Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, September 21, 1915, Page 6, Image 6

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    8
THE MORNING ORGONTAN. TUESDAY. SEPTE3IBEH 21. 1915.
S:
DELEGATES ARRIVE
FOR CHURCH MEET
500 Methodists Expected at
Conference at Roseburg,
t Beginning Tomorrow.
BUSY SESSION PREDICTED
Taylor-Street Church Case May
. Come Before Bishop Cooke on
Appeal to Settle Differences.
Reception Is Tonight.
ROSEBURG, Or., Sept. 20. (Special.)
Although the 63d annual conference
of the Methodist Episcopal Church does
not open officially here until "Wednes
day morning, delegates began arriv
ing in Roseburg today from all parts
of the state.
It la the belief of Rev. "William Riley
Jeffrey, who has charge of the pro
gramme, that BOO visiting ministers and
laymen will be In attendance at the
cessions. The conference will be held
In the local Methodist Episcopal
Church, with Rev. Richard J. Cooke,
resident bishop of Oregon, Washington
and Idaho, presiding.
A preliminary session of the confer
ence will be held tomorrow, when the
undergraduates In the conference course
course of study will be examined- by
the official board of examiners of the
church. The afternoon will be passed
In getting acquainted with the visiting
delegates and outlining definite plans
for the sessions to follow.
Reception to Delegates Tonight.
A reception to the presiding bishop
end members of the Oregon conference
will be held tomorrow night, with Rev.
H. J. Van Fossen, district superintend
ent, presiding.
The programme for the reception in
cludes an address of welcome by Mayor
Napoleon Rice; greetings by the pastors
of the sister churches of the city, ad
dress by J. H. Booth, president of the
official board of the Roseburg church:
response by Bishop Cooke and vocal
numbers by Mrs. A. N. Orcutt and Mrs.
Lyman Spencer.
The business sessions of the confer
ence will begin early Wednesday, fol
lowing organization. While the dele
gates now in the city refused to fore
cast what will take place during the
conference they intimate that keen in
terest will center about many of the
matters to be considered.
Taylor Street Case May Come I' p.
It was practically admitted in Meth
odist circles here today that an at
tempt probably would be made to in
duce Bishop Cooke to use his influence
Jn bringing about a settlement of the
old Taylor-street Church controversy
In Portland. Other matters of equal in
terest, it is said, will feature the con
ference. Besides the business and social ses
sions within the conference the visiting
ministers and laymen will be enter
tained by the people of Roseburg. Au
tomobile drives about Roseburg and
the adjacent country will be a daily
pastime for the visitors. Most of the
delegates and their wives will be en
tertained at the homes of local church
men. BUSINESS RUSHING IN' EAST
All Ketailers in New Xork Report
Gains, Says Ilarold Hurlburt.
i
T h r United States is experiencing a
general revival of trade, with contin
ued good times, says Harold Hurlbut,
a Portland vocalist who has just re
turned to this city after passing the
last seven montns in vocal study in
New York.
"I have found a steady and consistent
frrowth, of optimism regarding the
business prospects for the coming sea
son," said Mr. Hurlbut. i. ' Colburn
Pinkham, manager of the National Re
tail Dry Goods Association, said in
a recent conversation, that busi
ness with all the firms of the as
sociation was on a rapid increase and
that a number of sections that had felt
the depression greatly during the past
year were even at this early date up
to standard and reported a steady in
crease in sales.
DEBATING LEAGUE STARTED
Xilliunook County Joint Winter
I Series Is Proposed.
' KEHALEM, Or., Sept. 20. (Special.)
Plans for a Tillamook County debat
ing league for the coming Winter have
lieen started, with considerable promise
of success. The local literary society
has begun the season with a great deal
of enthusiasm, and a committee has
been appointed for the purpose of ar
ranging for the league. Last Winter
the people of Nehalem Valley were en
tertained by joint debates between the
three societies of the valley.
Plans are being made to encourage
debating societies at Bay City and
Tillamook, and at other cities in the
county, and for joint debates to be
i-.eld each month. Nehalem has some
Keen debaters and new material is be
ing developed by the weekly meetings,
KENDALL PLANS IN SCALE
Opposition Develops at Roseburg to
; Surrender of Mill Site.
