FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1936 VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA. OREGON Keeping Watch on Rhine What Other Editors • . . Think • • • • KILLING THE GOLDEN GOOSE Enthusiasm is running high throughout Columbia County be­ cause of new industry and in­ creased payrolls. There are pros­ pects of better times locally than citizens and merchants have seen for many years. A note of op­ timism is in the air and every­ one is imbued with the hope of making money, of recouping the losses of leaner years just pas­ sed. Yet in such matters, while ad­ justing to the changing order of things, it is best to move delib­ erately. Rentals in Rainier and else­ where in Columbia county have been going steadily upward. Of course some increase was indi­ cated, being due because of gen­ eral wage boosts and a rent scale previously set so low it scarcely paid taxes and ignored completely the matter of prop­ erty maintenance. Yet in a great many instances rentals have been stepped up so severely thaa it would appear the landlords ex­ pect to recaver several year’s losses in a few months. The Review doubts if many of these increases are justified at this time, being cognizant of the fact that few wage earners have as yet seen a corresponding in­ crease in pay checks. Some bus­ inesses, too, may be returning good dividends, but the majority are not yet “out of the woods’’ —nor will they be for some time. Already there is talk among several of our citizens indicat­ ing their intention of moving back across the river. Those who work on the Washington shore certainly have something to sup? port their complaint, if it is true, that they can rent better houses more cheaply in Longview than here. Most newspapers enjoy a de­ gree of friendly confidence de­ nied other businesses and for this reason have an insight into public thought. We have heard enough during the past month or so to convince us that the golden goose is objecting most vigorously to the kind of treatment being ac- corled it here. Rainier Review A few years after the Fraitee- I | | German war, which gave Alsace- Lorraine to Germany as an impe­ rial territory, a large national mon­ ument was set up on the hills op­ posite Bingen, representing the figure of Germania, keeping watch on the Rhine. It is thirty-four feet high and bears aloft the imperial crown and the laurel - wreathed sword. On the base are portraits of Emperor Wilhelm I and other German princes and generals and representations of troops from various states of the empire, to­ gether with the words of the na­ tional song "Die Wacht am Rhein.” Poisonous Snakes Rattlesnake is not necessarily a “gentleman snake” which rattles its tail before every strike. A cot­ ton-mouth water moccasin can and does bite under water. The cop­ perhead is the most common poi­ sonous snake in some sections, says a writer in the St. Louis Post­ Dispatch, and in the dead grass and dried up leaves which it in­ fests is one of the hardest to de­ tect Born of Whig Reforms London University traces back to the Whig reforms of the early eighteen hundreds. It began with a proposal made in 1825 for the establishment of a university to educate the sons of the "middling rich" who could pay up to $500 a year, including the cost of keep­ ing their sons at home, but could not afford the $1,250 a year which it cost to send them away to Ox­ ford or Cambridge. ACT TWO Dunn’s house burned out, ’Twas fun, no doubt; Now Dizzy Dunn Looks awfully glum. ACT THREE Be sure your insurance protection is complete. ACT FOUR See us—today! ROBERTS and HIERER •* 11. Benson Closes 32 Year Old Logging Camp (Clatskanie Chief) The last train of logs was tak- en out of Benson Camp in the Firwood locality on Tuesday of this week. The track is already being taken up in the woods and it is probable that in the next 9o days the main line will be taken up either by contract or by employees of the company. The camp opened here in 1904, the first load of logs was brought out in February of that year. Op­ erations were carried on in that camp for 32 years and five months. One hundred and five rafts have been sent south and the 106th raft will leave here Sat- urday morning for San Diego. Raft 107 is about half completed. Of the men who started to work at the camp at the time of its opening Arvid Johnson is the only one still in its employment. Henry West, who passed away several years ago also came with tha company as did Mr. Johnson from Washington where they had previously operated. Monday. These logs are being One Real Battle picked up along the tracks where There is only one real battle go­ they have been lost. ing on everywhere.' It has been in progress through all the ages— New Camp Opened the continuous battle between right The new camp one and a half and wrong. In every cause for miles from Mist is in operation which men fight, in the struggles and the first