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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1931)
TV VTPTTVtTV' U A tY --'flrtAl'iafi t linn .'ti'vn uv.tTV rrmjwr- arixm att Mi vie ni i rv-r-- MEDFORD ItXlL TKIBUJfiEi -MEbFORD,. OREGON. SUNDAY. JUNE 28. -1931 . . PAGE TWO -I r- i'ii " ' - m Uedford Mail Tribune . ! ' Dailr and flusdaa .... muiuiMa ny - - WEriFOHU rKlNTlNQ GO. I5-1T-19 N. Fir St. . Phone : RIIHKKT W. HUIII., Kdltor . i. (UUl'TKR U1IU, Masaaar - Ail lndspaalaat Newspaper Entered u second clui Bitter at Uedord, Oreaon, under Act o( Marco 8, 1BT9. 8UB8CHIIT10.N BATES By Mat) In Adtance: - Dally, vttli ftimlar, fear $7.60 Dallf, with Sumier, Month.... T8 ball,, wltlMwt Sunday, year 6.50 Dally, vltlic-ut Sunday, B-onUl 63 Sunday, ona rear ,.j J.00 ' B Carrier, In Adianee Hedfocd. Aeldand. Jacsjomllla, Central Point, I'toenU, Talent, tiold Hill and on lllBlwiya: Itally, with Sunday; month.. $ ,f '..llslly, without Sunday, raontb .65 nallN slthuut Sunday, one year...... T.00 ; Dally, Willi Sunday, one year ..8.00 ' All terns, cash In adranet, l tlftltlal paper of tin City of Medford. Official paper of Jackson County. '' ' MEXIHHR OP THE ASSOCIATED PBE8S . kecelilnr. mil Leased Wire Senlce Tha Associated Presj Is ueluiltely entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited ta It or otherwise credited In thia paper, . tad alao ta the local new published herein. All rlcbta l-f publication of special dispatches herein are also rescued. MEMBER Of AUDIT BUREAU - CJltCULATlON UEMBEK Of TUB UNITED PBESfl ' Advertising Representatives M. C. MOtlE.NHKN 4 COMPANY ! Offices In New York, CMeaio, Detroit, Francisco, Loa Angeles, Beattle, Portland. ' '' A small crime, wavo swept the city dtirlriB the woek, the chluf ' sufferers' being eta silos and hitm ' burger stand. John Ross Deuel of C. Pt was Smudge Smoke . In town the mid of the week. He can't walk yet without staggering suspiciously. i The elongation of the days has been rather noticeable of late. , . C, Vori der Hollen of Wellcn BJid boy towncd Frl. ( 1 : The cltyand county seem to be : standing up well under the blow doiui- them when it was doolded -to have no .horse racing nt tho cottnty fair this fall, on account of the depression. - '-. Pears arose anew, last week, that the worse Is over. i Ed White, the ex-trDmbonist Is . now resplendent in an ice oream . stilt. J; Curtis Bnrnes sported two ; unmnted socks one day recently. . i. The valley was the recipient of . an .innocuous drlzsie. lt'rt, which '.did nothing . much but take the '' starch out of straw hats and per '.'mnnent' viivos. : . j N . Watermelons from the Imperial Valley are now on the tapis, and ,-delighting the opulcurlans. ..; : ..Hoblae Deuel was seen on the streets: Jasl week for the first time since .the legislature ceased. . .The European situation .became 1 a' live topic of tiebato among the 'Savants nnd economists the past wei'k and oonslderlng they know ' nothing whaUoovor about tho sub. -Joct matter to start with put up a Jgood vocal battle, Many students , Of. evolution during the Tennessee , monkey trial participated. The war debt relief plan of IT. Hoover mot with tho Konernl dls 1 approval of the lone Jack. Co. .democrat, and the mass of alleged .Republicans, heronliouts. 1 ,'i.:The women folks city and . country- tho past woek have been busy making Jelly nnd canning np .rlcots,. for. tho long hard winter .-ahead. , . . , . , y; MaKnolla. blossoms aro adorning many living room tubles, and curl up anil tun brown whon olKiirotto smoke Is blown upon them. , , Asa llulibard has his 4d embes- bletl Thurs. noon and snmo was recovered at Q. J. .