r -i. 4r 1 FOREST FIRES f COST 5349,177 103,907 Acres Burned Over, of Lands; Under State ; : Jurisdiction In 1928 Oregon had J 067 forest .fires on lands under the jurisdic tion of jthe state forester's office. a report filed with the state legis lature by P. A. EHiotto. state for ester, shows. , These fire burned over a total of 103,907 acres 1 of, land and causea 'damage ; to - merchantable timber41oga and logging equip. ment and to settlers improve ments in the amount of $349,177. Of the total area burned orer ap proximately 19,000 acres consist ed of merchantable timber lands with a loss estimated by the state ofrester at S3fr,000. Approximate ly 18,15.000 board ret of tim ber was; destroyed or-damaged, in moat serious loss was in rthe logging camps " where equip, ment and logs were burned with a monetary sacrifice of more than SZ7&.OQQ. This was partlr covr erea by insurance. The remain der of the loss, placed at $43,187, was In connection with Improve ments on ranches and i farms ' in tne timbered districts. , -- Arson Is Problem Ones of the most serious prob lems ine forestry department had to deal with during the past few years was tne incendiary situation in tne southern part of the state r n . . . .... muie luan inira or tne area Durnea orer was In Jackson and Josephine counties. Most of these nres were due to Incendiarism: There were 87 fires In Oeuglae county, more than Bali MVhili were safd to be due io tnclhdiar- The eastern part of the state was hard hit the latter, part of July and the first part of August when lirhtnlnv ' iinrmi - V4 " O Lti. VlfscV-more tnan 80 fJr OB sta- lande. C Wlth the exception of Tastern Lane, Jackson, Josephine and Douglas counties the fire losses In the state were somewhat below normal. j . A large crew of field .men. was employed - during ; the . entire fire season, and every effort was made to detect persons " suspected of setting out fires. A number of these persons were arrested, and upon being tried, were convicted and punished." In one or two cas. es the persons accused of lncen-i dlarism were sentenced to terms In the state penitentiary. Poll Report Made ' Although.plans of the state for ester hare not been completed for 1929. it is probable' that the pol icies -In force ; during ,tbe 'Jar 1921 wtU be "continued.' Renoris received 'from: different parttof. tne state indicated that the op erations: of the forestry - depart ment were very satisfactory.-" -The biennial report of the .start forester gives a complete summa ry of the receipts and disburse ments of the department, and sets out numerous Improvements made during the past two years. Man new trails have been constructed, lokont stations have been install ed and telephone lines have been extended. Under the plan of op erations in 1928 reports of. the field men were made dally to the state forester, who relayed them to the district forester with head quarters in Portland. Weather conditions were said to have been quite favorable during, the sum mer of 1928, and had it not have been for incendiarism, the fire loss In the state would have been the smallest for many years. The Incendiary fires increased the to tal losses materially. : rw Medical Adviser and -Three Members of Board Also Leave Service ALBUQUERQUE. N. M..- Jan. 19 (AP) Superintendent Ber tha Lips of the Xek Mexico tha LiD3 of the New Mexicn P.Irls' Welfare home. Dr. Evelyn Friable. -medrcal adviser, and three mem bers of the board of the home ten dered their resignations to Gover nor R. c, Dillion at the conclusion of the legislative investigation of conditions at the home atid the death of Helen Askew, 18, who had been given an injection o twilight sleep. - -; v .. The members of the board who resigned are Mrs. Margaret Med ler, chairman of 'Albuquerque, Mrs. R. W. Bryan, Aubuauerque and Mrs. A. yL, Gonzales, Abiquin. The other two members of tb board are out of the sUte . And have not been heard from, .but Governor Dillon and the legisla tive committee will meet tomorrow at which time It is expected that a new board., will be , appointed. The legislative committee will aU so prepare a formal report to make to the governor. . - ; - District Attorney Lujan said to night that the complain charging k HEAD OF EIHLS' - -- IL JBslaughter Jointly - against the SJ superintendent and the physician . x ci had been completed and would be filed as soon as he had an oppor t unity to confer wita fi'B.: ,Has kew of Portales, father of. the dead girl. He Is on his way to Albuquer que. . . ' . . The Almighty Dollar .;:; LOUISVILLE, Kr.