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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1935)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, 5IEDFORU, OREGON. TUESDAY. JANUARY 22. 1935. Medford Mail Tribune "Emyaiit I. Southirn Qraaaa aa ta Hail Wagm'1 Oall Izttfrt flitordif Publlthed 67 uni miNTixu ra. li-it-ii n, rn l raa t aMlDCM W. BUHL. UlUt AO IndapcodaDt NaatpaPW tnund aa iml clui aallai t Madfof titiaa, iwlar iet tt Hint I, IIH. it mmipTioN tAm r mhi ui iiM Dall. u rt IJ-JJJ Dally, ft ajontht Daily, on. ownta j Cvrto la Adane Madfar. laniaoa, JatkKnlUa, Cantral rclnt. IHoanla. Tajaat. (KM ill art so uigham. Dill), om rear M Dilli. ll OMDtM 1 10 1 Dally. 00 aootb 0 411 tarsal, eaab la adtaoaa. Official papa of ttw City of Madforl Official paw at laeian. County. lUMWCk Ob THE ASB'KMATTU MUi kactl.lnt full UaHd Win anMa laa Aawdalad Praaa la aidually afltltla. w M w ror pnbllcalloo or ail ooat oupaicnai orodltad to tl of oUiara-laa aramtad lo thl papa aa alau la u local off ouhllitM hvato. All rlfbu for publication ar .racial HapaUfta tamo Ui alb natmfl MESIWCH Q' UNITMl PKK86 aTEMRKH OK AtlDII HUKEAD or CIHCUUTIONi dtortlitm toprcatoumaa M. C MOUENUN A COMPANT OfflM 10 K lull. Ctilcan. Detroit, M Mndw l tiuiU ImiiK PnrtlMO'. MlMtEK Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry An honest man in New York City, en relief, found 911.500 on the atreet, whereupon he phoned the police to fcelp him find the owner. It ! the Hop of humanity the honest man does not starve to death before he finds Job. ' The state legislature accomplished aothlnf in It first week, and few are optimistic enough to believe It will accomplish anything it aecond week. To date, it haa produced no IVftudevllle. and no rellgtoua fervor. And teema to be nothing but mass meeting of Portland politicians. In tent on fighting the governor with pi ore vigor than If he wae a Republi can, and no right to exist. e People atlU report they have the flu, when aa a matter of fact the flu haa them. Winter continues, with chills and rfhlvers, and la generally regarded aa he natural function of nature, in stead of some more akullduggery by ferbert Hoover. Bo far as this M and a half bu ttons In transportation taxes are con cerned, the cure la very simple if ene wishes to exercise It; Just stay Home. (Balem Statesman) Tskl Tskl Don't let loglo get the best of ymi again I Sen. Hury Long of Louisiana now appears In news reels at the Q. Hunt wisglo lantern show, and says a few words In favor of his whsckup the wealth plan. Many present were grreatly Impressed by Sen. Long's pleasing southern drawl, and the way he combs his hair, and expressed wtlltngnea to be mis-led by him. "NO BOUNDS TO FORD PRICES" (Hdltne Siskiyou News) This will pot help much, sa the driver does gtot sit on the price he pays. r "MKM OF MISERY' (Agony Column) Dear Miss Dlx I am a young man 30 yeara old and constantly bored. Nothing Interests me. I go to erhool and hate to study be cause It bores me. I go out to parties, but they bore me ter ribly. My friends bore me. I take a girl out who I think Is keen and she bores me. It has been ages since I have had a good time. I wish I had ambition, but I have not. The very thought of doing anything bores me. I hate to go on thla way. What do you suggest? BORED. ranry build ops are now running round with blanket on. which keep the bull dogs warm, and their fleaa eor.y. Wanted A good girl to wait on table at the Golden Rule. No par lor ornament, but one that wants good wages and Is willing to earn It. No other need apply. (Pendle ton Eastern Oreitvulan, 50 yrs. ago eol.) Pioneer code for blacult- hooters. "Hog-kllllng has started at the Wlm.on ranch. Your correnpondent is the recipient of a sloe of bnoon from Wra. Wlndon " (Tnlaley Items) Cruel and unusual, but man must at. LINKS OS CAPITALISM. When capltalUm'a been shattered, And smashed to the very last root. When all of the banks have been plundered And everyone's shared In the loot. We shall pause though a trifle be lated And say. wtth a sad. hungry sob: "We've done wtth the old rotten sys tem Jfow I wonder whoil give us a Job?" And only the peopie will suffer. And only the people will weep, And no one shall work for money, And