numm is - . ! j . ' ' .:; :
1 T-
"No Favor Sways U$; No Fear Shall AwT
From First Statesman, March 23, 18S1
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY ;
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Uitor and Publisher
. f ' . " Jtfaabex o the Associated Press C
Tie Associated Press is exclusively entitled to tt raw far publication t all
news dispatches credited to it or not otnerwtse creartca m ms newspaper.
Fourth Inaugural 1
: When Franklin D. Roosevelt was first inaugu
rated, on March 4. 1933, the country was about
t the bottom of the economic depression.
Mercurv-ceU Batteries
The trouble with flashlights is that when you
want to use one you generally find its battery
dead. Houses served with electreity, amd xnost
Banks were closed on orcea no. .
: . . ....
try over people far removed from the excite
ment of Washington sat in sober mood to hear
by radio what the new president would say.
Roosevelt on that occasion struck a note of con
fidence "our only fear is fear itself ' and gave
a measure of reassurance to the country.
' Saturday, in vastly changed circumstances.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated for a
fourth term. Now the nation and the world are
locked in war. The flush of war prosperity con
trasts sharply with the starved economy of 12
years ago. The spectre of unemployment which
haunted the country for a decade has faded; and
the congress, instead of being called on to leg
islate to spread employment, is urged to 'enact
service legislation to augment the supply of war
plarjt workers. 1
This time the inauguration itself was a quiet
affair. No parades and marching bands, no
huge crowds, no climax of an inaugural ball, no
celebration to mark the return of the democratic
party to power. A simple ceremony; on the
White house porch; a short .address a small
crowd made up what is distinctly ah historic
tvent. , " ; V""( - '. ' I ; ' T-'-;.-;-
For us the scene is. foreshortened." Ten dec
ades hence it "may be seen in different perspec
tive. ; The people of that day will look back on
the event as we now do on Lincoln's second, in
augural. , One prediction seems safe and that is,
that the mistakes and the blunders' of the war
effort will diminish in significance as time
passes. What will grow will be a sense of the
difficulties and the achievements of this war.
And in the center of .it all, of course, will be
Franklin D. Roosevelt. jl
History4 does not deal very kindly with those
critics of George Washington during the revo
lutionary war, with the cabal J of generals who
tried to unseat him or with complaining mem
bers of the congress. History gives little favor
to Lincoln's critics, either, those who were dis
gusted with Lincoln's mismanagement of the
war, nor with the committee from congress
which served as a rent for dissatisfaction.
Washington and Lincoln stand out against the
background of hardship and difficulty, rising
high above their critics. With complete military
success Roosevelt too will loom as a great war
president. If to winning victory on the battle
field he can add success in statesmanship then
surely his place in history will be doubly sure.
Ahead lies the last test, the test , of world
statesmanship, with many dragons, visible and
Invisible, lying in wait. Negotiating peace with
victors and With vanquished, helping the peo
ples of earth to realize their dream of a sensible
world order, clearing the way back to economic
health these are tasks which call for all that
the man has of skill, of courage and df fore
sight. That "the president realizes this task is
dear from his own words Saturday the "su
preme test," he calls it. So his inaugural, like
that of 1 2 years ago, is really a challenge for
-the whole "country to meet its obligation, now
international as then it was national:
If we meet that test successfully and hon
orably we shall perform service of historic
importance which men and women and chil
dren will honor throughout all time.
