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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1933)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune MEryeM Mi Seutturn Ortgoa Rutl t Hail CrlkUM' DtUS tietpl Saturday PuNittwd or UEItniUU PfllNTlNU CO, ii-tr-st m it fteM ft gOBEUT. . BUHL, iVUUr fcnsrad m tMooo claai mtvm at atedforo, rasaa, radar id Hard I. llTt. fUVWHlPTlON KATES DiUr rwr .......fft-00 Dtllf. ill BOOUH tl fUllt. 1M TM)DUi 00 JtekMMmUt, Canual Point. PbotoU, TaiMt. QoW BUJ tad M Ulfbvajt. Dallf, sot mr 0u Daily, fls BwnUM..... M Dillv. mm Boolb .40 AU tarna. abb la tdiasca. Official pap af Um Chy of Htdford. OfftetaJ paw at Jacawo County. UKMBEH OP TUB ASSOCIATED PUE8I u-Mm SMI I .m.A Wlr AarvlM sje.. a. Praa la airMllirrail antltlM) tfi tM dm (or publiwt'BD of all run dUpalcMa ttmUVto to II or oirwrwuf vnhn io mi vv tad Also to U local newi published herein. AU rlibU 'or puhlleatloo of ipwlal dlapatebat DareiD lit aua ruenra. IIEMBEH OP UNITED PHE8J HEMBEH OP AUDI. BUREAO OP CIHCULATI0N8 AdtertUint KeprauoUttTta IL & MOI JENSEN A CO MP ANT Omeaa to Nt York, Chlo, Detroit. Sao mucbeo Anxtlaa ScalUo Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By artfiui Parry The bird hooting sesson opened yesterday. Despite the darkness of tbe economlo future, none were too poor to purchase shotgun shells, or cuollna to get to rural paaturea Quite a number of 1 100 dogi trailed with their masters through the tall grass. The bb shot Is mightier than tbe lowly but more nourishing bean. A move Is afoot upstate to recall the governor. The attendant political monkeyahtnee will cost the state 75,000 or more, so the same will net be without-cost-to the-urpayars. The government Is ahowlng no con Mention whatsoever for Its lady criminals, In fact. Is downright dis courteous to them. Take the case of Mrs. Kathryn (Machine Dunne) Kelly, wife and able aide of Mr. Maohlne Oun Kelly, in tats kidnaping enter prises. Kathryn's mother and father wen also Involved, and all have life terms to serve. Said Mrs. Machine Ounne, "I'll be mean If I am not aent to the same prison as Mother. They can't be so cruel as to operate us." It never occurred to Mrs. Kelly, that some cruelty was dlsplsyed In sepa rating Mr. Urechel from his family, and returning him only when 1300,000 In hand was paid. This wss a mstter of business not sentiment. The de mand was noted, and duly acted upon as followa: "Those two were together quite a bit when they were free and It apparently did neither any good," said Joseph B. Keenan, assistant United States attorney general, today. "We will keep them as far apart as poeslble." The Westher Committee of the 18-k Jubilee should get busy at once and make arrangementa to lynch the weatherman, If he aota as he did when the National Guards held their Tscatlon In these parts snd It wss so hot the general'a white collar fried on the back of his neck. g MODERNS (Sliklyou News) JOKES, Oct. 13. (Special). Bon of F. V. Smith of Mugglnavllle was arrested Sunday by Deputy Sheriffs Chas. Calkins and Grant Whipple, for ateallng a horse and buggy belonging to another man by the name of Smith who la dairying on the BUI Sharp ranch. The horse had been tied to a hitch rack In Ft. Jones. A wind Is bsdly needed to blow the leaves Into the neighbors' lawns, and should be accompanied by a car washing rain. Your corr. has a shooting psln In his shoulder. It la the neuralgia, which sounds as high-toned as neu ritis but does not have to be taken to California next winter to be cured. . Following the publication of J. Curtis Barnes' article on "Stablllne tton", a rumor got loose In the coun try that a lively atable would be opened here soon. ... PANIIANDLINO KIDS Scene: Central avenue. Characters: Three boys; one bare footed. Time: Just before the First show. Boy No. 1 "Me got the stomach ache. Oht Ohl Ohl Pedestrian "What have you been eating to make your stomach ache?" Boy No. a "He alnt been eating nothing. He eln't had no supper, and neither have I. Hie mother went to Klamath Fe.le. and his father Is working. That's why we alnt had no aupper." Pedestrian "That's too bad. Boy No. I "We want to go see the pitcher. A man promised to meet ue and take ua to the pitcher. Never showed up, and we cant go are the pitcher. He'a awful hungry, mister." (Pedestrian moveson.) Boys (in unison) You're a cheap guy. making us kids spend our own money for a pitcher show, when we're hungry!" When J. Omar Samson retires from active seurvice late In September aa mall carrier In