0 if- Fisher Given Several Gifts Going-away gifts that "came ut of the hearts of the employ ees' were presented Thursday to Earl Fisher, State Tax Commis lioner who Is leaving June 4. Moody Benner, presenting the table lighter set. billfold with dime for good luck in it, and two pieces of cowhide luggage, aid the gifts came "out of the hearts of the employees," who nave found Fisher always cour teous, considerate and efficient. He added that funds for the gifts had come unsolicited from commission employes in both Portland and Salem. Fisher, visibly moved, smil ed: "I didn't know you were to glad to get rid of me." Then seriously he told the employes: "I wish you all success and hap piness." On the committee in charge of arrangements were E. D. Lindburg, chairman; E. B. Dag get, Violet Mooney and Muriel Eshlemao. Over the vigorous objections of Gov. Douglas McKay, the other two members of the state Board of Control, State Treas urer Walter J. Pearson and Sec retary of State Earl T. Newbry, voted not to renew Fisher's term, expiring June 4, and to replace him with Ray Smith. Portland republican. The switch was widely criticised through out the state, as was the appoint ment of Robert MacLean, Wald port democrat, to succeed Wal lace S. Wharton as tax commissioner. Tired Railroad Is all Through iminlly hauls a few nostalgic passengers who can relate the bonanza road's once glamorous past. Warninas Sounded on Reoo. May 27 HIP) More than 350 nostalgic railroad fans will lca n( HfCOn Frtrtfl gather this weekend to attend U3C Ul VACQll I UUU "final rites" for the tired old I , . . , , , . . Virginia and Truckee Railroad. Coastal rcs.dent, and beach vacationists are being warned ine w-miie line, pan ana , by Dr Harold M . Erickson .state parcel or tne days or Nevada Sjh,alth o(ficor- not to fat mus. np-snorting mining boom days. and uncieanei ciams which is in its 84th year of operation. at (ni, time of 1h? v(,ar mav It has petitioned the inter-(Contain a stong alkaloid poison slate commerce commission andjsimilar to strychnine, the Nevada public service com- He urges persons consuming Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Friday, May 27, 1949 IS mission for permission to store its two remaining rickety loco motives and tear up its tracks. Officials of the historic line. clams dug on Oregon or Wash ington beaches to make sure the clams are cleaned before eating. I with the black portion, or di- which hauled more than $600.-,gestive tract, being completelv 000.000 worth of gold and ail-1 removed. The portions removed, ver from the Comstock Lode at he slates, should be completely Virginia City, claim the rail-jdestroyed because they can be road has been losing money; fatal to chickens or pets, steadily for the past several; Fatal illness may result from Newport Plans Monday Event Newport, May 28 Nine vet erans organizations are joining1 forces here Memorial day to honor those who died in far with iemphasis placed upon a flower boat ceremony. The' 12-foot craft will carry on its decked flower wreaths for those who lost their lives at sea and will be launched from the coast guard dock at three o'clock. The flower - bedecked vessel will be guided into the channel stream by a coast guard vessel and from there will be allowed to drift with the tide outside the harbor, across the bar and thus to the open sea. Memorial services will b held by the American Legion at the Eureka cemetery at 10 o'clock. $$ MONEY $$ FHA 4'j Real Estate Loans Farm or City Personal and Auto Loans. State Finance Co. 153 S. High St. Mr. S1 3-StZJ eating mussels or the digestive glands in which the poison is harbored, Dr. Erickson points State Tax Employes Honor Commissioner Earl L. Fisher Eall L. Fisher, veteran state tax commissioner whose reap pointment was rejected by two members of the board of con trol, was presented with these bags and other gifts by Moody Brenner in behalf of his employes at a presentation ceremony held Thursday morning. fall in the performance of its duly, sit where it may though it were a desert." years. The line has sold most of its historic engines and coaches to Hollywood movie companies. It:out. The poison is a tiny organ manages to operate a singleism occasionally washed in by train dailv making a round triDithe ocean at this time of vear even.between Reno and Minden and'and eaten by the clams. moment Senate Soon to Move Into Old Hall Replete With Memories By HARMAN W. NICHOLS united Pr.M Sufi Corrponaeni ' Washington !M! Tuesday, Jan. 4, 1859, was a bitter cold day in Washington. The wood in the fireplaces of the old crackled and the 62 senators- Akutan Volcano Belches Lava Washington, May 27 U.W