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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1941)
; I ; ! OZSGOn BTATISUAII. Salem, Oregon, Simday .Mornlsg, April 13. 1S41 v ' Easter and Spring THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. President Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use tor publication of! all news dispatches credited to It or net otherwise credited la this newspaper. fium to aim for -Buckingham J palace, for the castle at Windsor Great Park, for Westminister and again St. Paul'sand not tq call their shojfc h L "Wo Favor Sways V$; No roar Shall Aw" ' - tgiS?V I . rrom First Statesman, March 18. 1831 i Wg&Z' ( M : ;,M i a - XA' tr fv. J- l I I yi- . Easter came late this year, on the calendar; but Spring came early, and here in this valley they have met. The annual miracle of earth's renewal that we call spring, coincides with the ancient festival, of the resurrection which we call Easter. Easter in March may be chill and blustery; this year in April flowers are a-bloom, grass is green, and trees are leafing out. Where indeed is there a lovelier country? Dogwoods stand in bridal white against the sober green of the fir trees at the edge of the clearing. Azaleas flame in dooryards, and tulips take the kiss of rain or of sun with equal wel come. Against the sky shimmers the light green of the new leaves on the cottohwoods and the alders as they march along the streams. The new grass oh the flanking foothills and the evergreen backdrop of the mountains pierced as they are with the snowpeaks completes the picture of the valley in springtime. No wonder the dwellers are given to provincial pride and self-satisfaction; and no wonder visitors are charmed into enthusiastic praise. It is out of this evidence of renewal of life from seeming death that man's hope of im mortality springs. If nature effects survival of plant and flower will it be more ruthless of man who is lord of creation? If the bulb in the dark earth stirs with the returning warmth, sends shoots uward through the crust which burst into thegolden glow of the daffodil or the delicate shades of the iris will the brain of man, that fine instrument of intelligence, moulder in etern al dust? Is it just the race which survives? Man clings to hope of personal immortality because that seems the sensible answer to the riddle of his existence, the natural ambition for an in telligent being whose earthly being is attended with so much of disappointment and frustration. Tennyson echoed that assurance when he wrote: "My own dim life should teach me this. That life shall live forevertnore, Else earth is darkness at the core, And dust and ashes all that is." Easter and Spring; returning beauty, turning hope. It will probably mean the--ruin of many afiolher stately monumenf Srhich has meant a mtichvte the world as it has to England herself and to un told generations of American tourists; but if it must be, it must be. - j . . Monuments, after all, ares the product of man, withal often of man's highest ingenuity. Moreover, much of their beauty and their great ness is derived from the gentle; mass of associa tions and memories built up about them in the course of years and decades and centuries. This latter is the heart of any monument: and it1, is indistructible where granite and concrete and glass and precious metals are not. So if the State Opera is a iheap of ruins, a little like the Guildhall; and if the Bellevue is chipped, so soon after M. Matsuoka's visit, and if a couple of really big holes are found in the -Wilhelmstrasse and down the tenter den Linden, even Germany may realize thalj war is war, and that even in the Third Reich, with its certain protection against air raids, thihgs are bound to hapen. The Germans can comfort themselves with the blueprints of the bagger and better ' opera house, the bigger and better Bellevue, and the bigger and better signs saying "Sight of bomb crater, 1841: dedicated to our heroic air men" the Reich can , build, vj But in London, such artifices will not serve. Trout on the South Fork! He Preached Peace "And They Crucified Him. By R. J. HENDRICKS re- Roll up That Map In 1805 Napoleon's victory at Austerlitz over the Austrians and Russians crushed the spirit of William Pitt, prime minister of Eng land, as illness had wracked his body. The waters of Bath having failed to effect a cure Pitt was brought back to London. Stopping at Putney a relative showed him4 to his room, and on the wall of the