no one shall sow or reap: But each In his corner shall shiver And think how much better they fare With the system of all-havlng-noth-lng Than of n mr having . more - than-thelr-share. (ft. Worth Times) Up Jumps the Devil! SOONER or later the ntn!e legislature will again face the tax problem. And it will be the iame old problem, what to do when an irresistible force meets an immovable body. Relief is still a serious stiite problem. In the last two year the state of Orepon and loeul districts contributed approximately a million dollars to relief. During the same period the govern ment donated to this state, for the same purpose, over $10,000,000. Now Federal Relief .Administrator Hopkins declares, for the atate to secure further governmental relief, it will have to raise four million as its share of the total relief fund. Where can Oregon get $4,000,000! This of course is the tax problem. And if the aum is not oecured, then, unless the federal policy is changed, Oregon will get no federal aid during the next twelve months. A nice "how d'y do!" We very much fear that the more the members of the legisla ture study this problem the clenrer it will become that no such sum can be raised without the adoption of SOME form of sales tax. But unless the people of Orepon have elvinged in their atti tude toward a sales tax, such action would be nullified by refer endum, and the state would be back where it started from. Governor MRrtin is reported as very much worried over the situation. He has reason to be. At the present writing the problem does LOOK liko an insoluble one. Solving Relief Problem WHEN an adequate old aye pension is secured, as well as linemnlnVtlietlt. inKlirfUlfP lllO rnlifiF niTtlilntn ..'ill V. unlva1 At the present time nearly half of the people on relief in Jackson county, would be eligible for an old nge pension. Those ineligible would, of course, become beneficiaries of unemploy ment insurance. Those too young for a pension, and incapable of labor, would, relatively speaking, represent a Under normal conditions therefore, poverty and suffering would be about as completely eliminated, as is humanly possible. Under abnormal conditions another serious depression, machinery would be available to take the relief burden off from on one hand, and private charity The difficulty under such a provide sufficient elasticity and adaptability, so that under nor mal conditions there would not be a waste of funds, and under abnormal conditions there would be a sufficiency. . . Inflationists THE objectives of advocates .-. ,..v. i.w. mi. inn. muuiv m liio Aniiuiltll luunc tary Conference held in Washington. Sixtoen organizations de manding inflation and various radical fiscal policies participated in the meeting which Father Coughlin declared would likelv he referred to as the "monetary craek-pots of America" by oppo nents of their theories. High-lights of the resolution made to congress, adopted by the as follows i 1. Conversion of Federal Reserve System to central bank The proposed central bank would be the sole bank of ourrency issuance and in lieu of the present practice of issuing tax-exempt interest bearing bonds, the centra bank would issue non-interest bearing legal tender notes. Such non-interest hearing notes would also bo issued in payment of existing federal indebted ness. All functions now exercised by the Federal Reserve System would be performed by the central bank and it would control all currency and credit of the country, including demand bank deposits. 2. Complete abandonment of tion of silver Detaching the dollar from any fixed relationship nirn gold is advocated to cope rency manipulation. The remonetization of silver is also pro posed. 3. Tavment of bonus in paper ately a substantial increase in adjusted compensation certificates of veterans in non-interest bearing notes is advocated. To business and financial leaders these "demands" might well be appalling if it were not for the fact that few congress men participated in the conference, and little support in con gress is therefore to he expected. Flight o Time (Mrilford and Jaikvin Count; lllatorv from (he fllra of the Mall Trlhune.of to and 10 Yean o). TEN YKAR AOO TOn.W , Janunry 13. Ifvt.v (It waa Frlly.