-' pill Mitchell, a former local boy who .made itood In .Ventura, Calif., wan visiting hero last week. t inhere) seems to bo plenty of whtnt fields .and namnurger stands n .the valley, nnd l doflolt 'of Woodpiles nnn potatoes. A number of plugged nickels have boon yanked from ohncurlty and placed in circulation, due to the depression. . -. - The latent of got ting up tor breakfast has boen adopted by - .many elvlc clubs and fraternities, throughout the Innd but Is not taking hold here as lively as ex .pected. A man la not In good voieo, until' along towards noon. itiJIm. Grieves bf Prospect and his nuslcnl prospectors appesred nt ' he Crnto Men. ovng, Mr. Orlevea . hlmoclt multrenllng tho Chlcker- Ing. . . A California woman Inst week filed a suit for 150,000 as her nliR.ro of tho $14,400 d'revvard for the arrest of the D'Autremont boys. ' ' Hevernl townspeople were ut to Portland lust week, and report the air upstuto chilly and run or ru mors. , A survey of tho economic sltun tlon In these purls shows the poor outnumbering, the .rich, about the same ns in the good years. Tho .usual license buying time Increase In the number of visiting Civllfor nitins is noted. Tho obnoxious red nnt Is show Ing up in the Insect proof pan (lies. ' . i 1 ' It's different In tho army, but III business Ptivato Information far outranks General Knowleiige. Arkansas Onsette, Well, lots of folks will hnve it little chnnsto this summer, If they have a little change this summer. Boston Herald. It appears, from the compli ments Interchanged by the Rus sian nnd American delegates tn the IfOndon grain conference, thnt wheat hns lent none of Its feud value. Vlrglnlnn-l'ilot. Now that graduate students are going to find nut about prohibi tion, trsylie tho drink proWem will be solved by degrees. Vlr-Klnian-IMIot. Former president Coolldge Is ronnlderlng dlnconllnulng for the present the writing of dally art icles "for newspapers. As If the O. O. P. didn't hnve enough un employment Ms liun'Js already. -Aj'liunsar) fjasel- CI.RAN cotton rars wants! at thj Mall Trlbu.no oKIc. , f ALL ABOARD AND 'I ' r V .. NT AXGTIIKR fifirt of the paper to4ayf'he nnmrnceiTfent o? the expansion proRrain oj the Mail TriBiine, predicted in this column a few weoks ago, is Tnade.- v vv' . (( ' x,; As stated nt that time, the reported sale of this paper wa3 ahsolutel untrue. No sale hag been made, no sale has been con templated.. THE SAME OWNERSHIP AND CONTROL- THAT HAS EXISTED FOR THE PAST 20 YEARS, EXISTS TODAY; AND 'THE SAME POLICIES PURSUED IN THE PAST, WILL E CONTINUED IN THE FUTURE.' , ; , ..; .' r;.y. ' ! ' With absolute faith both in the futnrfl i)f the-newspaper business! and the future of Sledford and Solttbern Oregon,, the owners of tho Mail Tribune decided the tiine: had eoine to, back up tliat fiiith in! a practical way take advantage'ioi a 'quiet period, with its' low prices and low construction 'costs, to pre pare' for tho return of that growth and prosperity, which it be. licves is "just around tho corner." .-, ' ' r---':. i.: .:. . ..-''. -'; ': .. TPIIIS, expansion program, as shown in the, hews stoi-y '. ahovo mentioned, is an extensive ,one and invoives a material in crease in tho Mail Tribune's investment. Not only will there be a' lijomplete internal reorganization calculated to give greater ef ficiency in every department, but new equipment will be in. stalled, including a' modern rotary color'.', press, a Ludlow, another new linotype, giving the paper a battery of five ma chines and improved and up-to-date facilities In the business and news offices. , . ,i t. ;. .-1 AS BEFORE stated, this change involves no new policy, it is merely a continuation and extension of the Mail Tribune's ESTABLISHED policy its constant effort to give the: people of Medford and Southern Oregon the best newspp.per that its rcsoureos can produce, merely another forward step' in its de sire to make the Mail Tribune as far as it an be made -the best "small city" newspaper on the Pacific Coast. ' ' "" - To take such action at this time, requires some courage, and involves some risks. Hut we: wish to pin no laurel, wreaths on our assembled brows. All business enterprises demand courage, and ho business can advance without taking risks. IJ CTT we tlo believe or at least we hope that such action at this time,;; will, not ,only. prove to be of ultimate benefit to this newspaper, but will be of immediate benefit to the com niilnity. ' - '.'-.-"'' '.'