corridor they passed through hung a map of Europe. Pitt, who had become prime minister at the age of 24 and had held that office longer than any man before or since, looked at the map and remarked: "Roll up that map; it will not be j wanted these ten years." The words were prophetic. Pitt soon died, in his 47th year. Napoleon went on to crush Prussia at Jena and Auerstadt, Russia at Eylau and Friedland. He overthrew the shell of the Holy Roman Empire, reorganized Germany, set his brother on the throne of Spain. He crowned himself emperor, and ruled over the continent from the North sea to the borders of (Turkey, and from Denmark to the Mediterranean. It was not until 1815, ten years after the fateful remark of the dying Pitt, that Napoleon was finally defeated at Waterloo and consigned to the last exile of St. Helena. ; The parallel with the present is obvious. A new Napoleon reigns over virtually the same territory as his prototype of, a century and a third ago. His armies smite with the same irresistible force; nations crumple in their path. Now as then Great Britain alone remains uninvaded; it alone defies the might of the Ger man Hitler. And for Great Britain the prospects are as gloomy as they seemed for Pitt after Austerlitz. There is a saying that history repeats itself. It is true; it is also false. History did not repeat itself at the Marne in 1940, nor at the channel ports. History did not repeat itself in the Balk ans. Nelson's victory at Abukk Bay was re peated in Cunningham's late victory in the lanian sea; but that nay not suffice to preserve the British at Suez and Gibraltar. J The parallel does encourage us in taking a longer view than the victories of a single year By JULIAN WALLACE GRAHAM He arrives with the spring rains, soft as whispering and just as sure. His hat askew and fly-filled he wades in restless boots. The type is not catalogued in any known compendium, is not listed; and the fact Is he defies classification, does the early season trout fisherman. The creature lives in a world of salmon eggs sjnd flies. You might meet the species almost anywhere after the season opens, provided pf course the "al most anywhere' be along a stream. But there are other provisos too. The stream hust be from the ranges and possess a name such as Beaver creek or Buck creek; and having an addenda like the south fork only makes fbr mystery, ind so much the better. "How's the chance to bum a match? Mine are wet.' You'll meet him on the riffle of the next bend and about the deeper eddies. Youfll find him where the water runs smooth over the sandbar, if the spring rains; haven't silted the verjjr stream. Chances are they may have, for the weather's willful as the wind, and you can only rationalize and say that you wanted it to rain anyhow. See the silver in the rain slanting the dark hemlocks, and feel the clean coolness of it and the far brush of the wind. If you aren't an early season trout fisherman, certainly you ought (to be. We did meet him around thel next bend, down where the eddy swings in foank and where the otter track sneaks beneath the! root He was slogging along between potholes when we spied him, and intent. What does it matter if his boots did ooze water and if his clothes arejwet as the swirl ing stream? He didn't see us till we hailed him, and then he looked up and jtind of grinned. "Thought you were Bill at first," he said, and the rain began to blow, and the sweep of it spotted the smoothness of the eddy. fAny luck?" and though he was casualness incarnate, canniness crept into his eye; and you could; tell he wondered if others had had better luck, j We said that our luck was pooly, because how can a man catch a fish with the stream hanging where it is? By common consent, then, we each picked a wet boulder and leaned back for the inevitable smoke. He jsaid that it was damn funny how all last week and the week be fore it was nice spring weather and the creeks low, and then a couple of days prior to the season it just poured down. "Yes, sir,' he said, "it was damn funny. Got a match that'll strike?" Likely in an inner sanctum we had one or two, and we'd see. No, we hadn't met Bill and probably he'd taken the south fork. Ah, the magic of the title, the ineffable sweetness of it; it's on and on forever to the farthest ridges soft with rain. For may it be known that when la fisherman casts his line into the cold waters o the south fork, mto that green swirl under the cutbank where me big wies He, it is indeed the