to hold high public office. Justice Holmes served as a cap tain in the Union Army from 1861 to 1865, and was seriously wounded In battle three times. His father, the famous Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, was the author of such poems as "Old Ironsides," "The One-Hoss Shay," and "The Last Leaf," as well as many books and essays. Justice Holmes ' inherited his father's literary skill, and his opinions from the bench were mas terpieces of simple, plain English. Very few men in America have had such a long and distinguished record of public service. NEW RECONSTRUCTION CORPORATION EXPECTED TO HELP BUSINESS IN U. S. By CALEB JOHNSON Congress has agreed to Presi-1 ly. dent Hoover's proposal for the es tablishment of a Reconstruction Finance Corporation, to come to the aid of banks, railroads and oth er institutions which are suffering from "frozen assets." With two billion dollars two thousand mil lions at its disposal, what is this pool of capital expected to do, and how will it do It? This is the most Important move which has been made so far to re lieve the depression from which everybody in the United States is suffering in some degree, and it is something we all ought to under stand. To begin with, the Reconstruc tion Finance Corporation, which probably will be popularly referred to as the "R. F. C," will get its cap ital by offering bonds for sale to Investors. As these bonds will be guaranteed by the United States Treasury, they will be as secure as Government bonds, and therefore it is expected that there will be no trouble experienced In luring timid money out of hiding and putting it to work by this means. We can take it as assured that there will be two billion dollars, or as much of It as may be needed, speedily available for the work of the R. F. C. There will be a board of direct ors of seven men to manage the R. F. C. They will Include the Secre tary of the Treasury and the Gov7 ernor of the Federal Reserve Board, - together with one other high Government official and four men not connected with the Gov ernment, but selected because of their banking and business know ledge and experience. - President Hoover has already intimated that the two Democrats who will be appointed to these posts will. - be Bernard M. Baruch, who was. chair man of the War Finance Corpora tion, and Edward N. Hurley, who was chairman of the Shipping Board and a member of other im portant commissions during the war. The War Finance Corporation is the model upon which the R. F. C. is based. It served after the sud den end of the war to carry great industrial enterprises over the sud den slump due to the cancelling of war orders. The principal differ ence is that the R. F. C.'is larger, just as the present economic con dition is more serious than It was then. With its two billion dollars avail able, and its management on the job, the R. F. C, will come to the rescue, in the first instance, of banks which are unable to make loans because so much of their as sets is tied up in securities for which there is no market at pres ent, or the price of which is so much below the original cost that to sell would be suicidal. A big bank has, say, a million dollars of assets, but half of this is in real estate bonds, secured by mortgages on property of undoubt ed value but which nobody has the money to buy, and on which the owners rind trouble in paying the interest, let alone paying off the mortgage. It does the bank no good to foreclose, because it then has an unsalable piece of property on its hands, while its customers business men, merchants, and man ufacturers are clamoring for cash loans with which to keep their bus inesses going and so keep men at work. The R. F. C. will take such "fro zen assets" off the bank's hands, advancing money to the extent of the real value of the property in volved, which the bank will agree to pay back within five years. The R. F. C. is secured by having a first lien upon the "frozen assets." These may be loans based on real estate, or upon commercial securities which cannot be realized on quick- Every kind of bank, commercial bajiks, savings banks, trust com panies, may borrow thus on long terms from the R. F. C, and its fa cilities will also be available to building and loan associations, in surance companies and similar fi nancial institutions, as well as to the railroads and clearing house associations. It is specifically pro vided that agricultural and live stock credit corporations may be aided also. One of the paramount features of the R. F. C. plan concerns loans to the railroads, the only industry which would receive benefits Inde pendently of financial institutions. The railroads are made special ex ceptions because of the widespread ownership of railroad bonds by in surance companies, savings banks, national banks and trust compan ies, and individuals. Next to the construction industry, the railroads represent perhaps the largest sin gle concentrated unit for purchas ing materials and employing labor; and their credit position is an ex tremely important item in the na tional structure at the present Ume. ' The R. F. C. is an emergency measure, and is not expected to continue in operation after the emergency has passed. Any insti tution which needs its help must apply within fne year from the date of the President's signature, although the President may, by proclamation, extend this period to two years. Loans will be made for an original period of three years, which may be extended to five. At the end of five years the non-offlce-holdlng directors are to be dropped, but the R. F. C. may continue in existence for another five years, to give time to dispose of any of the frozen assets it may have left on Its hands. After that it is to turn over whatever it has left to the Treasury and the final liquidation