The Statesman hopes sincerely that the pres
ident and the people will rise both to their re
sponsibilities and their opportunities and meet
this "supreme test" in the years immediately
head.
its failure is annoying. 1 Most every bouse Has
a batch of flasblights,dekd, ji closets, base
inents or attics, I which wOj belroundpd up and
renewed come next camping trip, j "
Those who have suffered frorn flashlight f ail"
ure -and who hasn't?-will be interested in
new mercury-cell battery Which is said to last
five times as long as the s andard type of bat
tery. It's a war development with great peace
time possibilities. So Important is the new
style of battery that njercury which dropped
from , around $190 a flask of 76 lbs to under
$100 has now bounced hack, to $165. That in
terests Oregon, which is a big producer of mer
cury from cinnebar mmes. i 1 I
Presently the new batteries aire used in pow
ering walkie-talkie sets as well as in flashlights,
After the war their use should be widespread,
too. ; SP -!? ;
i'''
i
Enabling Act
Some one at the state house is quoted as say
ing that there is nothing in the state constitution:
that, prohibits the taxing bf federal property;
The constitution is silent on the subject but one
of the conditions of statehood included in the
enabling act of Feb. 14 1859 and approved by
the Oregon legislature June 3 1859 specif ie"
"that the state shall never lax the lands or the
property of the. Uniteji States in said .state. - i
Incidentally, another 61 the provisions of the
enabling act was that jail salt springs within the
state, not exceeding twelve Jin number, with six
sections of land adjoining, Were, granted to the
state for such disposition' as the legislature
might direct. - What, jwe wonder, ever became
of the state's twelve salt springs? " I :
: - i- Vw '& k w
' -4- f , - - ', 1- " : -
t . .
frrrr m
1 ftp MM
pUIDEPOST
(Continued from page 1)
1 F "
nbtrfiwto4 hr Xiam Faatom AwmMimt
fcf MTmfitit with TW Wrtilmiua Bt
Actions Speak Loader
The Oregon Voter commends Senator Ma -honey's
bill to strike out the $40 limit from old
age assistance legislation.' As the Voter says if
a fixed limit is set, as proposed In some bills,
then there is not the flexibility in case of change ,
"in the federal law. ,Li 194J the writer recom
mended removing the limit, then $3d, but the
pension advocates insisted on putting in a $40
figure. ' Now they want this limit changed. The
figure is more or less a fiction anyway, be
cause welfare boards 'have allowed - higher
grants for medical or nursing care The real
limits are needs of the individual and money
. available. ; - J .. I
Riding across the continent in 'an army plane
was ' not . the only favor shown Mrs. Elliott :
Roosevelt's dog. Delivery was made in an army;
truck commanded by a major. f
Your Federal
Income Tax
It e. 15 (Centiawed)
laeesne to be Beperied
Alimony and separate main- -1
ten anew payments periodically
received by a wife subsequent
to decree of divorce . or of sep- ,
ante maintenance must be re
ported as income.
If you are paid in whole or In
part for, your services ! in any
thing other than money, the fair
market : value of whatever was
. received must be reported as in
come. This applies to. meals or
living quarters furnished an em
ployee as part of bis compensa
tion, with the exception of the
rental value of parsonages fur
nished to ministers of the gospel,
which is exempt by law. Where
employees are on duty only part
of the day and can, if they de
sire, obtain meals and lodging
elsewhere and yet perform the
duties required of them the value,
of food f and -lodging received .
from the employer . Is regarded '
as additional compensation. - ; I
If, however, meals & living
quarters ' are " furnished to em
ployees for ttie convenience of
-the employer, they are not part'
News Behind the; News
I . By PAUL MALLON ' ;
(Distrfbuuon by King Features Syndicate; Inc. Reproduction ta whole
or in part strictly prohibited.) i ".
- WASHINGTON, Jan . 21
Everything Is going to be a lot
different in Washington in this
fourth term. -You
can see
plain signs of
the character
and i scope . of
the change be
hind the action
of the house in
setting up this
new j committee
to. Investigate
un American
activities. ?
The skillful parliamentarian,.
Mr. Rankin, of Mississippi, who
navigated the authorization for
, tha committee through the ap
parently confused and uncertain
house, has made a speech indi
cating he expects this to be a
real investigation." His .voice
sounded to me a little hoarse, as
if he were expressing a wan
The infighting
r3
Panl MaIIa
(with aid from the nominal ad
of the compensation for services ! ministration leaders): and Ran-
for income tax purposes, and f kin's Isomewhat cowed group'
and this may - have .drawn m
enough self interested votes for ,
"victory. ' ' ) " f "' .; ;.