Maryavilie, Cal he will have walked lOO.Oon miles In de livering mall In S3 years he estimates. V mam IS The Recall of Governor Meier CO A recall bag been started against Governor Meier. The k-' charges are: the governor is utterly devoid of leadership, necessary to the office; that the real duties of the office have been left to persons whom the people did not elect; that the incompetency of the governor and his inattention to tbe duties of the office, have placed the state in an impossible condition. None of these charges if true would justify a recall, particu larly near the close of the governor's term. The recall is only justified as an EMERGENCY measure, when an office holder has shown himself so unfit for office, that tbe public welfare demands his immediate retirement. Then the expense of such action, and the internal dissension and turmoil, attendant upon it, renders the recall inadvisable, when the incumbent's term is practically over. Far better sense for the people who don't want Governor Meier to get busy selecting someone they DO want, and electing their candidate in the regular way, in 1934. OUT sense, unfortunately, has little to do with politics, and - less to do with the initiative, referendum and recall, as it functions, in this state. Under the conditions which prevail in Oregon now, and have prevailed throughout the Meier administration, no man at the head of the state government could be personally or politically popular. Tbe wonder is NOT that a recall has at last been started against Governor Meier; but that it was not started LONG ago. The fact that it has only been started six or eight months before the next state campaign will open, is a pretty good tribute to the governor's ability to "get by", to success fully ride the tidal wave of discontent and revolt, which the most serious depression in the nation's history, has produced. WITHOUT certain qualities of leadership this couldn't have been done. WITHOUT some genuine executive ability, three years of comparative political peace, would have been impossible. "PHE Mail Tribune opposed Governor Meier for election, and certainly can't be accused of partisanship in his favor, or any prejudice against his opposition. We have worked under seven-state administrations, West, Withycombe, Olcott, Pierce, Patterson, Norblad and Meier, and in all fairness would state, that with the possible exception of Oswald West, Governor Meier has been in leadership and efficiency the equal of any of them. His campaign slogan of "cheap to the taxpayers," has not been paign slogans, molasses to catch flies HAVE been I He has materially reduced the cost of hard to reduce the cost of local government, and we could recite inumerable instances where it took courage to take a definite stand, "id Governor Meier has never faltered always been there when needed and on the right side. His effective assistance to the fruit industry, in southern Oregon, alone, justifies a feel ing of gratitude and appreciation in this section of the state. DUT DOES SUCH A FEELING EXIST! Among a few, per- sonally familiar with what was done, yes. But among the rank and file, we doubt it. Just as there Is no sense, there is no gratitude in politics. When conditions are good, the head of the government IS; when they aren't, he ISN'T. That's about all there is to it, as far as practical politics is concerned. s e e e IT IS the weakness inherent in if you please in democracy, whole to think things through ineir neacia instead of their emotions. But it is not a fatal weakness. It is a weakness that. .n h overcome by education and experience. If the recall fails as it snould to secure the required support it will show the people of Oregon have learned by their past experiences. If the recall is filed, and an election follows, regardless of how it comes out, they will learn from THAT experience. llE live and learn. We still have faith, that eventuallv democracy will show the si - uies, or common sense and good eaatraint, which are necessary to its success, in fact to its survival. Toward this end, we urge our readers, if recall petitions are presented to them, to refuse to sign, and thus promote better government in this state instead of retarding it. War Must Go, or VS democracy has this to learn. And the world, the human race has something else to learn. That something else is this: unless the human race can de stroy war ; war will destroy the human race. We don't mean pacifism. We don't mean immediate and literal application' of Christianity, Both