Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, December 08, 1919, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE MORXING OREGOMAX, MONDAY, DECEMBER S, 1919.
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
City Editor Main 7070. A 6095
Sunday Kdltor Main 70,0. A 609.;
.Advertising department. .Main 1O1O. AB"o
feuperinteniient of Bldg. - Main 7070. A 60i)
AM I'KEMENTS.
ORPHBPM (Broadway at Taylor Vaude
ville this afternoon and tonight.
ALCAZAR (Eleventh at Morrison) -Alcazar
Musical Players in "Nobody Home.
Tonight.
BAKER (Broadway near Morrison) Baker
stock Company in "Cheating Cheaters.
ToniKht.
LYRIC (Fourth at Stark) Musical com
edy, "The Rounders." Three shows daily.
7 and and i) P. M.
PANTAOES (Broadway at Alder) Vaade
ville. Three shows dally. 2:30, 7 and 9:05.
HIPPODROME (Broadway at Yamhill)
Vaudeville and moving pictures. - to 5.
6:45 to 11 P. M. Saturdays. Sundays and
holidays, continuous. 1:1j to 11 P. M
r
THRIFT STAMPS
WAR SAVINUS STAMPS
On Sale at
Business Office, Oregonian.
Drama League Entertains. Under
the auspices of the Portland Drama
league, Roscoe Nelson tonight at the
Ijittle theater will read J. M. Barrie's
"The Old Lady Shows Her Medals."
Members of the, league and
friends are invited. The reading is
one of a series of entertainments
planned by the league. Miss Ellen
Van Volkenburg (Mrs. Maurice
Browne) will give an interpretative
presentation of "Alice Sit by the
Fire" Friday night, and Saturday aft.
ernoon, December 20, Miss Catlin's
echool will present Barrie's "Navity."
Monday, December 29, is the date set
for a. group of players, under the di
rection of Miss Nina Greathouse, to
present a number of small dramas.
Chaottfeur Is Arrested. A. E. Boe,
a. chauffeur, was arrested for reck
less driving yesterday morning by
Patrolman Padden after he is said
to have had a collision with an au
tomobile driven by H. R. Sprague,
431 Sixth street, yesterday morning
bout 2:10 o'clock at the intersection
of Eleventh and Washington streets.
Mrs. Sprague, who was riding with
her husband, was thrown out onto
the pavement asa result of the col
lision and received a contusion on the
head and bruises. She was taken to
the police emergency hospital for
treatment and afterwards sent home.
Consul Sammonb Transferred. In
formation has been received by the
foreign trade department of the
Chamber of Commerce that Thomas
Sammons, U. S. consul at Shanghai,
China, has been transferred to Mel
bourne, Australia. Consul Sammons
is a former Tacoma man and is, fam
iliar with conditions in the Pacific
northwest. He has written to say
that he desires to hear from Portland
firms interested in Australian trade
and will give every possible assist
ance. Dance to Follow Programme. A
three-piece orchestra will furnish
music for dancing in Hibernla hall
Wednesday night at the close of a
short programme to be given under
the auspices of the Robert Emmet
branch. Friends of Irish Freedom.
Judge W. N. Oatens, the speaker of
the evening, has chosen for his sub
ject the "Irish Republic and the
Right of the People of Ireland to
Choose Their Own Way of Obedience."
The public is invited.
Abtillebt Veterans to Meet.
Veterans of the 147th field artillery
are expected to meet tonight with the
auxiliary to companies A and B of this
organization that elaborate plans may
be worked out for the benefit dance
that is scheduled. Funds thus raised
are to be expended for an appropri
ate memorial for members of these
companies who made the supreme
sacrifice in France. Tonight's meet
ing will be in the gray parlor of the
Multnomah hotel at 8 o'clock.
Seat Sale Todat. Isadora Duncan
dancers and George Copeland, pian
ist. This morning at the Heilig box
office sale opens for the Isadora
Duncan Dancers - George Copeland
joint recital, Wednesday evening.
December 10, direction Steers & Co
man. Floor $2.50; balcony 2.60. $2.
$1.&0, $1; gallery, reserved 1 rows, $1,
admission 75c. Adv.