--AP-A -skipping dollar bill tied -up jtraffic! wnen aozens oi pedeamans.iat tempted to rescue tbs scooting lu- ere blown front the hud of a wo- mm.' The xuad camprn . ' a downtown corner ensnarled, the streams of vehicles Jronrfotirrdl- ROOSEVELT IN, i " I;' .i ' - ' " f- 4 . Jojously waving their toppers torero was In Albany, N. who braved a heaVy snowstorm to see them, former Obvernor Alfred E. Smith sod his successor, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, above,' watch detachment of state troopers parade in their honor. At left, surrounded by members of his family. Smith cuts into his birthday cake, celebrating his 65th anniversary. At right, Roosevelt mak ing his inaugural speech." " 1 ' , ffissci By ROE FULKERSON BEAU THIS FIRST : : Betty Brown goe to hlffh school dance where there in much petting, and wakens to the fart that boys have merer tried to kiae-rer. The following day she tnea to find ont why from her mother, who erases the isauo; bat Betty eonchioVi it is physical charm, which, attracts men. Point by point, tha takes stock of hr own charm, oaly. to' realize' that she is lacking ia many ways. '. She makes up a rhyme for her guidance: - Toes turned out to give me style." (KOW GO OH WITH THE STOBY) CHAPTER IV THE day after Betty had taken : stock of her physical charm, determined to cultivate what she bad, she had lunch with Lote Hall, the most popular girl in her class at school, She put on the recently purchased long stockings, shortened the-, hem of her sport salt, and with shoulders back, and toes, turned out, she made her calL Lois was In negligee when she arrived and asked Betty to her room. As she entered, Lois looked at her curiously and asked J What have you been doing to yourself, old thing? You look dif ferent, some way. "Shoulders back, mouth. In . a smile, Toes turned out to give me style." - Betty laughed, illustrating each point of her rhyme by exaggerat ed gesture.. What has come over you? Have you fallen in love? You, who have always spent your time searching for a book worm in a book!" VYes, I guess I am in love." Betty sat on Lois cedar cheat. "With who or whom, which ev er is correct?" asked Lois, inter ested. "Neither is correct." laughed Betty. "I guess I am railing In love with love. Oh. my gosh!" Lois kicked off her slippers and pulled her feet up under her. "An I having the great Joy of witnessing the awak. enlng of the cosmic urge, tne awakening of sex consciousness. the emerging of the butterfly from the tadpole, or something?' Go on, young woman, your story interests me strangely!" Did anyone Tslss you at the al umni dance the other night?" I was there, wasn't . I? de. manded Lois. "Yoir were." "If your next question is Who? I'll tell you it wasn't your George.' , '. , , , ,.. . ; t. J: "He isn't my George!" -"Then that pup has lost his tag and has no owner!" laughed Lois. If old Stick-in-the-mud Isn't yours I don't know wno ne Be longs tol He Is en Airedale." What do yon mean?" -? ; "Airedales are one-man dogs. George is a one-woman man. Pat ty Carnes bet one of the boys a box of candy she could make George kiss her and lost the bet. I don't want George to-kisa me. ' I ooni want any parucaur man to kiss me. I want to know why men don't want to kiss me. None of them" her rolee trailed off into nothing. She did not want to tell this bright; pop nlar girl -that no man had ever tried to kiss" her. "You are prisey!" said Lois, bluntly. . . . "What doer that mean?" "Persnicklty!'!. oxplalned Lois. "I am not!" defended Betty. VI am Just a normal, girl. I want 'to be admired like every other nor- mal glrL Men flock aronna you like bees around a blossoming ap ple tTee. Wbf? How do you do itt" Oh!" Lois put Iter finger in her .mouth. In mock modesty.. ; "I have my momenfs and my victor- leif of course. X haven't been neg lected." "Tell ine why!" urged Betty. "A girl who wakes up and finds herself T popular hasn't been asleep. -Long ago I learned that culture consists In knowing, a lot of things yon never have any use for; - Boys like to feel, superior. They like yon to look Into their eyes and tell them that they re wonderful. wIt yon know -more than they do yon have to hide Itt - "Yon know sv lot. but. if yon want - to get anywhere with men. SMITH OUT AND BOTH ARE HAPPY Db THE STORV OF A GIRL WHO MADE MEN LIKE HER by Ontral Pre Association." Ine' hide your light under a bushel. They do not like its glare in their eyes. Snuggle up to them, Tel! them they are big and strong and wonderful. They eat It up like a kltteu lapping cream. The weak er they are the better they like IU" , , ?'But I never have a chance!" eighed Betty. "There roust be something the matter with my looks. You are always pretty. Curled up in that chair, you are as graceful as a cat." ."Dancing!" said Lois, with a wave of her hand. "But I dance as much as you do," protested Betty. Lois rose from the deep chair, shaking off her negligee. She kicked , the back of her head, turned an easy and casual cart wheel and posed in arabesqque, standing on one . foot, her other leg horizontally behind her, her shapely arms stretched ' out in front. . I, "That kind of dancing," she explained, dropping back in the big chair and folding her legs under her, oriental fashion. , j. I "I had forgotten you did. that kind of danolng. Is that .what t&ade you graceful?" tf 'What I am today," Lois made a grandiloquent gesture, "I owe tOlong and unremitting labor" to perfect myself In my art!" am