.';' , For with so many wailers at the wailing post, this, action should : contribute toward dispelling pome of the prevailing gloom, and revive the courage of those who -have seemed to forgot that Medford IS as it has aiways been, and will always continue to be, THE "BEST LITTLE CITY ON THE COAST." GENTLEMEN,- -A MIRACLE T BEGINS to look as thougli "tVlllie1,', Hearst and "Hi" Jol'in- son might be left out in the cold. Outside of Senator Borah, who abhors agrccmiut with any tiling, as nature abhors a vacu um, there seems to be no stampedo to the standard of anti- mo-i ratpfium agitation. T , -; ,: . '-, Even Democratic, leaders are falling into linoL! Yesterday "ortjjinit Ctt S'WWi j-be ,liemo.oratio national twniiin, c dorsqd President Jfloovcf 's action'; Slid & few'hotirs later'Senatbr Robinson, Al Smith's 1928 running mate, followed suit. ' But far more serious to tho Hearst-Johnson hopes is tho ac tion of tho stock market. . ' t" ' V ' - If tho stock market is as most everyone believes, a true barometer of business conditions then this epoch-making ac tion off President Hoover has actually ended the depression. ' . Wo don't mean it has transformed bad times into good times, or that the booni days of 192!) or any approach to them have returned. ;. But wo DO MEAN that the back ortia panic lias been broken, and that, while there may be further fluctuations, the general trend of business will hereafter be up, not down. A when nil is said and done, in the land of the free nnd the home of the brave, BUSINESS IS. WHAT COUNTS. Call it money worship, crass materialism, call it any names you .wish. fThai doesn't change the fact, it is TRUE. ' If business conditions do continue to improvfc, if from day lo day conditions get better and better, instead of worse and worsc.theh war debt or no war debt, prohibition or no prohi bition, high tariff or low tariff, nothing will prevent Presi dent Hoover's renc munition or his re-deetiori. ',.. ''.',-...' , . A 'VYEEK ago President noover was the most unpopular; President Bince Taft. Today, wo have Will Rogers' word for it that he is one of the most popular. And this has all been done by t,),e war debt moratorium. If this business improvement continues, Hoover wius; if it doesn't ho loses. - - " s v .... . Rather childish, isn't it! But as a very acute obsorvor of humanity, remarked a long timo ago, wc arc all nothing "bnt children of a larger growth." '' A metropolitan is a mau proud of living among several mil lion people ho doesn't know and doesn't like. So they want a new title for boes. What about "Busy Little THE DREAMERS They Need "tote" (Houston, Tcs, Chronicle) You don't like dreamers think they are linpractlcnl. -1'ertnln kinds of dreamers, how over, are needed In the world. Kvery advancement In chlllxa-, tlon has been made possible by a dreamer who thought out th Idea, j The dovi'lontnc nt of the Idea ali nir (practical lines Is the part of the hiud-bollrd, far-sighted han'nei man.. This Inn n Is not often one With unuHintl vls'un and orl-,nnl Ide.ii. He Is an adept nt vepnratlng the prnctlml rrom the vlelnnsry and takes another's Idea nnd makes them grow Into something stable. 1 he , fur aWhted man In a dreamer of a sort. Hefore anything unusual can be done asime person must have had A dream, a vision, a presentation, a suggestion which In lie begin seven 1lin"a'n'.l rolraVed six" l.y Jonlln In the Western assoclntton. FULL STEAM AHEAD! HAS BEEN PERFORMED a film dealing with the life of Sinners.' ning would have been ridiculed by the materlnllstto or practicnl thinker, Hut soma men can dream and are practical enough to try to mnke their dreams como true by experiment. Often thoy sained Die . siigtres- tlons from a mere dreamer and ore not conscious of it, but think their tnvn minds evolved the mind picture end tts accomplishment. A dreamer may have been re sponsible for your suocess. i '1f you want to get rich," 'ad vises a multimillionaire, "sell the petiple things they cant to with out." Such ns ginger ale. say. or llpetleksi, er eosnethlner -to ie In tho lily pool. Macon Telegraph a Dr. Mllllkiin thinks radio will be tho salvation ' of American unity. Has the good doctor ever witnessed