PAGE FOURTEEN Th OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Sunday Momtofc November 28, 19J7 Study Program Given Grans :es All State Groups Will Get Outlines Aimed to Add Interest to fleets Granges in Marlon county and in every part pf the state will devote a large part of their lec ture time to a study of Oregon's natural resources, and the prob lems of use and, conservation of them, according to word received here. C. W. Reynolds, j executive assistant of the -state planning' board, has cooperated with grange officials and worked out a study .-program for this year, j An outline of the study plan . will - be presented in Jthe near future to the Marion county grange conference by Mrs. G. W. ' Thlessen, Milwaukee, state lec turer. On her trips the lecturer will be accompanied by o th e r grange officers, including Ray W. Gill, state jnaster; Morton Tomp kins, overseer iMri. Bertha Beck, secretary; Mrs. Mary Lundell, chairman, and Mrs. Fannie Mc Call, state ' matron. : v. " . Bulletin Lists Topics , - A special bulletin prepared by the planning board lists eight sug gested topics, all carefully out lined for discussion. Topics are "irmlng the Forests ' 'Weeds, "The Farmer " Buys and Sells,' "Fish, Feathers and Furs." "What Is Happening to Oregon's ' Youth Resources?'? -"We Can- Prevent Crime, "Too Much Land or Not Enough ! " "Electric - Power for Oregon." .. ' , :t. . First of the topics has been worked out in detail for presen tation at -grange meetings, and , others will be completed in the near future, it is announced. Mate rial is taken from planning board reports and from other 'sources. Will Add to Interest The lecture series provided by the planning board not -only will - serve to further conservation and other programs held to be of great value to the 'state, but It provides a. valuable, addition to the grange meetings, it is pointed out by Mrs. Thlessen. ."If you pic ture the little granges, ! many of them miles from any source of information, "you will '.see how valuable niils r information is for - them, Mrs. Thlessen states. "The planning board is carrying on an adult education project to a class of people who, could not other wise obtain It.", j.. : '. Mrs. ;. Thlessen has' already placed the program , before : the granges of Klamath, Like, Har ney," Grant, Malheur, ' Baker, Union, Wallowa, Deschutes, Jef ferson, Crook, Sherman, Gilliam, Wheeler, Morrow, Umatilla, Was co, Columbia, Clatsop, Tillamook, "Lincoln,; Curry, and Coos. .Other ; counties . will ,be visited in the : near future. . - ' ,. -t.- J v 1 TV l 5 ; 1 467 COURT ST. Sage of Salem Speculates By D. H. BORES That which bores you may not bore me, That which bores me may not bore you; And rare is she and rare is he Who do as other they'd have do. Sometimes such ones rewarded are, . . : - Find bores less boresome than they thought; Bores, as we find 'em, near and Are average persons, ego fraught The one. who bores not always bores ; He may be you, he may be me; His threes are threes, his fours are ...fours, ; '" .1 Though number one his weak ness be! ..Individuals are occasionally ob served dodging into doorways to avoid contact, with other Individ uals who are also dodging into doorways to avoid contact with them. And occasionally, also, in dlviduals are bored stiff howev er seriously, bored that may be by talk bearing upon the bore someness of other individuals. One Thanksgiving Memory , I heard an oldish man say Thursday that he dreads holidays like Thanksgiving and Christmas on account of they bring up so many memories. He was standing under a markee, waiting for a bus, and the rain was drip, drip, drip ping from the markee, making: a sad sound to a man, if he happen ed to be attuned to sadness, which this man was. Three or four spar rows were hopping about on the walk at his feet. . He was enter taining the sparrows by chewing up popcorn and s p 1 1 1 i ng it at them, and a good time was being had by all when I happened along. It's' odd, isn't Jt, how a sparrow knows a friendly man from an un friendly one? i Not that I am un friendly to sparrows. Only, In this instance I had spoiled a game, and the tiny birds did not like it very well. .They hopped away down the walk with their tail-feathers flick ing disgustedly and' their noses sticking up..", v '.: . ! ?.'Memories "cluster around hol idays', said the man musingly, his eyes following the birds. "Most holiday memories are happy ones, but some ain't. Some of 'em make you - sad, some' of ,'em make, you glad; and some of 'em make you mad. About 30 years ago, when I came to. this valley, after a long search' for a, clime where it would n't be. necessary to climb like all get out to avoid excessive cold and excessive heat, I met a man up in They'll set up the tree with the greatest of care - i : with hopes that a BIQELO W RUG will be there! A tinsel-bright gift idea, this gfving a ' rug to your own or somebody else's family! Choose something just