SfEDFORD MAIL TTtTEUXTJ, fEDFORP, OREGON. MONDAY, JAM7ARY 9, 1933. PAGE SEVEN DON'T FORGET TO PHONE THAT WANT AD BBSS AHJ1 rSB BATES: ttt word tuat inaertlon ( Minimum 26o) tut additional Insertlom. per word (Minimum 10.) fet line per month, without tl2b copy cm.nm Phone LOST tTSt If dog missing, call 1518. WANTED SITUATIONS REUABUS. experienced girl 75 1 houseworK. paint job.. Call at 222 So. Centra. WANTED MISCELLANEOUS WAOTSLwITm cu'Uvator, old horae. w. n-"". - ixcHANOE-Upholsterlng and furni ture repairing for what have you? Thlbault. Tel uo-iv . . " TRUCKMEN price. T. K. Flynn. 1B43 oom Oakland. Calif. . . Furniture " truck Francisco want load for there or points en route, Hawley Transfer. Phone 1044-X. GOLD WANTED Will pay caeh for "ZT ffrtid. broken ewelry. gold teeth crowns, bridges, watch cases. . e u .nvr. nlatlnum, etc. d m tOOKERSON. Box 57, Corvallls. Oregon. WANT TO RENT Completely furn ished home. Near high "tioo'" -I... f.imnce. 2 bedrooms. Phone lOll-'j. WOOD-SAWING. Phone 79I-W. WANTBDIarge heater or circulator with coll. 638-X. RAW FURS WANTED irnAtftm nrlces paid. Tou don't have to wait for returns. we fay caau. We buy Hides, Pelta and Wool. MEDFORD BARGAIN HOUSE 27 N. Grape St. Phone 1062. WANTED Household goods, stoves, tools, or what nave you. MEDFORD BARGArN HOUSE 27 N Grape St. Phone 1082 FOB RENT HOUSES n pyT Hiffh-clasa 4-room fur- ni.v,H residence: Res. A. Ideal Mirt. cor. MTrt'.e and Taylor Sts, Good 4-room furnished apartment, No. 301 Beatty St.; io per aia Geo. Iverson. wrvo pr.MT A nlcelv furnished du nlex. close In, for 13. Phone 1149 tor RENT 4-room furnished house 1001 North Central. Inquire 039 N. Central. FOR RENT Fum. house, 2 and 3-nn. apts.. garage. 604 VI. 10th. fOR RENT Partly furnished home, close In, nice shade, garden spot, garage, 20. water rent paid: lo cated at 315 so. Rivcrsrsioe; in quire at 325 So. F.lverslde. SMALL, modern, furnished house frlgldalre. garajse. 221 N. Holly. FOR RENT Clean, partly furnished 4-room house. Telephone saa-si. FOR RENT Furnished 6-room house: furnace, fireplace: close In. Tel 1326. FOUR-ROOM furnished house. quire Irvln Anderson, 214 Vancou ver Ave. FOR RENT Nice 5-roum unlurnlah ed house. $15 mo. Location, North Central, phone 449-X. FOR RENT Nice residence near high school: double garage. 503 3. Oat' dale. Phone 737. OR RENT 5-room furnished house and garage. Call at 345 N Bartlett FOR RENT woom small furnished house with garage. Call 315 1113-J. 741 WEST JACKSON 6 rooms, good condition and location. Tel. 105 FOR RENT -room modern furnish ed house: nardwjod floors, over stuffed electric range. Call at 630 S Central NEWLY renovated 5-room modem couaee on Pacific Highway with 8 acre lot good garden soil, irriga tion See J. B. Webster Agency. Phoenix. FOR KENT Furnished 6-room mod ern house. Call at 4H S Riveraide FOP RENT Partly furnished mod ern ao-jse. Upper Berrydale Ato Root. Kent's place. FOR RENT 4 room unfurnished hDuse n.rntv b'll.t Ins, close In lnauire 141 So. Hollv. FOR RENT Homes. Furnished or unfurnished. Brown at Walte, FOR RENT APARTMENTS FOR RENT 3 and 3-room apart ment. 217 W. 2nd St. MODERN furnished apt; heated; water. 345 No. Bartlett. ROOMS completely furnished, in cluding lights and water; heated: 5 a week. 229 No. Ivy. FURNISHED apartment, downstairs; garage. 344 Ho. Bartlett. NICE turn. -apt. SIB So Oakdale. NfakT fum. apt. Key 148 S Ivy. FURN. apts.: ateam heat: convenient for 4 adults. Tne uercen. iu wuiuce FOB RENT Attractive ground floor apartment lor couple empioyea Call at 532 Plum St.. alter 9 p. m or Sundays. HOMES FOB KJSNT Call 7D8. "OB RENT FURNISHED ROOMS ATTRACTIVE heated rooms. 