The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 17, 1926, Page 11, Image 11

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    TIIE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM; OREGON
SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 17, 1026
Ttie Oregon Statesman
.1 J Daily Exrvpt Hand ay fey i
- - THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY
t '.. . 215 8ot Commercial St., SaUaa. Oregon
K. J. Hn.lri-ka
Vrad J. Tuo? .
irl S. MrShrry
barker Bfanm -Audrod
hunrk'
- M aaat-ar
Vanaciag-Editor
- City Kditor ?
TV Wraps Kdttor
- 8oeity Ki'rtor
W. II. Henderae .- CirraUtioa Manager
Ralph H. K totting . Advertiaiar Maaagtf
Wrank JaakoaW Manager Job Dept.
K- A. R hot en ..... Liveatoek Editor
j W. C. Conner . . Poultry Editor
' - MEKBER Or THZ ASSOCIATED FRESa '
The Asaoriated Irea ia ezeltiftFTe.lv entitUd ta tbi iu fr nnKlipiin r
diapau-ae credited to it or aot otherwiia credited in taia paper and alto
nawa published hcrfiin.
all tm
the local
.--,-:::;- ST7SIVESS, 01TXCXS: : ' J
Jamea Keller S3S Wareeater BJdg., Portland. Ore. i
Ihoaiaa r. Clark Co, Sew York, 12 13flW. aist St.; CTileag, Varqnette Bide;
Bat meat Office .zl or 5M
Society Kditor ...10
TELEPHONES:
1", " , ' Job Department . S83
Iewa IVpirtment S3 Cr .J.08 Circulation Offiea.S83
.Entered at the Poat Office in Salem, Oregon, aa aeeond-elaaa matter.
October 17, 1920
PRAYER" FOR FORGIVENESS Hearken" thou to the supptica
tion of thy servant; and of thy people, when they shall pray; . V , .
and when thou nearest, forgive." 1 Kings 8:30.
I
REGULAR, REPUBLICAN TICKET
" -'. : - Taewlay, November 2
For V. 8. Senator: ' - , -
FREDERICK W. STEIWER
For Governor: . :
I. I. PATTERSON . .'..,. .
For Superintendent Of Poblfc
' '.Instruction:.- . ' :
C. A. HOWARD Jl,s:; r7$iy i: V ;
For State Labor Commissioner:
CHARLES H. GRAM ? -
For Public Service Commissioner;!
THOMAS KJ CAMPBELL
For Justices of Supreme Court
THOMAS A. McBRIDE -
GEORGE. M. BROWN ,
HENRY J. BEAN - -
For Congressman, First Congrea-
sional District:
W. CV HAWLKY ' . .-"
t
IARIOX COUNTY TICKET
For State Senators: .
SAM H. BROWN 1
LLOYD T. REYNOLDS
For Representatives:'
l MARK D. MeCALLISTER '
JOHN GIESY- - - ".
MARK A. PAULSON
F. W. SETTLEMIER.;'
THE RELIGION OF SERVICE
"Harry Stone, doyen of the Y. M. C.:Ai forces of this part
of the country; is telling: his audiences,1 as he told the one at'
the .Salem Y birthday dinner Wednesday evening, that he
almost had to pinch himself to believe he was alive in this
year 1926, at the world Y convention at Helsingfors, Finland,
last summer : j ;
When ,things happened that, previous, to that convention,
ineVer had happened, and that Mr. Stone would not have
believed could 5 happen for a thousand years yet, if ever
When Greek Catholic and Roman Catholic and Lutheran
and a hundred other delegates met and exchanged ideas and
'compared notes and planned for a better world.
Mr. Stone said he learned a lot on deep spiritual devotion
from the .Greek Catholic delegates, and of faithfulness to
their church from the Roman Catholic delegates, and of
adherence to fundamentals from the German Lutheran dele
gates ".
-; Each group had something to contribute to every other
group . t ' . r ., .
-. - And the great contribution of the American delegates was
a religion of service ;'a religion that believes in working for
better conditions on ' earth instead ; of putting their major
stress upon a mere preparation here for the life beyond the
grave, as seemed to be the attitude of the German Lutheran
: delegates. -' ' ''
; He thinks the American delegates taught some of the
other delegations that there is in their, Bible the Sermon on
the Mount, as well as the Ten Commandments and the doc
trine of "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.' t
t ' If there is to be peace on earth and good will to all.men,
4 there must be more such world conventions in which creeds
- and races and colors and conditions must be.fOrgotten
; And . in which the American ideals of the religion ' of
Kervic mustTbc- in vtiic iadeiiol-anIy Anjerjcan but
UniVf 1
must be scores and scores of millions of dollars thrown away
annually in; the cdst of all this stuff." - x: !