Smartly Mr. " Rankin framed
his proposition sd. the admlnis
tration leaders, 1 particularly
Speaker Rayburn (who has had .
some troubles from ; CIO in his
.district) could not make the.ap- ;
pointments The way he has- '
died it the appointing power was
put in the hands) of the demo-
era tic party leaders - as repre
sented on the ways and means
committee., j , S . . ,
The" investigating personnel
they finally came up with was
as surprising as the success of
Mr. Rankin's' original proposal.
It is the custom to name believ
ers in an Investigation to the di
rection of it, but! lor the first "
time in my 25 years' experience
here, this time four of the six '
democrats named, 1 including the
chairman, already had ' voted
' . - J Uslnsi. the Investigation. (Ran- :
between"' the kin could not take the chairman-
CIO boys plus the new dealers ' because he already has the
important veterans affairs com
mittee.) . i " r - . '
Most popular number at a recent program
presented for the entertainment of inmates at
the penitentiary was the. song "Don't Fence Me
In." -. I 1 -
Interprefihg
The War News
By KIRKE ll SIMPSON I
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAR ANALYST
The Hood River News remarks that a recent
picture of the. spouting horn a Depoe" Bay re
minds folk who live east of the Cascades that
It's been jlong time since they got to visit the
Oregon 3pat. Same goes for valley folk whose
A cards just won't stretch to distance driving.
But same goes also for soldiers in France and
the Philippines.
The Russian winter offensive dominates the war
news of the world this week end. I
Reaching from the Baltic to the Danube, it out
modes every previous operation of this or any other
war in size, power and speed. s -
- It hold uncalculable potentialities despite ofhY
cial Allied reluctance to ascribe to it yet possibili
ties for bring an early end to the war in Europe.
For that reason it overshadows even the impending
new Churchill-Ronsevelt-&ta1in mtlne nr th
amazing- spectacle of Japanese failure I for many i com to the extent of their fair
days to muster more than token resistance to Mac-
need not be treated as income.
In determining whether they are
provided for the- convenience of
the employer,-it is not sufficient,
merely, to show that an employ
er requires the emploee to eat
er reside on the premises: provid- .
ed, but it must appear that be
cause of the nature of .the work
it Is necessary lor-the employee
to eat; or reside there In order
properly ; to preform his duties
and that' the value of the food
and quarters are not considered
in determining the wages paid
for services. . ;:' ; i; ' .
A farmer who trades or ex
changes the produce of his farm
for goods or i services must re-'
port as income the fair; market
value of the stock at the date, of
receipt, regardless of its par val
ue, i-, --:v: i
So .also notes received in pay
ment for; services represent In-'
i The bill for a $100,000 governor's mansion
j has stirred many native Oregonians to take pen.
in hand and write letters to the editor objecting
to such extravagance. The figure seems a bit
; high, but not when you hear what prices seven
room houses 40 years, old are bringing on to
day's market!
With the republican legislature n Oregon
and the democratic legislature in Washington
ordering probes of the joint distillery deal truth
b going to have to do a lot of dodging to
escape detection. .
Alcoholism is a disease and alcoholics are sick
people, is, the current theory about an ancient
"evil. , The worst thing about it is that the dis
ease seems to be contagious, too. "
Editorial Comment "
NO TBIAL FOB HTTLEKT .4 j' :
Word that the allied commission on war "crimes
has decided against putting Hitler and : the top
flight Nazis on trial after this war is shecking, for
It indicates that the bigwigs are prepared, to make
a worse' mistake than they did when they failed to
hold the kaiser responsible for starting the' other
war. For Hitler and his like are a hundred times
more, deserving of capital punishment than Hohen
zollern was. . - , V:".' :; " '? --: '-
The plan seems to be to confine the big Nazis
somewhere, maybe on an island as Napoleon was,
without a trial, and presumably under, luxurious :
conditions, which wouldn't be much further pun
ishment after they have lost the war because they
would be safe at least And after Hitler's death
wt supposed his body would be sent back to Ger
many to be placed in a marble tomb for the adula
tion of all future Germans, as Napoleon's was tak
en to Paris and put in a tomb that is one of the
sights of the French capital today.