404 8 Grape. PLEASANT ROOMS House furnace- heated and a fireplace. Three gooa meals, $1.00 a day. 710 E. Main FOR RENT Comfortable rooms: prl- yate entrance, one block irom. Main St. Reasonable rates. 222 S Central. FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT Mv noultrv ranch equtp lev with electric incuoators ana hrooaers. wen lurnisnea uwuoo, Mrs. C. A. Wlnans, Ross Lane. FOR RENT Sutturban property, email tracts near Central Point and Medford. Phone 106. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FOR RENT An established service station In a good location: gooa equipment and living quarters Phone 417. FOR EXCtANGB FOB EXCHANGE Good light closed car and Bldg. & Loan stock for later model car. Phone 731-X. FOR EMCHANGE 1 acres, small house and garage and hen nouse, for less acreage, small modern house. Will pay the difference in caah A. D. a-swis, fit. 4. WOOD for jay or potatoes, near Trail R O Skenenger. Trill, ore. WILL trade dry 16" ftr and hard' wood for light truck a cast ui FOR EXCHANGE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE 80 acres Klamath county, on highway and railroad, fine land, all Irrigated: 45 acres Jackson county, no Irrigation needed. Will sell or exchange for smaller acreage or Medford prop erty. Phone 1282. FOB TRADE 40 A. 7 modern cab- Ins. & houses, filing station. 6 miles from Falls, $5,000 back cost am 500. Make offer equity. W. J. Hoi' man. Fort Klamath. FOR SALt UOMBS NBAR COURT HOUSE itt -J r AvA a SCnODl IB WHO mwcjn 21549 5-room home, lovely lot. nice location, only $300.00 down, balance $15.00 per montn. See Charles A. Wing Agency, Inc. FOR SALE Good 3 room house (east front) and nice lot close to nerry- dale store. A great Bargain at nov, Terms. Phone oi f-L. FOR SALE OR TRADE Two line homes In Portland. Will traoe mr property In or near Medford. 329 E. Main, pnone lea. FOR SALE POULTRT NEW LOW PRICBS on chicks White Leghorns, Hsnsen strain, o cenw Reds and Rocks 9 cnts. 24 page catalog free. Jenka Poultry Farms, Tangent. Oregon. r.HinKS Order early. Leghorns 9c; Reds 10c. Strong stock. Keller, Jacktidnvllle, Ore. FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES TO MAKE ROOM for more trade-ins on our new Plymouth and DeSoto Sixes, we are going to sell the ioi' lowing cars this month at prlcei that will meet with your approval 1931 Desoto 8. 4-door Sedan, air wheel and free wheeling equip ped. 1929 DeSoto 8. 4-door Sedan. 1039 Model A Ford 4-door Sedan. 1929 Model A Ford Sport Coupe. 1928 Model A Ford Sport Coupe ( dandy car at the low figure 0 $125.00). 1927 Pontlac Coach at the g! awav nrlce of $65.00. Many other In both cheaper and better cars to choose from. See them at Mead Motor Co, 204 North Rlv ersMe. FOR SALE REAL ESTATE 40 ACRES on C. L. highway i ml above Fish Hatchery 4 ml river "front. Verv reasonable. Beautiful building sites. Owner. Mall Trib une. WILL SACRIFICE my equity In mod ern duplex. Good Income property, Make me an offer at your own price. Balance $2600. like rent. Look this over. Mrs. Gustafson. Box 37, Jack, aonvtlle Star route. Medford. 12 ACRES Own water right; house and other 'buildings: on bus line; (1000. A. E. Dennis, Rogue River Oregon. 420-ACRE atock and dairy ranch 300 acres paid up water right fi:llv eoulDoed: stocked, lncludln 30 good dalrv cows: $30,000 ranch for $17,000'. $3500 will handle. Will take some trade. Also going lunch room, reasonable. Knight at upp, 19 N. Bartlett. GOOD homes, ranches, timber lands, building lots. Bargains. Roberts, 720 W. 2nd. Phone 1528-J. WHEN you think of real estate think of Brown 6s White. FOR SALE FUEL DRY FIR. black oak and laurel wood $1.75 and up. Phone 153 Jacksonville. FOR' SALK-.MISCKLLANtOLg FOR SALE Baled hay. $12 ton. M. Lofland, phone 447-J. ; I FOR S.K'uE OR TRADE Nfwtown. Delicious and Jonathan apples, also winter Neuis pears. Cheap, by box or ton. Joe Kaator, Rt. 4. Bx 2J7.!iier final report and account for tne FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS PIANOS DRASTIC PRICE REDUC TION on complete atoca oi new .... slightly used pianos for January clearance. FREE PIANO LESSONS. BALDWIN PIANO SHOPPE. Lllla M. Purucker. 