THE SCHOOL—EARTH’S NOBLEST MONUMENT PORTLAND SCHOOL DAUS FOR YOUR PRODUCE Portland. Oregon VAUDEVILLE PHOTO PLAY» Completo Chari«« Saturday. Adulto. Matin-e, Fie: Evening». 33a Omtlnuvu* 1 to 11 p. tn. Children HIPPODROM 1 I ACKERMAN AMARftie TT C A Will BMU* BII ml . liu.i nimto, m . Waler- Xi. U U o /X proof, Itotpriud, lutproof »nd Fireproof — — — . - _ Molila« Watai proofed White Portland Cement la WHtOrDrOOICd ,h" b*,t ,o‘ MU»"* Plaaiar on out*M» for Bungj^ vv MWA JfA A ¡ow<__ | ,orH not atulti and dii t i.m be tioeed off. W rito tur literature Sold by A. M< MILLAN A CO., M0-I8U Eaet Ankeny Htreet. Corner Second, Portland.___ HEMSTITCHING ANO PLEATING. Huttonbdllng — Hutton» — 1'laltlrqr — Tuikin* und Chalnatitching All Mall Order» given careful »nd prompt attention ELITE SHOP, 1281 Tenth near Waahington. BAB S RESTAURANT PORTLAND HIDE & WOOL CO■ IOS UHM» rt*tlA»*, OUMI Writ, fur I'ricee and Skipping Tag» ___ Copyright F«2. International Feature Servie«. Coi rtM y of Hearst Sunday Papera. “““ “This giant building represents the PUBLIC SCHOOLS of the United State*. This is the ONE thing that is important in fl is nation. In comparison with it NOTHING ELSE has impor­ tance. ' “The Capitol, where Congressmen sit, the great monument in memory of Washington, the mountain ranges, the WHOLE NATION is subordinate to this noblest of all earth’s monuments 1 HE PUBLIC SCHOOL. “Wliat the nation is. what its laws are to be, its future use­ fulness in the world, ALL depend on the school in which the children are taugh . HIDES* llJ.'lii^bbt, MOHAIR. CASCAKA HAKK. Addreee Uepertment B The Phonograph Known for Tone STRADIVARI AiwU»«nl»l, Order direct from factory. Murrtsm BL. Portland. Oregon. La.t HTRADIVARA PHONOGRAPH CO. ■ ■J Writ, ua for price» and market condition» on ¿"X I tllTC 0¿ OOF! Veil Portland. Oregon T 7"T W M A T Hot*, Poo'-try, Fruits. Potifoes, Oaoni, For‘y T l\ IV1 I I J 3» ZX I B .1 I . I 1 I I P eie. ln ,he Sam’ Localk* rianus and Phonograph* sold on inatallment “Protect this monument, build it higher, nobler, better, and you have provided for the future and the safety of the United Stati 5.’’ mccormi £ k " mu » ic co . Orr*on Dlatrlbutor* 428-421 Waah Cu kb let Mt CLEANING AND DYEING For reliable Cleaning and Dyeing eervlce »end parc»la to ua We pay return porrtage. Information and prlcea given upon requeat. __ ENKEH CITY DYE WORKS FruTlIehed 1880 Portland CUT FLOWER» A FLORAL DCtlGN* Clarke Bros., Florlala, 287 Morrlaon Ht. _ FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS Cotnnierclal Iron Worka, 7th & M ad I eon. FOOT CORRECTIONIST Faath.rwelxht Arch Hupporta mad« to order. J. E. Tryzelaar, 618 Pittock Block, Portland, Ore. HIDES WANTED We tan deerakina properly tn„ed, alao pay hlgheat prlcea for horaehidea. Writ Coast Tanning Co., 882 Tenino SL, Portland, Oro. MOI.KK UAKBKH COLLE IE iMtchM traci., in » wtwk». Some pay while Imrn- In*. roaltlon» «ocured. Writ« for catoluKua. 23» Uurnaid« »mwL Fortla-ul. Ore. MONUMENT»—E. 30 »nd P im 6t». Otto Schumann Granite it Marble Worse PERSONAL Marry If Lonely; moat aucc«»aful Hom» Maker"; hundred» rich; confidential; r.liubl»; year» experience; description» free "The Hucce»»ful Club." Mr». Na»h, Box 55«. Oakland, Calitornla. SHIP US YOUR WOOL Cteanins. cardin» and mattre»»«». Cryatal Bpnn»» Wooton Mill». 7U0 Umatilla. Foreland. SANITARY BEAUTY PARLOR Wa help the appearance of women. Twenty-two Inch awitch or transforma­ tion, value 17 CO, price |2 t5. 400 to 412 Dekum Bldg. »HOE REPAIRING IN PORTLAND “ Model Shoe Krpalr, 272 Waahlngton BL VETERINARIAN—Cattle » »peclalty Dr. Cha» M. Anderaon. Kenton. Portland. Wedding Bouquet» and Funeral Piece» Lubliner Flortot», 248 Morrl»on St. H otel H oyt Located Sixth and Hoyt Strictly Fireproof and Modern. Near both depota and convenient cur aervlce to all pasta of city. Further Direction* Needed. The grammar school principal went from room to room explaining what to do in case of fire. The pupils listened with respectful attention until he came to hl* final Instruction. “Above all thing*,” he said, “if your clothing catches fire, remain cool.”—The Chris- tian Register (Boston). Due for It Now. •THOUSANDS of prominent Northwew people x can t«erlfy that I permanently cure Pile» with­ out operation, pain or confinement. Your money back If I fall In YOUR caae. Writ, or call for FREE booklet. DR. CHAS. J. DEAN CND AND MORRISON PORTLAND. OREGON MENTION THIS PAPER WHEN WRITING correspondent writes to a morn- ing paper to say that he has never experienced an earthquake shock. An income tax collector has noted his name and address.