ultimate. When you get back to town, and they're busy semiring the creel and exclaiming as they do, why, you can stand to one side ItH not be HKiwinweM wr modesty tnat; prompts you to 4-1S-41 Seeking information concerning John and Sebastian Ritner, early Oregon pioneers: an answer: (Concluding from yesterday:) "Lewis Ritner spent an unevent ful youth on his father's farm, and was so thoroughly trained in the science of farming that he took charge of the , whole property at the age of 18 years. "This responsibility came to him because of the marriage of his brother and his removal to a farm of his own. S "In April, 1883, Mr. Ritner married Corinda, daughter of James Edelman, Mrs. Ritner be ing a native of Benton county, Oregon. The father was born in the state of Pennsylvania, and located on a farm in Benton county, where he died at the age of 62 years. "Mr. Ritner is farming 500 acres of his father's claim, and has large numbers of fine stock, including thoroughbred horses, red and roan Shires, Cotswold sheep, and dairy cattle. "An additional source of reve nue is a logging business in which he engages for a portion of each year. "He has also 16 acres under hops,: and considerable fruit. He is very successful, and is regard ed as one of the most scientific of practical farmers in the coun ty. S S "He is a Republican in poli tics, and with his wife is a mem ber of the Evangelical church of Pedee, in which he is a stew ard and active worker. "Mr. Rittner has the sterling and reliable traits of character which brought about his father's success, and which have brought him many stanch friends, as well as the esteem of the entire community. Unto Mr. and Mrs. Ritner have been born -three children: Ella, wife of Frank Sheythe; Annie and Martin P. Ritner, at home." S So ends the sketch in the book, "Portrait and Biographical Record." Its author made a mis take when he said Sebastian Ritner "in 1847 went to the mines of California. Though" members of the Bonney dan (of the families of Dr. Truman and Jairus Bonney) discovered gold In .two "places in 1845, near where the later famous discov ery was made, news did not' reach the outside world until the discovery in the Sutter mill race, on Jan. 24, 1848, by three men from or from near Salem, Oregon, CapL Charles Bennett, Stephen Staats j and James i W. Marshall : - In the meantime the members of the, Bonney clan , had in 184 come on to mad settled in Ore gon, where Woodburn city and the state training school for boy and Hubbard city now are, but they gave out no news of their, discovery and, on account of the death on Jan. 24, 1848. the entire European situation, and surfe-Iikf' could do it there in the bend, with the eddy swing- aeven-mchers, a ten-; and .111- inff slow at our feet and the rain 'slanting the hills. be-John, If BUI didn't aport one We could do it - that would beat aixteen inches! "Sufferm cats! said BUL and he nodded to la chorus we breathed, us in lieu of introduction. "Don't ever mention "Where did you catch them?" the Ward tiAin ta m inin T T. imtrnwl Hiii . !f .K heavy hand of, German protec- walked .twenty mfles.VNo, we jnight have said, voice. Tor, aeme time he dn tien," it is with a great deal f equanimity that though fwe didn't The coffee, becomin restless. ' answer and the eddr wtmr one learns of the gutting fire of the Berlin began to murmur in its own quiet way; and our with it foam and the wind car- of the physician, Dr. R. Gfldea, who knew what they had dis covered was. gold, no news of their discovery reached the out side world. The Jan. 24, 1848, discovery was soon flashed to the world or rather spread to the world as fast "as that slow going world could take it; before the cable or the radio or any other swift agency, compared with those named, was known. Sebastian Ritner perhaps joined the gold rush of the forty niners, which changed many things in every major section of the world. S "King's Valley" is not correct It is Kings Valley, according to the US postoffice department and all other authoritative sources. It was named for Na hum King, the first settler, who was an Oregon pioneer of 1845. The site of historic Fort Hoskins is near there, built, and, this writer believes, its exact site selected, by the then 2nd Lieut P. H. Sheridan, who be came General Sheridan, the world's greatest cavalry leader. -Kings Valley and the site of Fort Hoskins are in Benton county, Oregon. Pedee is in Polk county, near the mouth of Pedee creek where it enters the L&ckiaxnute