28 So. Grape. Medford THE NEW contract bridge score cards with the new ruies ana ....... of hostess or friend to whom you desire to make a present printed thereon, for sale at the commercial Printing Dept. of the Mall Tribune. 38 N drape- m Pads of 25. FOR SALE Two large wicker doll buggies, doll bed anfc oiner iu Jhampoo shield and stand. 319 No Central. FURNITURE for sale Servian rugs. radio, overatuffed, Maytag, mns' dining set, bedroom furniture. Westlnghouse range.. Selling every thing. Come. 120 Vancouver Ave FOR SALE Good used piano W7.50. Good organ 7.50. galdwin nana Shoppe. 266 S. Grape St. FOR SALE Dry oak. laurel and men- canlta. pnone mo. FOR SALE Harley-Davtdsdn motor- .. i . a o ft - . V. D . .TnHn . Mall Tribune. FOR SALE 11x5 lathe. Inquire at Flck 6c Llndley a. FOR SALIUeed sewing machine all makes. $5 up; terms u aesirea. sn makes rented and repaired. White Sewing Machine Co. 24 N Bartlett FOR sand, gravel, sediment, fertilizer and teaming, pnone uiu-j. GET the "No Hunting" and trespass- lng slgna at the Man TriDune joo office: printed on oloth to with stand the rain and weather. FOR SALE Large sized Monarch Electric Range with trasn burner Cost 4260 Cash price $76 Like new P O Box 414 Central Point INCUBATORS and brooders for sale. Phone 206-R-i. FOR SALE Suit of clothes, good as new, for 16-year-old ooy. iu Stevens Ave. BALDWIN and NEWTOWN apples, 25c box. Phone 7-F-4. FOR SALE Circulating heater. Phoew 676-Y MISCELLANEOUS LINOLEUM, floor or rugs Olo-coated; everything furnished for $i oo. uau Lamport's. FLOORS cleaned, waxed and polish ed: everything furnished lor l.uu. Call Lamport's. GET the "No Hunting" and trespass ing signs at the Mall Tribune Job office; printed on oloth to with stand the rain and weather. BUY AT HOME Out-of-town sale' men are canvassing MCdiord dubi nea men for duplicate and tripli cat-e sales books and flatpacks tor different kinds oi counter sates reg lsters, for ledger sheet and state ments used on bookkeeping ma chines, and other kinds of printing All of these can be furnished by your local printers and at as low and generally lower prices. Do not order anything from out-of-town printers. Call your own printer and keep the money employing home people. HAWLEY TRANSFER Expert pack- srs and movers. 6 poet a 1 livestock moving equipment. Price right Satisfaction guaranteed 810 Nortb Riverside. Phone '044-X. BUSINESS DIBECTORY JACKSON CO. AWHTKAO C. Abatwrss et Title itM THIe iMsenae. The oaJy oossfriete Title system la -iwamiw County. MURRAY ABSTRACT CO. Abstracts of Title, Title insurance. Rooms 8 and 6. No. 83 North Central Ave. upstairs. Automotive Loans. CONTRACTS REFINANCED PAYMENTS REDUCED We pay up balance due dealer, bank or nnanoe company ana waa your payments. Additional moifty loaned Phone 31 for appointment fcxpert Window Cleaners. LET OEOROE DO IT - Tel. 1173 House cleaning Floor waxing, ori ental rug cleaning, specialty. Job Printing. MAIL TRIBUNE JOB DEPARTMENT Best equipped plant in southern Oregon. Printing of all kinds; book binding; loose-leaf ledgers, and blanks, billing systems, duplicating cash sales slips and everything lo the printing lino, ao-au w. urajw Phone 78. Tainting and Papernanglng. HARRY MARA Paining, tinting, paperbangtng. Phone 14-P-4. Res Coleman Creek road. Money to Lend. WE LEND MONEY ON FURNITURE AND LATE MODEL AUTOS Three Der cent per month on un paid balance. No other charge. See W. S. Thomas. 