—Punch London. IDDIES SIX I i Sv I On Rundny tn Costa Blcn the whole family visits the nearest village to I in n gala day. Perhaps there is religion* festival in the morning; any .ate. there Is n mnsa to be ended. Afternoon Is given over to Its. which women and children usu- y make alone, while the mar of house hangs around the general re or postofllce. as the center of ercst. If he Is feeling “flush,” he ats himself to a can of evaporated Ik. n great luxury, which lie drains through n nail hole, just a* if It re champagne. T«o frequently, however, he un- rths a Jug of moonshiners’ liquor, a dent beverage, which I* manufac- ed In ninny huts In spite of the ac- Hflty of government revenue ngent*. there la nny of this stuff In clrcu- H||on. he usually ends the dny by in- Ktglng In a machete duel with his E Will M. Maupin g niiiitiiniiiitiiniiiiiiiiiitiiiitiiiitiuiiiiim TODAY M® L 1'11 do the best as on I go. m face the future with a «mile. Content to meet whate’er may be; And say to all 1 meet the while, Today Is good enough for me. 1 may not win a golden store, Nor e’er achieve undying fame; But I, at least, can strive the more To squarely play life's little game. I may not build a future great Nor win renown upon the way; But I, at least, can scoff at fate. For I am master of today. Not time, nor fate, nor circumstance Can crush the hopes that in me Ue; The storm* that rage, the lightning's glance. But clear the atmosphere and *ky. I fear no future, for I know Whate’er betide along life's way. For me the flowers bloom and blow, And I am master of today. Come good, come ill, I will not yield To sullen frown nor adverse grasp; With utmost strength I'll stand and wield The weapons that my hands may clasp. I’ll waste no time in idle thought Of what the future hides away; As given me, so have I wrought. And lam master of today. (Copyright by Will M. Maupin.) -------- O-------- tt THE ROMANCE OF WORDS •■MOB” "»ham/’ “mob" had It* L IKE birth In one of the most disagreeable periods of English history; that between the Res­ toration and the Revolution. It The Defending Answer. originated in a certain club In The office that looks for the man London toward the end of the never suffers eye-strain, but Its sense reign of Charles II, for, says of hearing must be slightly dulled by North, in his "Examen," “I may the shouts of "Here I am!” note that tlie rabble first changed their title and were ■ called the 'mob' In the assem­ blies of the Green Ribbon club. It win their beast of bur­ ---------- —- ------------------------------------------- den, and was first 'mobile vul- gus,’ but fell naturally Into the t*«t friend, and both principals spend contraction of one syllable, and the night ir. the jail, which even the smallest villages maintain for sueb ever since is become proper eventualities. The duelists nwake English.” good friends the next morning, but In spite of the writer’s opln- unfit for work for another day or ion as to the propriety of the two. word, we find in “The Specta- Bullfighting Is rare In the republic; tor." at a considernble later pe- the only ring. I believe, is in the capi­ rlod, the ■tatement: “I dare tal, and that is seldom used. Cock- not answer that mob, rap. pos, fighting flourishes to a certain extent, Incog and the like will not in but not so much ns In the more north­ time be looked at as part of ern republics. Lotteries are popular. our tongue. In fact, 'Mob,' is —Paul B. Popenoe In the National Ge­ already one of the many words, ographic Magazine. formerly slang, which are now used by our best writers, and Utilitarian. I received, like purdotied outlaws. "There appear* to be no longer a Into the body of respectable clt plnce In politics for the silver-tongued Izens.” orator." Could this writer returr to ex “No,” replied Senator Sorghum; amine the literature of today "people have developed grent commer­ and particularly newspaper cial discernment these days. They see headings where short words are no reason why n inntt should waste naturally favored, he would find Impassioned eloquence when he Isn’t that three-fourths of his proph­ trying to sell something.” ecy has come true. "Mob” and "rap" have taken up a perma­ nent position in English, "incog" Is an allowable contraction, but “pos" has passed Into the ranks of the totally obsolete. In 1921 returns from 40 state* (& by th« Wh«ei«r Syndicate. Inc.) showed n death rate of 108 per 100,000. The decline In 1921 is equivalent, ac­ o cording to the association, to a saving Chancs to Observe. of about 18,000 Ilves in 1921 over 1920. "There's one thing about the new The association points out further that since it began Its active program styles.” "What, for instance?" in 1905 tlie tuberculosis death rate has "I never realized before there were been cut from slightly more than 200 so many good looking girls in thia to a figure well below 100 per 100,000 town.”