right from our largo group of Bigelow Lively Wool ruga and carpets, Youll find stun ning patterns and colors for 18th Cen tury, Victorian, Modern, Colonial and Provincial rooms. And don't overlook the cheery fact that any Bigelow rug or carpet you choose will be gaily gift wrapped, to take its place with all the other Christmas offerings under the tree. So make yours a lasting gift m, and don't leave it to the. last minute, we implore. You can be Santa for as little as CCO dawn payment . . . on on convenient time payment plan. So yoa don't have to be a Mr. Moneybags to make a generous ges ture thin Christmas I - " 45a, ,- TALMADGE the Willamette headwaters region I met him on a Thanksgiving day morning, and because he had a lonesome look, and further be cause I had been for some time living in a region where strangers asked no questions of one another, I invited him up to dinner. He said his name wasBIxby, which was all right with me. "Well, along about second help ing time there came a knocking on the door, and my wife answered it. When she opened the, door, we heard a bass voice say, 'Howdy, mam. I'm an officer of the law over Wyoming way, and - and right then Bixby. or whatever his name was, Jumped for a window. tipping the table over and scat tering the dinner , all over the place. 'Hold him, yelps the Wy omlng man. But nobody neld him, and he went through the window, taking the sash with' him. The Wyoming man galloped around the house, but. Bixby,. was gone. Pretty soon the Wyoming man casse back 'Been trailing that rat for two weeks,! he e x p 1 a 1 n d. Murderer? I asked. "Naw, he said. 'Just deserted his wife and four children, that's all.' "Ever since then I always re member that Thanksgiving day, more especially if someone knocks on the door while we're eating. Taln't much of a memory, but I can't seem to get entirely shut of it. And he added, "I don't know why I'm telling you all this. Reck on I'm sort o lonesome." Then the bus came. Thursday was a day of big bus iness at all local show houses. Par ticularly noticeable at the Grand and the State, where wait-lines were in evidence most of the af ternoon and evening. At the lat ter house Ted Mack's orchestra and company of specialty perform ers went over with a bang," and continued as the stage feature during the remainder of the week. That boy is in a earn! Asked what he learned in school todav he says he learned that erysipelas is a disease, and he had always thought it was some sort of a fla vor for sode water. He'll have an education yet. I hear of a man up the creek who was compelled to give up dig ging a ditch on account of a bad blister which he was afraid" he'd get on one of his hands. .... Another song by George W. Bo- ley, Salem writer, of lyrics, is be ing issued by a Portland publish er I am quoting briefly from it: In this Oregon land where a man ; Is a -man, J PHONE 8419 ii In this valley of dreams come true, - .: We have cast our lot in God's gar- oen spoi,- i Willamette, we're loving yon. t We love your great broad high ways, - Tour fairy cities, too. Tour placid rivers flowing, j Tour meadows wet with dew, j Tour golden grain at harvest time. Tour sky that's always blue, ; A resting place for the weary, . Willamette, we're loving you. j Incidents of a Damp Week An old gentleman, in the Mill creek section got his feet wet up to his knees. Had his glasses on crooked and missed the log across the creek. Declares somebody moved the log. Which nobody did. Portia's statement that the gen tle rain from heaven falls alike on the Just and the unjust was heard in numerous places during the week. Shakespeare is not so dead as Some folks try to make out. An East Salem baby was play ing with a tin can in which several dried peas had been put. Grand ma in another room exclaimed, "Mercy! how at rains"! (Special note: the bab4 did not get the can open and put one of the dried peas up its nose, but it wasn't because the darling did not try.) That vivacious stream, the San tiam, : gave its usual interesting performance under inspiration of a copious rainfall during the week. ':; " . ' That story of the time when boats came up from the river to the court house has been in cir culation again. Wet weather stor ies circulates best in wet weather. I seldom fall to remember, when the rain is falling, the story Mark Twain told of the time he went down to Alexandria, Mo., a short distance below the Iowa line, to see a man. He went down on a boat from St. Louis. The trin was not a very satisfactory one. He noc onjy iauea to see the man, but he failed, to see Alexandria. the town being entirely under wa ter. A rainbow poked one end of it self into Sight Wednesday, and ducked back again. I fear rain bows are having a rough time of it at present. The rainbow, ner- haps you remember, wag "the first sign of peace to man." There was a belief, auite seriously nrenti at one time, that if one hurried ana reached the end of a rainbow before It disappeared he would find a pot of gold. It is now gen erally, accepted as a fairy story, the pot of gold idea. But there are up to date ideas beine travel v eon. sidered which are little less ridic ulous. "The boldest and bitterest mat. ire ever Put on a stare" is the wav Stage (New Tork) classifies "I'd Kather Be Right."