river, about 20 miles southwest of Monmouth. Pedee owes its name to Colonel Cornelius Gilliam, who lost his life in the Cayuse war after the Whitman massa cre. He was bonk in North Caro lina; came to 6regon with the 1844 covered wagon immigra tion. Says McAjrthur's "Oregon Geographical Names," page 274: "Either fce Coljmel Gilliam) or members of his family named Pedee creek." He was born in North Carolina. jSays the McAr thur book: "The name, of course, is from the famous river of North and South Carolina which was doubtless frequently in the minds of the Gilliams. The stream in the South is officially Peedee, but thie postoffice in Oregon is spelled Pedee." The Safety Valve Letters from Statesman Readers or two. After ten years Pitfs -map of Europe do so, for these traits of many are not in the soul again was valid. The seeds of decay in Na- of the one who a true trout fisherman. But you poleon s empire grew in his conquered terri tories, in Spain and Portugal first; in Russia after the invasion and capture of Moscow; in Prussia under the leadership of vom Stein and ScharnhorsU And Napoleon came as something of a liberator, while Hitler invokes a primitive type of oppression which shall pro voke an earlier rebellion. The lesson then is that of the virtue, of tenacity tenacity and industry. Ample ma chinery of war in the hands ef trained men directed by ruthless but brainy leaders is the secret of German success. The only way Hitler will be overcome is not by quieUstic confidence in the "triumph of right" nor yet in the histori cal fact that most conquerors usually ride to a downfall, but in the cold reality of superior forcev driven as it must be by men with su perior fighting skill 'and courage. i deep in the in fer such is how Monuments Knowing that the Guildhall is a shattered and charred ruin, that much of Sir Christopher Wren's noblest work has been consumed in the second Great Fire, and having an awareness that monuments in all of England and Scotland uuiic an expression or utter boredom; and when they ask. "Oh, where'd you catch these beauties?" you'll look far away! far beyond the Jones across the street and their red brick chimney, and wave yaur hand vaguely to j the hills. You'll say, wnat will you say? YouTl say that you caught tuoa a we muui lorx. - It wasn't long till we were trioades of fly and bait fishina. u is wnen you meet on a stream. w riiw. at great length the merits of thej Royal Coachman and the Pmrmachene Belle for summer fishing, you -understand, and the rain came down. Frankly now .would you use a Gray Hackle Peacock? And always there was the constant drip drip drip of the spring rain in the undergrowth and the wind soughing ia the alders; and thejaaidday mm you couldnt see, swinging behind banks e nimbus cloud. We thought that maybe a fire said a spot of lunch would make the world brighter. We'd finally achieved the fire, with the coffee on to on and the smoke hugging over persons, when in walked BUL We'd been ea the verge of taking Hitler apart and Mussolini, and unraveling .State Opera house, and the damaging palaces and public buildings. t It will probably mean, of course, jof other retails To -the Editor: A local boy whose plans for continuing his education had failed, in his youthful disap pointment, turned to his mother with this thought provoking question, "Mother, why are we born?" So do we, grown and young people alike, in our failures and losses ask in our grief. "What is the purpose of life? Why are we born?" Somehow we are likely to think our reason for living is to attain happiness on this earth and when some bar rier confronts us, in our dis content we think of life with-all its sorrows and disappointments. If we must suffer so much, why then, are we born? We have only to look between the pages of the world's best seller to learn the answer to all of life's problems and the an swer. to life itself. Here one of the first things we -find is the striking over powering truth that we are "born to die. I am referring to the fact that we must die to self as related ia John 12: "Verily, ver ily, I say unto you, except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit He that loveth his life shall lose it and he that hateth his life in this world w" Let us pause here without com pleting the verse and return to it later. Well, that had not been our idea of achieving happiness. We are very explicit and har bor few uncertainties in our own minda as to what we want of life. We -have . numerous desires