Sister Philomena Dies. Sister
iiarv Philomena. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. L. Vaeretti and sister of Mary
l-ciiirel. Carolina and Joe Vaeretti of
Sandv. Or., died Saturday in Rose
burg. The funeral will be held at
10:30 o'clock this morning from the
rhanel of Mount St. Joseph home.
Portland. Interment will be in Mount
Calvary cemetery.
Actors' Benefit Success. At the
actors' benefit held on Friday at the
Heilig $140 was raised and a check
for that amount has been forwarded
tn th. committee in charge in New
York A performance of "Up in Ma
bel's Room" was given, at which the
irrvlrrs of the actors and the house
attaches as well as the Heilig itself
were donated.
Alleged pickpocket Arrested
While F. A. Fritz, manager of the
Men's Resort, was arranging a mov
int? nicture machine yesterday after
nnon. Oscar Grey, laborer, is said to
have picked Mr. Fritz' pocket, taking
his Docket book contaning about o0.
Grev was arrested by Inspectors
Tichcnor and Mallett.
Clerk Takes New Position. After
passing eight years in the employ of
local school offices G. O. Baker, as
Bistant to Clerk R. H. Thomas, has
taken the position of registrar of the
l.aSalle extension university, with
offices in the Pittock block. He will
also teach business letter-writing by
correspondence.
1500 Reward.
For the arrest of the robbers and
recovery of the merchandise stolen
from the store of Mrs. T. Grossman,
149 Third street, on Dec. 5. A pro
portionate amount will be paid for the
recovery of part oi tne mercnancuse.
I. B., H. H. and M. L. Holzman. Adv.
Offices for Kent. Apply to su
perintendent, room 218 Fenton bldg.
No. S4 Sixth street, opposite Wells-
largo bids. Adv.
Kemuerer Coal, Carbon Coal Cow
mine agents. 321 Hawthorne ava. East
11S8. Adv. .
Fine selection Xmas gifts. Port
land Cutlery Co., S6 6th at., nr. Stark.
Adv.
Engaged general practice, suite 609
Fenton bldg. m. D. Fenton. Adv.
Dr. Richard Dillehunt returned
Stevens bldg. Adv.
Dr. McMahon, 100 per cent chiro
praetor. Adv.
Moors Sanitarium for the milk cure.
Adv.
For Xmas trees. Bdwy. 3596. Adv.
SOCIETY
M,8.
ELIZABETH LORD and Miss
label 'Withycombe of Salem
were the guests of Miss Genevieve
Thompson this week-end. Saturday
Miss Thompson entertained for her
gueMs with a luncheon at the Uni
versity club, followed by a theater
Thirty to see "Up in Mabel's Room."
Those who enjoyed this affair were
Mrs. Preston Smith, Mrs. Folger John
bon, Mrs. Kenneth Robertson. Mrs.
Harold Sawyer, Miss Elisabeth
Lord, Miss Msble Withycombe. Miss
Fay Nichols, Miss Eliza Parker. Miss
Vida Nichols and Miss Thompson.
Saturday night Miss Thompson en
tertained with a line party to see
"I'.eal Things" at the Little Theater,
the play written by Mrs. Mabel
Holmes Parson, and given by R. For
gus Reddie and his University of Ore
gon players.
Yesterday Miss Thompson took her
quests to hear Miss Winifred Byrd
In concert. Miss Withycombe and
Miss Lord really came to Portland
to be present at this concert, as Miss
Byrd is also a Salem girl.
The New England Conservatory of
Music club, in Portland, of which
Miss Winifred Byrd is an honorary
member, will give a luncheon at the
Benson hotel today In her honor, at
which Mrs. Marie Gould, who is the
personal representative for Miss Byrd,
will also be an honor guest.
Miss Byrd is an Oregon girl and a
pianist of" note. Many social and
musical affairs are being given in her
honor.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ladd Corbett
are in town again after several weeks
spent in New York with Mrs. Cor
bett's parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Williams left
last Thursday for the east, where
they will visit in New York, Wash
ington and Chicago. On Tuesday
night Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Brunn were
hosts for a dinnef in their honor.
Those who enjoyed "lis delightful
dinner were Mr. anft Irs. Williams,
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Colt and Mr. and
Mrs. George F. Nevins.
Mrs. J. Earl Else was hostess for
the current literature department of
the Woman's club, last Friday at
luncheon. She was assisted by airs.
Bert Hicks, Mrs. Phillip Gervurtz. Mrs.
