PAGE FOUE Medford Mail Tribune "iw)n SouUttra Orsaaa Hdi Uii Hill rrikunt Dally Bierpt Saturday Publiiiwd bt ; HI DUt HI) PUINTINU CO. ii-sras n. if si. BOBEbl W. liUUL, editor An lodepeudeot Ntnpapsr Entered u leranl elus natter it lledfortl Oregon, uikw Art of Marcb 1, IBT9. (fCKSrKIITlON BATK8 Br Mall n Adtanet Daib, om rear fo.ati Bails, ill month! I.T5 DaUj. ona monLb 60 Br Curler Id Adram Mndfnfd. AifcUM Jaekiotnllla, Central feint, Itioenls. Talent, bold U1U and ttlilinya. Dal I), one Fear ,.$6-0U Daily, lis BonttH. $-15 Daily, oof Bootb 60 All Krmi. eah Is adraof Officii! vvu or the Clt or Medforit Official piper of Jackaoo Counti. I1EMBUK (I THE AHH'ICI ATEli HIlKflH KecalTlnt ITull Luted Wire Sentcs Tbe AiwUtafl fren li ncltnlfeli aatltlta to tbt um for puhUeailoa of all new dUpalcnsj credited to It or oUxnrUe er edited In tot papet and alao to tbt local new ouhlhbed tertla. All Mints for put'.lcatloo of ipedal dtopatdx tereu) ara ! raeened. 4KMHKU Of UNITED PKBHb MFMHRH OK AUM1 BUHBAU OF CIKCULATIUNB AdrartUIni KvoraacDtatlies li. C MMiENSEN A COMPANY Omen Id S York, Chlcaco, Oeirolt. 6u YancUao J Aitfelss Rrattle Pnruuid. MEMBER -3r U. Ye Smudge Pot By annul rem The title of "champion liar" for 1034 has been bestowed upon a Cen trails. Wash., ml 11-worker. Ai i w ward he will receive a diamond-stud ded medal, instead of & political office. Portland's outstanding Communis tic agitator, under a seven-yeai sen tence in state prison for conviction of criminal syndicalism, has departed (or Washington, O. 0., Instead of Moscow. The government, against which he rants and ratla so fervently, has appropriated $760 of public funds, so he may perfect an appeal to the supreme court. This legal action delays his Introduction to the warden about a year maybe' 18 months. This Is real nice of a form of government he only desires to de stroy. Frigid weather prevails, causing pedestrians to walk like they were going some place, and highly de lirious of getting there. Legal action has been launched upstate, to determine the constitu tionality of salary payments to the governor, secretary of state, and state treasurer. The last named official, If the move Is successful, would receive 66.6fl per month. This Is a trifling Upend, and not enough to Justify the treasurer, threaten) tig to throw the governor out the window more thta twice during any single meeting eX the Board of Control, Sponsors of the Townsend Old Age Pension Plan, which proposes pay ments of 9200 monthly, v a sales tsi. to all worthy and needy persons ever 60 years of age, will present arguments In behalf of their cause at a congressional caucus to he held Jn Washington, D. C, tonight. A de vastating argument In favor of the 200 per month pensions would be the presentation or the recent press report that Kate Smith, radio crooner, notorious for her aerial and vocal execution of the "Moon Comes Over the Mountain" receives $71S0 per Week. SAMK IlKHK ITKM. (8F. rall-HuUrtln) Albert Einstein has derided that the world may be Infinite, after all, and we are greatly re lieved. For some years pnst dis tinguished scientists in their ex pans. ve moments have been try ing to explain to the dumb com mon folk that the wirld is finite . and that space hns Its boun daries. Not boundnrles, you un derstand, like the fence arotind the cow pasture, but other lim itations that bend back on them el rr i.iore or less like a snake with his tall In his mouth. It was a most disconcerting hypo thesis and we never could get It through our iic?.d . Economists report "improvement In very channel of trade and com merce, save loans by bnnka." The co ess of t e banks, In this respect, tr"" be due somewhat to the public tendency to forgive a bank robber on the grounds he robbed nothing but a bank. There was the late Okla homa desperado. His neighbors viewed Ms banditry with kindly eyes. He was a1 vbvk liberal with money he gained at the point of a gun. In a bank.. "" "IINKil K OF IWDIM.lMl. What little r-inking Is done now adays la on a par with what one would expect to be administered in a boarding school for girls. I saw a father recently attempt to spAnk a 10-y-ar-old boy. and really It was a farce. A padding of corduroy trousers bet wen the hair brush and the boy's skin nullified the effort. Anyone who has been spanked by a father or grandfather of the former generation knows that a strap or hairbrush bark has no terror for the youth with his trousers on. They should n)way be removed first, then, holding the boy firmly across the knees, the spanks should be rained down hard and fast until the naughty youth tingles with deal re- to reform A PADDLKR. lExthange). 