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About Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1937)
VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON J ames Lace Spread That Reflects Good Taste kilduef or Bouts hill , austaal ’ a . NeVttt HINT SWIMMING UNTIL He WAS SV VÍAOS OLD, AND 7Ht fust time in rue mat to He swam Five Mets When you dress up your bed for company, you seek distinction— the purpose of this lacy spread. A true reflection of your own Seeking Contentment. good taste is this stunning open- ANTA MONICA, CALIF.— work design, one easily achieved Out in the desert country by crocheting simple, single me I met kindly, hospitable folk dallions of string. A stunning about / S bravely making the best of things on remote, smal’ homesteads. On little far-away ranches, on res ervation trading posts, they are edu cating their children by resolute self-sac rifice; keeping in touch with the world through radio, through books and •t tit Him- Or WILMCIUOOAr. UAMATN. magazines and HAS UUID AT LEAST newspapers; and al A FULL TÍAR IN H3 DIFFtetHT COUNTKKS most invariably con tent with their lives and proud of their Mrs. Henrie, born in Alsace 82 years ago, _ . was the _ _______ struggles and living wife of ________ the late comfortably — yes. Johans Henrie, a munitions execntive. She traveled with him 30 years and happily—within while he was attempting to establish contacts throughout the world. After Irvin S. Cobb their means, how his death she went on traveling, just for fun. ever meager. Mr. Kilduff had to swim that five miles because the motorboat he occupied alone sank suddenly, far from shore. Then I come back to crowded cities where wealth seems only to make the inmates dissatisfied be AAAAÀAAÀAÂÀÀAAAAÀAAAUAÀ | receive a salary of $25,000 a year cause somebody with greater wealth as educational counsellor of the Na puts on a guadier show of ostenta tional Broadcasting company. tion and extravagance. And I see L. R. Lohr, president of the NBC, the man who feverishly is striving says it will be full time work, add after riches so that when he breaks ing that "broadcasting has a man down he may afford the most ex date to operate in the public in pensive nerve specialist. And the terest, convenience and necessity.” spoiled woman who was born with By Lemuel F. Parton All this will presumably be in Dr. a silver spoon in her mouth, but Angell’s department. judging by her expression the spoon It would be difficult to think of Dr. must have been full of castor oil— Loopholes for Statesmen. Angell as a mere emeritus. He ■^JEW YORK. — Statesmen fre- said he was retiring at sixty-eight and the flavor lasts. And the poor little rich children who have every ’ quently may be found on this "because of obvious and offensive thing now and so will have nothing or that side of the loophole. In senility,” at the same time demon —except maybe dollars—when they June, 1933, Guy T. Helvering, now strating the contrary by some lusty grow up. unrolling the government’s roster swings at the New Deal. He will Curious, isn’t it, that so little buys of alleged tax-dodgers, was the sub need no time out for road work be such a lot for some people and such ject of a bitter senatorial debate. fore taking on the radio engage a lot buys so little for the others? Certain senators fought his conflr- ment When he retired as dean of • • « mation as commissioner of internal the University of Chicago in 1921, Making Mental Slips. revenue. the Carnegie foundation snapped HE most incredible thing has They charged that, as an income him up at a fat salary, but, before come to pass. Here I go along, tax lawyer, he had procured a re he got his chair warm, Yale was year after year, building up a rep duction in the tax bill of the Slim after him. He is always in utation for invariably being right, Jim Oil & Gas company from $1,- mand. the same as George Bernard Shaw 211,000 to $451,000. However, he was Baccalaureate orators used to see and Mme. Secretary Perkins. Then confirmed, and, discharging his offi —bango!—I make one little slip and cial duties, puts the finger on the “the orb of Rome sinking in a sea the trusting reader is shocked from “wealthy evaders” for the congres of blood” and warn us that we were pit to dome. getting that way, too. Now we are sional investigation committee. The other day I suggested taxing Prof. Roswell Foster Magill, au heading “down the same abyss salaries of governmental em thor of the tax-avoidance report, which has engulfed Europe,” which ployees. Now from all sides I’m was Dr. Angell’s phrase in his fare wrote books giving pointers on le well address at Yale. That is, un told federal employees are subject gal loopholes, before he went to less we do something to check the to income taxes; only the vast ma Washington. No moral turpitude has slide. jority