'. ROSEBURG, Or.. Sept. 20. (Spe
cial.) Upon the outcome of a meeting
of the stockholders of the Douglas
County Park & Fair Association, to be
Tield here tomorrow night, probably
will depend to & great extent the future
investments of Kendall Brothers, of
I'ittsburg, in this vicinity.
The meeting was called to formulate
plans whereby the local fair grounds
tould be surrendered to Kendall
Brothers for a site -for their proposed
Fwmlll. Persons opposed to the rail
road and sawmill have refused to sur
render their stock in the grounds. The
proposed mill site represents an invest
ment? of $3300 and about three-fourths
of the stock has been surrendered.
State Fair Notes
i-
STATE FAIR GROUNDS, Salem, Or..
Sept. 20. (Special.) Miss Pauline
Looney and Miss Mary .Mason, Jeffer
son, are in -camp until the close of the
State Fair. They are at-home to their
friends on the oldtlme lot No. 30
looney avenue. They have as guests
today Mrs. Cornell aid daughter. Miss
Ituby, of Salem.
Mrs. E. T. Weatherred, a member of
the Board, returned last night from the
Gresham fair. She consulted with rail
road and Chamber of Commerce officials
relative to Transportation day. She re
ports that the Elks will bring their
band from Portland on Elks day.
Mrs, E. E. Morgan, of Portland, ar-
rived last -evening, and is In. camp at
her cottage. No. 30 Downing avenue.
Ben Sutton, of Salem, and Grant
Flake, of the same place, pitched tents
yesterday.
W. J. Entrees, Salem, put up & tent
yesterday at No. 33 Moody avenue.
Five racers and a colt arrived in from
the Woodland Farm, California, this
morning, consigned to trainer John B.
Stetson. The animals are in the best
of condition and no sign of lameness.
George Wilbur," of Salem, pitched a
tent yesterday at No. 14 Wilkins. The
big new well is supplying water to the
campers. .
The Oregon Patrons of Husbandry
win nave a tent on the main avenue,
and will be in charge of Mrs. Vail.
The Tented City is growing daily and
the entire list of shady lots will soon
be taken. There is an abundance of
room, but the shady choice nooks are
mostly engaged.
The cry of the newsboy Is heard of
mornings and the city is assuming met
ropolitan airs.
RATE OF INTEREST HIGH
SOME3 BANKS CHARGE MORE THAJf
100 PEIl CENT.
Fact Concerning Methods Found
Throughout Country Disclosed by
Member of Reserve Board.
RALEIGH, N. C. Sept. 20. Facts con
cerning high Interest rates being
charged by National banks throughout
the country were disclosed by W. P. G.
Harding, member of the Federal Re
serve Board, in a speech tonight before
the Raleigh Chamber of Commerce. Mr.
Harding was explaining the Reserve
Board regulation granted preferential
rediscount rates to notes secured by
staple commodity warehouse receipts,
provided the makers had been charged
not more than 6 per cent interest.
"From the report to the Controller
of June 23. 1915," he said, "it appears
there are five National banks in Ala
bama whose maximum rates of interest
average 24 per cent, the rate in one
case being 60 per cent and in another
34 per cent. The average rate of in
terest which one of these banks was
charging on all of its loans amounted
to 12 per cent and another 10 per cent.
In Arkansas one National bank ad
mitted making a loan at a- rate as
high as 120 per cent, another at 50.
another at 60 and another at 25.
In Georgia there were 11 banks
where the average maximum rate of
interest was about 30 per cent.- The
maximum rate charged by one of these
banks was 40 per cent, and the average
on all loans was 15 per cent. In Texas
a number of banks reported rates in
excess of 100 per cent, and many of
them stated their rates on all loans
average 1 per cent per month or more.
"These high rates, however, are not
confined exclusively to the South, for
the reports show unreasonable rates
of Interest of 50 per cent in the North,
as well as in the Far West and South.
Twelve per cent seems to be regarded
still as not extraordinary by the coun
try bankers in Minnesota. Wyoming,
Kentucky and California."
FIRE LOSSES REDUCED
PORTLAND PER CAPITA CUTF"R03I
f0.67 TO LESS THAN U
Campaign of Education and Activity In
Prosecuting; Arson Suspect Is
Credited.