48 8 Central Ground floor Craterlan Theatre Bldg State Licence No. S-1S7. Trans ret. BADS TRANSFER & STORAOE CO. Offios 1016 WO. ueoirai vuvum oio Prices right Service guaranteed REIN KING TRUCK1NO CO. Trans fer and Storage. We haul anything at a reasonable orioa. ill NO FU Street. Phone 832. LEGAL NOTICES Administratrix' Notice of Hearing on Final Report and Wount settlement M Estate. Ir. the County Court of the State of Oregon for Jackson County. In the Matt of the Estate of Robert John Conroy. Deceased. Notice la hereby given by the un derslaned. He. en Mar Conroy. as ad msnistratrlt of the esiat of Robert John Conroy, deoeaeed, that said ad ! minlMrs'.rlx did. on th' 31st day cf December, 1932. fl'e with the County court jot Jscuson twnty. ureson settlement of said estate and asking that a decree and order be made al- j lowing and approving said final re port And account and settling said estate and discharging said adminis tratrix thereof and making auoh flnd lnga and decree In said matter aa may be proper under said final re port and account, and that on said day the County Court for Jackson County. Or--pn. sitting in probate, made and entered an order setting the hour or ten o'clock a. m. on wedneaday, the first day of February. 1933, as the time for the hearing of said final report and account and all objections to such final account and the settlement thereof, and re quiring all persons having any ob jections to the allowance and ap proval of aueh final report and ac count and the settlement thereof and the settlement of said estate In ac cordance therewith to appear In said court at said time and make such objections. All persons having any objections to the allowance and approval of I the making of auch findings and de cree and to the discharge of said ad ministratrix are hereby required to appear at said time and place and make auch objections. Dated this 31st. dav of December, 1932. . HELEN MAR CONROY. Administratrix of the Estate of Robert John Conroy, deceased. Trail TRAIL. Jan. (Spl.) An epi demic of flu has been circulating here. Reported sick are Mrs. Irwin How and daughter. Wanda, Boyd Tucker, the Burk family and Floyd Hutchinson and family. All are bet ter at this writing. u Mr. and Mrs. Herman Pence and son, Junior, have returned home to Klamath Falls after spending a week visiting his parents here and her relatives In the Sams Valley district. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Watson are staying with Boyd Tucker, while Mrs. Tucker la at Yreka, Calif., with her daughter, who Is til. WMber Tucker and friend, Doc Grim, who left here Monday for Cor vallls, found a lot of flooded roads and did not get through till 6:00' o'clock Tuesday morning. Friday was another beautiful sun shiny day here. They are few this time of year, so are appreciated. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Watson were overnight guests at the S. W. Hutch inson home New Year's eve. Shady Cove Union Sunday school elected officers and teachers Sunday: Mr. Goble. superintendent; Mrs. John Still, treasurer; Elle Still, librarian; Olive Hutchinson, secretary; John Still, Mrs. John Still and Mrs. Lions teachers. Agood attendance Is re ported each Sunday, Every one la Invited. Trail Extension unit will meet January 12 with Mrs. Eva Seglesman. There will be sewing for relief work and a good attendance Is desired. Life Sentences For Tigetrd Man H1LLSBORO, Ore., Jan. 9. (AP) Two life sentences, to run consec utively, were 1m