( Hsrd flht launched In coiiKreu for America to enter world court. Medford high baaketball team plava Oranu Paa tonight. Coaoh Calllaon predlota the "worst licking any Med fotd team ever nvelved. aa the 'prima donnu' of the team show Interest In ererythlng but baaketball." Pussywillows are blooming In the Reese creek district. Phoenli missionary society will sew garments for Chinese needy. William Lyd.ard of the Economy Orooelerla la spending a tew days In southern California. Crescent City man Is arrested for attempting to sell local prohibition sarent a barrel of moonshine. Stanley Aherwood of the poatoffu-e force reported thla morning with miK-h satisfaction that 24 rests sg.-) today Mr and Mrs Dl.-k ftherw yl aere prearnted wit ll .1 han't-. .nr c: and a half pound htv wli,., beauty baa long sine, di.appearcd. decided minority. that is with the recurrence of the shoulders of the government on the other. system as' wo see it, would be to Get Busy of currency inflation and monc- containing demands that will be conference may be summarized gold standard and remonetir.a- with the effects of foreiirn cur money To "secure immedi purchasing power", payment of TWENTY VKARS AOO TODAY January IS, inn. (It was Sunday.) Portland aiwlera protest opening of Ro-iie river to commercial fishing; southern Ortgon sportsmen up In arms over legislature proposing to plsco license funds In school funds. Oerman warship sunk In North See. by British fleet: Russians drive Kola er's force back from Warsaw; Allies plan titanic spring offensive. " eam Deionglng to C. A. Adams ran away on Main street thla morn. Ing. and a probe showed the animals to nave been unhitched. The ordin ance requiring all farmera to hitch their teams will be enforced. Warm sunshine hsa brought ovit sutolsts by the doeens. who motor over the pawl areas. Ore-.t local Interest In the Hsrrv K Thaw case, and Mall Tribune be. wched to print more details of the latest .eval developments, and the .mtty hearing proceedings. Farly spring plowing starts In the Talent district. Wood supplv of the city la pr. tu ally ehautd. and shipment la ex pected from Olendale tomorrow. Tie nnl endurtnc lov U between '." of the isriit -tex. W!m 'int.r ;tr. exhibition of hi temper give a poor allow. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. mined Ittlera ptrtalnlni to penonil health and hyilent not lo dla iioe dlainoal, or treatment Kill he aniwered by Dr. Brad. II .tamped wlf-addrewed envelope la oncioaed. Letter, ihould be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the laige number of letter, received only a few can be an swered. No reply can ba made to queries not conforming to Instruction.. Address pr. William Brady, E65 El RAPID Kr.m XTION P The first test of any method of reducing superfluous fat, bulk. overnight la, what effect wilt It have on health? If yha.-ja,'ag " n y I ... -atfaT-W . I doubt about this. the method la out. By thla test virtually all of tha ay. tenia which have been exploited through the kindly assist. anoa of Aunt Polly that mod est old lady who signs her .tuff only with her In itials In the past few yeara would tall at tha start. Then from tha victim's viewpoint tha Important test of tha reduction method la, not how many pounds It wilt burn off In tha first week, but how many week, can one follow tha regimen without having to go to a aanltorium or gat a dlvorca from one's bona or hired girl or being diss. vowed by one's frlenda and faced with a wheelchair In tha home for the aged. What makea moat fat people fat la not too much fat, nor too much pro tein, but too much good old carbo hydrate potato, bread, pie. cake, candy, lore cream, pudding, crackers. breakfast cereal, pancakes, mush, corn pone, 'lasses, sugar, ayrup, pretzels. and beer. These thlnge are chock full of calories, eaay to eat whether one Is very hungry or not, cheap, available everywhere, aa easy to digest as any equivalent amount of nourishment one can take In any food, and yet my dear overstuffed friends, I hate to say thla, for I am fond of the delectable carbohydrates, too carbo hydrate food, aa we get It, la notori ously poof In vitamins. A well balanced ration Includes three or four ounce of protein (nl- trogenoua material), three