The fire loss in Portland has been
reduced from J6.67 per capita to less
than Jl per capita; nearly fSOOO'has
been saved through 'the development
of care among the citizens in handling
fire alarms, and more convictions for
arson obtained in Portland than In the
entirp United States in the past year,
as a result of the educational and pro
tective campaign that has been car
ried on.
Fire Marshal Stevens repoi ted these
achievements in an address at the Mem
bers'' Council luncheon of the Chamber
of Commerce yesterday.
Last year- he declared that the Are
losses in Portland were $1,750,000; that
16 lives were lost, and 2000 alarms
turned in.
Indications this year are that the
number of alarms will be less tha
1000, and the fire loss considerably less
man fl per capita.
Every false alarm turned in costs the
city SoO, and last year there were 117
false alrams turned in, representing a
cost ol X8850.
This year only 14 false alarms have
been turned in, and none has been
turned in since last May.
Mr. Stevens said that last year only
five men were convicted of arson in the
United States. This year in Portland
two convictions have already been ob
talned, and 12 more are expected.
The campaign of education is to be
continued this season in schools and
public organizations of all kinds.
GIRL'S FOOT STRAIGHTENED
Removal of Cast Sliows Spccess of
Osteopath Operation.
ROSEBURG, Or., Sept. 20. (Special.)
The condition of the foot of little
Mildred Humphreys, of Myrtle Creek
who was one of the chief subjects op
erated upon at the recent Osteopath
convention held In Portland, was re
vealed today Wyhen Dr. Snell. a. local
physician removed the -case and found
that the position of the foot had been
entirely corrected.
The child was afflicted with infantile
paralysis about six years ago, the dis
ease leaving the foot In a twisted con
dition. Dr. Snell believes that with
proper care the foot will become nor
mal with the passing of a few years.
JUDGE'S HOME IS ROBBED
Thieves Ask Neighbor if Anyone Is
Expected Home Soon.
According to the report made to the
police yesterday, the home of Judge M.
C. George, 616 Market street drive,
was entered Sunday afternoon and
ransacked by two young thieves, short
ly after the two men had conversed
with a neighbor as to the probability of
the occupants being home within an
hour.
Some jewelry and $20 In mony were
taKen. Judge George is mi for the
Summer, but his home Is occupied by
. l. Jones, son-in-law of the judge,
and family. They were out for an
automobile ride Sunday afternoon.
Indian Liquor Seller Sentenced.'
- SALEM, Or., Sept. 20. (Special.)
.Koocrt tsarton. or Oregon City, charged
with giving liquor to Alexander Nor
west, a Grande Ronde Indian, was con
victed hnd sentenced today in Justice
Elgin's court to serve' 80 days jn the
county jail.
-
up the Columbia on steamer Bailey
Gatzert. Alder-street dock. Main 911,
KIPLING SEES "HILL
COUNTRY" AT FRONT
Sandbags of Boches Are Seen
Through Loophole-Region
Fine for Gunners.
ENEMY MAKES NO MOVE
Colonel Who Loves His Men and Ivm
ploys Time Providing for Their
Comfort Slakes Deep Im
pression on Author.
(Continued From First Page.)
go on. Stop and wait. We've a moun
tain battery to look at."
Gun Has No let Name.
The guns were not at work for a
moment, and the commander, a grim,
forceful man, showed me some details
of their construction. When we left
them In their bower (it looked like a
hill priest's wayside shrine) we heard
them singing through the steep, de
scending pines. They, too, like the
10 men, seem to have no pet name
in service.
It was polsonously blind country.'
The woods blocked all sense of direc
tion. Above and around the ground was
at any angle you please, and all sounds
were split up and muddled by the tree
trunks, which acted as silencers. High
above us the respectable, all-conceal
ing forest had turned into sparse.
ghastly blue sticks of timber an as
sembly of leper trees around a bald
mountain top.
"That's where we're going," -said a
man . "Isn't it an adorable country?"
iimcume gun loosea a lew snots in
the fulmbling style of her kind when
they feel for an opening. A couple of
rifle shots answered. They might
have been a half mile away or a hun
dred yards below.
Unlimited Labor Seen.
An adorable country! We climbed lip
till we found once again a complete
tea garden; little sunk houses, almost
invisible in the brown-pink recesses of
tne tnick forest. Here the trenches be
gan and with them for the next few
hours life in two dimensions length
and breadth.