pored on Aubrey Welch, 38. In circuit court here for the slaying of his wife and their 8- year-old daughter at Tlgard Dec. 26, Welah, pleaded guilty to two ape- arate charges of second degree mur der. A life term was Imposed In each case. ACROSS L Pouches 6. Exclamattor 8. Spatter 14. Metal 15. Elasticity 17. Cylindrical 19. Amid 20. Negative prefix 21. Mors rational 22. Contemptuous name for a child 23. Wild plum 25. Kxpunpe 27. East Indian boiled butter 29. Hlfrh in the musical ACll e Jin. Likely M. Tlilok o It. Modern eleO trical marvel 16. Note of the scale 17. Vn?niI flsTht 3. Noftrils Solution jf Yestere'ay'a Pun A Li A mEfli LQG&WATl- E wjl em A HQ RJE ggQ L t mi :1a p LTTTpp mfIpI flAR i ppF e qpg P A T E nKR ELjETTc owEie maSe jfeop M. Possesses 54. Frequently 56. Former Rold Japanese coin 55. Egyptian solar disk 10. Ruislan mountains . Melodfea 63. &malleit at Me: sbbr. SI. Brother of 4Ioses U. entires with gas V. Subdues 7. Trigonometri cal ratio 71. Transmitter 74. Existed 75. Ardor sltiRlnc voice I'rlnclpal rooms lo Roman houses Architectural 41. 43. pier treated as a pilas ter 4$. Moisten 47. Simple open vocal sound 4P. At horns 50. Musical Instrument 51. Type of auto mobile 12. Deed &Zk 7 S W)'1 HP3 5 Si. JLJmlT' 'LMlL 30 3l TZ,.32 33 ST 34 3S -T rr-M M31 S 31 H 41 43, 49 4 IL-Ui .. si i . ,mmi, ,l.tJ., - -i , -i i -4t44JU- - i So Si JZIFlZiZ IZIi 7 ip?7 W. C. T. U. PREPARING TO MARK VICTORY DAY BY CELEBRATION JAN. 16TH Med ford W. O. T. V. chapter will celebrate annual Victory Day. Janu ary 16, with following program: Morn hip. 10 o'clock. County President Mrs. J. C. Woods presiding. Singing, "Lead On, Oh King Eter nal." Devotional. Mrs. (Rev.) Long. Welcome address, Mrs, J, C. Woods. Response, Mrs. E. D. Patterson, Ashland. Business period In charge of Mrs. Woods. "Pending Legislation ," B. A. Olden bure. Noontide prayer. Covered Dish Luncheon. Afternoon SrsMon. 2 oTIock. Presiding Officer, Mrs. E. A. Olden burg. Song, "America.' Devotlonals, Mrs. R. T. Holmes. Ashlnnd. Mu'lc or reading. Vocal solo. Mfrs. Ella Doran. Address, "Advance Not Retreat," Rev. W. J. Howell. Report of Resolution Committee. Offering. Song, "Advance Not Retreat." Benediction. TO BE NEAR WIFE Ellis Nelson, 81, who suffered a fractured leg when his automablle left the highway betweem Woodland and Knight's Landing, Calif., has re turned to Medford by train, to Join Mrs. Nelson, who Is seriously 111 here. Mr. Nelson had been working In that district when he received word of his wife's lllne, and was en route here from Vallejo, having left that city about 3 a. m. Tuesday. Blinded by lights of an approaching car, his machine flfcldded on the highway made slippery by mist, aad caused Vie Injury to hla leg, and wrenched shoulder muscles. For several hours he lay si the side of the highway, he said, and motorists who would atop to view the wreck, drove on without feeding his cries. About six In the morning he was successful In attracting the at tention of a laborer in a neighboring field who assisted .him to a hospital. Mrs. Beers Buried January 1 Is Wad Funeral services were conducted January at Scottsburg cemetery for Mrs. Cora L. Beers of Elktem, Ore.. who died Desember 30 after a ew hours' Illness, It was learned In lfted ford yesterday. Surviving her are her daughter, Mrs. C. D. Mobley of Elk ton, who formerly resided in this city, a eon, C. R. Beers of Denver, Colo., and one sister In California. Phone 643 We'll haul mm refuse City Sanitary Serrto. IS. To this If. Picture formed W )tm IS. Kxclmrvss 22. Insnare I 24. Loaded 1 29. Mysterieisi Blslleal word 38. Masculine name 50. Xvlnr 31. Serving to relieve without curing S3. Answer the