awkward and my. legs and knees are bad." confessed Betty. "Do yon think dancing would help?" if "It couldn't hurt," answered Lois, eediously. "I was never no ticed by any boy in high school until I danced at a school 'enter tainment. That night two of them wanted to take me home ! EVer since, I have no trouble ex cept to keep them away from me. vn Hke their women wild. Danc ers are supposed to be wild. 1 Have had a let of fun fending oif those wio have that Idea." "I have never been bothered, but I would like-to be," sighed Betty. ' "Oh, it's a lot of fun," laughed Lois, gleefully. "Keep them guessing and they come back for more." "'- ' , - "How does one keep them guessing?" . "By keeping them In hopes that maybe some day some wonderful favor will be shown them!" laughed Lois. What wonderful favor?" I guess girls can only learn by exposure!" Lois waved a grace ful hand to Indicate the question would not be answered, i "Well, I want to be attractive," Betty continued. .1 L cWho doesn't! Men have all the desirable thlnge in the world. They are lords of creation from the day .they are born. Only through them tan women, att-in motor cars, ermine coats, dia monds, pretty clothes, everything desirable. Indians used to , take scalp locks to decorate their cos tumes. These days men battle In business or professions ' and have been ' taught " to decorate their women instead of them selves. . "But they dfcorate only .the women who nlease them. It's ev ery woman's job to learn to make the poor, dear, silly things nappy. It's as easy . as peeling . a hard boiled egg. and the harder boiled they are the easier they are to peel " vLVf don't want to be married or to . peel hard-boiled eggs.". Betty spoke plaintively. "But 1 do want men to remember t am on earth," "Tell you what!" Lois Jumped up quickly, leaving her negligee In the chair In her . baste. "My danelng class baa a recital torn or row night. Here's an extra, tick et. Take it and come -'. see us dance. If you like the Idea, Join the summer class, and go In -for acrobatics and . Jais 1 work. With those long legs of yours you could do wonderful , kicks and snllta". '. - - "It sounds good to me, cried Betty. -. :' " ' : . She was embarrassed ' as , Lois went calmly around the room, un Ti A'rur rT." ;n S-'-'.'-sAN. 5;; I phi (Ke'on- Sutuui:; Morning. January 20, 1929 '" completely undressed--. She bum med a tune, dressing leisurely un til her mother called them both down to lunch. Lois had an engagement to go I riding with some boy at two o-ciock. Betty went home before came, wondering if Lois had given her a solution of her prob lem. (TO BE CONTINUED) SEN'S WIFE PLANS FLIGHT SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 18. (AP) Mrs. Martin Jensen, wife of the Dole flier, told the associat ed Press today that she intends to fly from Honolulu to San Fran cisco Just as soon as she can make the necessary arrangements. Mrs. Jensen said she was study. Ing aerial navigation under emory Bronte, distinguished aerial navi gator, to find her way over 2,400 miles of Pacific waves, which no woman has yet crossed by al. "The only thing that is stopping me," she said, "is about 125,000. The huge trl-motored plane I want to buy will cost 160,000. Some of the money has been obtained, but uncertainty about the - balance makes the date of the flight un certain." Treat for Stamp Fans ROME (AP) Philatelists may well be on the lookout for ;ome new Italian issues. By re cent royal decree new types of special delivery stamps are au 'horized, C03ting 1.25 lire within 'he kingdom and 2.50 for abroad, 11 For "pneumatic" delivery in cit-Iwaa 35. Dailey is 38. Word of her es. new Issues of 15 and 35 cen- death was kept from her 17-year-tesimi denominations will be got- old daughter, Marie, who is critl ien out. - jcally ill with tuberculosis. ft III r L H II r -.' II Testimony Before Ways And Means Committee is False, Importer Charges WASHINGTON, Jan. 19. (A P)- A charge by a New York Inv porter that American manufactur ers of Reed furniture were delib erately presenting misleading In formation to obtain tariff increas es was made today before the house ways and means committee hearings on tariff revision. The. allegation, made by Allan Gerdau, representing the Otto Ger dau company of New York, result, ed in a' rapid fire; of questions from both republicans and demo crats on the committee, and tin. ally the witness was asked to pro. duce any concrete evidence he might possess. Duty Held High Now Gerdau, a reed importer, de clared th? present duty of 20 per cent ad valorem on reeds was "dis criminatory and monopolistic," and had cut business In half. . He said he was amazed at the testiT mony of manufacturers and .as serted that 60 per cent of it was unfit for presentation. Chairman Hawley Interrupted to say that this was for the com mittee, not the witness, to deter. mine. Gerdau also suggested a $10, 000 fine for witnesses, whom the committee found were not telling Lake to be Searched For Marylander's Body