The U.S. geological i u r v e y an nounced today that Akutan vol cano, a 4,200-foot cone in the Aleutian islands, has been act ing up again after two years of quiet. The volcano, 27 miles north east of Dutch Harbor and eight miles west of the village of Aku tan, dropped one-eighth of an inch of ash on Akutan during the night of April 29. Quoting Akutan Postmaster Hugh McGlashan, the geological survey added that both ash and sleet fell on the village the fol lowing day, and that the erup tion continued full-scale until May 10, when it decreased in in tensity. On May 17, the postmaster re ported, villagers approached the volcano and found that lava was flowing down the northwest slope. Considerable steam was generated when the hot flow en countered the snow. Straus and Boke Kept Off Payroll Washington, May 27 (Ft Cali fornia's senators joined today in a new effort to keep Reclama tion Commissioner Michael W. Straus and his California region al director, Richard L. Boke off the federal payroll after July 1 The amendment would require that no money be paid to the reclamation commissioner, as ' sistant commissioners and re gional directors until they have been appointed by the Presl dent and confirmed by the senate. Straus and Boke have been unpaid since January 31 under a limitation on the interior de partment appropriation bill for the current fiscal year. It re- quires that no money be paid to men in their positions unless they are engneers of at least five years experience. Neither Boke nor Straus is an engineer. all there were in those days rubbed the numbness out of their hands. The honorable John Cabell Breckinridge, the vice-president of the United States, removed the glove from his gavel hand and demanded order. This, he announced solemnly, was to be the last day the senate would hold sessions at the old stand. That noble body was about to move to new quarters, equipped with brass spittoons, fancy snuff boxes and plush surroundings. The senate is getting ready to move again back to the old place. The roof is about to crash on the "dignified heads be low. Workmen will jack up the roof supports and do the kind of a re-make job they are plan ning on the White House. This isn't the first time that the senate has moved back into the old room which once echoed to the golden oratory of Clay and Webster and Calhoun.- It's gone back several times before for similar reasons repairs to the present quarters. The old chamber, to the left of the capitol rolunda, probably is Washington's most useful spare room. After the 35th senate moved out, the supreme court moved in and stayed for 75 years; until the tribunal moved across the street to its magnificient. white marble home in 1935. It has been a museum since. On that January day in 1859, the senators interrupted business long enough to pay respect to a friend the old room. Sen. John J. Crittenden of Kentucky arose to say that the 35th congress could spare a mo ment, surely, so he could in dulge "in a few words of part ing from this chamber." The gentleman from the blue There was silence. Then Vice-president Breckin ridge spoke up: "Let us devoutly trust that an other senate, in another age, shall bear to a new and larger chamber, this constitution vigor ' ous and inviolate, and that the 1 last general of posteritv shall gas-lit senate chamber i witness the deliberations of the representatives of American states still united, prosperous and free. . . . The body will now i proceed to the new chamber." Those were the last words uttered in the old room by the 35th senate. Soon, the ghosts of the great of bygone years will have com pany again. The senate is going back. But only for awhile. grass pulled out all the stops. "Mr. president," he said, "we cannot quit this chamber with out some feeling of sacred sad ness . . . here questions of Ameri can constitutions and laws have been debated; questions of peace and war have been debated: questions of empires . . . they give a sort of consecrated char acter to this hall. No matter un der what sky we may sit; no matter what dome may cover Although transparency is us; me great patriotic spirit oti distinguishing characteristic of the senate of the United States fine American hand-made glass will be there and I have an abid- ware, it is made almost en lng confidence that it will never tirelv from opaque materials. Half Price Shrub Sale EVERY SHRUB IN SALISYARD AND AT HALF PRICE SATURDAY ONLY We close town salesyard for summer Saturday evening Knight Pearcy Nursery South Liberty 1 Blocks South of State II V V TL . f 'S I HR piECE SET f I 0-r,fc -r regularly $26.75 SPECIM. 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