and some times indeed cur goals seem very worthy ones, an edu cation to fit us for what we call our rightful place ia the world is. only one of many, but some times young people must lay aside their books and help sup port the other members of the family. : Sometimes ill health seems an insurmountable obsta -da to gaining our chosen goals. Whatever our hopes when we are ' hindered, we find it -hard to meet - the difficulties & with ; patience and understanding. But -let- us ' consider', what Christ, the wisest man who ever walked among mem, had. to say about JUe, this one great truth us who have surrendered our lives have comei tion that after to the realiza- ill, this is the only true way happiness. We find that having met this con dition, a deep peace comes and beneath .life's turmoil, there is' a consciousness that to die for Him is truly of paramount im portance and the patience we never before possessed comes to us, for we have the assurance in our own lives of the promise, John 14:21: Jesus answered and said unto him, flf a man loves me, he will keep my words: and my Father will! love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him." And when we have come to know His gracious presence, then life assumes a significance and beauty never known before, and with the light of! Heaven shining: on our earthly way, our days on earth are glorified.. Born to die to self, and then at last (unless we remain when ' He shall come again),' bora to give up this mortal body in ' death. But is this all. Is mis in deed the purpose of life: v Now let us return to the vers left unfinished, "and he that hateth his lie in this world what then? "shall keep it unto life eternal.' Here at last Is the answerthe final conclusion. We are bom to die that we may live with Him who died and rose again with Him whose re surrection we commemorate this Easter time. And what a glorious meaning that life holds as we come to realize that this, then, is its ultimate purpose, that w , may dwell forever with the risen Lord, where there will be ' no disappointment, where there ia only baxmmesa far - hxA Chapter 42 Continued ' - ' ' Whatever s the i colour of our political creed our religious faith or any other, personal bias, we were as one; In according sanc tuary to an unhappy people. Von Wallefels. saw in this a Machia- .- velian opportunity. Germany would send us 'Jew ish refugees' but they would not . be Jews. ; In a training camp off the Baltic coast, men. were, taken " who by their physical . .appear ance and language might pass as Jews. There they were taught aU . thoM things which, as prac ticing Jews, they should know. They were the W Brigade hand, picked to come to this wantry to bring about great chaos on the outbreak of war." The chief of the imperial gen eral staff leaned forward and aaidd, "I gather that explosives were to be used for this pur pose?" At Sir Hector's nod, he continued "I haven't seen those documents of yours but I pre- sume that they would have gone for power sUttons, reservoirs, government offices, railway ter mini and so on' with the object of completoly disorganizing the country and breaking down its vital transport services? rExactly nodded McAllister. -Yes," nodded the CIGS. "I can see the objective clearly enough but not the . means of -reaching it V Sir Rector grinned. "That too, was really devilish clever," he said. "It's self-evident . that a German Jewish refugee is not going ' to gain' access to all the points of attack which had been marked out but that's Where the Fellowship Of the New Day came ; m: ' ' ' . ---- "Under the name- of -Igor Le vinsky and purporting to be -a Russian, a Colonel Weimar had founded; what announced itself as a communist society. The Fel-' lowship of the New Day was, in fact, a communist organization. With, the exception .of Weimer himself jam! a few men at the top, every member was a genu ine communist It was no use for von Wallenfels & Co. to attempt to enroll Englishmen in a nazi organization. As you know there are a few fascist-minded English people, just a. comparative few, but a communist movement was another matter. There are a number of political rebels in this country who might well be in duced to become members of such an organization, the nazis knew this just as well as we do. These members were all careful ly chosen for the jobs they held. Thus young Slatter who was murdered was doubly attractive to them them since he not only worked in a small arms factory an obvious point of