0e Ma4 r.a.ie mu ad. M1MIII These Oregon "Reds" YT is amazing to lioar those Oregon communists rant about the A sanctity of free speech. At a meeting in Portland the other night, to protest the re cent conviction of Dirk De Jonge, and demand the repeal of the criminal syndicalism law, practically every speaker maintainor an undying devotion to free speech. Over and over again it was declared the criminal syndicalism law violated this constitutional guarantee, and repudiated one of the basic principles of true IN' the first place this law speech. It only denies the or unlawful acts, via the written Under this law any citizen and advocate the overthrow of MEANS, i.e. via the ballot box. content the vices of the capitalistic system and the virtues of communism and urge his hearers to repudiate the former and adopt the latter. Only when he goes OUTSIDE the law and advocat'S direct action, armed revolt and bloodshed, does the state step in and tell him to keep his mouth shut. Why should any law abiding, right thinking citizen object to thiol Should a citizen have any more RIGHT to advocate the over throw of his government by force, than to mount a platform in Ilaymarket Square and advocate or a raid on the food shops of OUT there is another angle to communists' professed devotion to free speech, particularly inconsistent, and obviously insincere. Take this man, De Jonge for example, who was convicted under the Oregon statute, but according to Inst reports, is en route to Washington, D. C, to stration before the White House. During his trial De Joncc was asked, from which country he would take his orders in case of war between the United StateB and Soviet Tiussia. "I would take my orders from Moscow", was De Jonge 's answer. In other words De Jonge 's first loyalty is to the Russian government. Well, how about free speech under THAT govern ment! . THERE is less free speech in Russia today, than in any coun Irv in ihm wnrlf!. Tf this mfln l .Tnniro na n Pnucinn anhloet had dared to say in his beloved to say in this state, before the been shot at sunrise. Let any Russian subject publicly criticize the Soviet govern ment, and even suggest, that a better form of government MIGHT b3 attained, and he is clapped in jail, before he can com plete the first sentence. To have advocated what he did advocate in this state, the, forceful overthrow of the government, not a prison sentence, but death without a trial would have been his portion. Free speech indeed! No person with the slightcst interest in free speech could subscribe to the principles of Russian com munism. And yet these Oregon "reds" proclaim their devotion to Moscow in one breath; and their willingness to die for the right of saying what they believe in the next. . OIFFLE1 As has been previously stated in this column, these PROFESSIONAL American communists, deserve no more consideration than any other criminals deserve. They profess to be interested in humanity and the betterment of the common man, but this is all a smoke screen behind which they conspire to gain their destructive ends. They are only interested in the overthrow of this government, THEMSELVES, through the dictatorship. Let their ends once be achieved, and there would be just as much personal liberty and freedom of speech in this country as there is in Soviet Russia today, And yet these "reds" have to the principles of a free democracy, (which they would eventu ally destroy) to gain a foothold in a country which they admit, in case of war, thev would desert and betrav! FIRST '35 MEET (Continued from page one ) C. A. Hartley aubmltted low bid. with (3.183. other bids submitted were. Mountain States Construction Co. of Eugene. 