a domestic knock-down and di-ngout over which station should he tuned InT Wichita Kngle. ' An efficiency expert nays that unfinished business caused the de pression. If he's right, the de presslon should automatically ef feet Its own cure It Is finishing a lot of business. Thomaston tOa. Times, " Malt Trlbuns ads ar. naJ Ml 1 10,91)0 popl Try flaj. FLIGHT 0' TIME FIFTEEN YEARS AOO I THIS WEEK - From the File of The, -- Mall Trlbun , ' '-' Monday '-." ." - Tntn afreet lhnndera nlcrhtlv to i, c.u v. w , . ...... r. . uuuw. the direction of Capt. Vance nd Lt. Foss, in order that the boys win oe reaay in case oi a -cat w Mexico'. '' , ' '' 'f '' .i . John' Peri; P. O. Blgham. and T. B. Daniels return from1 a flsh- lh. frlrt' fA Trill! 'where 'Bingham caught an g-pound at-k-salmon. The oreater weoiora ciuo win make a house to house campaign lit the Interest of the 'proposed Blue ldge railroad. 'i r J " Police, warn autolsts' -"that' they mint keen their tall lights burn ing, or be arrested. ' : Farmer of the rnoenijr. area bnWpknA ntt A load of hav by young autolst, catches autolsfand spahks mm. : ' ; ' Oregon' troops, mustered In as federal troops pass through city en route to the border. - icu't' Tuesssay - Diiwilnna win crreat VlCtOtV OVer Teutons on the Eastern front. .Death. Bontencei. 18 inrnciea al. Dn.,1. Citiipinant for -treason. Charged Jrlsh leader aided . Ger many. .. -, : . r 1000 signatures have, been ob- i,in.A in iha netltion asking ! for an amendment to the state con stitution prohibiting . the importa tion of lUiUi-i- into the state trom California. ' ' ; ' "Out at. the Drifts" with Mar guerite Clark, at the Star Theater, today, only. (Adv;) . ' : Efforts to match "Bessie mum anA wnite Hamoton ? for .a spe cial race on the Fourth fall, as the 'owners of Vide Hampton" fall to appear.' '' ' . i George A. Hum uses over v theater, and will operate same,- '. ,, r ..Wednesdajj . v r' u ' John W. Johnson, Scott Povls, n a - ia Miller return rroma trip to Four. Alile Lake,' and Mr. Johnson entnusoa aa joui'wr tu - reporter: ,; -,' " ' ' 'Four-Mile lake . is destined w i ..a n Biimmnr resnrt.T said John W. Jobnsoh, who was one of a party of Medford men that returned Inst night from a fishing trip . to Fou,r:MI1e ; creek. , "The scenery Is wondrous, hlg) -ajren hills with Mount Pitt towering above the lake. And the lake It self is beautiful Ice cold glacier water, as clear its crystal, with a smooth 'gravel bottom' sloping i gently away from the beach." ' ' s ' nrnsneftnr lit found dead by nelEhbors In his1 lonely. cabin dn Sardine Creek. i r Co. 1 to be mustered lnno tear era! service,- nnd subject t cn, to ithe (bolder. 4 ' ' ijff Aiiifis ,uwni.ii e'l-fc, TS. the' Western Front, along the River Somnie. 't ' ;? Paul McDonald of Morrill is spending a few days with home folks, nnd reports many Indians and cowboys of Klamath county will nttend the ' Ahland Hodeo and Fourth of July celebration. 1 '.'Prof. Cook, the daring douuuii Ist will d?ty death daily aT the Ashland Hodeo." (Adv.) ' . , Ttitu'Stlay , , . A,,Blln ttnnnpr. who. rob- . . .... Tinffua mvee."ia. nea tue xiuup. ..-v. . year aso ,-is beid in.. murder. u a oilnA ta m.elccted clerk or the school board, at the first irieet- ing of the year. ' Btlund for n good time nf Klam ath Falls over tho Fourth, Juy Olmstead. John Moffntt, Lelnnd Noe, Roland Hubbard, and Wes ley Judy. ..left, In a car mis '"netty Orecn, the' world's rich est woman, dead, at- the age or 87. . . .-.., A. W. Walker sells jjick a Saxon Six. . ,' ' Co. J Is ordered to recruit i" th. and waste no -time In the doing, by tho war department. ','... With two motor truck and . ' . - .. l.h the Te- aonen xeiuiia . surfacing of the Jacksonville road ill be oompletea mts w-r. ..'.. i TSI,1I,, rlull. tlt- tired In natty white pants and blnck costumes won first pilso at Ashland. Mrs. G. K. SatchwnU l the leader. i . Friday . '. . , in Antnrtnln vnst A8I11HIIU sm . is,. throng at annual Fourth of Jnr coieiusiuti. Oreater Medford cluu paraue s" Uullls railroad bonds. e . - German retreat from Russia un derway. ' . Karl S. Tums FoTd to tn during "King Sulphur Saturnalia at Ashland. . sue nun. . - . . ., i- mri Its linotypes n,,.