attack, but was also a watchman at a big electric power station. He was a political hot-head of the type who might well be induced to sabotage the country's r e sources." "In other words," said the First Sea Lord, "the nazis were hoodwinking their political op ponents into working for them?" (Ed note: This was months be- . fore the- nazi-soviet pact of 1939.) "Precisely," said McAllister." "Have the Special Branch dealt with the people on those lists of yours?" asked the foreign secre tary. - fThey have," replied Sir Hec tor. "Every man of them." i v "But I understand," put in the secretary of state for war, "that a number of the W. Brigade had already been landed at Har wich?" r- t-:-. "And they've already been sent back from Harwich, ' the home secretary assured him. . "By the way, went on the man who,' had the war office, "what about that vast dump of explosives up in Caithness?". . ' mr a - ;i Beef did bis .best to denriva you of it, but we managed to save it in time, and . we thought we might make a present of it to the war department , place at which Sir John Meredith ' . was congratulated on his share in C L G. & to him, "what was the , name of that , fellow up at the m .. aM - ' "Well, there were a number there, sir," said Meredith. "Which one?" - . -roe -youngster from me east Surreys?": - V- v:-- tamran. ' mOhi ! yes. I must remember Ten minutes later Meredith ' and: Beef left No. 10 Downing Street and turned into Whitehall. "Rum business, ISir John, com mented Beef .as he hopped sev eral times -ea the same : foot (to get into I step : with I Meredith : "Rum! What ; you r might : csdl odd." ' ' ' - "Odd? echoed ' Meredith. -"That's not the 'word TM liiv X '- used. - i ' ' - "I mean i odd ' that tall I these ' chaps walking about herei dont '. know about - what happened to that Nazi brigade. Well, I guess it is best not to let such news - "pop out now. .. ; As they walked on up White- hall, Beef-aaked,," Sir Hec- tor get that sealed! package .that that bloke Kloffer left with his ouciiorsr - j "He did. It was delivered per sonally at Grosvenor Square by a Mr. Rain, the senior clerk of Messrs. Fairweather -Sons , of ungnion." . "And it was the- whole works,, was it. Sir John?" "The whole works. Beef." They looked up at that proud wiiiuiin wiiiut aiwra uie iter . man embassy. i "We might have saved our selves a lot of time and trouble. Beef,' and you a lot of pain I'm ' afraid, old chap," said Mere dith bitterly. ' "Dont look at it that way sir," said Beef. He thought a moment or so and then added, "I sup pose my poor nephew, Herbert, was murdered?" i "Not a doubt He must have found out .a ; bit more - than was healthy for him to know." i a iijce someDoay to nave swung for huh, so I would," said Beef vindictively. "Somebody will," observed Meredith. -And it will be Klof fer. Just wait and see." -" - ' i. "By the way," said Beef. "I suppose it was that there Cap tain Conran what slipped me "the key when those Nazis had me. "It was," nodded Meredith; "Our . Intelligence Service cer tainly worked the business of putting him under cover ex cellently. The whole of that faked bombing of the police car was capitally done Of course, alT the fellows had got out of the i car before they blew the wheel off it If it had not been for Conran, we should not have known of von Wallenfels plans . for his return to Germany and would not have been ' able to give them a spiritual kick in the pants with that destroyer es- avr4 (To be continued.) 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Later when we'd drunk the last hit af raffo silver witt ra5n. .t. i. t ,.4i.. ... t3 if:.:. - mna me 5ooaness of it still lingered, we sinyerly hand varuelr to fhm hm w a. mrM v u v. v ter-President-Colonel-General Geeringiwill tell Sllr.1 1" I !f ' -Z topotXMnt thing Jie luftwaffe bova in northern Franc and mrsA .wHTv7rr T -"w.ww: I r um mem on is to she to ones self. And here . . w c luajjiaycv a tvn 5 me seuu icn. ! - -i -: ig the wonder of it - r ir1" -'Tim' " -mrrfir-i- -ii - ii .mil i ii iii i i i i . ... . , " " ' " ,wl" Ha norantiao Oardan Orchid. e stcww -cBS spynAT art . , SAO Win Onrmr Jrmm B prtsss isde beaaty BeaUl the " Coast ausrea. ' - SOT-M X namphaat SJO Smarty Party. S AO-Dutch Uncles. - C : B Personal. 10 AO Piye Star final, w " if f.rthwet Round Table. "25-Manny Strand. Orchestra. U AS News. - -v;!. .JJ5WATm Kg. AS Mount Bood WovW. - ' S2w Ltoorty. . IOT-Abmb Corner. , T - : Radio. 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