Here is atcasc ih'pbinti The First National bank of St.
Louis, Mo is sending to the newspapers the speech in pamph
let form of its vice president, Dr. W. ' F. Gephart,' on ."Some
Neglected Aspects of the Farm Problem,"; in .which he, wades
through a great : mass of platitude ; solemnly setting forth
facts that are common knowledge in thi3 conutry, and ponder
ously drawing conclusions that are obvious to any, one with
brains above a rabbits ?, "i - ; r , . r- ' l
As muchas to say, What a wise old owl I am." . The
apogee of it all, the final and ultimate and oracular super
conclusion is in these words:
"Our agricultural community Vi ... should endeavor to different
tiate between the handicaps that are inherent in the industry and
those which are due to external circumstances. Once this' Is definitely
determined then it will be 1 time to take such" political action as is
possible to remove any external difficulties under which the industry
may be suffering or Injustices that may be handicapping It. At the
same time that such external corrective measures are being taken
such internal' reforms which may; be neceseary. In the Industry can
then be akenj by 4lie farmer himself. Sooner or later the; farmers
of the country must be told that improvements in the condition of
their Industry depend as much upon what they themselves' do to solve
their problem as by what can be done for them by external agen
ties." ' '
AM of which is almost as plain as mud. The fact is that
the farmers of the United States would work out their own
salvation, would 'solve both their "external and "internal"
troubles, jf the authorities at Washington would wake up and
take away the advantages- being dishonestly enjoyed by the
Wall Street! sugar; trust in the Cuban raw sugar differ
entials -:t :-; ; , -; -
If they would amend the tariff law so as to wipe out a lot
of its free trade black Spots-7-
. And if it would cut out enough of the dry rot on the federal
payrolls to give a real business administration, developing
the sugar industry, the wool industry, the linen industry, the
mohair industry, and a thousand others, in order to make this
country self sufficient in all the things it can grow or make
or mine or. get irom 11s own poieniiai icsumwa aiiu(1.u"
ities, there would be no exportable surplus or raw products
And most of the fundamental troubles of our farmers
would be over. They would have their home market; sus
tained by permanent prosperity
The best market in the world
And, in a very short time, this conutry would be an irm
porter of wheat and several other-major products the surplus
of which must be sold in inferior foreign markets.
TT
Ov
TO A' CYNICAL FRIEND " A - J
The writer would like to say to a good but cynical f riend
troubled with the inferiority complex, who has been cracking
jokes about the optimism of The Statesman, especially on the
future of the sugar beet industry in th Willamette valley,
that these facts are worth considering: H
Only about 10 years ago, the United States was using
4 million tons of sugar r annually. f ;-,That t seemed a lot of
sugar; some- 89 pounds annually per? capita ; the highest in
the worldrr . - - - - r
: , But we are now using over 6 million tons a year; about
111 pounds per capita annually. And-both our population and
1 our Der capita consumption are growing We will before long
be iising 10 million tons a year.-; t ' " . -
We buy 4 million tons from Cuba, and about 1 million from
Porto Rico, Hawaii, the ; Philippines, and Louisiana; cane
sugar. We produce the other million tons in sugar beets. We
have 108 beet sugar factories:. r- V , -
- That many beet sugar factories, or sugar factories pro-
ducmg tnat tonnage, are iouna in sections 01 uermany not as
large and rich as the Willamette valley. I, We can have 100
beet sugar factories in the Willamette valley, and make only
a dent withe supply we use annuany m inis couniry now. vve
can grow the, beets not only without missing the acreage,
but will atthe same time increase the tonnage of other crops'
cn pur land ; by producing a cultivated, clean, rotation crop
And we can have the 100 factories if we will all get rid of
our inferiority; complex and work like we ought to work; not
in one year, but before many years. It may be a dream. But
it will come true.' How qoon will depend mostly on ourselves.
There are a th6usand other reasons; but the-above will
have to do for the first lesson for the writer's cynical friend.
. LOADS AND LOADS OF ROT 3.