nurpose Mt Ruit"lsn inland sea 37. Oronn aft. Moaem ruler 40. Coax 42. Substitute for iodoform 44. Insect 48. Soft murmur Ins sound 4. Orowlna nut f0. Lighthouse 51. Scatter: archsfa 53. Hangnail SS. Rage 57. One whs et- tendn the sick ;5. Fra grant oint ment or the ancients si. Afresh 63. Volcano l. Perceived 17, Imltite IS. Stupid person :0. Type measure 1. Egyptian deity DOWN 1. Takes a chair 2. neclon Z. Brass mutttcsJ instrument 4. Expression of contempt 5. Metalliferous rock Pronoun 7. Glacial ridges X. inuolenca 9. Article of jewelry 10. Sides of a triangle 11- Article 12. Character 1 14 hy prsteu tioua super .Iclal knowledge That TECHNOCRACY Question Editor's Note: This Is the second' of fx dally articles about Terhnoc- I racy hoe predictions of possible economic collapse started a farriung controversy. The articles give a new InMglit into Technocracy and present other statistics pertaining to the displacement of men by machines, i energy consumption, debts and other j points Involved. By J. R. BKAt'KETT. (Copyright, 1832, By The Associated Press.) NEW TORK (AP) Energy la Technocracy's fundamental word. It is on the basis of the rapid Increase In the use of energy that Howard Scott, Technocracy's direc tor, has stated that drastic changes must be made In this economle sys tem to save It from possible collapse. Technocracy la the name of a group of engineers working at Co lumbia university In an "Energy Survey of North America," the pur pose of which Is simply, .according to public statements, to make a tech nical analysis which, If successful, the Technocrat believe would nldl cate necessary corrections In the economic system. Here Is why Scott believes energw Is so Imporatant: 1. For all the years of man's his tory up to about 1800, he used the energy resources of the earth at about the rate of 3,000 Calories per capita (a measure of energy) per day. He used little coal, no electricity, and scarcely any of the devices which need energy. Then suddenly the ma chines came, and today man uses about 160,000 Calories per capita per day a gain or 75 times. 3. But, in the meantime, man did not change materially his methods of directing society. What change there was probably occurred at a rate slm liar to the rate at which It has changed in all history In other words energy flowed into the social mechanism at a rate entirely new In history, and society was not prepared to cope with that change 8 The result has been a disor derly a ad fluctuating use of energy, resulting In fluctuating In p reduction of gooe. depresslous and unemploy ment The nation has attempted to progress, figuratively speaking. In an oxcart equipped with a 1,000 horse power airplane engine This, Tech nocracy believes, will sweeme In creasing difficult Other economists have stressed the Importance of power, but some of tiem object to the greater stress which Technocracy has given It. They further consider that compar ison between 1800 and now Is not EATER OFFI Fleyd HouM, eetgmeer at the Red ford repeater statlen f the American Telephone and Telegraph company on North Bartlett stseet, Friday night conducted 34 members of the Amateur Radle- Club at Southern Oregon through the long distance re lay plant. Tae group deekued It was one of tee meet Interesting and ed ucational meetings held by the club. PHONE mmr W"OU X soil, M, t Machines ana Power - An Increasing use of energy or power to drive machinery Is cat i Ring nu Alness fluctuations says Terhnocracy. The cluirt at top HluMrnte the point, showing a theoretical buot'W curve going up and down and deeper and higher and oftener na energy consumption gains. particularly revealing, pointing out that relatively