2,3M 30: n. I. Stuart dt Sons, a. 703.79, and 8! Ash. (2.969.00. Acceptance ot the bid may bs announced at the next council meeting, but no action can be taken until the funda are made available by property ownera. I'lre summary (ihen. Henorta read at the meeting In cluded the annual aummary released by Fire chief nor Elliott, which list ed the year's fire loas at the low fig ure of (11.17149 On this loss, a total of (11,11049 of lnuranc waa paid. A report from the atreete and roads committee for the montha ot De cember. 1934. waa read, listing among routine Items a s.immary of the stste emergency relief work on the near creek flood control project. The report stated that an avenue of 135 men a-ere employed on the project, the status of which wsa an nounced aa follows: Allotted. (39.. 4.17: disbursed. (32.340 37; balance. (7.208 73. Twenty men a-ere employ ed on the SERA excavation project at court atreet, the status of which la aa follows: Alotted. (ta3(IO; dis bursed. (934: balance. (9:19 to. A communication from Oreeiey and Hansen, contracting entlneera fur the sewage disposal plant, waa resd. vt rnttttng preliminary p!ana for t:ie plant and asking that test pus be excavated at Um aite, MEDFORD iLA.IL Americanism. docs not deny the right of free right to advocate violence, crime, or spoken word. can mount a soap box if he wishes this government, by PKACEFLT. Me can proclaim to his heart's the holding up of a local bank the .community t We think not this question, which renders the join in some unemployed demon Russia, half what he was allowed law stepped in, he would have and the attainment of power for establishment of a proletarian which is none at all! the unmitigated crust, to appeal WARNING ON 'FLU' ISSUED BY COUNTY HEALTH OFFICIAL (Continued from page one) similar to those of the 1918 epidemic There la little danger from the dis ease at the present time, the doctor said, unless pneumonia or ear Infec tion take place. Dr. Drummond Issued this warn ing. "If jou iro !'.:. you should take proper cat of youiiK-i; ao that com plications do not occur. See your family physician early. Do not walk around or try to work If you are sick Oo to bed and stay there. Keep out of the fog. If you have ny aynvptoms of pneumonia, don't try to 'fight It off with a lot of second hand remedlea and M.'k-fence ad vice. Oct some expert help Imme diately. "If these Instructions sre followed. It will help msterlally to reduce the Ju'kon county mortality rate, and j keep your wife from drawing a w.d ow's pension." 4 SAI.RM, jRn 3 tl't Rtei5lons of time to further nesotlatlcos for com plete recovery were granUMt the East ern Oregon Esnk'ivg company of Shsuiko and the Trout dale State bank, by the state bank) tig board, it waa announced today. AALRM, Jan. 3 i. Charles M Ihoma. public utlltlea commissioner, late yesterday abolished the amended tariff of the Idaho Power compnv of Boise. Arrvtnr eautern Oregon terri tory, by h:eu the 10 per cent gros rum i on all delinquent light and power u'uii iss ffllinlaatcd. TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, Personal Health Service By William Slgiifri letters pertaining to pertonal health and hygiene not to dta (as. fllaMo!s far Ireutiiivlit will be BIMuered by lr. Brady If a itamped srlf-addressed envelope le encloied. IXters should be brier and written in ink. Owing; to the huge number of letters received only a tew can be an Mverrd. No rrply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Hradv, 26S Kl tamlno, Beierly Hills. Col. El'TROPHY AND DYSTKOI'IIY. I am ashamed to report that I have been unable to learn what earthly good a basal metabolism test does anybody ex cept the manu facturer of the machine, the technician or trained nurse who trundles It to the bedside and starts It going, and the patient who goes out to abash or dinary l n v a 1 ids Into baffled si lence while she recites her re markable plus or mlnub record. Per haps the gadget helps to take the patient's mind off from the thought that so many latter-day specialists rely upon machines to tell them what alls the patient . . . But then, I'm Just Ol Doc Brady with nineteenth century medical edu cation, and this Is the twentieth century. I lenrned no less physiology than you did In grammar school and high achool. I learned there were 200 odd bones In the body, also some chyme and chyle. Like you, I finally convinced the teacher I had chyme and chyle clearly distinguished and accurately placed