- In which George M. Cohan . impersonates President RoosevelL A musical show in which the current admin- (Turn to page 15) VftWD LUXURIOUS OUGO . ... . ' mm Quisenberry's pw 4io Sta,.su CENTRAL PHARMACY Among the New Books r Reviews mid Literary News Notes By CAROLINE C. JURGEN Something to Remember. By ELIZABETH STANCY PATNE. This is a light, slightly amusing love story. Susan Jones, the hero ine, sets, forth on a cruise to New foundland. She draws a cabin mate also named Jones, - but the latter becomes Injured In an ac cident ' and is taken to the hos pital Just before . the boat : sails. When they came to remove her trunk, Susan's trunk becomes re moved Instead, Susan doesn't dis cover the mistake until, the ship is well underway.' She has the al ternative of using the clothes in the trunk or wearing only. the dress she came aboard -in. Final ly she decides to use the clothes In the trunk. The 'clothes are rec ognised by a man on board and the situation is complicated by Susan's loosing her purse. Those who like really good stor-1 ies, won't of course, care much for this. Susan seems unusually, weak and indecisive for an American girl. The story Is filled with too many coinefdents and the man of the story Isn't exactly" like any modern young man we have met. For thi readers who enjoy Lor In,' Norris, Hank or Fanny HIslop Lee, this will be' a nice variation. Elizabeth Stancy Payne has long been a favorite among readers of this type story. In this she for sakes the' home-and-garden back ground of her recent novels and goes to sea. She. is evidently well acquainted with the background and some of the descriptions light en the rather Inane conversation. : The Perils of Modernizing Je sus. By . Henry J. Cadbnry. Mae- millan. $2.00. 1037. Anachronisms, one could easily believe, in reading "The Peril of Modernizing of Jesus," form a hobby, for Dr. Cadbury. He is -continuously pointing out one or an other he has found in this or that place. He tells us that on a visit to the Holy Land, he once saw, in the -Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, a statue of Mary wearing a wrist watch. He objects to "0 Little Town of Bethlehem", being sung in the film production of Louisa M. Al cott's "Little Women" in a scene during Civil War days when Phil lip Brooks didn't write it until 1868, "four years too late for the civil war setting, and it was in fact "not published until 1894." The author points out several oth er anachronisms equally interesting.- : , While he admits that such glar ing errors as the wrist watch ep isode seldom appear in present- day books on the life of. Christ, there is a dangerous tendency to modernize Jesus. Modern writers too often, he -believes, lack hlstor- We're gathered together a host of Christinas ' gift suggestions things that will assure a' happy Christmas to everyone! Gifts to de light women ... gifts to please men! Shop Quisenberry's for Christmas gifts.' Here's a Part of the Story Traveling Kits P Billfolds Soaps Bath Accessories Perfumes Cosmetics Men's Electric Shavers Parker Pens and Sets - ' ' 1 - . Comb and Brush Sets Yardley Gift Sets Sparklet Bottles Novelty Gifts Stationery Come See the Hundreds of Other GIFT IDEAS at ical perspective and consequently anachronisms! and sentimentali ties creep Into their writing.- - "Could - we ever be induced," Cadbury writes,; "to return to the portrait of Jesus as simply given by the gospels,' while we might not assure ourselves that even this ' was entirely authentic,- we should at least appreciate how much less authentic modern por traits often are." And. he adds, "In aiming to make Him Jesus) real and, human It (modem the ologjcJ made him real and mod ern." - --J i He explains the cause , of mod ernization as "lack of interest or trained imagination .necessary to reconstruct an. ancient scene." An Interesting part of the book deals with the very human trait which : Dr.' Cadbury terms "self- flattery, " He says: ? " Nearly every word of enthus iastic praise for truths we think we find In Him is really only a claim of His support for our own view ; point." The author calls to our attention how frequently we use ' the expression, "It is very good, I have always felt that way about the matter myself," ' " Dr. Cadbury elaborates this with -"we flatter , - ourselves ' by praising His : (Christ's) universal ity, his m eder ness, his Insights since we mean by these things merely our own Judgment in the areas . where we are quoting Him. - Dr. Cadbury i insists the first necessity is to know ourselves, "to allow for this tendency and to discount it and to attempt to neu tralize it." He speaks of this ten dency toward modernization . of Jesus, as "neither honorable nor profitable." He urges us to an efr fort "to learn the mentality of Christ's environment, and a "more thorough study of Gospel rec ords." Dr. Cadbury's chapter on "Lim itations of Jesus' social Teach ing" will likely bring an outcry from many of the more-conservative theologians. Christ's social teaching cannot all have bearing on this age, "Jesus spoke," Cad bury says, "as though he were warning contemporaries of Noah and Lot, not speaking to late-born epigoni of a twentieth Christian century like us.'