are theoretically sound, but praotioally, impossible. We do mean establishing a will to peace stronger than the will to war. We do mean, a world opinion strong enough to enforce peace, and with the power at any given time to do it. That, as we see it, is the only way. And it must be done by the world, just as the salvation and perpetuation of democ racy, must be done, within the various democratic nations, by the PEOPLE THEMSELVES, developing the capacity to think things through to a logical conclusion. THE people must see that war, ANY war, (except a war ACTUALLY in self defense), is AGAINST their self inter est; that peace, peace is TO their self interest. In other words the human race must become, what it isn't today really CIVILIZED. It must be made to see that war, with all its appeal to robust manhood, its deep seated traditional urge, is aa out of date as the stage coach. That the end of war, will not mean a decadent or effeminate race; it will really mean a stronger raoe, a race that is wise and self controlled, that has the sense to divert the combative instinct, to fighting things like instead of fighting other races, that, essentially speaking are no different from their own. This must be done, if what we now call civilization is to sur vive; just as the capaoity of true self government, must be evolved, if what is known as democracy is to survive I Public school students of Marlon county, Pie., take written examln at Ions on safety methods. Extra ere - dit la given for reporting fire ess - rdft. light and power at no expense fulfilled, but how msny cam state government, he has worked our political system, inherent the refusal of the people as a to discriminate to be ruled by capacity to produce those qual-1 . judgment discrimination and j disease, poverty, the elements, j Salary lnereasea totaling 61.000' j annually for schwol Ueohers of Chat-' 1 tanooga, Tenn. have been ordered by ! j the municipal department of cducft-i loon. Personal Health Service By William aifut-o tetter pcrUiUing u peraunai antita ud uyfleDe ool U dis ae diHiciiuaU ur treatment,, aylii o nattered oy Ur. etiad) J ft lamped tell - addi ei4ed envelop iDcluaea. Ustlexa mould M artet ftxm written to icit Owing to che targe Dttmbai ol letter .ecelved ool a ta oao 0 tna wcred ber. Ho repl) can or mad to queriea pot onororming Ui UutrvcUoD Addreaa Or William Brad. 16& m camloo, riererte Uilia, Cai. THIS WIST FIX LOOKING BACKWARD Youth la a blunder; mankind truggle; old age a regret, aald Olaraei, In one mood, and In another the same xamoua phraae maker observed that almost ev erything that is great haa been done by youth. Another noted writer of Disrae li's time who told the world the pen la might ier than the sword bade blun dering youth and struggling man hood cheer up, for in tne lexicon of youth there la no such word aa "fall X shouldn't wonder if my own pet poet Aleck Pope didn't get off a neat one on the subject, but what's the use? The way one looks at youth de pends mainly on the state of one's afterles. and no amount of poetising or metaphor making can remove the question from the field of physiology. Rejuvenation la the bunk so far aa any magic nostrum, gland hocus- po cua or mall-order surgery Is concern ed. But if one can free one's mind from the poetry, romance and mys tery Inspired by the miracle mer chants there are some things which one should avoid In order to stay young. I refer to sound principles of physiology and hygiene, and not to any silly twaddle about smiling when you're In no condition to smile or be pleased with youreelf. A symbol which has become popu lar tho It is Incorrect la TB which really means tubercle bacilli but to the laity means tuberculosis. In med ical parlance there la another sym bol, CVD which means cardiovascu lar disease or degeneration that Is, heart and artery disease. This In cludes many cases of slow heart fail ure (myocarditis, angina pectoris), apoplexy (cerebral hemorhage, stroke or shock of paralysis) and chronic nephritis (Brlgfet's disease). CVD now terminates more lives than does tuberculosis vltself. People are learn ing bow to avoid or prevent tubercu losis learning In spite of our popular education system. People are not learning how to avoid CVO, for this is more a question of personal health. individual knowledge and habits. Most individuals take neither lntereat In nor any steps to combat premature old age or "breakdown" until they are pretty far gone. Now I believe atneerely that a man or woman who 1s Just "a bit stale' can