In their re- pectlve receptacles and then I "drop ped" physiology. But there you and draw apart a bit, for you never had any more of It, whereas I re sumed the study of physiology In my first year or two of medical school. There the quaint 111 German professor Instilled Indelibly Into my mind a fundamental principle of nu trltlon, viB., that "the strength of n organ Is determined by Its use." There Is blessed little truth in It, but It was easy to remember and he'ped to get you a good mark on examination. Surely It Is not necessary for me to display my erudition but I must prlng a few fancy medical terms on readers and elucidate their mean- ng at once. Then If I do thought lessly use the terms In future ar ticles you'll still know what I'm talking about: or If some other doc tor resorts to them when explain - ng a case you will know as much about It as he and I do. Here are the terms: Dystrophy Eutrophy trophy Hypertrophy. Crossword fans, will notice they NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By Oi O. McJntyre MEW YORK. Jan. 3. There la a tlp-toey glamour about the hushed little lost streets c' Greenwich Vil lage at twilight. Last evening In the clear chill of a sudden turning I saw into the basement studio of & sculptor. Under a fierce white light a gray - bearded, green - smocked artist ' was mod eling. Long past the time when most workers have quit for the day and In full years that suggest the chimney corner, he was engrossed by his task. Likely In the same atmos phere of gontel poverty he has been striving for yera snd years. Village attics- and cellars hide many such Silhouetted on window blinds, too. were shadowy glimpses of men and women at their easels. In the qu:et courts here and there were occastonal groups In the all absorbing discus sion of creative art. In a hallway I noticed modest cards over push but ton arrays: Masks. Portraits. Sculp ture. Verges. All this is America's true Latin quarter the Insanities of the cock eyed nut cafes cannot becloud. Here are sensitive, high minded folk, liv ing literally on crusts, who would be insulted at the suoMlon of dole. No matter the failures, they never give up. Tin Pan Alley believes nothing Is deader than a popular song, once it has passed out of circulation. Yet there have been revivals after a Ions period of years, boosted chiefly to even grruter popularity by the radio. The first "Shine on Harvest Moon" was. in a way, accidental. This Nora Baycs-Jack Norworth hit was Inter polated in a Zlefeld show as part of a cabaret scene of the 1900's. Then almost slmultaenously came the t vlval of Julia Sanderson's "They Didn't Believe Me." as the result of that lady's broadcasts. Lewis Muir's "Waiting for the Robert S. Lee" was next And It's running wild. There is fresh Interest, too. In the romance of the Royal Mounted Po'.Ice In the mazarine. Cosmopolitan has se nt h wrt trr uo to ot t a - Mr .fries of actual murder cases the Motilities solved In revent years. Also two plays for the stae this season will deal with nr .en Mess tracking of crimin.il through the bleak waste lands Rex Beach Is flirt In with a similar Ides for a novel. Radio skits are rehearsing aloi the same line EverytvKly u north-westing It up. The Inevitable circle also swings bac: lo the Castle Walk in dance paliwe Tills la a stiff-leased con- uvt m lor swift strides, punctual by ahtrtln turns It ws conceived, the leeorts no. by Irene end Vernon one y atter-midnUht at uptown !Vit.iiiohy. Pie floor was o J.un med that when they arose to da nee tiit fast manner of plowing Uiroutfu 8i SIP 1 II OREGON. THURSDAY, Brady, M. D. , read DEATH down, but you should pay no attention to that. The ending-trophy means nutri tion, nourishment or growth. EutrO' phy Is normal nourishment oi growth. Dystrophy Is defective nutri tion or growth. Atrophy Is wasting, or failure of nutrition or growth. Hypertrophy Is overgrowth. It Is all quite simple, once you apply your Oreck to It that Is, the dictionary says It's Greek I wouldn't know and by saying them over two or three times to yourself you'll have se- eral swell new words in your vo cabulary, and find It excellent fun using them casually In conversation, especially when you encounter a pest who talks too much Only for goodness sake don't con