logs were brought of every human soul, still the same down and dumped in the- Clat­ two forces are arrayed against J skanie river at the site of the old each other. cannery Tuesday. Camphor Found In Tree The logs are taken out of the Sometimes camphor is found woods by truck. Four trucks are tributed through the grain of the being used and at the present tree in small white sugar - like time about 60,000 feet of timber crystals, when the method of col-1 is being put in the river daily. lection is to fell the tree, split the At the present time it is unde­ wood up into splinters and scrape! cided by the company’s officials off the crystals; at other times the' whether logs will be sold in camphor occurs occupying a single' cell like a kidney, about the size flat rafts or if they will contin­ of a man’s forearm. ue to make the cigar rafts. Wm. Kidney is in charge at Seventeenth Century Bird ' the new camp site ,. and about 60 Dutch settlers In the Seventeenth! men are now w°rklnS' century used to call the dodo the! “walgvoegel” (the nauseating EQUIPPED bird) because no amount of cook­ ing could make it palatable. But x— r not even Its utter uselessness could i save it from extinction. From bones found in different parts of Mauritius a complete skeleton, stands in the museum at Port. Louis. 5 A K SyT« 'fl^g / =r Bees Aid Clover When the Australians first Henry Larsen has a picture of planted clover it grew well in Au­ “Maude is received everywhere j stralia's fertile soil from seed the first load of logs and is mak­ as a belle.” ing plans to get a picture of the brought from England but pro­ “I can believe she is—she has a I duced no seed in the new country. last load which will come out tongue, I know.” They couldn't understand it until they imported bumblebees, pollen carriers from plant to plant. Na­ ture’s cycle was perfected and seed came. [i] I □ Passengers in the smoking L compartment on my train Wy were arguing about why r|7 railroad business is pick­ le ing up. * • A factory owner said it was because of Free pick-up- and-delivery of less than car­ load freight. The railroad calls for the LCL freight at ship­ per’s door and delivers it to consignee’s door. • A traveling salesman said it was because so many passen­ ger and freight trains now run on faster schedules. The Blindfish The blindfish (Amblyopsis spe- laeus) is related tc the mud min­ now and killifish and is found in underground streams in Mammoth Cave and other caves in Kentucky and Indiana. It is from two to five inches long, entirely white, and has no trace of external eyes. • There was a school prin­ cipal in the group and he said it was because train travel is so much cheaper for passengers. He said passenger fares are at the lowest point in history, with substantial reductions if you buy a round-trip ticket —and no more sur­ charge for riding in sleep­ ing cars. ACT ONE “Fires are fun,” Says Dizzy Dunn. “Insurance,” he asserts, “Is all the nerts.” Birds Fly at Birth Mound builder birds which are of a family of birds inhabiting Australia and some of the South Sea islands are hatched fully leathered and are able to fly and live an independent life from the ament they emerge from the PAGE SEVEN A GRANAT ENSEMBLE . . . diamond engagement ring and wedding ring in a design of rare beauty, and exclusively shown at this store. The Pair for $75.00 —or eithei ring can be pure hared icparately Other Granat ensembles at other prices You are invited to see the full selection. A. L. Kullander One man. a farmer, said he liked something he could de­ pend on, that’s why he was traveling by train. • Another man, a newspaper re­ porter, said people were in favor of railroad travel be­ cause it is by far the safest. He quoted a lot of statistics from a book called,“ Live and Let Live.” • EPORTER-PHOTOGRAPHERS, hundreds of them, constantly scour the for "shots" that will more real . . . more interesting ... more understandable. The single, business-like click of a camera and a thousand­ word story is captured, all in an instant, to be presented in a manner more graphic than the words themselves could ever attain. The scenes these men photograph number into the thousands daily. From this great number a careful selection is made. The chosen pictures, designed to aid you in the visualization of im­ portant news events or "human-interest" occurrences and individuals, are regularly offered by this newspaper. This is our answer to a modem public1« demand upon a modern newspaper for pictures of places, persons and incidents of world-wide interest. R • make a news highlight world REVIEW OF WORLD EVENTS—IN PICTURES APPEARING REGULARLY IN THIS PAPER A banker we all know by name said railroad tax pay- mentsmeana lotin thisstate. • Weareproudofrailroadachieve- ments, appreciate the public’s good will and increased patron­ age, and pledge continued prog­ ress. J i RAILROADS I and THE PULLMAN COMPANY i I I