come back, but I do not mean to suggest that there la any hope for habitual of fenders who repent and cry for suc NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Oct. IS. Diary of a modern Pepys: Up and a batch ot Bahama Island folk songs John T. MoCuecheon sent. Also notes from DeWolt Hopper, Byron unanaier. Harold Bell Wright and Dor othy Russell. To PasM . ;t J a rousing break s' I last with Prazler I B Hunt and much -J " $1 hoollloolng. -L y In the after- " jiJ?" noon writing a tir 1 foreword for W O. Sibley's "The French Five Hun dred," a re-Issue oils. Then to Bob uarrand and Queenle Smith's and talked to Mrs. Pat Campbell and Otis Skinner. And Jsck Howard, back from the Far East, there with a slim new mus tsche. Dinner with the Meredith Nichol sons against their going to far away Paraguay to ministerial post. Among others the Messmore Kendalls, Oeorge Armsbys. Fannie Hurst and the Irvln Cobbe. So home late reading .Valen tine Williams' thriller, "The clock Ticks On." Among the p re-drought restaura teurs that rumor persist will come back Is Joel's. Joel Is Joel Rlnaldo, who has been to and fro-lng on hi Brooklyn porch ahiee he shuttered his dispensary tucked near the Met ropolitan, And opposite the atage entrance of the New Amsterdam. It was a stuffy haven with ft downstairs bar and an upstairs dining room, featuring chill and the "Blue Moon" cocktail. Joel's collection of bad checks with notable signatures Is not excelled. O. Henry went to Joel's. As did moat writers and night news paper workers. Along with a reported revival of Joel's is ft petite annonce of the clos ing of the old Judaon hotel, so long a serene literary landmark In Wash ington Square. Like Joel's, It waa unpretentious, with ft self-devised saga and that nebulous friendliness dubbed "atmosphere." At varying periods tt homed Edwin Arlington Robinson. Prank Norrla. Rldgely Tor rtnoe. Isaac P. Marcosaen. William Johnston and other. It was namei for the first American foreign mis sionary. Personal nomination for the slick est of the press agent illusions that Garbo la camera and Interview shy. Pew know the handicaps John Barrymore. regarded by many as ft moat distinguished ftctor. overcame n occupying hit place in the sun. Rla initial daya were marked by what seemed tnsurmoun tables. He had ft way of gawking on, pigeon-toed, with feet far apart, and some of his pro umiclatlon smacked of south Brook lyn's "foist snd "rc'jt." D'r;r- th year nrecf-l'vj hi rrr. v ; .;:- :i in "The Jest," b put himself in the ft 7 m. r' -r Urady, M.D. cor when they are overtaken by the cold gradations of decay. Symptom hunters wro prick up their ears and pay close attention here may as well turn to the funny pictures. We have a lot of yougish readers whom we want to keep young, and for their sake we are quite fini cal about mentioning symptoms. Be sides, there are no particular symp toms which spell staleness or prema ture old age or anything like that. Symptoms are properly complaints the patient makes to his doctor, not suggestions the doctor gives to the patient. Degeneration is a word that rather alarms the layman because bis in terpretation Is different from the In terpretation of the physician. In the medical mind It means merely ft wearing down, ft downgrade change, as contrasted with the building up or upgrade change of youth and adult life. Regeneration Is a reversal of the downgrade changes, such as X believe still possible for those who have gone stale. In a talk to follow well consider this In more detail. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Regeneration Regimen Quite a while ago you gave ft diet for persona prematurely old and breaking down . . . (B. H. C.) Answer Ask for booklet "The Re generation Regimen." Include a dime and a stamped envelope bearing your address. No stomped addressed en velope no booklet: Tomatoes Are Healthful Kindly advise whether tomatoes are bad for one with neuritis, and also whether it Is harmful to work around them. (Mrs. T. A.) Answer Tomatoes are good for ev ery one, especially for folks with rheumatlz. Hlndehede reported that an exclusive diet of 11 pounds of to matoes, V pounds of Graham bread and about 4 ounces of margarln dally produced a urine having s high solv ent power over uric acid. (But that was in the old days when some doc tors still Imagined uric acid was a cause of some ailments.) Keep Fet Warm and Bleep Well If the lady who has cramps Is the legs at night will put a extra covers over her legs she may escape. Z for merly suffered In