or four ouncea of fat, and ie to 20 ounces or more of carbohydrate for a day. aa well aa adequate mineral elements, vitamins and bulk or roughage. The diet which makes people too fat Is poor In vitamin, and Includes excessive amounta of carbohydrate, we have found out why people crave too much carbohydrate. It la be cause they don't get enough vltamlna. Any reduction diet which la at all effective In reducing weight 1. nothing more nor less than a scheme to restrict the Intake of carbohy- dratea. Many popular reduction diets en able an overweight Individual to aohleve phenomenal results In the first week or two but sooner or later either tha health or tha reaolutlon breaks down. Among younger Indi vidual. It la more likely the health. Among those past their prime It la the reaolutlon. Then the poor gink J. C. Barnes Answers Iverson and Elucidates His "Labor Dollar" Plan To th Editor: Mr. Iverson will find when he hfts given a little more time to the study; of my proposal that the questions! that con fus him are quite fully answered. His first question: "Who Is going to. put the unemployed to work?" My answer Is that the gov ernment at the start must put the unemployed to work now and here after whenever unemployment arlees. ThU would not be a temporary re lief measure but would be a per manent governmental policy. Not only for the purpose of abolishing unemployment but In order to estab lish a mlnfmum wage of 60 centa an hour for common labor and to stablllre the value of the dollar at two hours common lsbor. Mr, Iverson states that: "Putting the! men to work would not create an Immediate demand for commodi ties and we already have a stagnant surplus." My proposal Is for the government to put tlx million workers to work st a minimum wsge of SO cents an hour In non-commodity producing enterprises. I have outlined the kind of work in my proposal. This would put directly into the hands of work ers six billion dollars to spend an nuslly and so would crests an 1m mediate, demand for commodities. In fact this additional purchasing power In the hands of these non commodity producing workers would make tt necessary for all million additional workers to be employed In commodity producing enterprises to produce extra goods. The total amount of extra goods necessitated would equal the total amount of the purchasing power developed. That Is 13 billion dollars. Now regarding a 50 per cent In crease In commodity prices that Mr. Iverson anticipates: An Increase In commodity price would be nec astary if the government secured the money to meet the payroll incured by putting the unemployed to work by levying a tax. The proposal make doea not provide for meeting the payroll through levying add I tlonal taxes. I propose that con gress orgsnlre a central bank along the lines proposed by Ooldsbourgh In his speech In the house of rep resentatlvea January 7th. 193ft, ex cept the purpose of the bank would be to create a cash reserve to estsb lUh a ml nlmum wage (or common labor and maintain it: that ts, to stablllre the value of the dollar at I Now I Eat Stuffing No 1 pet Atomarh Thanh tn TV II -an. Quick KdUf twrstm It PISt OLVM ta irt.M. tMh ttomh tmndT w tt. ut ftJ.W .!. 1S97 and Tml u Proo f- BELbANSS&S i I I X I FOR INDICATION I Camlno, Beverl Hills, Cat. KFCRIIFS A Bin BI ST goes on a big bust, gorge In the blessed carbohydrates and brings back the Initial top weight with maybe a pound or two added for good enough Par better to go at thl. dwindle business right. Moderate your eat ing hablta little the first week or ten days, aay Just omit some one earbo hydrate Item or which you have apeclaltred augar, breakfast cereal, bread, tater. candy or whatnot. But lay in all the vltamlna you can In the last week or two. for remember. Insufficient vitamin In your diet tor year past aocounta for your tad plight today, and you've got to ac cumulate a small reserve store of them In your body before you can expect to subsist comfortably on a maintenance regimen for a person of your status, to say nothing of etlck ing with a aultable reduction regi men for aa many weeka aa may be necessary to bring your weight back to the Ideal. Ql'KSTIONS AMI ANSWKIIS Extra! Kit rat rounie Plan, to Have Babyl We are