of them, and probably the been charged. It just means that He has struck out vigorously hardest-worked ones, draw such Dizzy Dean may be pitching for against the Supreme court reorgani small wages that they owe Uncle Washington next year instead of St. zation, sit-down strikes and insidi Sam nothing when March 15 rolls Louis. ous collectivism as he sees it ex around. Commissioner Helvering is a emplified, in the present adminis So far as I recall, this is the sec shrewd, portly, ruddy, white-haired tration. He is a conservative, and ond time in my life I’ve been wrong. Kansas politician who wears good "middle-of-the-roader” is an apt I can't cite what the other instance clothes, carries a shiny malacca term only in denoting his adherence was—some very trifling matter, no cane, smokes good cigars, knows to traditional cultural and govern doubt—but it must have occurred his way around and says little. He mental patterns. He was a profes because I remember the nation-wide was in congress from 1913 to 1919, sor of psychology for 26 years be excitement which ensued, with peo a tax income lawyer thereafter, ac fore becoming president of Yale, his ple going around in a daze mutter cording to the somewhat heated and father having been president of the ing: "Can it be possible?” I now admit that early error and vehement charges of Senators Has University of Michigan for 38 years the recent one, too, and humbly beg tings, Couzens and others. —until 1909. He has been a close friend of His notable achievements at Yale pardon of my devoted public—all Postmaster General Farley for have been administrative. He ef eight of them. It'll never happen many years and it was understood fected sweeping reorganizations and again. that he was the President's per during his incumbency endowments Conquered Champions. sonal choice for the internal reve rose from $30.000,000 to $100.000,000. nue post. The value of university properties T HAS been brought to the atten tion of Mr. James J. Braddock He has been active in Kansas pol scored a parallel rise. He was the itics for many years, a former su first president of Yale who was not that something happened to him a while back. Probably, by now. he perintendent of public construction a Yale graduate. under Governor Woodring, and Mr. Lohr says, "In joining us he has quit wondering whether many campaign manager and chairman is only changing his base of educa others were caught In the earth of the Democratic state committee. tional endeavor from New Haven quake, but is reported to be still He was bom in Felicity, Ohio, in to New York, from a university to | saying "Ouchl” at intervals. And now, as is customary, his 1878. His family removed to Kansas the air.” Erasmus never got a when he was eight years old. He break like that. Nor even Nicholas backers will insist he demand a re studied law at the University of Murray Butler. It will be interest-' turn engagement—or disaster—with Michigan, and was county attorney ing to see how the radio fans take the Brown Bomber. But it I were Mr. Braddock—game though he be of Marshall county, Kan., before he to the new curriculum. -I think I’d pattern my reply on © Consolidated News Features. went to congress. He is one of the WNU Service. the example of the gentleman who hardest men in Washington to see was knocked galley-west by a hit- and correspondents have mainly let "Million Fish” and-run motorist it go at that. One of the hardiest and most pop As the dazed pedestrian was try ular of toy fishes is the puppy, a na ing feebly to ascertain whether he Middle-of-the-Koadcr. tive of the waters of Trinidad. Bar was all in one piece, a kind-hearted R. JAMES ROWLAND AN bados and Venezuela. It is some citizen hurried up. GELL, retiring president of times called the "million fish" be "Have an accident?” he inquired, Tale, is an aggressive middle-of- cause it multiplies so rapidly. It is brightly. the-roader, which seems not such a also known as the “rainbow fish" "No, thank you," said the victim; bad idea, considering the plight of because of the bright prismatic col "just had one." IRVIN S. COBB. extremists, right and left. He will ors of the inch-long male. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT PHOTOGRAPHY THg LEADING FNGUSM AurMOJtfTf OH AMTS IS BtRTRAf.'l ANT OF BIRMINGHAM, ANO Ht WAS SOON WITH THAT NAME / ROLLS DEVELOPED 8 prints 2 double weight enlargement«, or your choice of 16 prints without enlargement« 26c coin. Reprint« 8c as. NORTHWEST PHOTO SERVICE Fargo North Oateeta sth WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK... iwwwmwwwwHww T I • • • Sentinels of Health Don’t Neglect Them I Nature designed the kidneys to do ■ marvelous job. Their task is to keep the flowing blood stream free of an excess of toxic impurities. 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