If this is the final word on Anglo-American pol
icy it is to be hoped that the Russians, vtith their
rough and ready ideas of Justice, get to Berlin first
and get hold of tiiuer and ins conorts urst. evi
dently we are too effete to deal with such men as t American plans for renewing the assault on the
Arthur's power-laden invasion of Luzon or to re
act effectively to Admiral Halsey's surface and air
sweeps of the south China sea. ' ' J
Even the formal recapitulation IJof the battle of
the Belgian bulge by General Eisenhower's head
quarters, disclosing that the Nazi gamble "has not
seriously affected our own plans and preparations
for future operations," took a secondary news rat
ing against the background of the Russian drive to
end -the war. ". -k,;.'- V-'-- ,: I . -:- j
VThether the Nazi high command had ? sought to
evade a total disaster in the east by a quick and
deep retreat in the face of the Red army onslaught
in Poland or been caught too extended to check the
Russian juggernaut was still uncertain. t
There was no doubt at the week endj however,
that every eastern gateway to Berlin from the up
per Oder valley to the Baltic coastal blains was
being menaced by the Russians, some of than like
the Breslau and Pozan passes, at5 ; perilously close
range. Day by day the victory guns of Moscow ;j
boomed ear-shattering salutes to new Red I army
successes.:'...1 -1 y:- ;-i -
Nazi evacuation of the Slovakian hump was re- ;
ported by Berlin as the Russians drove beyond cap
tured Krakow to sever its communicatioai life lines
and outflank the vital industrial heart of German
Silesia now in sound of Russian guns. t was al
ready outflanked from the. north by Russian cap
ture of Czestochowa. There seemed little prospect
that tiie surging Red armies on the southern wing
of the offensive could be brought to a stand short "
of the Vak and Oder if mere, j r ff 4 '
It seemed clear that in less thanfa wek the two
main Russian Vistula bridgehead drives; hid been
welded into a single massive salient reaching 'clears
across Poland. Northwest of recaptured Warsaw
other Red forces -were seven-league booting their
way down the Warsaw-Danzig railway and flank-
ing highways toward a trio of critical German com
munication hubs upon which contact between East
Prussia and the rest of the. reich depends. " I --
In the west, crushing losses inflicted on the Nazis
in the Belgian bulge battle' a revealed by Eisen
hower's headquarters went far to Justify; the belief
of his staff that the foe had been: stripped of the
means of renewing his counter-attack anywhere on
a major scale. . There was definite confirmation,,
too, of the assertion that while the German gamble
in Belgium had bought a little time at shockinx cost
In casualties, it had not materially delayed British-
market value when, received. If -a
note does not bear interest and '
Is not j marketable at a fair dis
count Value, there Isjno income
until payments are received on
It, but if a noninterest-bearing
note Is regarded as good for Its
face value at maturity, the fair
discounted value of the note at"
the time ; of receipt Should be
reported as Income. Then when -payments
are received on the
note a part of each payment rep
resents a part of the discounted
i has been softshoed but clever;
It started this Way.. i
" When . Rankin first astonished
his opposition by even daring
i to propose an investigation, the
. house leaders had it killed in
1 an unrecorded : vote the kind
in which only numbers on op4
posing sides are counted but not
the names. j
You would think that" un-
- American activities,, would ;.be
the first subject congress would
i want to investigate In war times!