B. W. M. Wade, and Mrs. Walter Kline.
At the table, which was very artis
tic with holly and red carnations.,
Mrs. Frederick Eggert and Mrs. Sarah
Evans presided.
Mrs. Alice' Johnson and Miss Mar
garet Laughlin gave a most interest
ing musical programme.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson W. Clark were
hosts Saturday night for a most en
joyable dance at their residence on
Cornell road. Their guests included
Mr. and Mrs. Chester G. Munphy, Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Wilbur, Mr. and Mrs.
M. Donald Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
ward Grelle, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. William Rober
son, Mr. and Mrs. Coe McKenna, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Alears, Mr. and Mrs.
James Cole, Dr. and Mrs. Herbert
Nichols, Dr. and Mrs. Otis Wight. Dr.
and Mrs. Edwin Labbe, Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Sheik, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice
Dooley, Mr. and Mrs. George Gerlin
ger, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Beebe, Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Gerlinger, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Beebe, Mr. and Mrs. Nor
man Rupp, Dr. and Mrs. William Bil-
derback, Mr. and Mrs. Lane Goodell,
Mr. and Mrs. George Nevii.s, Mr. and
Mrs. George McPherson, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice Crumpacker, Dr. and Mrs.
John G. Coghlan, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Wiley, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Riley, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hindman, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Wernicke, Mr. and Mrs. W.
B. McKay, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Went-
worth, Mr. and Mrs. George Went
worth, Mrs. Warner, Miss Genevieve
Thompson, Henry Mears and Harold
Schroyer.
The Portland association of danc
ing masters will give a benefit dance
at Christensen's hall on Monday
night, December 29. The association
will have the assistance of the Chris
tillion club under the personal super
vision of Mose Christensen. The ben
efit" dance will raise funds to bring
the post -convention of the American
national association of dancing mas
ters to Portland in 1920. Invitations
may be secured from members of the
Portland association. The officers are
Mose Christensen, president; Miss
Axa Paget, vice-president; Miss Olevia
Ireland, secretary; Montrose Ringler,
treasurer.
Coming as a surprise to their
friends is the announcement of the
engagement of Miss Hazel Hogg, a
former University of Oregon student,
to A. Townsend Kurtz, who is affili
ated with the Oregon Agriculture
company of Arlington, Or. The wed
ding will be sometime in January.
Miss Bertha V. Flannigan became
the bride of Oscar J. Carlson Novem
ber 26 at the home of the bride
groom's parents. Captain and Mrs. C.
J. Carlson, in the presence of rela
tives and a few friends. The service
was read by Rev. V. G. Ogren at 8:30
o'clock.
The bride's only attendant was her
sister, Mrs. Effie Furer. The bride
groom's brother, Edward L. Carlson
was best man.
After the ceremony a dinner wai
served, followed by an ' informal re
ception. Mr. and Mrs. Carlson will
make their home in Portland.
Lambda Alpha chapter of the Beta
Phi Sigma fraternity has announced
its sixth annual dance for Saturday
night, December 27. The affair prom
ises to be one of the foremost li
fraternity events this season, and i
being eagerly awaited by the mem
bers and friends.
The dance will be given at the
Irvington club, and the committee is
arranging for attractive holiday dec
orations, which will be mingled with
black and gold, the fraternity colors.
The committee m charge of ar
rangements is Charles C. Welch
Theodore D. Harmon and Dr. Edwin
Morene.
BAKER, Or., Dec. 7. (Special.)
Congratulations are being showered
upon Norman P. Henderson and hi
bride, formerly Miss Deloise Myers of
Baker, who have just returned from
a little trip to Weiser, Idaho, where
they were married.
Mr. Henderson is a graduate of the
High School of Commerce in Port
land, a etudent of O. A. C, and has
been night editor of the Morning
Democrat of Baker for the past eight
months.
The bride was formerly a resident
of Elliott, Iowa. Since coming to
Baker she has made a host of friends
Mr. and Mrs. Henderson will make
their home in Baker.