fuse trophy with what the bright little woman at the P-T meeting calls "undernourished" or "poorly nourished" children. Poverty and In sufficient food has nothing to do vith atrophy, dystrophy or other trophy. We find atrophy, dystrophy and hypertrophy as commonly among well-to-do as among poor children or adults. QUISTIONfi AM) ANSWERS. Neighborhood Nuisances. Please tell me how to k.111 useless neighborhood dogs. These mongrels ruin our sleep with their barking and howling . . . Mrs H. P. W. Answer Get two or r.iore neigh bors to Join with you In reporting the nuisance to the police. Water on Knee. Brother fell down stairs and In jured knee. Water formed and now the doctor says It should be with drawn by the needle, but brother thinks that will leave the knee stiff ...SR. Answer It will not leave the knee stiff, but if not treated now the condition may leave some perma nent disability. Bare Knees. Is It healthful for a young child to go bare lecged or wear soekles In the winter? It seems to me the child's blood will be chilled. Mrs. B. O. J. Answer Leave It to the child's preference. If the child Is not an imbecile he knows whether he Is more comfortable with bare knees or coddled. iCopyrlght, 1935, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady ihonirt send letter direct to Dr. Wllllnm Brady, M. I i(i5 El Cnmlno. Beverly Hills. Cal. the crowd was born. Others saw. liked lt. and before dawn almost every couple on the floor had. picked It up. Cole Porter Is running close, if not actually tied, with Nw;l Coward for the Celebrity Sweepswitcs. No party among the gfiw.y parquets seems able to get nlpnj; vithout him. Although much of his life has been spent In Europe, he Is without affectation save he carries his own sheets and his dress and manner still faintly suggest his native Jem, Ind. In large gatherings, he clings to the back ground and Is rarely seen In the lobby buzz et theater Intermissions. It Is through his song lyrics many of which are reserved for a select coterie he exprcs&es tho waggish humor undoubtedly his. Among the new celebrity conceits, incidentally, is a special tablt at the Colony to which society scribblers refer as the Beth Leary table, the Cholly Knicker bocker table, the Monty Waterbury table, etc. Tli 1 ng u m a bob,, : Roy W . Ho wa rd has traveled 00.000 miles during the past 13 months . . . More Connelly's father was once Richard Mansfield's manager . . . Jimmy Walker Is re ceiving 60 pounds a week for his weekly London column . . . Gilbert Seldes puts himself to sleep reading the funnies . . . Genevieve Tobin is H. G. Wells' favorite on the movie screen . . . Harry Acton and Warner Janssen have long been neighbors at Flushing . . . Ernest Hemlngwny'a favorite American fishing spot is Key West? Fin. . . . aattl-Casnzzi likes cold spaghetti for breakfast. Another wave of editorial resent ment has risen for the theater chair kicker and his side kick, the theater congher. Wasn't it Oliver Hereford who wrote ol the coughing pest In I Lite: "Those that come to cough re main to spray"? (Copyright. 1934. McN.uviht Syndi cate. Inc.) CLEAR OF SNOW Rod conditions In and around Medford were materially Improved today with verv little -now reported on the highway. While there Is still snow on the Slskiyous, nine is re-1 ported on the right-of-way. and trav- ' el then Is safe today, as In thej itreensprlnps. without chains, al though all motorists are warned to earn- them in case of fresh snow falls. There Is still a little -mow on the Klamath end of the GrccnprlnR luchway. but none lot t on the Sex ton mountain, it wa learned. The sun was shining brlehtly in the blith er section of southern Oretron this niortilne. WII.MlNliTON. I1 . J.ui. S (APt -With 3200 children abent because of grippe. W'.hnlreton nubile schools today mere ordered closed hy Sujer intet',1e:t a M. Ptnuffer. Be correctly eor-emi Ui an Arri-t Model hv Ethel t p n Ho; (iiiTiiiu, - List klaU T.