- n.wint,tiA mils bpii'" te keep ,the metal hot, and, the public Is invited to tun this wonderful invention. . t M.rf nml Frank New man, -write column-long letters- " the editor, pro and con on in ... . ..HnH.1 nmnnsnl. fttld muo ajeuge . - editor -again warns ,pnei aija .. .. . . .... . . wlttiln all tnnt icrwm m u.i -j - i. i..n..K in Uia futnre. a reaswmmi" - fc or bo vast Into, the waste basket., - ' ' . Kstnrdnr ' ' Mrs.' John Beveridge and chil dren leave on a visit to relatives in flutters. -1- . mr. rv w. McDonald entertains at a plenle dinner In Ashland l-nrk, in Jtonor of Mrs. W. H. Canon Who Will soon leave tor Itoseburg. i Mrs. T. E. Ilnnlels entertains the Nullo BrJilge club at her home on Siskiyou lleights. , . Miss Tn Cochran who has been ttemllnir the- California State Normal bos, .returned, for the stjm Thnmn l ftwem nf New York City Is visiting relatives In the city. Th. Crtiinlnr 'I "I , i t nr diino In honor of tu lfin rhant)ions. ' " 1 Fy Jejwiip rnon . and uw ar wort. Verne 8. CanonJ brother of -tho room woo (ho bet uin. on Swiss ann aanw " - of Jlerkdey. Calif. PROHIBITION VYhrc" Economy laiS ' (8. aV. Call-Bulletin) . When hearty all branches of the federal government are being forc ed; Jrj ' cli expenses; lit the Interests efi'ecp'nbmy,': the - prohibition bur. .ejaliilr. iiot even; racing' asked to do '7t ' ''!,i-,- ' " ' , iOm;the contraryiillt' to 'thought , likeljt that fi;OiTilljltion' ; ; Director W)otcaIt wlU.Keti morei fmoney tHsnj.ljeijhaa. been:' getting for his Bureau; .; -.! ;,.'., ' ( fte.;i.puttfni',s!ioiadditlbnai of- 'fifVlrSi .ta-' irnVlr'-navt: ,1. ' yatiemfk i to enforce ; therun- . 'probabilities; are'., that .--an (extra, fund will be- needed, to1 pay slime men. at so, me taxpayer must furnish It. J . Prohibition "enforcement" costs ihoif fifty million dollars a year Irf direct expense. 'That means fifty 'rntltlon dollars wasted, s ' It ' costs Something like a oil-Hon"J-tn Indirect expense.' That means a billion wasted. ' :.' It would be simplicity1 iuelf to salvage this fifty million and this billion, and the ' country could use'' both - amounts ' on a public works program that would relieve nome of our 6,000,000 Jobless. Instead, the administration is pinching the pennies for the army,, the navy and the postal service and other .essential departments . and refusing even to admit the stupendous annual drain of prohi bition bn 'our- national resources. Save a few millions, throw away billions that's the trend .of econ omy you get from your govern ment today. OMGOyMitD By Petty Spite v . (Saletn .Capital-Journal) The' 'exhibitions ' of "petty spite and vindictive malice staged by Governor Meier at - meetings of the board of control are somewhat dismaying' inwhe"cnibf ' executive of a great commonwealth. There was the case of Henry Meyers, superintendent of the- prison, against whom were., framed the unfounded fabrications of dis charged employes and disgruntled convicts at;a farcical public hearing.-, There were the base Insin uation hurled -against Tom Kay who for forty years had an un blemished reputation in public of- f lra BnfAJ t...'.!.. I rxt " 1 csnaru -aa jr UJf HIO CaIIEO v. IMh, There 'aff--th& persistent abuse of Carle Abrams, state pur chasing agent, who could do noth ing right, and yet whose system had been adopted for tils succes sor by the board. - And now there is the malicious Bniptng directed against Hal Hoss, the only state official loft not under the gov ernor's control to discredit' him and pave the way for the election of -one Who wears the Meier col lar as successor. ' The latest spectacle of reprisal sptte was staged Monday, as re sult of the rule adopted by - the motor license department refusing the Issuance of special license numbers as the practice caused confusion, dissatisfaction and un necessary expense. The Govern or demanded preferential treat ment and the selection of special numbers for his three motor cars. Because the request was refused and the executive treated as other auto owners, Mr. Meier charged that Oregon license plates cost more than those of other states and announced his intention of probing costs in the secretary's office.1 which Is not in his province at at!. The "Oovernor then vetoed the construction of the proposed $26. 