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eugene
Dec. 7. (bpecial.) The engagement
of Miss Eileen Tomkins of Cascade
Locks and Kenneth S. Hall of Port
land was announced informally the
past week at the Gamma Phi Beta
house. Miss Tomkins is a sophomore
in the university and has been active
in etudent body affairs, particularly
tn the Y. W. C. A. She is a member
of Tre Nu, Zeta Kappa Psi. women's
debating fraternity, and Gamma Phi
Beta eorority. She is a graduate
the Hood River high school. Mr.
nan is a laie graduate and the son
of Robert F. Hall of Portland. At
present he is living in Salem, where
he is a member of the state highway
commission. No date has been ee
for the wedding.
mimimiiiniiiiiniiiinaiiniuiiiiiiiiitiminuiiiiiiitliimilniniiifiiiuitiniiiiiiii
A Lasting
Christmas Present
For the Wife or Mother Our
monthly income policy.
For the Son or Daughter Our
endowment savings policy.
F or Father Our new low premium
policy maturing as an endownment
at age of 65.
ubrCOTllfifC Insurance Company
Home Office
CORBETT
Fifth and
A. L. MILLS. Pres. C S. SAMUEL.
PASTOR SEES NEED
OF
"Goal of Man" Is Subject of
Rev. W. T. McElveen. .
OLD THINKERS CRITICISED
Man's Belief in His Own Capacity
for Good Held Incentive for
Greater Endeavor.
"Man is a strange compound of
majesty and meanness; weakness and
power; transiency and transscendency.
As Dr. Johnson suggests. 'Man is both
a groveller on the earth and the gazer
at the sky.' Man is composed of two
elements; one grain of dust to one
of diety. But essentially man Is not
dust; he Is divine.
So said Dr. W. T. McElveen in his
sermon yesterday morning at th
First Congregational church. His
topic was "The Goal of Man."
He continued by saying, " 'Be ye
perfect as your Heavenly Father is
perfect.' That injunction is not the
moral prospectus of a fanatic; it is
not the exhortation of an idle dream
er. it is the edict of one who was
the greatest and best of men and
who ever knew what was in men.
Only Good la Seen.
Jesus never said a contemptuous
word about human nature. He never
spoke of any man as being cheap or
insignificant. He ever saw the di
vine hand-writing on every soiled
fragment of humanity. He didn't is
nore the. mischief that sin was work-
ng in the human soul, but he in
sisted that there was something In I
man which when reinforced by a sense
or God s presence would make man an
easy match for every evil force that
would reach out to wreck or ruin him.
"The old orthodoxy used to say that
there was no moral health in man.
It found a kind of pleasure in de
scribing human nature as inherently
vue. indeed, some of the old think
ers thought that by disparaging the
nobilities of human nature they
magnified the nobility of God. Pascal
was in his day one of mankind's
greatest thinkers. Yet his favorite
and frequent theme was the utter
worthlessness of man and the trans
cendence of God. Calvin did some
patient, persistent, penetrating think
ing. Thinking men ever will be his
debtors. But he said far too much
about the depravity in men and too
little about the divine in men.
The theologians are not the onlv
thinkers who err in this particular.
Mr. Huxley described man as if cor
ruption was his father. Mr. Car
lyle referred to the population nf
England as 'thirty millions, mostly
fools.' Matthew Arnold looked devn
with contempt on all outside his own
caste and called them barbarians.
Emerson declared that the worst fea
ture of charity is that it preserves
lives that are not worth preserving.
And there are still some preachers
of the gospel who find more delight
in talking about the acquired cor
ruption of human nature than about
its splendid possibilities.
Moral Audacity Need.
"From the lips of the Son of Man
none of these libeling and vilifying
conceptions of human nature ever
fell. Rather, Jesus indicated that
man's fundamental peril Is that he
shall not think enough of himself,
and shall not believe in his own ca
pacity for God. Jesus ever reminded
men of their divine parentage and
destiny. He seemed to think that
people were made stronger and bet
ter, not by entertaining belittling
opinions about themselves, but by
having a quickening sense of what
was possible for them to become.
"There is much more inspiration in
trying to get to the head of the class
than there is in trying to remain at
the foot of the class. v 'Be ye perfect,'
insisted Jesus. He didn't apoligize
for the audacity of that command.
He intimates that moral audacity is
just what the average man needs.'
RELIGION'S SIMPLICITY TOLD
Justice, Mercy and Faith Are Held
Great Essentials.