! He goes on to say that Jesus rarely if ever dealt with social In stitutions as such. "We find it hard to believe." Cadbury write, ."that Jesus did not think of some of . these ques tions.". Cadbury Is referring to taxes, money questions, mongamy. prostitution. He continues by ex plaining that It Is particularly hard to believe in the face of the n.ft--ur;my ... -'1.1 fact ; that Jesus "consorts with soldiers,, tax collectors, harlots, and f even a Roman centurion." But. according to: Dr. Cadbury, Jesus did not know "class inter ests, class consciousness, class ideals." Cad b u r y speaks of Christ's teaching and purpose as unplanned, as "consideration of a technique would be quite foreign to the whole thinking of . such lives.", ( referring to Jesus .and Paul). They would probably. have been "horrified at the suggestion that converting of men was due to some skilful plan." Dr. Cadbury cautions his read ers to consider : the question, "How far do the .words recorded in Greek after some decader rep resent the words originally spoken in Aramaic? Have not the Inter ests and prejudices of the follow ers of Jesus colored his sayings In several definite directions?" . He concludes with "For many of us it will remain more satisfac tory to leave much about-him un known, much about him alien both to ourselves and to the church that more . immediately succeeded him, than to paint him up tnconcernedly In our own Im age or .what becomes so "often quite similar, to attempt to sup plement the imperfect historical portrait with what we call the Christ of faith." First and" last. Dr. Cadburry alms at the biographers of Jesus who. are endeavoring to give us "an understandable, Jesus.7 This,-1 trade von this beautiful mas wmm set I: Hi jinio fefaaya for youi Old Ilange on a Ilev;, 1EATR0LA RANGE I tuu, koomy OVK., Heavily oven bottom. HAXDY GRID for broiling. Makes broiling easy as frying. I PED-A-LIFTER Key Plate. Step on a. pedal and the key-plate section rises to a 45 degree angle. j HAXDY FLUE CLEAXOUT and roomy ash pan. - ' ' - . i SEE THE NEW ESTATE HEATROLA TODAY AT II0GG BlOS. 325 COURT ST. 1 ! Oft HE Yes aail 7 mm J f VIUUWT ftftJtsjs; 1 Aal J SUiVWS MIWII Prices Start at . InUaai-FlM Ais Duct (right), loond APf f A V only in the EsUte Oil Heatzola, v!Ov . blocks heat j-sends it into rooms. Special Offer Is For Limited Time Only . . . Trade in Your Old Heater on a New . Estate Oil Circulator -j- Terms f " A$k About Our XmM Lay Away Plan .. . I - a "- ' i ' ' jlLHJOO.UD 325 Court Street SALOI, 7 JL001! aot have a picture ct the "true j Jesus." , , Critical! readers are apt to won der a l,tti ,f Dr J. self, hasn-t tried to do, perhaps unconsciously, the very things hi is objectittg to so emphaticafly iJ others Sorely, the Jesus that Cad. bury give, us is much less wise, much Tnore simple than ne man even the Bible has pictured for us, or. than the man those who do not accept Jesus as devine, stitl give him credit for being. Dr Cadbury would have us believe that Jesus was a very simple man, working without plans. or thoueht of a future. However. "The Peril of Mod ernizing Jesus" sets forth a new and Important theme in a rather convincing way. Whether or not one agrees with Dr. Cadbury and who ever; completely agrees with any one author the book is in teresting and provocative of a new avenue of religious thinking. Dr. Cadbury has taught at An dgver Theological Seminary, Bryn Mawr college, Haverford college. Pendle Hill and the Kni- copal Theological Seminary at jamoriage. Massachusetts. He is at present Hollis professor of Divinity 1st Harvard university. He is the author of "Matin at Luke-Actst," and with Kirs6pn Lake of Volumes IV and V t "The Beginnings of Christian ity.? ' mm Here's the finest coal and wood range on the market product of The Estate Stove Company, who have been building top quality cooking appliances for almost 'a century. Beautifully styled, unmatched in beauty of design and. finish.' Its features Include: I ; . I DOUBLE COXSTRUCTION" cast-iron inside, p orcelain enameled jsteel outside. ESTALLOY (nickel-chromium alloy) fire box' side linings. More than double the life of the best cast-iron linings. . t . . Insulated door. Easily removable ESTATE fj for a Htfr!a...ff nays Isr Kssff i ITROLl TjggS i mWf: i" - - si TURNS WASTE INTO WARMTH I L..i l.ra it A L2JLU j Phone 6022 OREGON - r u