Again SEATTLE, Jan. 19. (AP) Another search for the botfy of James E. Bassett of Maryland who disappeared here more than four months ago was started to j day in Hicks lake, south of Seat. tie,, at the instigation of his par enta, Mr. and Mrs.tank P. Ba sett. The new search was based on information furnished by a man and a woman which authorities previously had not considered im portant because It did not Jibe with their theories. All other searches were conducted north of Seattle near a house rented by D. E. Mayer and Mrs. Mary Eleanor Smith, whom officers believed killed Bassett and who were con victed of the theft of the Mary lander'B automobile. The two new informants, who were brought by the Bassetts to the county jail, identified Mayer, who is awaiting trial as an habit- ual criminal, and his mother, who is awaiting sentence to the peni tentiary. Michael Wirtzefeld told a story IS PER CONTRACT SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 18. (AP) In fulfillment of an el ieged written wedding agreement by which either party was to kill the other for unfaithfulness, John Dailey shot and killed his wife here in the store where shewas employed. Dailey explained to police that his wife had deserted him ten days ago, taking all their household furniture. He considered that a violation of the pact. Before her marriage to Dailey, the woman was Mrs. Joseph Cor bin, wife of a Chicago minister whom she divorced in 126. She IN HE Disinheriting Your Children FEW people know the startling fact, un der the present community property laws of Oregon, that if I there is no will all . community property; on death of husband froes to wife and on death of wife goes to hus band. This automatically disinherits their children as to such property. If this situa tion is Unsatisfactory, by all means consult your lawyer and draw your will,' naming this strong Bank as your Executor,. the truth and the chairman re plied that the committee could not administer oaths without special authority from the house. ; - Bourbon Put In Word Representative Garner, of Tex. as, ranking democrat on the com. mittee, observed at this point that If oaths were administered testi mony "would be curtailed 10 per cent. ,, '., ' i Representative Treadway, re publican. Massachusetts, warned Gerdau that the manufacturers have the right to . make similar charges against his company and that It appeared he was assuming the same "selfish interest" In the matter as others. - Gerdau insisted he was sure of his statements and added that one unnamed company had circulated petitions to its customers to seek tariff aid In the face of huge pro tits. Representative Crisp, demo crat, Georgia, requested that he present any concrete evidence ayallable. The committee, concluded hear ings on the Woods schedule to. day and began testimony from SB witnesses, not heard during, the days set aside for consideration of the metals section. which led Bassett's relatives to believe that his body had been sunk In Hicks lake. He told of inquiries of a couple he identified as "Mayer and Mrs. Smith, as to the depth of the lake and of an abandoned chicken house on the lake side. Later he said, he saw a couple in an automobile answer ing the description of Bassett's acting suspiciously near the chick en house and subsequently heard someone paddling about on the lake. Mrs. Mary Mays identified the convicted couple as those who had brought a man, who looked like Bassett, to a roadhouse outside Seattle September 5, the day the Maryland man disappeared. The man she supposed was Ba-ett was obviously drugged, she said. So far the new search, like the half dozen others that preceded it, has proven fruitless. POWER UTILITIES E WASHINGTON, Jan.' 19. (AP) Three witnesses appeared today in the Power Utilities-investigation being conducted by the Federal Trade commission, each to testify regarding subjects previously touched upon. , Martin G. Glaeser, professor of economics at the University of Wisconsin, was examined regard ing his textbook "Outlines of Pub lic Utility Economics," which had been mentioned in the correspon dence of some utility representa tive previously introduced, as fa vorable to the points of view held by those connected with the in dustry. He said no payments had been received by him from utility inter ests or any other source for writ ing the boox except the regular compensation for his work with the Institute of research in land economics and public utilities, lo cated at Northwest University, which sponsored the publication. This was said by him to have re ceived some support from the Na tional Electric Light association since 1925. 0 IKS And Every thing Else Now you may have any kind of auto , repairing done under one roof at ; Vick's. Especially auto top repairing i; which is done by a master craftsman Quickly, efficiently, lastingly! . . -At Vick's rocrai -At Vick's -At Vick's -At Tick's -At Vick's UmrMV UU -At Vick's -At Vick's At Vick's --At Vick's --A I conscious of the fact that s&e was