At the First Christian church yes
terday morning Rev. Harold H. Griffis
emphasized the simplicity of true re
ligion, taking for his scriptural text
i verse from the prophet Micah
What doth the Lord require of thee.
but to do justly, and to love mercy,
and to walk humbly with thy God?'
"True religion is, after all, a very
simple thing, and yet from the begin
ning men and women, have sought to
make it hard and difficult," said Rev.
Griffis. "The prophet Micah sums it
up under three heads: Justice, mercy
and walking humbly with God. The
prophet makes it a very human, social
proposition by recognizing two duties
toward men and one toward God. He
computes first from below and then
from above.
"The first element is justice, which
means literally loyalty to the right or
the truth. To tell the truth, to live
the truth, to be the truth, to give 16
ounces to the pound, to pay 100 cents
on the dollar, to do to others as you
would have others do to you this is
to be just. Honesty is not a policy,
but a virtue. The man who is honest
simply because it is policy, is not
really honest: he is only politic. A lie
is a lie regardless of its size or degree.
What makes a thing false is not its
corpulence, but its coler.
"But justice is not all of true re
ligion. A man may be just and yet,
according to the divineword, be hard
and mean, like the elder brother in the
parablo of the lost boy. He is the just
man who inflicts no wrong when he
has the opportunity, but he is the
BUILDING,
Morrison.
Portland, Ore.
Gen. Mgr E. N. STRONG. Awt Mar
MORAL
AUDACITY
truly merciful man who, when- the
opportunity comes to do a. harm, does
Instead some real help.
"But to justice and mercy there
must be added a third element of true
religion. It is the element of faith
or walking humbly with God. Faith
with the prophet was not a theoretical
process but a practical performance.
The man -of faith is the man who
takes God with him on the journey
of life."
JUDGMENT HELD INEVITABLE
Man Most Account for His Deeds,
Says Evangelist Dickson.
That mankind will be called upon
to give an account before God's judg
ment bar is one of the clearest and
most unassailable doctrines of the
Bible, said Evangelist L. K. Dickson
last night, addressing a large audi
ence in Christensen's halL His ad
dress was one of a series of Sunday
night Bible lectures which he is giv
ing under the auspices of the Seventh-day
Adventlst church.
It is reported that more than 200
people have affiliated with' the Seventh-day
Adventlst church since the
special services began under the lead
ership of Mr. Dickson and his com
pany of personal workers and mu
sicians. In the lecture last night the speak
er said In part:
"Man is left free to choose whether
or not he will serve God and keep
his commandments, but, as the
apostle Paul said, 'We must all ap
pear before the judgment seat of
Christ." This is not optional with
the individual, for we read 'we must
all appear.' Repudiation of the fact
does not change it.
"There are two judgments men
tioned in the Bible which will take
place before the wicked finally re
ceive their punishment. The first of
these sessions is now in progress, as
we will attempt to prove from the
scriptures next Sunday night. This
judgment is an investigation into the
cases of mankind prior to the be
stowal of the reward of the faithful
when Jesus comes the second time.
He says of himself, 'Behold, I come
quickly and my reward is with me,
to give every man according as his
work shall be.' It is very evident
then that there raust be an account
ing of those who are worthy prior
to this great event which is now so
near."
WORLD PREPARATION' URGED
'The Coming of Jesus', or Christ of
Prophecy," Is Subject.
Preparation for the return of
Christ to this world was advocated
by Rev. Elbert E. Flint, pastor of the
Atkinson Memorial Congregational
church in a sermon preached yester
day morning on "The Coming of
Jesus or the Christ of Prophecy."
The making ready for the coming
of Jesus is as important as his com
ing," said Rev. Mr. Flint. I love
Jesus, 1 serve Him because I love
Him and I love Him so much that my
heart is pained with fear to think
of what might happen should my
Lord come. I remember well, still,
the tragedy of Jesus when he came
to this world. I remember too, that,
that tragedy was enacted even by
those who had vigorously sought and
looked for his coming. The world
asks for Jesus to come, many in the
world believe that things are to be
righted by bringing back the Lord
Jesus to the earth. But pray tell me.
what more could he do than he did
should he come? It is the supreme
question of the hour.
What would Jesus say to this en
lightened. Christianized age, but the
very thing he said to Philip so long
ago, have 1 been so long time witn
you and dost thou not know me?