—New York Sun. population. A. & A. S. R. SCHOOL COMMITTEE 721 Gaseo Building. Portland, Oregon. (Paid Advertisement) Book 4 Here'» a world that auffera sorrow. Here are bitterne»» and pain. And th» joy we plan tomorrow May be ruined by the rain. —Edward Gue»L FOODS A CHILD MAY HAVE not what the future holds HE food* In the following list are I CARE For me alone. I only know T thorn a child may have, though In summer heat* and winter colds ALL HAVE GOOD TIME ON SUNDAY Anything From Drinking Condensed Milk to Sanguinary Dueling “Goes” In Costa Rica. Reprinted through th« Red Cross BALL BLUE la needed in every department of bouae- keeping. Equally good tor tow..'1« -able linen, sheet» »nd pillow cu«. Girls! »Girls!! Clear Your Skin With Cuticura * they should not all be served In one Advisable to Wait. Woofl meal, and the mother »elect* the foods Saturday night was very stormy and A Kansas observer discovers that most appropriate. Solid foods are Introduced gradually homes are broken up because lazy little Alice was quite frightened, so, after one year of age In the diet of wives feed their husbands on canned was told to say her prayers and go to food. But what of the homes in which bed. After meditating a while she ex­ a normal baby. The first meal should have as a be­ the products of the cannery preserve claimed: “I think I'd better wait till ginning a dish of cereal, gruel, proper­ happiness by making it unnecessary it stops raining, mother, ’cause my ly salted and served with milk; a piece for husbands to eat what their wives prayer will get all wet going up to of zwieback or crumbs of bread made ; heaven.’ have cooked? »oft with milk, or an egg occasionally, cooked for two minutes and thick­ Why They Stop Counting. Differing ideas About Robins. ened with bread crumbs. This is the time to form the habit of slow eat­ The best, years of one’s life are Some people in Germany believe ing and perfect mastication. It is so that if a robin nests under your eaves, from eighteen to twenty-four, says a Important that other things should be your house will be protected against writer; so we really can't blame our slighted rather than neglect this, as it girls for lingering between those years means a lifelong habit for health or fire; while others consider it a bad as long as possible.—Boston Tran­ omen, foretelling a conflagration. Indigestion with its ills. script. Fresh bread, hot breads and rich bis­ Fifty-Fifty. cuit should never be given. Always Properly Qualified. serve bread stale enough to crumble. There are 35.5 persons to the square A good way to serve it is to cut in mile in the United States, which is The generous who is always just, small squares and brown in the oven. about the same as the number of jay and the just who is always generous, For the child from the twelfth to walkers to the mile of city streets.— may, unannounced, approach the the eighteenth month, fruits such as throne of heaven.—Lavater. orange, pineapple, strained apple Boston Transcript. sauce, prune juice and mushed pulp, is especially good, as they contain valuable mineral salts, vitamines and acids. One ounce of the juice or fruit pulp given one-half hour before or one-half hour after their milk. Broths.—Mutton, chicken, veal or beef broth, with rice or stale bread crumbs, five ounces; beef juice, three ounces. Cereals.—Gruel, or cereal jellies made of oatmeal, barley, farina, rice or wheat, four otfnces. Breads.—Zwieback, dry toast, stale bread and butter, graham cracker. Eggs.—Soft cooked In shell, coddled, or soft poached. Meats.—Scraped rare beef, one ta­ blespoonful. Milk.—One to one and one-half quarts In 24 hours. This amount In­ cludes all milk used In the cooking and BENEFICIAL! Aids preparation of the foods. Feedings for child from twelve appetite and digestion, helps months to eighteen, are five in 24 hours. Cereals ure given once a day, always to keep teeth clean and well cooked. Vegetables are necessary breath sweet for a healthy baby past a year and a half. Potato well baked and served with butter, spinnch, asparagus tips, It’s LONG-LASTING! full carrots and cauliflower well cooked and mashed, one vegetable dally until of flavor that won’t chew out. two years of age, then green vege­ tables may be given occasionally with the potato. It’S ECONOMICAL! A live Meats are given sparingly nt first up cent package provides a to the third year, and should be finely chopped or cut. Desserts should be treat for the whole family given sparingly up to ten years, and candy never until two years old, and then but one piece dally, alway» after meal. WRIGLEYS AFTER (©. litt, Wärtern N«*ip»p«r union.) WK IGLE TJ TOLL OF TUBERCULOSIS ------ IS CUT *------------ --- ’»leían* Report 90.7 Out of 100,000 Die, a* Compared Witn 200 In 1905, New York.—The death rate from all inDs of tuberculosis in the year 1921 Ikhed the remarkably low level of Llj per 100,000 population. This in- Mmtion has been obtained by the ■onal Tuberculosis association from ^Registrars of 45 states in the Union. SEALED) fl A KEPT WRIGHT.