that manner until I learned to keep my feet and legs warm in bed. Answer Thank you. It Is a good Idea. (Copyright 1933, John P. Dllle Co.l Ed Note: Readers wlihlni to communicate with Dr. Brad; should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 3RS El Ca uilno, Beverly Hills, CalU hands of a coach who ironed out dif ficulties by eight hours a day of rigid discipline. He'd awaken Barrymore out of a sound sleep to see If he would still pronounce Cuba "Cuber." Bagatelles: Ted Cook makes early American furniture a hobby. . . . There are 71 members of the exclu sive Blddle family In Philadelphia. . . . Andrew Mellon is a chain smoker of miniature cigars. . .. The only New York reporter to wear a monocle Is Captain Bernoard Rasketaon-Watt. Reuter'a correspondent. . . . William Gillette, now In the 70's, rides a motorcycle. . . . James Whitcomb Riley and BUI Nye would amicably agree not to speak to each other for several days at a time on long lec ture tours. . . . They feared contempt of familiarity. . . . Rob Wagner, movie critic past SO, can still do a nlp-up and walk on his hands. . , Gran tl and Rice and John N. Wheeler were Ring Lard n era most intimate friends. Lloyd Smith, young broker about town, has a sepia cook who describes her own religious persuasions as that of "A Seventh Day Adventuress." Americana: H. L. Mencken's per sonal note paper, '704 Cathedral street, Baltimore," bears an N. R. A. stamp In the corner. The late Ring Lardner's son John, following the Illustrious footsteps of his father, is not only developing Into a crack reporter, but Is said to have a flair for fiction. Lardner's last bit of writing was a radio review. The most successful panhandlers are touching up their approaches with humor and find it the best method of all. Anybody will pay to laugh these days. William McHarg. asked by s bum on 45th street for 50 cents to get to his family. aked where they were. "In the balcony of the Capitol theater." he replied. (Copyright, 1933, MoNaught Syndicate, Inc.) (continued from page one) which formerly dictated Cuban pol icies have become so dlagutted wlt.i the state department's refusal to use atrongarm methods in Cuba that they have quit even making suggestions to the department, certain official let the bankers know in diplomatic but understandable language that their advice meant nothing to the admin 1st rat ton. prominent every day In the NRA Is that of Senator Wagner. He was called in as one of the pulmotor aquad because of the confidence organ lred labor has in him. Inner Japanese sources say war with Russia is inevitable and the sooner It is brought spoilt the better for Jr.pan. beca,:je Russia is getting stranger every minute. As I Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS a JflLUONS of bushels of wheat, lj' Its. tag unprotected on railroad atatlon platforms throughout Russls are threatened by destruction and decay unless the grain can be ehlp ped rapidly to morketa. It cant be moved to the markets. It appears, because of lack of rail road equipment. IT will be tough on the Russian owners of this wheat If It should be destroyed by the weather. But Its destruction would help to reduce the world surplus, thus benefiting wheat growera elsewhere. Zt's an old stste of affaire when destruction of vast quantities of food csn be construed ss of benefit to ANYBODY, Isn't It? It's a bsdly Jumbled world we're living In. SURPLUS. Surplus. Surplus. Over production. Swsmplng of mar kets, with resulting ruinous prices to producers. These sre the things we read of and talk about. All of s sudden we have learned how to produce more than we can PAY FOR. So everything Is out of joint, MARK this, for'lt Is Important: We AREN'T producing more than we COULD CONSUME If all of us were able to OBTAIN aul the things we want, for the capacity of human beings to consume Is prac tically unlimited. What we've done Is this: We've de veloped production more rapidly than we've been able to develop distribu tion. WHAT la prosperity, anyway? Well, here Li a fairly accurate answer: It is a BALANCED state of supply and demand, wherein there le a market at fair prices for every thing that la produced. Isn't thst about HH ANOTHER question: What brings about this BALANCED stste of supply and demand that producea prosperity The answer to that question lsnt easy, but It goes something like this: When EVERYBODY Is able to ex change, on a FAIR AND EQUAL baa Is, what he produces for what the other fellow produces, there is a bal Inflation to Make Jobs, Stabilize