planning on having a baby and would Ilka to know what diet or other preparation will put husband and wife In the best physical condl tlon for It. Mr. and Mra. . Answer No alcohol. The less to bacco the better. Heed the ordinary rule, of hygiene. Ba stir to get your lodln and adequate rations of vlta mlna. The Sucker Population. Please explain the Inclosed. H. B. M. Answer It appear to be a clipping from a magazine. "I can tell your disease from vibrations from a drop of your blood on pleoe of paper with Instrument like a radio, for 15.00." I suppose the sucker who haven't $5 will feel they have missed another wonderful opportunity. Come Bark, Old Hnas. I am a, well, I can't aay girl any more, because I'm 43. but the lnaur ance examiner pronounce, me In per fect condition. Yet I know I'm slip ping, for I can't do the work I for merly did . . . B. L. C. Answer Keep your chin up and ee what an lodln ration and a course of rltamln-feedlng and a bit of correc tive dieting will do for you. Detail In booklet "The Regeneration Regi men." which will aet you back 10 cent In coin and stamped envelope bearing your address. Meanwhile, fix up a corner of the living room or the rear hall and roll yourself a half doren somersaults two or three times a day. (Copyright, 1989, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persona wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. O., 26S El Camlno. Beverly Hill., Cal. two hours' common labor. In my Declaration of Principles I have shown how this could ba done. Goldsbourough proposes that a cen tral dank be organired with a paid up capital stock of 4.400,000,000. All of which would be owned and paid ior oy me united states treasury. The United Statea treasury would use to pay for this stock the 2,800, 000.000 profit It haa from devaluation of the dollar and would use the money It now has In other banks amounting to 1.600.000.000. Then the central bank, under present resula tlons could buy government bonds up to ten times its paid up capital stock. -or could buy 44 billion dollars worth of government bonds giving tne government legal tender central bank notes to psy for these bonds X propose that these government bonds bear one-tenth of one per cent Interest Instead of four per cent In terest and thla 44 billion dollars be used first, as a fund to stabilize a 60 cent minimum wage for common labor and stabilize labor Income Second. I would use a part of this 44 billion dollars to pay off the six billion dollars of government bonds now callable and other government bonds as they become due stopping the Interest, that Is. reducing the interest to one-tenth of one per cent In this way full employment of labor could be taken care of and a 50 cent minimum wage for common labor established without additional taxes or without the necessity of raising the level of commodity prices to any great extent. That la the prloe of commodities would only be raised in those Industries In which labor ls now underpaid. The agrl- i uii umi iiuiiiairy would oe princl pally afrected and benefitted. J. C. BARNES Medford, January 31. "One man's meat msy be another man s hash. Wild oats are much worse when rye Is mixed In. When you are Young-When the Famous Exhilarating Drink from South America CHI IT TOKAY Th -D.llt Drill ol Million.- Imports IMrta Prom 9mith America. Mailed or Urlhrrrd on Receipt or Check. moneT-oriler. atampi. caati. or tent C.O.D. on order. JI ST PRINT N M K atid check TRKET -ITY ... Mill Coupon lo IVANIIOt:, lb. 2Sc. St lb. toe. I lb. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntyre IK THE BAQOAOE COACH AHEAD. Jan. 23. Due to a audden getaway piua tn. heavy neirlra southward psBr we could w If " vj '' - H mml m o d a tloru ! eL. a further we could winnow accom- tlona no 1 av i .ur.ner .nan Lsia?7 SaJ wlldwool. S00 YTj odd mile from t ?? w n our destination So In on of those rare lucid Intervals I thought u p wlrinn for f-frZiPfl auto to carry us Mgmymt rest of the way. Vr'-,1 But nobody taaiiSiia ahowed up. And there 1 was with a wire, dog. and a prise moron amlrk on a lonely depot platform. A lean cracker with a aeat-sprung flivver offered to play good Samaritan for 175. He lowed as how he could make It by mid night. It waa S