- but the Dies investigation, large4
ly of the communists and their
activity within the CIO' and new
deaL ; had been so bitterly op
posed, that the Idea even oi a
new fair investigation seems to
have become repugnant to those
forces, fresh, from what" they
considered an election victory, j'
Rankin, however, forced a roll
call in which the names of those
' ' voting would be known to their
r constituent ts--and he won then!
An underlying, unstated reason
- was that' such an inquiry actuf
ally gives the house member a
hold on the radicals in down
' town departments who are In
, frequent . contest - with thern
value previously reported as
come. The balance is a recovery
of discount originally deducted .
and: hence it should be reported: .
as income when received.. .
"THE YOUNG IDEA" By Mossier
' - ... a '
they deserve. Baker Democrat-Herald,
Siegfried line to match Russian pressure ia the east.
TZave yea two seats In the last row of the second balcony behind
a pillar, if possible T"
If the hand of the White
. House" or the CIO; was discern
ible in the ways and means
committee choices, it was not
apparent to Rankin. He looks
on the selections as "compro-
mlses.- " j -!
: His reason for ; placing even
1 that, bright; a lightj on what ap
pears to be dull! prospects, is
; that with the three republicans,
, himself and one other democrat,
he may be able toj swing ma
ijority of 5 to 4 in favor of some
kind of Investigating, even
' against the wishes ! of the chair
man (a Hague henchman) and
the other democrats who simi
larly, come from districts sub
. Ject to tiie heavy CIO political
pressure. ' 'i - ; v ;,
The scope of whatever limited c
Inquiries are to be made may
be determined; in the end by the
- popular demand created by the
American Legion and other pa- u
, triotid organizations interested
In the subject In .his speech
Rankin" asked' that they; write
him any evidence they detect.
Unquestionably jthe weakness
' of the old Dies committee was
that it was not strictly legal or
meticulous about all its: facts.
On occasions, unquestionably it
went. beyond the point where It
could not be successfully re
futed. j -;:( -; : V -.
Particularly j it branded some"
public people with, the commu
nist .taiat ;on the ground that
. they were under communist in
fluence although they were pre-
, sumably unaware if the nature
of 'i. organizations' j which i they
joined. The Dies bublicity was
." always handled Inj an accusing
.rather than a factual way.
The need for a fair and fac
tual inquiry into tiie scope of all
un-American influence ln this
; country is plain,' In! vlew ol cur-
i U-ent war and 1 peace; conditions
apparent to all. The FBI only
: handles law violations. Congress
could furnish a great resistance
1 to subtle propaganda- and meth
ods. This need is likely to con
: tinue to exist for a long time.
ftlaybr , Commends
Kiwanis Activities
( Commending the!t community
service activities of Kiwanis Inter
national,: founded in Detroit 39
years ago this month, Mayor I
M. Dough ton has issued a proc
lamation setting ; aside the period
of January 21 to 27 as Kiwanis
anniversary week iA Salem. He
credited .Kiwanis" with helping to
provide much of the moral Stimu
lus for the world war effort,
f The Kiwanis club Of Salem will
observe the JOth . anniversary , of
Kiwanis International at a meet
ing to be held at noon Tuesday,
Jan. 23, at the Marion IIoteL
Teat community event," mused
the. a T. Reporter, fla facW one
"of my reerly. assignments t. a
small "town daily was to cover'
one. of these evangelistic cam-,
paigna. They always rated, gobs,
of publicity z J,
"TaIk '-. about cooperation I and
community effort your certainly;
had plenty of bothon those ocv
caslons, "fully as much as I see
now. on some of these patriotic
campaigns. They, had hist as
many committees and they .held
preliminary cottage prayer meet
ings all over . the town.: Then
tiiere was tiie-big union ehorusv
They always made a. lot out of
music at these meetings, Usually
the evangelist brought with him
hi own choir director. ; Sankey,
you , know, was Moody's song
leader. , Homer. , Rodeheaver you
still see .his name on a lot of .
church , music went along with
Sunday and - some of the other
big evangelists. If the - director
could, blow a trumpet or a slip
horn or if his wife could lead
an 'Orchestra, so much the better.
fYes, they counted a . lot j on
music to gettthe crowd in tune,
emotionally. After a half -hour
of j singing by- congregation and
choir, with perhaps i Nearer ;My
God to Thee on a slidf trom
bone, the evangelist would ap
pear and go to work. - ! (
. "And believe me.it was work.