Men passed on their business: a
squad with a captured machine gun,
which they tested in a sheltered dip;
armorers at their benches, busy with
sick rifles: fatigue parties for straw
rations and ammunition, long proces
sions of single blue figures turned
sideways between brown sunless walls.
There were no trees above us now.
There trunks lay along the edge of
tne trench, built in with stones, where
necessary, or sometimes overhanarine
it in ragged splinters or bushy tops.
Bits of cloth, not French, showed, too.
in the uneven line of debris at the
trench tip, and some thoughtful soul
had marked an unexploded Boche
trench sweeper as not to be touched.
It was a young lawyer from Paris
Who pointed that out to me.
Front of Line Is Reached,
We met the Colonel at the head of
an indescribable pit of ruin, full of
sunshine, whose steps ran down a
steep hillside under the lee of anal
most vertically plunging parapet. To
the left of that parapet the whole hill
side was one gruel of smashed . trees.
split stones and powdered soil. It
might have been a ragpickers' dump
heap on a colossal scale. "
Alan looked at it critically. I think
he had helped make it not long before.
We are on the top of the hill now,
and the Boches are below," said he.
"We- gave them a very fair sickener
lately."
"This." said- the Colonel. "Is the
front line.".
There were overhead guards against
hand bombs, which disposed me to be
lieve him, but what convinced me most
was a corporal urging us in whispers
not to talk so loud.
The men were at dinner, and a good
smell of food filled the trench. This
was the first smell I had encountered
In my long travels uphill; a mixed,
entirely wholesome flavor of stew,
leather, earth and rifle oil. A propor
tion of men were standing to arms.
while others ate; but dinner time is
slack time even among animals, and it
was close to noon.
"Bocbf Get Their Soup."
"The Boches gotv their souo a few
days ago," someone whispered.
I thought of the pulverized hillside.
and hoped it had been hot enough.
We edged along the still trench.
where the soldiers stared with justi
fied contempt, I thought, upon the
civilian who scuttled through their
life for a few emotional minutes in
order to make words -out of their bloodj
it reminded me or coming In late to a
play and incommoding the long line of
packed stalls. The whispered dialogue
was much the same.
"Pardon; I beg your pardon, mon
sieur. To the right, monsieur. If mon
sieur will lower his head; . one sees best
from here monsieur."
It was their day and nieht lone
business, carried through without dis
play or heat or doubt or Indecision.
Those off duty, not five feet behind In
the dugout, were deep in their papers
or their meals or their letters, while
death stood ready every minute to
drop down into the narrow cut from
out of the narrow strip of -unconcerned
sky. And for the better part of a
week one had skirted miles of such a
frieze.
The loopholes not in tise were
plugged, rather like old-fashioned
hives. Said the Colonel, removing a
and you will see their sandbags."
Through the jumble of riven trees
and stones one saw what might have
been a bit or green sacking. ..
"They're about seven meters distant
here," the Colonel went on. That was
true, too.
Colonel Knows His Men.
We entered a little fortalice with a
cannon in it at an embrasure, which
at that moment struck me as unneces
sarily vast, even though it was partly
ciosea oy a rrau pacKing case lid. The
CtloneI sat him down in front of it and
explained the theory of this sort of
redoubt.
"By the way," he said to a gunner at
last." can't you find something better
than that? I think it's too light." He
twitched the lid aside. "Get a log of
wood or something."
I loved that Colonel. He knew his
men and he knew the Boches-i-had
them marked down like birds. When
he said they were beside dead trees or
behind boulders, sure enough, there
they were. But, as I have said, dinner
hour is always slack, and, even when
we came to a place where a section of
trench had been hashed open by trench
sweepers and it was recommended to
duck and hurry, nothing much hap
pened.
The uncanny thing was the absence
of movement in the Boche trenches.
Sometimes one imagined tnat one
smelled strange tobacco or heard a
rifle-bolt working after a shot: other
wise- they were as still as a pig at
noonaay.
BABY'S EYEBROWS
INFLAMED SCALE
Scalp Thickly Coated Also.
Caused Irritation. Spread
to Hair Roots.
HEALED BY CUTICURA
SOAP AND OINTMENT
"When my baby was one month et
I saw a yellow scale on bis eyebrows
and soon after found that his scalp
was thickly coated with
it also. The eyebrows be
came quite inflamed and
caused irritation and the
I scale spread to the roots of
his hair. His scalp itched
so he irritated it. and his
hair became thin and dry.