speaking the nation made probably as astounding gains In the last centtry as In this one to date. F. O. Tryon of the Institute of Mr. House explained how regular long distance telephone and tele graph messages are relayed along the Pacific coast, across the continent and over oceans if necessary. Hfe snowed how the plant Is equipped with storage batteries which will op erate the entire plant for a day and a half without external source of power. Qaa-driven generators are also available for operation If power la stiH unobtainable then, he said. Next meeting of the ham club will be January 37 In Ashland at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Max Crowson at 881 Iowa street. Mr. Crowson op eratea amateur radio station W7BQK. Breton windows giaxed h? Trow bridge Cabinet Works. vtmtads have something to trade or buy. Let our. intelligent Want-ad takers help you word your message for best results. You'll like this courteous service. Simply lift the re ceiver and ask for Phone 75 Economics In Washington hat writ ten that "the industrial production of a nation may be gauged by Its use of power." He calculated an Index of energy consumption between ISnn lfl:j and round that, unlng 18lt :i 100, consumption In V. S. Increased to 310 about three I lines. Going back to 1849 and using actu al heat measurements, tie calculated that production In 1840, not Includ ing water power for which there were no figures was 178 trillion B. T. tJ.t a measure of energy: that by 1800, Including water power, It was 7,340 trillion B. T. U., and 1033. It was 34, 434 trillion B. T. U. Technocracy's statistics are that total energy production la 1810 was 75 trillion B. T. V. and that It was 27,000 trillion B. T. U. In 1P2A a gain of 8.1S times. Technocracy said most csT this In crease has occurred since 1000, when, according to Technocracy, production was 3.C40 trillion B. T. U. This latter figure compares to Try on's 7.346 trillion B. T. U. for 289fl. Tlie two groups of statistics may not be exactly comparable due to dif ferences In methods of computation. They are similar for the last decade. ,however. Neither set of figures makes com parable calculations relating the growth of energy to growth In popu lation. Since population Increased, the per capita fcaln of energy was not aa great as the total gain. Tryon calculated that energy con sumed Increased at about the rate of 8 to 7 per cent per year after 1809, na compared to an Increase In tha physical volume of production of 4 per cent per year. Comparing 1809 to 1016, Tryon found that popula tion gained a total of 38 per cent; physical volume of agricultural manufacturing, and mining produc tion, and railroad transportation In creased a total of 80 per cent, and energy production ISO per cent. As' to what machines used thl energy, Carrol Hoop Daugherty, in a U. S. Geological Survey Bulletin, has calculated that, using 1809 an 100, capacity to use power Increased from 18 to 1009 If automobiles ar Included. If autos are not Included., the change was from 18 to 899. This Indicates that much mor than half of the consumption of en ergy was ocoounted for by the auto-1 mobiles In using oil and gas, and that by excluding autos from tha general computations of B. T. V. tha gains would not seem so important as an Influence on production. (Tomorrow. Machine and Economics) Funeral services for the late Joha Taylor 8 tails worth, a resident of Cen tral Point for tha past SB years., wens held from the Conger funeral parlors Sunday afternoon. Rev. V. E. Mil lard was In charge of services and burial was made In the Central Point cemetery. Real Estate or insurance Leave to Jones Phone 796- BMW1LPJ. II I 14 f