Billy Sunday has his sermons
down in a little-black book, but
. that .Was Just for reference. .He
had a flow of words and a flow
of gymnastics too, and he poured
himself out both ways. You
could count on sermons on par
ticular topics as regular as could
be during the meetings. There
would be one on astronomy, with
figures ' about light years ' and
galactic systems - to prove the
glory of God and the insignifi
cance, of mortal man. Always
there was a stem-winder on liq
uor, and usually in those days
a healthy blast at dancing and
card-playing. : . '
. "Then there were special meet
ings a mass meeting for men
on. Sunday afternoon; or one for
women on . Monday afternoon.
Friday night might be high school
students night and . Wednesday
night lodge night no group of
size was overlooked.- s.
"As tiie meetings advanced the
pressure for conversions , would
grow. There ' was mere exhorta
tion to unbelievers to confess and
to sinners to repent There were
more appeals to hit the sawdust
trail - to the altar where local '
preachers and church 'Workers
greeted and registered the con
verts. - ".. ' ' .vy .-'i
"The last Sunday afternoon or
night always allowed time for
the freewill offering, which was
the evangelist's compensation. Of
course committees had previous
ly done a pretty good job of
canvassing, so the giving wasn't
all spontaneous. In the aggregate
the offerings j would run well
into five figures. That would
start a backfire of criticism over
the take of the evangelists, j
"There was always . an argu
ment about how permanent were
the conversions. The critics inT
sisted that the meetings were
just! an emotional orgy with very
few permanent recruits to the
church; but the defenders would
claim there was some net gain.
I suppose there are still a lot of
men who trace their conversion
to a Billy Sunday or a Gypsy
Smith meeting. I don't believe
tiie ! argument ever was settled;
but; somehow the union evange
listic meetings stopped. In fact
I dont recall any since the first
world war. Whether the preach
ers finally concluded the results
weren't commensurate with the
effort or whether the supply jof
great evangelists ran out I just
don't know.-. : -. ;rv ;. s
"I do know this, meditated
the j Old dime Reporter, "that,
come late January or early Feb
ruary, good oyster stew weather,
when there's snow on the ground
andja stiff wind blowing I think
of those Biederwolf meetings
back; in Fort Wayne. Maybe it's
Just j nostalgia, but you know! if
.Billy Sunday was preaching in
this town or Sam Jones or Gypsy
Smijth Pd go and hear him,
though I confess I havent dark
ened a church door for 20 years,
except for funerals and weddings.
"I guess styles have changed
wiTHW rm CIRCLET
.... iKlkut'ii K2.5SI.
Dill - i V
' Thi ibrotralt of the Arctic is ;
yn imprententious book. Its au-.
ithor stays so modestly out of the.
way ma i us iuuu u p
she herself has actually been in
: the northlands so famiuar vo ner
'.lorer t husband I YilhjalmuT.-.
? But ahe takes you there, with .
-.2vtext and photograph. You travel ?
alohg-the land Tint of;tiie Polar!
I- Mditerranean:' the '- present ; If
emphasized, but there are exdt-
ing glimpses into the distent past.
: and reasonable guesses at the fu- -
iiitV tt ISO oaieea of'informa-. "
vUon served up agreeably ,f or ;
: young and old both to enjoy, -
HOW TO READ BETTER AND
FASTER, y Nwrmaw Lewis
' (Thomas T. CroweD; SZM)
.' Here's a five-week assignment
for you, and though: I havent
" been able to spend the required
r time on it, it looks as though it
l, would perform alt it : promises.
x Most people's reading habits are -;
- slovenly; they: don't use. their
eyes efficiently, nor their brains. ;
This book is full of exercises and
tests. It takes time, , but it ought .