The world needs a prospective Christ
as much as a retrospective Jesus. For
all phases of life, business, industry.
government, education, religion, to
build the vision of the Christ into
human society as the prophet of old
built him, will be to establish the
coming of Jesus into this world of
ours. The world s heart today is
bleeding for the Christ that the
prophet beheld. Let us thank God
for the certain solution of our mad
dening perplexities, offered by the
Phrlst seen, and foreseen bv the
prophet for a better day which is I
coming, as is the Christ always and
forever."
HIGHER IDEALISM IS URGED
Not Finer Clothes, but Finer Spirit
Needed, Says Dr. Morrison.
"Not finer clothes for your body
but finer substance for your spirit
is what God wants you to have. If
you have forfeited your inheritance
from God it is because you serve
false gods," said Dr. A. A. Morrison,
rector of Trinity Episcopal church,
in his sermon yesterday morning.
"No man can serve two masters. He
cannot serve God and mammon. He
cannot cling to two adverse ideals.
Him
GoffejeJFaslLel
thoutelDmgi
CdstsgEesigszTng
SPillllilp
we say
"Please!"
you'll say
"Thank you!"
YOU'LL thank us for urging you to
try Drinket, You probably think it is
a beany, wishy-washy makeshift, imitat
ing the good coffee you like. Just try it.
Youll be surprised. Rich, full-flavored,
full-bodied, a real, . satisfying, genuine
food-beverage it will be a new favorite
on your menu. Let the children drink
Drinket, too. Buy Kellogg's Drinket of
your grocer. This signature is your
guarantee.
Kellogg's Drinket is produced in the same modem
kitchens where Kellogg' Toasted Corn Flakes, Kellogg's
Krumbles and Kellogg' Krambled Braa are made.
two - conflicting dominating- princi
ples." said the rector. "Jesus, when
he came, saw that man pursued ma
terialistic things, for all men are
alike by nature until they are con
verted to the idealism of Christ. He
said: 'Take no thought of your life.
He meant to take no exaggerated,
foolieh, unnecessary thought. The
lilies do not toil- God, who tinted the
lilies with exquisite beauty, will care
for you, and -so minister to the vital
necessities of your nature that you
will be incomparable.
"The life oat your spirit is much
more Important than the hat you
wear, or the amount of money you
have In your pocket.
"There is no lesson that the church
needs more than this one the lesson
of service. We must work and pray
for the redemption of the world for
Christ."
DEATH PENALTY HELD FALSE
Dr. Stansfield Sees in Bible No Jus
tification for Hanging.
In speaking at the First Methodist
church last night on "Capital Punish
ment Is It Christian?" Dr. Stansfield
took as text Matt, v: 38-39: "It hath
been said an eye for an eye. and a
tooth for a tooth, but I say unto you
that ye resist not evil." He said:
'Capital punishment Is non-enns-
tian and anti-Christian. Of all the
arguments advanced for capital pun
ishment the scriptural argument, so-
called, that It is taught in the word
of God. is most offensive to many
thoughtful Christian people. By the
same process of reasoning, almost
every form of evil has been sanc
tioned and supported by the Bible.
Slavery, drunkenness, polygamy, the
burning of witches, are in the book
by actual practice, or by precept, cus
tom, or command.
"Capital punishment, as we have
it in the Old Testament, is the He
brew practice of the old Semetic law
of blood revenge. This- law of retal
iation Jesus positively teaches Is
wrong. It Is anti-Christian, and no
intelligent Christian man should
quote the Bible in support of capital
punishment.
"Murder should be punished, ana
society should be protected, but life
imprisonment would be more of a
real punishment for the murderers
than the swift and easy revenge of
death by legalized life-taking."
Poverty Rotary Club Topic.
Members of the Rotary club will
meet at the Benson hotel tomorrow
noon for the regular weekly session
and luncheon, and will take up for
consideration the topic, "Poverty, a
Reconstruction Problem." The speak
ers will be as follows: A. R. Gephard,
general secretary of the public wel
fare bureau; Dr. George Rebec of the
University of Oregon, and Ben Selling,
president of the public welfare bu
reau. Attendance at the luncheons
of the Rotary club in October was
71.33 per cent of membership, accord
ing to the . report Of the secretary.
this placing the Portland chapter
among the ten highest in the United
States in this respect.
imiiiiiiiiimmimiiiiiiiiiitiiiiimiiiiiiii
Overcoats
and Suits
for every age of
Id
ESIGNING, cutting,
tailoring and fitting
all done under one
roof. Easy payments, if
desired. Winter woolens
now displayed.