Dollar Value Every one Interested In the discus sion of Inflation should read Prank Jenkins' column in Sunday's Mail Tri bune In which he defines "printing press money", that la I. O. u's Issued by the government and "bond money". that la money backed by government bond issues. Except In one case 'the government pays Interest and In the other It does not, there is no differ ence. The security back of each kind of money is Just the same. However, as Mr. Jenkins points out the quantity of bond money that could be issued would depend upon the amount of bonds that could be sold. While tf commodity money was used, not backed by bond issues, the price level of commodities would de termine as to whether the volume of money would be Increased or de creased. After the price of commodi ties was raised to the desired level the volume of money In circulation would not be Increased until prices began to sag. Again Z want to point out that a commodity dollar la not a flat dollar. Back of every commodity dollar Issued Is the declared policy of the govern ment to stabilize its purchasing pow er at ft fixed value In commodities. So the amount of government I. O. U's In circulation would be controlled. In previous articles I have discussed meant of control. Prance controlled Inflation. The value of a franc went from twenty cents down to four cents and here It was stabilized and It value In gold haa not been permitted to fluctuate since then. Government I. O. U's, the puchaslng power of which Is established and stabilized, are the commodity dollars with which a payroll should be provided to put the unemployed to work In non-commodity producing enterprises and with which inflation and a higher price level for commodities should be accomplished. Value of gold In dollars alone should not be the messurtng stick. nor should the price of commodities In dollars outside the United States have any bearing. A strict control of all necessary Imports should be brought about by reciprocity agree ments Instead of controlled by the imposition of tariffs. Imports would be regulated by quotas as France now controls Imports Into her territory. I have suggested a fifty cent mini mum wage. Now we will presume that thla minimum wage would na turally tfring about, when all men art STOP TAKING SODA! FOR GAS ON STOMACH Much soda disturbs digestion. For gas or our stomach Adlerika is much better. One dose rids you of bowel poisons that cause gas and bad sleep. Heath's Drug Store and Medford Phar macy. Swedlh Massage Hoars t to ft Corrective Exercise By Appt Oscar S. Nissen, P.T. Phytic I Them peat let Formerly Director and Imtnirtoi Maaj(e Dept., Boston Cltv Hoop &2S K. Main St. Medford, ore. anced state of supply and demand, and there Is no such thing s over production. Tbe amount produced baa nothing to do with over-production. It'a all s question of distribution of FAIR exchange of what people HAVE for what they WANT. LETS Illustrate' ' Suppose you produce bets snd your next-door neighbor produces ahoea. As long ss you can exchange one hat for one pair of shoes, every thing Is sll right. The more bsts you produce, the more shoes you csn hsve. But when something goes wrong with the rsee of exchange snd you have to trade TWO hate for ONE pair of shoes, you soon run out of hsts. Then you csn't trade any more, for you haven't any hats. And mark thla: When you run out of hats to trsde. your neighbor no longer hss a market for his ahoes. LET'S get at it 'another way. Pros perity, defined In the simplest possible words. Is HAVINO the things we WANT. The more we produce, the more we csn HAVE. But each of us can't produoe with his own hands all the things he wants. 80, lnorder to get what we want we have to exchange what we produce for what others produce. As long aa the large rate of ex change Is fair and equal, the mose we produce the more we are enabled to consume and there la no such thing aa over-production. WE'VE aolved pretty well the prob lem of production which both ered the world for ao many centur ies. What we need to do now Is to solve the problem of distribution, ao that the more we produce the more we can have. NRA Is an effort to do that. It Is a blundering effort, to be sure; a sort of blind reaching out In the dark for something we want and dont Just know how to get. But at least It Is an effort to ac complish something tremendously worth while. Let's give it that credit. Bullfighter Recovers. MADRID, Oct. 16. (AP) Sidney Franklin, the American "bull fighter, has been discharged from tbe hos