' to save time. Recommended es
pecially for book reviewers. . . ;
A tANOOAOI comi
ASHORE," by JoanKa Carrer Cel
' - eord (CwraeO MaxlUma Praia
.- szjcs).
- It is surprising, as you wfU dis
cover in this book, how many
i words "and phrases the landlub
1 ber owes to the sea; railroad men,
' flyers, motorists, baseball play
i ers, even newspapermen have
' picked up some of their vocab
r ulary from the sailor.v '
This is really a glossary, but
; Miss Colcord so smartly turns .
i nauticisms " Into witticisms i that
; most people wfll not be able to
1 wait until they need it for ref ef-
' ence but will sit down and read itl
tr at once from clew to earing. The
author comes frome 'f ive gehera-
' tlons of seafarers and was born
at sea. Sailors, she says, are Nice
, Nellies when women 'are about,
but she managed 'to . overhear
! enough so that this work is far
from prudish. - '
Practical
Rolision
1 by &av. John U atxUght, 1rm .
,oumier on Heugiois Lola,
Willatngtte jirwmty
Someone has very aptly said,
. r . i - .
uraj maa woo grows oux
I grows.,,.Here wb have the'basie?
-' tirinciole that 'life la a mmrwaa I
, of growth, and that he who fails
to grow physically, morally. In--t
teRectually, and spiritually, is
- failing ; to make his adjustment
to life.' We, need to outgrow old
j Ideas,.' old" prejudices,- and old
philosophies just as much as for
healthy development we need to
outgrow old clothes. The person
. who falls to cast aside the gar-:
: on the garments of maturity has
ceased growing. And where there
Is no growth, there is no life.
,v Saint i Paul expressed this pro-
cess, of growth In the spiritual
realm as he said. "Wtim T
child I thought as a child, I spoke
ait a child, I understood as a child,
but "When I became a man I put
away childish . things. His sue- -cess
in the spiritual life was due
to the fact that h Vnt trmnof
O w ww aaa
Rare Goose Wintering
In Bend's Alirror Pond
BEND, Jan-. 20-P)-Discovery
w oiuSjc ua kuus among nu
. t i . . . . - .
siant uixus wintering at -Mirror
pond here reported by H. H.
Sheldon, naturalist and photographer.;'-
',:
The rare specimen, whose nest
ing habitat Is known to be in the
Alaskan Interior, was named for
oernara fc. Koss, British natural
ist and pioneer of the Hudson Bay
company operations. K Only two
pther specimens : have officially
been reported in Oregon area.
lv :.: . -.f ..: ..... " .
Anw ' TTi - AljtMi AL f -
vuuca vuurcna seeni
to have left the sinner-trade to
the sects. rtn afraid even the
-preacher would faint in one of
the older denominations if a man
, called out Lord, save me from
- my sins.". ; H .
"What's that? What's that
youre saying? Wheres that In
terview with the congressman?'
Oh, yes 'Coming right up.
"I guess .rm getting old, wool
gatherine over ih r
" ww t'UiJta J ill,
way, did I ever tell you about
those summer camp-meetings in
Foster's Grove?
STEVEIB
Bracelets - 1",
lrrmgs -
."! . - Rings- - .
, cup. ;
DiAi.:o:n)s . : '
WATCB23 -,
irWELRY
Stevens & Son has an
outstanding selection of
-. chic Costume Jewelry . .
. youll find many; many
pieces to add a sparkling
. touch to your costume
' , for daytime and evening
wear. -
)4
Credit If Desired
Diamonds
Re-set
WhQe Tea
. TTait
Etere
noon:
f:30. A. M.
to C P. M.
? Not Open
Saturday -