OPEN THE DOOR CAN EASILY REDUCE HIGH LIVING COSTS Prlcea Will Com# Down When Kvery , one Put? Shoulder to Wtieel and Increases Volume of Prod-uo tion. -PMt history haa pro red quite com-1 clualvely that you can no more legie latc the cost of living np and down than you lsjx slop Uie tide by build ing a eea wall," saya Roger W. Bal>*4 ?on, national expert In financ*. "The baalc economic Law ot supply and da-i maud alwaya has and aJwaya will de termine prloee," he declree, "in spite ot articlfloiaf restrictions which may seem to interfere temporarily." "When demand exceeds supply, prlcea are bound to rlae. With three hungry men with one loaf of bread, but one thLng can happen. When aup ply exceeda demand the / rereree ia true. Three loaves of bread to one man bring price? tumbling down. "The real eauae for the present high level prlcea la apparent when you reallie that the United States Is ex porting at present twice the foodstuffs that It exported a yaar ago. and three to four times the amount exported In normal year?. We are feeding Europe, what's more we must continue to feed Europe until it gets back on Its own feet again. "Their crop of 1919 will help some, but we mu*t wait until the harvest of 1920 before they are wholly Independ ent of this country. If the general public can be educated to an appre flatlnr t*? situation aa It i?, apd can b? m.ice to^???ro!l'l lliu wett-ba*. Ing of * v*ty one of ua depends upon every man producing as he haa never produced before, supply can be In creased to meet and exceed thla un precedented demand and we shall weather the storm with everybody ahead ? ? ? ? Tender the circumstance?,... it is more of a re!!g!oBS que^:'on ac economic one Maximum production on the part of every individual moat be made a moral iaene. ? ? ? ? De creased demand means depression, and employment and hard time? for everybody Increaaed production will meet the situation and ??Tve the prob lem" j *But that can only be acoomptlah ed by every man putting hla shoulder ~ to the wheat, and producing a? he! never produced before. ? ? ? ? When j the majority of the peaple were made to feel that slavery waa wreog. It was abolished. When the majority of the people were made to feat that drink ing was wrong and were ashamed to I be seen going into a Moon, we 90!' prohibition "In the same way. whea the people begin to look down on the man who 1? not a producer, or who cvrtail? hI? production, ua shall strike at the) tap root of the eoet of living problem? We must go on a 'producing Cam paign*." ' 1 The only road to fchrlftlneee and economy. The power a naa pnta into ?arvlng measure? the p?fei of tfce m^n ia everything he aAAartakee. ' There are 1,4*6 minutee tn eVery day. H yea aft five ot them to tray War Savings fttpnpe, yon atfll have 1.4SI left tor o&er thing? -> ? quarter ?av?4 % day means |I128 tn a year, or mote thaa $100 if put in War Savings fltaenpa. " /? Ram won't make erope grow unleea seed 1? in the gromnd. Interest can't snake War Savings Btampe grow un le?s your money la 1a thaa. Put your STAMPS FOLLOWING FUG AROUND WORLD ThHft Oampalgn Goes Of* Wherevet Old QI'ory Wavet?Ch*#rl?Q Ntvki Comes From Faraway Con stantinople. ?Jon| with the man of the Nary, the War Sarings Stamp li following Atoe flar rpund the world. In the Me dlterrcsocn squadron, the gorernmeot savings 6 ecu lit lea are aa much a part at the battleship? and cruisers that are aiding in stralghtantag out the tangled affairs of Asia Minor as the ammunition hoists. For American thrift has not stop ped at home. The sarings campaign organised by the Barings Dtrlsion of the Treasury Department Is being car ried out by both officers and men through War Barings Societies, Thrift Stamp?. War Sarings S'empe and Treasury Sarings Certificates. A letter .^ist recetred by the Bar ings Division from Captain Darld P. Boyd, commanding F*6 S Olympia at Con.'^ntlnople brings the Infor raation that the thrift campaign on that res*e' has been placed in charge cf L'euterant H. K. Koeblg Captain Eoyd csT- assurance of the oo-opera tVon c! ti-nself and his men in the wort k , -i PAID FUR FUNERAL W*r SaTlcgs Stamp? ar? u in evitable u death and taxes, and TLmm KE*m\\ II I . i ? . T..11 living Recently John Klrkira* died In Dayton, Ohio. He left no relative? and tiro who ?ought to fire him a proper burial were confronted with difficulty In flnanolng the funeral. Kirk 1 nu had died learlng no ready cash, and the solicitous friends were afraid that public charity weuid have to be charged with the burial espenaee. They dlacovered, however, that before he died the man had In ?ested In about $100 of War 3av tng 6taro?a. A trip to the Dayton poetcfttce and the observance of the neoeeaary formalities enabled them to pay the undertaker's bill THE SOBERING BUNDLE I Wbw you hsrs a tronoh of boodle In the bank Just up the pik?, you'll stand for YukM Doodle, law and or der sad the lik?. Thau do creed of devastation. such m Rossiaa outlaws J shrlak, -vili reoefre foor confirmation ?j#iU denounce It Ilka a streak When a man is brok? and toasted, with ao pa?ka?? laid away, h? ta erermare disgusted with the laws w# an ?bay. He would see oar courta all lersled. and the Jtidgee 00 tka raek. and the plutocrats bedertled till tkey car? up all their stack. Ha would aee all thine* upended, Justiee be weald reader ?tte; then hie ehanoea would be end id to accumulate aome loot. I hare eeen aome agltatora stirring up the peopled souls, aad they all ware oaat-ofT gaiters aad their pants were fall of holee. And they aald their oka las were clanking aa they damned the plutocrat; If they'd only do soma banking they would ?000 get orer that. I hare heard the spielers thrift less pitting up thai t weary song; T - hare heard the weak 4nd shiftless say ing everything is wrong.| Bat tha man wha mtm his money thinks the Russian creed absurd, and he thtaks lit beastly funny that ao many yawps lare heard. Ntrkrl 2Jaiii} By IZOLA FORRESTER (Copyright, ISIS, by the McClur* Ntw# p*p?r Syndicate.) Stubs named her that the very first day she appeared In the square and passed