"After he was eleven
months old . I got some
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. On combing
his hair I noticed his scalp was almost clean
and with a few applications he was healed."
(Signed) Mrs. Nathan Sherman. Kelso,
Wash., March 10, 1915.
Sample Each Free by Mail
With 32-p. Skin Book 00 request. Ad
dress post-cord "Cutievra. Dept. T, Bos-
Sold.throughout the world.
hunting for gun positions: the hills are
full of them and trenches close to
gether and commanding each other.
You see what a beautiful country it is."
Officers' Hobby Is Trenche'x.
The Colonel confirmed this, but from
another point of view war was his
business, as the still woods could tes
tify. But his hobby was his trenches.
He had tapped mountain streams and
dug out a laundry where a man could
wash his shirt and go up and be killed
in it all in a morning; had drained
trenches so muddy that to stretch in
them was an offense, and at the bottom
of thejiill it looked like a hydropathic
establishment on the stage. He had
created baths where half a battalion
at a time could wash.
He never told me how all that coun
try had been fought over as fiercely as
Ypres in the West, nor what blood had
gone down the valley before his
trenches were pushed over the scalped
mountain top. No, he stretched out
new endeavors in earth and stones and
trees for the comfort of his men on
that populous mountain, and there
came a priest who was a sub-lieuten
ant out of a. wood of snuff brown shad
ows and half veiled trunks.
MASONS HOLD SESSIONS
AFTER BUSINESS MEETING IN' VAN
COUVER AUTO TRIPS TAKEN.
Royal Arch Body Concludes Convoca
tion Today and Masters Will
Convene Tomorrow.
VANCOUVER, Wash.. Sept. 20. (Spe
ciaL) The Grand Chapter of Royal
Arch Masons -of Washington is in ses
sion in the local Masonic Temple and
more than 100 .Royal Arch delegates
are In attendance. This Is the 31st
annual convocation of the Grand Chap
ter. Convocation was opened, committees
appointed and A. L. Miller, of Van
couver, past grand high, priest, deliv
ered the address of welcome, to which
Charles P. Kimball, of Bremerton, dep
uty grand high priest, responded.
Henry L. Kennan, of Spokane, grand
high priest, read his report, after which
the reports of Horace W. Tyler, grand
treasurer, of Tacoma, and Yancey C.
C. Blalock, grand secretary, of Walla
Walla, were read.
Convocation was resumed at 2 P. M.,
and after two hours' session, automo
biles were provided by the local chap
ter and the delegates were taken for
trips to various points of interest
around the city and into the country.
Beginning at 7 P. SI., a special drill
team conferred the order of high
priesthood. At 8:30 o'clock an Informal
reception and dance was held at the
Columbia Hotel.
The officers for the ensuing year will
be elected at the morning session to
morrow.
On Wednesday the Grand Council of
Royal and Select Masters of Washing
ton will be held in Masonic Temple.
WOMAN WRITER IS DEAD
MRS. GEORGE MEL, VI N MILLER SIC
CUMBS AT EUGENE.
i
former Editor of Pacific Monthly
Never Recovera Health After '
Death of Only Daughter.
EUGENE, Or., Sept 20. (Special.)
Mrs. George Melvin Miller, one of the
best-known literary women on the
Pacific Coast, died at 2 o'clock today at
the home of her sister, Mrs. Idaho
Campbell, after an illness of four
months. Mrs. Miller had not been well
for the last seven years, and, accord
ing to her friends, had not recovered
her full health since the death of her
only daughter. Miss Mary Miller, who
resided in Portland 13 years ago.
Mrs. Miller was born on a farm be
tween Leaburg and Thurston, on the
McKenzie River, and always had lived
in Oregon with the exception of a
two-year tour of Europe. She was
formerly editor of the Pacific Monthly
in Portland and contributed largely to
the sunset Magazine.
Mrs. Miller had contributed to The
Oregonlan in Portland and had charge
of the women s department of a Eu
gene paper until her recent illness.' She
was the author of many poems and fic
tion stories and is mentioned in prac
tically every compilation of literary
people on the Coast. Mrs. Miller was
an active member of the Fortnightly
Club. Her full name was Lichen Maud
Cogswell Miller, and she wrote under
her maiden name.