104 Fourth Street
E Bet. Washington and Stark
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiniiiTT
AXOFFEE-UKE BCVEItAGE
READY TO SERVE
nuMt ntsm 09u fun ca
MAN
Conservative styles
for business men, yet
cut to give that keen,
well-set-up air.
$50
See Window Displays
Buy Your Gifts for Men
at a Men's Store
Exclusive Kuppenheimer
House in Portland.
MORRISON and FOURTH
Printing and Book-
binding establishments
are developed much the
same as any other line of
business.
It trkes years of effort to
demonstrate that you are
one of the leaders in the
industry.
For over twenty-five years
we have striven to provide
under one roof Printing,
Bookbinding, and Paper
Ruling Equipment to pro
duce Qiuility printing and
give service.
Glass &Prudhomme Co.
65-67 IR0ADWAY
' BOOKBINDERS
DESKS FILING CABINETS
Oro& YAMHILL,
THE
UNITED ARTISANS
INSURE THE WHOLE FAMILY
Four Up-to-Date Plans
Adequate Rates
Assets Over $1,000,000
Headquarters 608 Beck Bldg. '
Main 1220 A 1112
Do Not Neglect Your Feet
Take care of them and keep them
in good condition. It means that
you will be more efficient and
comfortable. - .
Try a Pair of Ground Gripper
Shoes for Comfort and Service
Ground Gripper Shoe
Store
381 Yi Washington St..
STEIN'METZ
SILVER STEEL
RAZOR, $2.50
Prepaid Guaranteed for Life..
PORTLAND CLTLERT BARBERS'
blPI'LY CO
SS Sixth St.. Near Stark. '
YCftfJg'
-!vwnr-:
A Bond for Christmas
a Christmas Gift that
increases in value
There are comparatively few gifts that will
mean more to their recipient in a few years
than they do now. A high-class bond is one
of these exceptions.
And today -the very best bonds existent may
be purchased more cheaply than ever before,
in denominations that appeal to the moderate
investor, as well as to the wealthy man.
We can sell you bonds of "proved worth" in
denominations of fifty dollars, one hundred,
five hundred, and one thousand dollars, at
prices that will yield an income of five to six
and one-fourth per cent.
6)
BOND DEPARTMENT
LADD & TILTON BANK
Oldest in the
Washington
VVe-.-3He'y5'
' W )S Si' W XT S Sir W i
p(HKn
M. L. KLINE
Plumbing, Heating, Mill
and Steam Supplies
Exclusive Agents for
The William Powell Company
Valves and Specialties
30 Years Wholesaling in Portland
84-86-87-89 Front St.
Automobile Tractor
School, operated on practical laboratory and shop method.
New Vulcanizing Course Opens January 1st
New "building; full up-to-date equipment; high-grade instructors;
. personal attention. Good opportunities for graduates.
Radio Telegraphy
We are training hundreds of young men into radio positions. Interest
ing travel and good pay. Shortage of operators has forced up the
salary scale, and made the demand keen.
These schools co-operate with the state in providing financial aid to
returned service men.
For catalogue and detailed information, address
Div. C, Department of Education
Portland Y. M. C. A.
4
HIGH GRADE FINISHED WORK ROUGH DRY
ECONOMY FAMILY WORK WET WASH
"CINDA LOU"
(Fax Tro
' A . SLOW SHIMMIES
Km Betas; Featured by
The BIk Dance Oreaeatra DfLnif,
Meoae Hall Every Tuesday. Thursday
aad Saturday Bilgats.
Rea.. SO EK Ih at. Phone Kast 6545.
C. Gee Wo
. Root and Herb Remedies
162 Vz First St.
FURS
APPLEGATH
Northwest
and Third
FEDEBAL RESEBVfS fSV-.l?
KINDS OF LAUNDRY
Are You Satisfied
that the amount ' of insurance
which you are carrying -at pres
ent is sufficient to adequately
provide for your family in the
event of your death?
Remember
that it takes considerably more
than it did a few years ago.
The New World Life is
a Western Company.
See our special coyprighted
policies."
New World Life
Portland Office
Stevens Building
J