pital where he underwent' an oper ation necessitated by an old horn wound. It will be a week before he knowa whether the operation was en tirely successful and whether he may resume bullfighting next spring. .Tax statistics Indicate more peo ple In Georgia are riding In automo biles this year than last. employed, a fifty per cent Increase In the price level of commodities over present prices. That would mean that gold would sell for approximately $45 per ounce instead, of t)30 per ounce, that Is if the number of hours of labor to produce an ounce of gold remains the same as at present. When enough I. O. U's were put in circula tion by the government to bring up the price level, for Illustration, of gold to $45 per ounce then the government would do just what Prance did, tt would balance Its budget. It would collect each year in income taxes the full amount necessary to meet the government "payroll." The govern ment would do this, as I have previ ously pointed out, even If it had to levy an income tax on all workers, even on those working for the mint mum wage for the government in non-commodity producing enterprise. Perhaps we would find the rise in the price level of commodities used In the United States woVild correspond closely from day to day to the value of gold in commodity dollars. The volume of commodity dollars put in circulation, paid out to meet the government "payroll" would be in creased until the price level of com mofTHles was forced up to the desired level, that Is to ft fifty per cent In crease over present prices if It was determined that amount of Increase in prices desirable, and-then prices would be stabilized at thla level. J. C. BARNES. MEMBER. THE ORDER 1 rf-kJ NOT BY "v5rva, saw:- JL'"U' In 1 The matter of distance We don't consider the matter of distance when we are called, for we. are equipped to answer such calls quickly and economically at all times This is a point worth remembering by those who are not close to our establishment. PERL FUNERAL HOME rtee MojitLcicut ?ivtmEa?5-04NJTV CORONER. SIXTH AT OAKOALE -PHONE 47 r vtt' 5 V Flight 'oTime ! Medford and Jackson Count) History from che rUee ol l'n Wail Tribune of 4o and to kear TEX YEARS AGO TODAY Octooer 16, 1933. (It was Tuesday.) Contributor to the Letter Box aUes up the valley and "finds everything is conducted contrary to good busi ness, and I have a notion to move here and change it. Biskiyou tunnel bandits reported seen In California. Establishment of ownership of the ,45-callber revolver found near the tunnel, now main ob ject of the authorities. Photos of the holdup scene attract wide local attention. Two Medford girls walk to Portland. Craters Join with National Guard to give ft benefit dance. Dr. J. M. Keene objects to the elty feeding and giving gas to transients. "If they can't keep themselves now, what would they do In a panic?" asks Mr. Keene. He was overruled and called "hardhearted." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 16, 1913. Six thousand visitors tu Crater Lake during past summer, records show. Construction work starts on Gold Hill cement plant. Women voters slow to register for special election in November. Street Commissioner Owney Pat ton and force of men are busy put ting the sidewalks and crossing In shape for winter. Mike Spanos of this county, sen tenced to hang October 31, issues a statement from the death cell, blam ing another and charging a "con spiracy." Residents of West Jackson street district complain to the police that boya are tipping over woodpiles wher ever they find them. Ye Poet's Cornei Symbols of Life. Do not bring me flowers. But ripening fruits and grain. Flowers are the morn of life. Ripe fruits our earthly gain. Babes are the tender shoots; Later the buds and flowers; Anon the petals and ponnel blow These are youthful powers. Later comes the ripening fruit The full corn in the ear Strength of full manhood And womanhood appear. When the blades turn yellow, Tie the hair turning gray; Leaves aTe turning autumn, AHng life's rugged way. Ah, later comes the reaper. To garner the fruit and com; To place them nl the storehouse, To await the eternal mron. By Mary O. Carey. Don't Neglect Kidney and Bladder Irregularities BEED promptly bladder Itrea. ularities, getting up at nigkt and nagging bacltacne. Triey may warn of some disordered Ittdney or blad der function. Don't experiment Try Dosn's Pills. Successful for 50 years. Used tne world over. Gel Dosn't today. At all druggists. D nan's PILL5 DBSK1 K OF THE GOLDEN RUU If) ts w