1
- Every newspaper off ice of any, size in the United States
receives daily a great armful df propaganda from men and
r.r-snizations of various kind?--. 5 V- ' " 't -
Most of it being" dumpec into capacious waste baskets. The
Statesman office" publishes a farm, papr.'a poultry paper,
"-,1 teachers paper, so it probably gets more than its share
r,f rifv the size of Salem. V The rcrige of the flood of propa-
-.in da is very wide . . i: . t . v
nennin." from some of the bisrest financial and industrial
country down to the Tia Jusrsa racir 7 c
i c; l
ill
, PIECUt'ST . i
Martha has a manner gracious
un-i attractive. Martha has a
tnind and knows how to use it.
Martha is alert, practical, effi
cient. Indeed Martha possesses most
of the many jreyauirementa for
business success,- i
Now Martha has a good posi
tion, and again she hasn't! 1
Martha flits from pillar to post
with a frequency that Is disturb-
Ingly amazing. Even her best
friends are bound to admit that
ic business Martha is not making
her mark. ' ' . .. j
Why? ;
' An erstwhile employer concise
ly implies the reason:
'You can't tell that girl a sol
darn thing!"
Martha knows it all! In that
lies her weakness.
Mary is .pretty and petite, In
mlPir-Khyry-ppea4jogJ'it:
Mary is bright -never misses a
point or fails to catch a meaning.
v ; Mary .has a sense of humor, is
generous to ?J fault. Is constant.
capable, conscientious.
Yet
Mary, too, is ''looking for a
Job rather more often than might
be expected
. Why? ; i '
, An office mate of hers In unwit
ting comment gives the right an
swer J :-'V !" ' ' '' -! "" ' :
"Mary's a dear,' but 1 she can
never -make up her mind, j Some
one else has to make it up for
her.', ' J C . r!? : .
In har own little corner of the
universe Martha may shine ' with
the brilliance, of her own and her
family's valuation. Pa and Ma nd
the ' Uncles and Cousins and the
Aunts : may take Martha's word
for, what she knows; for what she
can do-to her; 'sparkle and her
wit pay homage.'. ; : ,
' But .the world thatlies'outside
the family t circle Is; singularly
cold, frtinkly ! skeptical. TIs deeds,
not words, withjjhein;! It Martha
knows it all her saying so will not
prove It, S What she has to do is
to show thP2i..But she doesn't! f .
Ad vie? proffered and Ignored, la
glaring error ior:twi" And unsentimental,-
outsiders 1 pronounce
JudginenL Jfot Oijfy does Martha
cot know' it all, 'but In their opin
ion Martha 'is a fool. "'' - j
' ' i
Mary plays the clinging'Vine to
the: real delight of the stronger
members of her family. Dad. and
the boy laugh at her little iodf:
cisions, teape her for her cupnirtg
Inconsistencies, love her liar -jher
eppealiDg dependence. . . '
However, the "sturdy xaks of
the office force have no wish to
be ' bound round with annoying
tendrils, , resent r having their
growth and- freedom hampcre.l. ,
- Constant, calls for ; help; : cease
less stream' of tjuesUons.i an- op-J
portunity missed tor wise- decision,
time squandered la uncertainty,,
action held, up by doubt and -Bis
Business has little 'more use ' for
Mary. ' ' " '-v'--.
...4. ... . 4 ' .
Self-assurance is much to be' de
e? -dvBut let its. self-assured, be-
:H conceit.; . i .,'"
Too much of anything is exact
ly as bad as too little.
The results of the epicurean are
about the same whether a piece of
piecrust Is overdone or undone.
He can swallow neither.
If we are clever and know we
are, let's at least camouflage our
real feelings on the subject. -
If we underestimate our ability
let us not make a show of fear and
Indecision.
The cocksure and the too meek
two extremes between which
there Is, there must be, the happy
medium that forestalls failure.
The Midget Meat Market never
fails to give you the finest meats
and fish. There Is but one place
in Salem to get the finest fish. The
Midget Market has it for you. ()
Slate surface roofing applied
over your old shingles. We have
over 200 jobs in Salem. Nelsot
Bros., nlumbers, sheet metal
work, $55 Chemeketa, it ()
Army and Outing Store. Biggest
bargains In clothing, shoes, under
wear." hosiery, gloves, valises and
suit cases.' .The " working man's
store, 189 N. Commercial. )
Ia spirit
: an
,:ient
utter
SALEM YOUNG LADY
TELLS OF VISIT ABROAD
(CobHbu4 from pe 1.)