p. m. Just then a dinky local, packed to capacity, tooted In and we clam bered Into tha baggage coach with the dogs. I occupied a seat on a crate of cataup and my wife sat on a nail keg, each of ua seeking to look like blase New Yorker escap ing the rigors of a northern winter. The baggage man eyed us through half spectacle.. His Adam apple suggested that robin roundelay "Just bob-bob-bobbln along." Finally he Inquired In a querulous whine: "What king of hounds la themf" Hounds Indeed! With pedigree, as long aa the declaration. Florida has stark patches against It fairyland backdrop. Out tha half open coach door are thosa lean-to cablna In the clearing, black sepulch ral rulna auggestlng awamp. 'gators and miasma. Many groves of oranges were rusted brown by ravage, of frost. And those gnjarled python limbed , trees dripping fringes of gray are for the world Ilka old Ripe re turning from long naps. But out of such mangy atretchea wa would aud- denly edge ribbon smooth bayous with here and there a startled flam ingo. And what more exquisite word in our language than flamingo In a walk to the water cooler the sour taste of water on a train never changes I aw a freckle-faced towhead sprawled asleep on the green plush scat. I hoped to see an out stretched hand clutching one of those glass revolvers filled with colored candy. Instead It held a toy Mickey Mouse. Otherwise the day coach is the same a when you and I were young. Most Florida road, are dotted with dclapldated cars, playing hookey from the Junk heaps, that seem fairly to gasp: "Florida or bust!" There Is much youth among them, youth that la facing thlnga with high heart. Al ways they have a wave and a .mile for the stranger. It I. a new and sodden American poverty that In an exodus from cities meet life on the open road lustily' alnglng, "Happy Days Are Here Again," Instead of swarming to the lower Beat Side cel lars to plot the government's over throw. Tha baggage man la .peaking: Next atop there's a right good eatln' place. A friend of mine named Ben son sits prlt nearly as good a two- bit table aa you'll find along the East Coast." We debouched, dogs and all. Short order depot restaurants are right up my boulevard. They might not give you egga Benedict but they serve beana baked In cheese. The counterman, true to type, waa sal low, lanky, gamilou. Ha had his prods for familiars and a shy obeis ance for atrangers. Lightly, he kept several conversational balla going while anticipating needa of custom er by reaching under the counter for mustard, extra pat of butter, a knife or a spoon. He had worked up north. At a "quick and dirty" on Fourteenth street and used to sit In the gallery at the Palace on Sunday nights. Wasn't Herb Wil liams a scream with that cast of hls'n miming out ,of the piano? And he liked the girl who aang In the bright red dress: Blossom Seeley. A Florida girl he believed. And that Jigging Mick, o, yes, Jim Barton. What a dancer! On the train, too, were two brlpht blondea of a down at heel theatrical company. A slater dancing turn, one Judges. Tot aow and then they exe cuted a paa aeul In the lurching aisle. A harried Sam Hania looking fellow scrawled flgurea on an envel ope. Likely the manage beset by fi nancial worries of barnstorming. The last dying sparks of a once big en tertainment blase I Thu we clackety-clacked along. The conductor with his badly fit ting store teeth, and Hon tamera' h al r roac h . was t ar mora f ol k sey than his gold caparisoned fellow of the de luxe air condition Pullmans. He didn't seem to care whether we got there or not. And. after all, that's the spirit for an enjoyable safari . Within four yeara 1340 new stores have been opened In Moscow. Use Mall Trio una want, i you are Old-Drink AND ADIIRK'S Hl.Rfc aite dralred Rot i;t. Medford Ore, 0c. t Iba J1.00. t lba.