-lbuue wabi JANUARY 3, 1935. Is the Townsend Br OEOBGB NO. II. Let us now review some statistics of the U. 8., lately furnished In re gard to tbe valuo of farm crops pro duced In the United States. These are given as from two and one-half to four and one-half billions per year during the last few years. Thirty per cent of our people In the United States derive their In- come from agriculture and their to tal gross Income la not more than two months' cost under the Town send plan. We are forced to reduce our farm products, because we have an oversupply. Pension fund or no pension fund, farm products cannot be Increased materially, unless we Just grow them and burn them up, as we have done with our corn crop, or la now done In Brazil with coffee. Only Three Days Pension. A larg.) part of the farm products never enter the channels of trade. They are consumed by the farmers themselves and therefore no turn over tax would be available from this source. Let us further presume that the rest of the farm products are sub ject to a turnover tax three times; even If we take Into consideration that many farmers bring their prod ucts directly to the grocer in ex change for other goods, and only one turnover tax can be credited to these transactions, we find that the total sum available from all transactions of farm products In the whole United States would be sufficient Just to provide enough money tor three days' pension fund. Keep In mind that this sum ta furnished by 30 per cent of all the people In the United States, and that our farm Industry Is after all the basis of a great amount of the wealth In the United States. The very desirable price increase of farm products within reasonable limits would make very little differ ence In the sum total, which would come from this source. Falluey of Bank Clearances. The promoters of the Townsend plan base their percentage require ment on a turnover tax of 1360 bil lions per year, which la explained by the use of the bank clearance In pre -depression time. A most fantastic statistical J tin gling 1 Bank clearings do not represent turnover of goods alone. The high bank clearance of pre -depression days and today Include many other Items, especially stock transactions. During 1929 we had for a while turnover of 20 millions of shares on the New York stock exchange alone, at a value of perhaps three billion dollars per day, and these transactions on the New York stock exchange enter not only Into bank clearance statistics in New York, but frequently at the same time the same transactions appear in bank clear-' ance In other banks and swell the sum total of all bank clearance all over the country. I do not know if the Townsend people want to charge also 3 per cent for stock transactions. This will mean of course a very consider able sum. but the result would be that there will be no more stock sales fr.r rsrwsr.i.fit.! iViiTn"w nH fiir.l-iar with 50 transactions the total cap ital would disappear and be paid over Into the pension fund. It is also not quite clear If the Townsend plan contemplates the turnover tax for real estate. In any case these transactions are of course also Included In bank clearance sta tistics. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. IF you want 1935 to be a better year for you, in a business way, than the past three or four years have been, here is a good New Year's reso lution for you to adopt: Work hard whenever you get the chance, save at least part of what you earn and DON'T BELIEVE IN SANTA CLAUS. AN old year has ended, and a new year is beginning. This question is In the minds of most of us: Will the new year better than the old one has been? LISTEN carefully: . If EVERYBODY In the United States will adopt the resolution sug gested In the first paragraph of this column today, and KEEP it, business in 1935 will be MUCH better than In 1934. IN favor of better business In 1936 is the fact that we are all tired of depression and anxious for the return of prosperity. AGAINST It Is the fact that too many of us have been taught to believe that all that Is necessary to bring, back prosperity is to PASM A LAW IP we go on believing that all we need to do to bring back pros- 1 Are You Rundown, Ailing? Y7HEN you feel rundown, when your blood is thin or stomach friypa you trouble, with gas, or ' sour rising. " trv Dr. Fierce' Golden Medical Discov ery. If you are ihin-btoode J. need LSrf to put on hcalthv tM Is a dfpfnriitilr initr. Mi Irfi J im; Oik M. Si ten. Ore 't tirr.t run.! n. At tim. entvn vii, rtr'chril n, 1 hir-iN ui-n Pi I'wut i itl n MMtril M'-'.l 'ip TTM , It'll MV( t f'tt tW I y ii f-'t like I V.Wft Ur Um 1 hl no further IroMblr " tf ti taaku U kale 4.00. Plan Possible? 