the hill. The morning ride was
tremndonsly interesting. Cactus
hedges were frequent. Bedowin
tents, If such they could be called
were close to us. They were Just
rolling up crude beds ; to eorner
of, their ; wretched abodes' a ' we
passed. Soon we were ia the Ju-
dean hills. Out of the desert
came-& caravan of camels swing
Ing along,, .unconscious of 'the
thrill they .were giving u." don
keys here and there - carrying
strange loads. Men, but especially
women- on these lonely stretches
followed the. trails with unspeak
able heavy, loads balanced apon
their heads. .Mostly; however the
hills .were rugged, bleak and 1 bar
ren with lonely caves staring at us
now and then: 'Truly we felt our
selves In midst of "No Man's
Land." Breakfast in diner at 6 : 3 0
a, m. At 9:30 came call 'of "Jaffa
Station. Alt scrambled out to be
hurried off In cars to ' "City of
David." ' . '
First Sight of Jerusalem
Soon, after rounding a few
dusty hills, Jerusalem lifted be
fore us that city set ; on two
main hills Mt. Moriah and Mt
ZIon. Through Jaffa gate and Just
around the corner was our hotel i
imagine the privilege of spending
two nights just Inside Jaffa gate
After having eaten and having
been bathed in dust of the desert
for entire night we ; were sights.
to behold. Vigorous scrubbing re-?
vealed our original selves, though,
and by ten we were -ready to meet
our guide wom. for .these days
ie owaj much.- (He was the same
guide who was' privileged to be
with Dr. and Mrs. Fosdick daring
their three months of research
this ''past ' year. Youl should have
seen his eyes, shine when 1 asked
him of Fosdick. "Oh! he the most
wonderful 'man In the world, . but
no finer taan his Missus, .Oh! his
eluded : walk down Day Id's street
wretched place and up Zlon a
hill-T over , rough cobble stones
from which, place we could look
out over, Jewish "walling : place
where narrow streets were lined
with fly covered beggars whom
instinctively v we shrunk from
so loathesome they were. Streets
were sickening indeed. . Back to
Hatch for lunch.- " . . .
Trip to Rthlahem
Tuesday afternoon ; motor trip
to Bethlahem, Mt: of Transfigura
tion and Mt. of Olives; Each would
necessitate a volume were I to
begin to describe it. Back to hotel
bysix o'clock an ! hour at den
tist'snative dentist with degree
from American dental college at
Beirut. I was- amazed- at his
keenness and f evident mastery of
his task. Had ' to give up three
times, for - dentist 'appointments
the meagre amount of breathing
space from sightseeing. Wrote
cards until ten-twenty.
Buschman Gapp, a young Mor
avian fellow, and I arose at 5
a. m. before it was yet day and
went out through Jaffa gate,
along Jericho road, crossing 'Da
mascus road and up to Garden
of Gethsemane where in simple
devofional service we tried to re
alize where we stood. Just in
front of us was the twisted.
gnaried "Tree of Agony." (Again
leaving detail to later diary ac
count). Reluctantly we left,
climbed silently the. hilt to St.
Stephen's gate through which we
entered into the city Tonowing the
'Via Dolorosa" the way Christ
went toward Calvary. Winding our
way through streets where beg
gars were just beginning to come
on their weary duty we finally
found our trail to hotel, reaching
it at 7:30 after a truly never to
be forgotten two hours walk
Historic Scenes
Wednesday Breakfast and met
guide at 8:30- Walked all morn
ing. Program: Down Via Dolor
osa again to inner court where we
climbed down 23 steep steps to
Pool of Bethesda." No wonder
those lame and blind needed as
sistance we nearly did ourselves
On to Pilate's judgement hall.
Here details preserved so minute
ly that we could scarcely realize
any so overlaid was it by Cath
olic symbolism. Next to church of
Holy Sepulchre, traditional place
of Crucifixion, but many . think
Calvary hill more likely to have
been a place called Gordon's Cal
vary without the city beyond Da
mascus gate. Helina, daughter of
Constantlne the Great, built Cath
olic churches over fifty sacred
places of Palestine. Nearly ruins
themm all, ror simplicity or or
iginal settings entirely lacking
now. Imagination needed at every
turn of the way. Have been read
Ing Margaret Slattery's delightful
book on "New Paths in Old Pal
estine." It helped considerably.