-H.wJ Communications ilgned It, But Oppose It, To the Editor: It ao happen that Z am one of the asserted millions of slgnera to tha Townsend old age pension re covery plan, yet I never entertain ed any notion that tha Townsend plan would stand any chance to be enacted Into law; the motive in affixing my signature wa lmply to register my discontent wtth pres ent conditions, and In thla way stimulate the demand for a speedy action to promote recovery and soc ial Justice. It is difficult to see how any person with a sense of responsi bility can really support said Town send plan Inasmuch aa It 1 un tried; It la too large In scope end too audden In application to escape tha natural and Inevitable oppoalng reactlona In the form of new eco nomic maladjustments, which under the sudden Application of the Town send plan would spring up by the thousands. We have aa most everybody well knows, undergone painful economic difficulties, why then should we saddle ourselves with new com plications and possibly disastrous contlngenclea through a audden overdo of a pension legislation which In the light of past exper ience la nothing ahort of fantaatlo. and this at a time when we at last may rightfully look for results from an Intelligent and far sighted plan aa introduced In congress by the Roosevelt administration. For speeding up recovery the writer suggests that we work for a 30 hour work week to spread the work available, and to promote more Industrial activity by a program of expanding credit to small Industries and enterprises. Tour for all the radicalism the country can stand, but no more. H. A. HART. Medford, Jan. 31, box 1963. P. fl.: I see by the banera where Prof Geo. Iverson tries to convert Farmer Bill to that famoua Town- send Utopia. It strikes me aa a strange sort of an Utopia we shall have when, as the Townsenders reason by some unique loglo In their heavenly plan, that a great benefit will come to our nation when with the aid of the pension money every shelf In the country will be rendered bare, what heavenly day. when the aver age family cannot buy another art icle for love nor money, at, last planned acarctty will be real, des perately real the momentoua ques tion oi tne nour: "When win the next freight be In with a new sup ply?" Every family will find ItseM short of necessities they simply must have, the prices could not be ex pected to Jump under such con ditions, they would skyrocket. Wages would go up, but who la optimistic enough to Imagine that the wages would skyrocket? Here we have the housewife on onehand acrambllng to procure the good she needs, and trying to make her money reach: and on the other harfd we aee the aged penslonlst with a new supply of money, ready for a new orgy of spending, buying anything and everything at any price In a mad scramble to get rid of monoy phantastlc to be aure, but nevertheless real. What Impres sion will auch a state of existence have on the public? If we argue long enough In favor of Invoking auch conditions, maybe even Farmer Bill will give in to It, but let's hope the sponsors of the plan will use leas energy In convincing people of the superficial parts of their stuff, and more energy In dealing with the con sequences of their plana, and that such dealing be done In a little more broadmlnded way. H. A. HART. IT HAS ... the beauty of "Little Women"! ... the nonchalant humor of "Thin Man" I ... the delightful romance of "It Happened One Night"! JOEL McCREA HENRY STEPHENSON FAY WRAY REGINALD DENNY m n m i rn l A SV l U LU BY PI RULING 8AIEM. Jan. 23. VP) City official here today aald they were not dl couraged by Secretary H. L. Ickea re scinding of Salem' water work loan allotment of I3.500.0O0. They Im mediately began preparing to maka a new application, and have Included the project In a list of proposed SERA enterprise, totaling about 3. 970.500 that will be submitted to tha state headquarter of the SERA later. Mayor V. E. Kuhn aald he did not "believe loss of the loan 1 detri mental to the city in any respect. In asmuch aa limitations placed on pow ers of the city In acceptance of h loan would have been ao varied and complicated that It would hare coat the city more In the long run than to acquire a municipal water plant purely on a bond aale basis." Better birth control than peopling asylum and poor house. ADRIENNE'S House Frocks Values to $3, in colorful, springlike wash dresseB in cluding Nelly Dona. .$79 3 Dresses $5.00 Formal & Dinner DRESSES All winter and fall styles reduced to ONE-HALF PRICE Collars & Cuffs Reduced to ONE-HALF PRICE New Spring Dresses arriving daily kW today and WEDNESDAY and WEDNESDAY Adults 20c. Kiddies 10c D