8CHIMACHER The Salaried People. Ten per cent of the people In the United States derive their Income In form of salaries aa servants of the federal, state or municipal govern ments. They do not produce any goods subject to sales tax. but their salaries appear in the bank clear ance. The same refers to all other sal' arles, fees of professional men, etc., and all these sums enter Into bank clearance. We have had and have yet taxes on freight charges, amusement tocketa. etc., and the sum total of all these transactions would be sufficient Just for another day or two of pension fund requirements. As to Industry. Remains now, of course. Industry with lte man and machine power. We can without doubt increase machine power tremendously and produce unlimited quantities of goods, but we do not want to feed the pen nies Into machines, but to men. and the question has to be answered, If this la possible, can It be made a reality? The total value of all goods pro duced in the United States is esti mated from 30 to 45 billions of dol lars per year. We have seen that the value of all agricultural products Is estimated at four and one-half billions of dollars. The ieal value of all products con sumed In the United States Is the value of the goods received by the ultimate consumer or buyer, and not the sum total of all products made. It Is practically Impossible to get the real values. I have explained this already, before giving the example of hay and milk. How misleading our production statistics are can be seen when we find, for example. In a tabu lation of chemical products made In the United States Includes an Item: Arsenate of lead 91.000.000 (these figures are not the correct figures. but given anly as an example). Or an Item: Fruit wrapping paper $1,000,000. Here are two Items with a sum of 3.000,000, which go Into trade sta tistics. But the same Items are contained In the pears and apples shipped. I am convinced that the figures given In our statistical records refer ring to values do not represent the final values and are much too high. But even If we presume that the figures are correct, It is a matter of simple mathematics to work out how : much more we must produce and what extraordinary turnover must be accomplished to make the Utopia of the Townsend plan possible. To get the sums required from a per cent turnover tax Is an Im possibility, even if we would be able to produce the goods needed to ar range for Its distribution and con sumption. . We must take Into consideration I that we have not only to produce j the additional goods to the value of i 34 billions, but also the much greater i amount required for the rest of the j people very eager to get a much i greater share than they get now. Good luck to the younger genera tion. They have to face this problem and Incidentally must provide enough values In addition to their require ments and the pension funds to pro vide for the ever-Increasing interest on our existing debts and their final liquidation. So, to them, a happy New Yearl (THE END.) perlty Is to pass a law or wave a wand, DEPRESSION WILL CON TINUE. Prosperity will return only If and when we are all willing to work for It. The politicians tell us otherwise, but they are WRONO. IN our attitude toward depressions and the way to recover from them, we are queer. If someone were to tell us that li we dropped a rock off the roof of the house or over the edge of a preci pice. It would FALL UPWARD, we would laugh at him. We wouldn't even try auch a fool thing, because we KNOW what would happen. But when the politicians tell us we can all vote ourselves rich, we listen to them. PROSPERITY comes often to those who get out and hustle for it. It comes SELDOM to those who tit I on the front porch and wait for it to come along. If. In the twelve months that are now beginning, we will all do more hustling and less sitting and wait ing for the politicians to bring pros perity to us and dump it into our laps. 1935 will be a better year. jf paid rhat yovr credit is j fear u the logical nine 6 fj. np to 100 for tha mfi& iiklt or ntonthty peyi with no endorsers necessary and oo embarrassing investigations. A