On the Mosque of Omar or "Dome
of the Rock.." traditional temple
site. Couldn't enter mosque while
Turks controlled city, but now
that sacred place of the Moham
medans has been declared open
to peoples of all faiths. After na
tive boys had helped us into large
soft slippers slipped on over our
shoes, we stepped Into dark en
closure and walked about on
priceless Turkish carpets. Entire
center taken up-' by huge central
rock fro mwhich they believed
Mohamet ascended Into Hearen
and to that rock he Is expected to
return. Christians believe that Ab
raham was about to sacrifice Isaac
on this rocka In center of rock 'is
great hole where blood of beasts
of sacrifice-was poured. Drained
off below Into Kldron brook. In
case nearby three hairs of Mo
hammet are locked. Once each
year case is opened and vast mul
titudes file by to kiss these hairs
so it is that tradion Of Christians
and Mohammedans are mingled
Back weary, but grateful for in
formation of the morning -to
hotel by noon. Off to 'dentist
again. " ... r
Dead Sea an1 Jordan
Cars ready, at two o'clock for
87 mile trip: to Dead sea drop
of 1300 feet below sea leveC Jeru
salem Is 2500 above, hence we
wound down barren Judean hills
to oppressive ' heat below 3 500
feet. There lay the Dead sea-i-46
miles long greedily absorbing
into itself all the moisture meant
rior scorchinr wilderness " round
about. We dipped our fingers in
to its -warm, heavy H2Q (water)
S times more salty Chan ocean
water.'Never will any of us forget
that tastej. Even so Its beauty
amazed ns a deep blue Jewel set
as It were In that wilderness of
desert brown and. tooped. over by
the dome of a cloudless sky. On
ten miles to Jordan' river one
third wider than our own. Mill
creek in winter season. Here boat
rides offered for 5 piasters (25c)
Some filled bottles with; H20, but
most of us preferred to think of
events of years ago when John
the Bapsttst came from Wilder
ness and Jesus met him perhaps
very near where we ..were! Tis
thought that .Israelites crossed
Jordan there. . ' -
-Jericho and Bethany ; . ,':
After-15 or 20 minutes we re
turned to. Jericho road, and' con
tinued toward Jericho little to
suggest Its being - modern, how
ever, and on to historic knoll
where the walls -came tumbling
down.. Thought of the three girls
here and Prof.'Hobson. I stood on
edge of the decaying wall, and It,
to, came tumbling down. Across
from ns "was a pomegranate or
chard In that dry ladn back In
twilight.2 Stopped. ' a moment at
Betahny, but could see little. To
seemed odd at first, but like
everything, else Kwe became v ac
customed to It. Dead tired, but
went to store below, selected cards
and i wrote, a . dozen, s To bed" In
good bed, 'draped as a -cradle In
netting by, 11 o'clock.
, At Jacob's Well u t
Thursday We nWereC railed at
6 Breakfasf -tiSOv and. off for
Nazareth by ,-7: 30.- , Mornings de
lightful -before heat of the day be
gan. Soon .into Samaria. At almost
any; tujn'weteould see rhere and
there on- those slightly, lesjH, bar
ren hills flocks of sheep following
their . shepherd. More v. flocks - of
black goats than sneepi How the
23rd Psal m glows with pev mean
ing after nealy -400 miles of mo
torings in-hills of Judea, Samaria
and Galilee. Stopped to: drink kt
Jacob's Well looking up hill to
Sychar where woman returned In
where kind faced carpenter tried
in broken English to explain his
primitive Lwooden plows, etc.,
younger boy helping him. :We
thought of another carpenter
shop. Went out and talked with
some Arabs on primitive thresh
Ing flooivthen up to candle
lighted room where, after writing
a . few cards and a note to you
folks, I turned In about teir
o'clock. Called at 4:30. Breakfast
at 5 and off for Beirut by -3,)
through orchards of . bananas.
UIO.lgV3 1uiMtftttauiai.v-ji : ait U l Ur r-
ries cotton fields,, palm treM.
etc. r To Beirut at 1 p. m. l,ng
wait In L passport waiting Ju.
Finally en boat by 2. So f-u-ifd
days In Palestine,
nasie 10 ieu them, or-Jesus, on a
distance ,"Goodr: Samaritan Inn'
arrested our attention. How dif
ferent from hills of ; Oregon yet
with a personalityrall-their own.
Finally winding up and around we
reached a -scenic divide shere 16 !
out before us stretched 'the Gali
lean hills and far in distance to
the left we caught a-glimpse bf
the Mediterranean or the 'Great
sea as they call It.. f
Hills of Galilee V
No wonder Jesus- loved these
hills of Galilee. INo- wonder - the
disciples grew wealthy of heart as
they tramped over them with Him.