She is survived by her husband.
George Melvin Miller, of Eugene; two
sisters. Mrs. Idaho Campbell, of Eu
Looking Forward
to otherhood
Experienced mothers everywhere are recom
mending "Mother's Friend," a wonderful help
to all expectant mothers. It is gently ap
plied over the muscles, makes them firm
and pliant to accommodate expansion with
out the usual strain and pain. This also
overcomes nausea. It has a most remarkably
soothing influence and is declared one of the
greatest aids we have for the mother-to-be.
ont fall to get a bottle of "Mother's Friend"
today of any druggist. Then write to Brad
field Regulator Co ICS Lamar. Bid., At
lanta. Ga., for a bandnome book that yon
win greatly enjoy. Mailed .rrea.
Smoke-vise
of the Coast
gene, and Mrs. Emery Ingham, of Port
land, and a brother, Boliver Cogswell.
Portland.
' Hood River Dahlia Freakish.
HOOD RIVER. Or., Sept. 20. (Spe
cial.) While it is not unusual for the
same dahlia plant to bear a few vari
colored flowers, George Haslinger has
blooming in his garden a bed "marked
$1.00
The Most Popular Thing in
America
For your dollar
You can get more at Powers' on
Dollar Day
The values will surprise you
Our Windows Tell the Story
They show real bargains
They demonstrate what a single dollar will do at
Powers' on Dollar Day
ID)
i 1
QUALITY
FI33T
!
fl! QOaiEtie when the folks are WOm
out and you're casting about Mm$Bi
fffigtMt for a little soothing consolation, VfffA
I $m we suggest an "Evening with tmWffM
mfml Gen'l Arthur." IMfffiM
I mm Be sure you get a round, even WM
m ilim Hght and then settle hack with a
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wJlmi!A blend of the comforting tobaccos iltWti -J
iSjf "reach home." M
Sff&SSS Later, Youmayliglitnpanother ilyfeivtl!
y Gen'l Arkurad finally turn in H
111 todreamofsunnyplantationsand
'WftVyiS oldHavanaandfaroffSumatra
MB! "Here the good tobaccos grow.
WwM f Gold Medal Award WMfk
I pp
Gen11 ' fHf
AKfflm WM
1 cigar, cS?s prf
A Also a three for a quarter size p
M. A. Gunat & Co., Inc., Distributor
by such freak tendencies. Deep red and
pure white flowers are in bloom on the
same bush, and other flowers of the
plant are half white and half red.
longshoremen's Strike Ends.
NEW YORK. Sept. 20. The 730 strik
ing longshoremen who have been tying
up the freight of the United Fruit Com
pany came to an agreement with the
officials of the concern today and will
the Dollar
If llisl li VOlilH 1; thirdEX )
return to work tomorrow. Tb men
were jrranted an Increase in wages.
TODAY'S BEAUTY
SUGGESTIONS
face powder simply covers up an
unattractive complexion and leaves no
lasting benefits. Those who have tried
a simple spurmax face lotion find it
much better, as it removes skin dls
colorations, such as freckles and tan,
and makes the skin smooth, white and
velvety. This lotion is made by dis
solving four ounces of spurmax in one
half pint hot water, then adding two
teaspoonfuls glycerin. This complex
ion beautifler does not rub off or show
like powder, and gives a more refined
appearance. It removes both shininess
and sallowness, rapidly giving the skin
a permanent, healthy, youthful appear
ance. An especially fine shampoo for this
weather can be had at trifling expense
by dissolving teaspoonf ul of canthrox
in a cup of hot water. Pour slowly on
the scalp and massage briskly. This
creates a soothing, cooling lather that
dissolves and removes all dandruff, ex
cess oil and dirt. Rinsing leaves the
scalp spotlessly clean, soft and pliant,
while the hair takes on a glossy rich
ness of natural color, also a fluffiness
which makes It seem very much heavier
than it is. After a canthrox shampoo
arranging the hair is a pleasure. Adv.
Success
Success Is the child of initiative
and sticktoitlveness.
In advertising It means sizing up
a market and keeping right at It.
It means faith, knowledge and
courage.
It means ability to see mistakes
and turn them into triumphs.
It means keeping everlastingly
at It.
The rewards are well worth tha
effort their size is without limit.
A 5112. AdV, -
"No flat plains," said Alan; "no