will be up to the Government There is every reason to expect that the establishment and opera tions of the R. F. C. will accom plish the two things which all fin ancial leaders agree need to be done. These are to provide a mar ket for securities of banks and rail roads which are now unmarketable, althuogh of great value, and to re store confidence, - the unreasoning lack of which, in the face of the really solid foundations on which our economic situation stands, Is the basic cause of our present busi ness stagnation. There are other factors in the general business situation, of course. The worst of them, at this time, is the European financial sit uation. Little that can be done by legislation at Washington can have any direct effect on that, but a great deal can be done to strength en our situation within our own borders. The Reconstruction Fi nance Corporation plan is the first of the President's major recom mendations to be enacted into law. Congress still has before it his plan to strengthen the Federal Land Bank System, to create a system of home-loan discount banks, to enlarge the discount facilities of the Federal Reserve Banks, and to create a $150,000,000 corporation to aid depositors in failed or Insol vent banks. In addition, the President seeks action upon proposals to revise the transportation laws so as to restore confidence in railroad bonds, to re vise banking laws to safeguard de positors and to curtail national ex penditures sharply, with a view to helping balance the budget All these plans must be speeded through Congress, in order, as Mr. Hoover states, "to re-establish con fidence, to restore the functioning of our economic system, and to re building of prices to values and to quickening employment. ODD BUT TRUE I ". '. J tt PtUGOW MUST VMt tml WHftS IMISN NEW - m m m Nil". TO fcNE . F THlfc MID. rVS THWR UnM DOfcANG THE fA00UUG . -jLJh1 -- 11 AM LJBS 4 trmi finw tmt MRU NtiNClUlNlt CONSKfcWW WW ' i Norwie ay aiY Tuc NlRt Willi HOT VOSYU0H - - fl4M A-?A7 IT WEBS mM IN WUCWS 0U vmiw im m wmn taction MtSJHlC S IWEtt (A 0 ryNt ' Job Hunting on Motor Van Legionnaires, Selectmen, Clergy, Boy Scouts and Camp Fire Girls united in a drive to uncover' occasional jobs for unemployed men an East Bridgcwater, Mass. The touring van is the famous "House on Wheels" that carried Legion men to the Detroit Convention. SIMPLE FOOD BEST FOR SCHOOL LUNCH Attractive Sandwiches, Vegetables, and Fruit Suggested as Good for Growing Children. Simple and inexpensive garden and dairy products form the foun dation of the best school lunch, says Miss Lucy A. Case, nutrition specialist at Oregon State college. Whole grain bread and butter sandwiches, a raw tomato in sea son and a bottle of milk will go a long way toward satisfying the body needs of the growing child, Miss Case explains. She suggests whole grain bread and butter sand wiches containing eggs, cheese, meat, fish or nut " butter; a raw vegetable, a bottle of milk and a fruit or custard dessert. "Make the school lunch as com plete a meal as possible," Miss Case says, "and have the food appetiz ing. Wrap it in waxed paper to pre vent mixing of flavors and drying out, and pack it compactly in a washable, ventilated container. Put the heavy foods on the bottom, and those to be eaten first on top. Time and effort may be saved for moth er by teaching children to pack their own lunches as soon as they are old enough." A hot dish, served at school, is a desirable complement to the packed school lunch, says Miss Case. To give children sufficient time at noon to eat lunch without undue haste and still have time for the play, which they also need, Miss Case recommends a lunch period of not less than 45 minutes and preferably an hour. "A simple, balanced school lunch, with adequate time for consuming it," she says," "is an important fac tor in the economy of health, and it is daily receiving more attention from both parents and teachers." For Sale 3 V, cords dry lS-ln. cord wood, $6 cord at Robertson's barn. Leave orders at postoffice. John Henderson. Run a G.-T. Wsnt At!. NEW ACCOUNTS 1 , Life is a gamble but we all play our own cards. This bank Is a Financial Service Station for you and all the people of this com munity. Our officers are eager to ad vise with you on money mat ters or business problems. If time is money many are rich and don't know it Don't put your problems off pat 'em OVER. Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank There Is No SubstJtato for Safety MacMarr Stores Phone 1082 Free Delivery SPLIT PEAS 2 Excellent in Soup. LBS. 23c RAISINS resh, use in pi and cookies. 2-LB. PKG. , Clean and fresh, use in pies i Qs Prices Effective Sat. and Mon., JELL-WELL Jan. 30 Feb. I America's favorite dessert 6 PKGS 49c LARD 8 -LB. Armour's Star. QQ PAILS OtfC BROOMS Medium weight and fine tie. Regular 89c value. fV EACH Q.tJC FIG BARS Oven fresh LBS. 23c COFFEE MacMarr Coffee is a quality prod- 3 lbs "1 89c Honey PAIL .. U V Pure Butter Creek strained honey. -i n-LB. All Syrup Max-l-mum Cane and Maple. 5 -LB. CAN 69c Macaroni or SPAGHETTI Use with cheese and tomatoes. 10 LBS 49c Shri nmp Southern whole shrimp. Fine for salads. CANS 29c Pancake FloUT MacMarr. Ready mixed. IOSck 52c Bacon Eastern sugar cured. Mild and sweet PER LB. ... 19c MATCHES 6 A real value. f " -BOX CARTON LDiZ SOAP Harmony, C. W. or P. and G. 37c -i A laundry soap IV BARS Lettuce Crisp and solid. O HEADS .... 25c Celery Large, well bleached, crisp and tender. M BUNCHES 25c PEACHES Yellow Cling halves. No. 22 Cans fl EACH J. DC ROLLED OATS 9Alber's Cream Flaked. AA -LB. BAG OtIC Dates Fresh and clean. 2 LBS 19c Vegetables Bunches CARROTS, TURNIPS BKETS 2 LARGE 4 Q BUNCHES JLOiZ Oranges Sweet and Juicy navels. PRICED 15c to 25c Per Dozen Bananas 'rult. mo. 25c Firm golden fruit. A REAL SAVING, DOZEN