Great Plains of Esdraelon lay be
low us that battlefield of the
world lying at the cross-roads be
tween the East and the West. In
deed all of Palestine is a buffer
country Canaanites, Midianltes,
Phoenicians. Greecians. . Turks,
even the World war demanded: a
deadly toll from this stricken
land. ' '
Reached Nazareth at hieh noon
and were hurried to Hotel of
Galilee to wash up and Oh bov!
we needed it. On imedfately , one
hour more for lunch in Tiberias.
High moment of entire stay. In
Galilee came for me as we sud
denly came upon first sight of sea
of Galilee 682 feet below sea
level looped the loop again and
again as we came nearer and
nearer to Tiberias, the one re
maining of the six cities of old
guarding this chosen lake. What
a revelation this sea was to us
all. How steeped it was in rich
associations. Unspeakable heat.
We scarcely sampled dinner set
before us at Hotel of Tiberias..
Lake of Galilee
-Auto trip encircling lake to
Capernaum ten;-mile trip. Only
ruins there. Several stole a swim
some waded, but others of us sat
under eucalyptus or date palm
trees looking out to sea. A few
sail boats were on lake, but other
wise perfect stillness and quiet
reigned supreme. -
Finally we rettrrned to Tiberias
ly four and back to Nazareth by
six-thirty. Visited carpenter shop
. r ... stsa -y X
.'..'"."::. Vi to your I
Sight" .
' - - ' ' - - - - -
f '.-- - - . -
Dr. Edward E. Boring'
Glasses Are Important
Do you remember .Theodore-Roosevelt's,
story of how he -discovered when he was"
thirteen -years old that-he could not see
well?- -..--'-;,-.),
, In his autobiography by -Macmillan he
i wrote : " v ' .',- . . .
"I had no idea how beantiful the world
was. until 1 got those spectacles. ,1 had .
been a clumsy and awkward little- boy, and
while -much of my clumsiness and. awk
wardness was due to general, characteris
tics, a good deal of.lt was due to the fact
that I could not see and yet was wholly
. Ignorant of the fact."- -
The recollection of this experience gives
ns a keen sympathy with' those who are
v trying. In pubUc schools and ' elsewhere to
remove the' physical causes of deficiencies
in children, who are-often unjustly blamed
. - for .being obstinate or unambitious, or
"Mentally Stupid.! . .
u; , Examinations :by , the American . Red
' v Cross show that one child out of every six
. or seven - is : suffering from a physical
r defect serious enough to retard normal
' growth and development. -
Watch your child and let the t doctor
I. look nim over on occasion. Even so-small
a thing as a pair of glasses may open a
new world for. the youngster. . .
PHONE 120O
FOR APPOINTMENT
CORNER STATE AND HIGH STREETS
( ; JSalem, Oregon r-s-v.--:
In Connection With Red Cross Drag Co.
5
THERE IS HO SU BST I TUT E F O R
ELECTRICITY
I FRIENDLY
it-
A Man's Home';.
There's a feeling a man has about his hcrzh that
-makes him Want to protect it -to secure f pr his
1.4 U ! ,J j .a ' J 1 ' I. '
awv-u uiics uicu wuuuucu vomioiT ana nz t
The man' Whose home and family are tl
things in life finds satisfaction in saving Jcr
investments in utility securities. An indepcident
income from the public service company means to
him: . Msi v
mess.
ebig
ound
Missus! 1 assured him I under-j hotel -byt 30 and dinner over by
stood his appreciation ; of Fos- j 8:30. All meals m Jerusalem, Ka
dick.) I ' irareth and Cairo perved "by wait-
Relief from financial worries. V'3
Pleasure of beifig a partner in a
worth-while enterprise. u
Joy of being able to meet emergen
ries as they arise. p ' ' r;
Satisfaction of nevtr being a bur
den to others.
Benefit of being able to : take ad
vantage of opportunities
Prestige ot sound financial con
, nections. .'.,:
- s- " - . . - j. . .. ,.,. .
Ask ahfit the new First Preferred Stoc
';company;now offered at $90 'per share
6.67 on. your money. .'I,: v-'
: i . . , - .j., -.v.,,: y . . ' . -
"Write, call or phone -' . - . -
INVESTMENT DEPARTr.lE
" Salem,
i
.1
237 North Liberty Street
Portland Electric Povj
Division Offices at f
Salem, Oregon City, Hfllsboro, and. St, Helens, Ore; and 4
1
.Wash.
6-67 I N O RE GON'SOGJlJZATnST
PI
c UTILITY