Few ol th Other ftrrpoaea For U'hich We Lend Morar- For paying taxes F or doctor, dental or ho&pual expenses For paying insurance premiums For baying coal, dittoing, etc For paying rem or imprmkng property yy Oregon & Washington Mortgage Co. 4 S. Central. B. Thoma. M?r. I.l.env No. s-l.'7 Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years Ago). TEN YEARS AOO TODAY January 3, 1924. (It waa Saturday.) Nellie Tayloe Rosa, first woman governor, to be inaugurated aa cfclet executive of Wyoming. Sams Valley fields and roads sui.'er from recent high water. City council recommends an or dlnanoa prohibiting autos from park ing within a block of a fire. Plans for the new high aohool building are exhibited at Croweon'a. Stricter enforcement of dry laws urged for coming year, and clrlc clubs promise to cooperate with county of ficials. Medford high quint to tackle New berg In first basketball game of sea son. Locale will be handicapped by absence of Jimmy Allen, center, and Clare Williams, guard, who have bad colds. Ralph Jennlnsa takes oyer ahelfra office. Charles Terrlll retiring to his Lake Creek farm. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY January 3. 11)14. (It was Sunday.) A. C. Hubbard endorses the pro posed new city charter, in le';ter to editor. French army within 30 miles of Rhine, at one point on western front: Russian horde surrounds Austrlana In Carpathians; Serbians report victory over Turks. Three Rogue River district visited by fires In past 10 daya. Bright sunshine comes after several days of fog and rain and chill winds. Herbert K. Hanna Is named "Orand Collector of the Wampum" of Red men's lodge. Third episode of "The Master Key" at the Page. Francis X. Bushman IB "Crushed Hearts." at the Star, and "A Soul Astray" at the It. SALEM. Jan. 3. (AP) Gross liquor returns to the state during 1934 totaled more than three and a half million dollars from sales, tax and licenses, a compilation of fig ures made from the state treasurer's office and the liquor headquarters here showed. More than three million dollars was realized from the sale of hard liquor alone from state stores and Agencies. Complete figures were: gross returns, $3.509, 532; sales, $3,084,271: tax oh beer and wine, $264,645, and licenses. $160,617. Sales during the last month of 1934 reached the highest mark for any mouth since the first state store was opened last February 15, or near!y $600,000. In virtually every section of the state highest one day's sales were noted on December 24 and 31. 4 Oregon Weather. Unsettled tonight and Friday; rains west portion and snows In the moun tains: little change In temperature; Increasing southerly winds off the coast. WASH OUT 15 MILES OF KIDNEY TUBES Win Back Pep , . .'Vigor . . . Vitalitj Medical authorities airree that yonr kid oeyi contain 16 MILKS of tiny tubes oi fiHeri which help to purify th blood and keep you healthy. Jf you have trouble with too frequent bladder pjiMj;e with sranty amount csus uiB bumintr and discomfort, the 16 MILES of kidney tubes need washing out. This dan ger signal may he the beginning of nasvins backache, leg pains, loss of pep nd vitality, getting up niEhts. lumbago, swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic pains and diziioeta. It kidneys don't empty 8 pints every day and get rid of 4 pounds of waste matter, rour body -,ll take up these poisons causing serious trouble. It may knock you out and lay you up for many months. Don't wait. Aak your druggist for DOAN'S PILLS . .. a doctor's prescription . . . which has been used successfully by millions of kidney suf ferers for over 40 years. They giva quick mii help. to WMb out the 16 MILES of kidney tuues. But don't take chances with strong drugs or so-called "kidney cures" that claim to fix you up in IS minutes, for they may seriously Jul?C,f;Jrntte delicate tissues. Insist on DOAN'S PILLS ... the old reliable re nef that contain no "dope" or habit-forming drugs. Be rure you get DOAN'S PILLS U your druggist. lB-U. Faitr.MiIburn Co Start the new year with all YOUR DILLS PAID i great satisfaction to know that all personal and household bULs are good anywhere. And the first of the dean up ill these bills. We'll lend tfpose. Yon can pay us back in small irnts. Promt. ODandential serrice. (2)