000' fire proof vault for the pro tection of state records, author ised by tho legislature, the appro priation for which had been ap proved by Mr- Meier, authorized bv the board, and bids 'tot which had bten called. This n(so wafl Intended as a slap at Mr. Hoss, who Is custodian of the records. ' tattle things lor a big man! PAY DEBTS, SAVE Ray of Sunshine (Detroit Hows) . The United States, In the opinion of thows who may be considered best able to Interpret financial sta tlstlcs stands as a ration awaiting some accredited signal to make a great (Industrial and commercial advance. The uncertainty and re straint of the so-called depression have had th salutary effect of ar fording time for debt-paying, while tho hesitancy to make Investments or to enter upon tuslness enter prises has resulted In a tremendous increase In the volume of savings. "So far thia year.' say a Hugh Hancroft, New York financial writ er, "we haven't been buying very much, but we have boon setting out of debt very fast. From October l. 1D29, to April 1, 1931. eighteen months of depression, we have been absorbing 650 million dollars not of new securities, each month and have been paying off loans on se curities at the rate of 400 mil lion dollars a month. It seems clear in st we aro Individually saving and Ltettlng out of debt at a remarkable Prat' r ' The same phenomenon Is com mented upoA vlee-hero by Howard bHiddulph, newly ?tected president or tne National Association of Mu tual .Savings Banks. "When we consider' said he, "that about 13 'j ! million peoplo have almost 10 bil bioa dolla&rs of 4poJta In mutual avint't banks, with a further sum of-18- ilIio&-4oUar-o oving In commercial savings banlu, it Id plain' ))hat the American people have In their savings alone a great reservoir . of liquid capital. Ibe lieve this frame of mind will pro vide the" basis to begin anew.- ; We should look to the soundness of re covery rather than speed." 5 I ..... . . 1 I Press Comment TTPICAIi TAX REDUCTION" .-' Typical, of legislative attempts to reduce taxation' fs the new law, now , in , effect, requiring counties to pay the' state $30 a month for the care of Insane and feeble minded patients- in state Institu tions committed from those coun ties, and in turn -collect, when possible, -thta amount from fam ilies and relatives of the afflicted. .Under this - benlflcient arrange ment, the saving In state taxes Is added to- county taxes, so the gain to the taxpayer is nil. . Care of the insane and feeble minded has hitherto been regarded as a state, not a local duty. Under the' new dispensation, the state provides the Institution, but the counties Its : upkeep. Why the state cannot make Its collections from individuals instead of forc ing the county to. Is probably be-, cause the latter system provides two new sets of jobs at taxpayers' expense to administer it. The state has already appointed Ben: Wing at a salary -of 9225 a month and expenses, provided office and cler ical force to supervise ' collections from the counties and now the counties must appoint similar or ganizations to collect from the families of the afflicted. ' . As the majority of the Inmates are without means and come from families without means, the cost of maintenance falls upon the county; ' Marlon county alone will have to pungle tip $50,000 or more iri additional county taxes, With prospects of recovering but 1 a fraction of the amount. The costs of administration will ' probably offset 'the 'collections, the net sav ing to the' taxpayer being in the red. The counties have already paid itate taxes for the present . year for the' support of those Institu tions so they are now called upon to "pay them again, which will ef fect serious complications In the present budget and foice' increas ed county levies in the future. But state taxes will' show a' "reduction, which is what the administration is aiming at. r If this system' of making coun ties pay for state institutional care is" to become a permanent policy, there Is no reason why It should not be extended to . other Institutions besides the state hos pital and feeble-minded school. A considerable saving In state taxes can be effected, and a corres ponding Increase -in county taxes accomplished, if the same pro cedure Is . followed for the state prison, the deaf and blind schools, the tuberculosis hospitals, etc.; It could even be applied to the high er educational nrhools, with every county paying the cost of the stu Their PRESENT is Sweet Their FUTURE is Golden Y',ES, thef can jvoll afford o lose ihem selves in day dreams. . For thev are DOING SOMETlOXa. to make Vheir dreams come true. . Witnout sacrif i'co, they are gradually, consistently laying the foun dation for a future of ( independence nnd plenty. 7 ' ' ' ' They do not miss their small weekly sav ings deposits. Yet their "bank account is growing, growing, growing. No wonder their hearts and minds are at peace. No wonder they are happy. Let's help make you happy, too. The Medford National Bank dents Trom the county Salem Capitol Journal. .' 1 .Iudlgp " The extent to which pessimism prevails In the stock market may be Judged from the fact that the shares of several important cor porations today are selling for con siderably leBs than the. quick as sets owned by these institutions. In other words, as is pointed but by AnA inwmcnf hniiptln. if their businesses were to be liquidated to day, tne StOCKnoiuerB wumu in na.ri mnra thfln the current price of the shares, without any allow ance for plant, equipments tsuuu .ut The uninA ct thfttr materials on hand inventories),' their hold ings of government securities and their balances in the bank would leave an immediate margin of profit to tho purchaser of their stock on the present market. In one sense the investor who buys the shares of these companies Is obtaining money for less than its face value. An explanation of why such stocks are not bought so heav ily as to raise their prices at once to the value of their quick assets Is that investors know that the busl a ' you of that. Will convincti yoii that Cliiysler cars are joyously different from other cars. Not only smarter to look at, but more fascinating to drive. Mote life, more spirit, more snap in pick-up, more security at high speeds, more ease and safety . of control. Chrysler proves on the road that only Chrysler engineering is able to give Chrysler results. . Drive a Chrysler and learn the dif- , ference learn why you'll be happier with a Chrysler.' CHRYSLER SIX 4 Body Styles, $885 to $935 Chrysler Eight db luxe 4 Body Styles, 1525 to $1585 ' Ml prites (if -' ARMSTRONG 101 South Riverside o Li aa will, pot, tie, llqu.Matedpd they fear -that tltfe asset may.jrjgj renurj-i ed Jiefore liquidation or, alternated ly. -that- he- prtee- el -the stocks 7 will go still lower on tne ba.n, nf rifminlRheri enrnlner. . But probably another Important I 4 consideration -Is' that- when nMnl. li' have the blues, they have the blue, and things look considerably worte to them than they really are. (Kansas City Star). Despite occasional factorial crli. f llain . tmliuve ir Wnul...i & t - " - . j.uu up- r I predates accurately his position In r j tho Democratic parly. iri fact, he i knows what's 'due'"1 hlAi. i-Boston nemiu. ' "We have in -England todny a number of young' musicians who should go- far," I aeclitr'es' a1 corn, poser.'. One of them lives 'next door to us.-The Humorist i.on don). ' ' - 1 ; -. Another thing It would ibe dlf. flcult 'to explain to the man from Mnrs is-why. Al -Capone.-'can he an f American citizen and Prof. Douglas Macintosh cart not:-virJ glniun-Pllot. fop CHRYSLER "70" 4BodStyle, $1245 to $1295 Chrysler Imperial Eight 4 Body Styles, $2745 to $3145 f. o. b. factory MOTORS, INC. - pjj0n 18 o YOU ARE JNVI TED to open a Mctlfiml Nntloniit savings ac count .today. An .Initial 1cmikU of Si will start Vol' on Hie runtl to sueww. . ; ,; i