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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1922)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1923 S DECLARED NEEDED Rev. William G. Eliot Jr. Dis cusses Modern Trend. TWO BOOKS ARE CITED Average EnglUh-Speaklng Man Is Said to Be Terribly Ignorant on Simplest iacla. "Many men. otherwise Intelligent, suppose that medievalism and irrell rion are the only alternatives; they do not know that they can be abreast of the age Intellectually and still be Christians." aeclared Rev. William G. E!it Jr.. in speaiclng at the Church of Our Father. Unitarian, yestreday morning, on "The Religious Ufa of the Modern Man." "Having- been taught that religions and chiirrh were based on miracles and having learned that miracles in the ordinary sense do not happen, they nave naturally and quite logically riven over with the miracles what they had supposed was their religion and church. What we see la 'not a new religion, but the renewal of re ligion,' destroying only what modern intelligence discredit, and conserving and building up the essential faith of the Christian centuries." Tut Hooka Are Cited. rr. Ellol called attention to two booxs as evidence of the religion or Jack of religion in the average mem ber of the Knglish-speaking race. He aio cited an article in the Modern Churchman on "The Creed of the Av erage Kngllshman." He noted that theie were 60.000.000 unchurched peo ple in America. The two books were "'Religion Among American Men" and The Church in the Furnace." The evidence is to the effect that the av erage Englieh-speaklng man ia terribly-ignorant upon even the simplest facts about religion, he explained. "We have not the easy task of Adapting Christianity to the lack of religion in the average man. We have rather the exceedingly difficult task of re-education almost from the ground up with vat obstacles of jirejudice. Mere freedom ts not enough to build a church on. because a man can be free without any church at aiL C h rial la a Faith I rsrrel. The getting rid of errors can never take the place of the great life sriving force of the Christian faith which are hindered rather than helped in the present day by the de mand that people must consider the miraculous to be the foundation of all "valid religious and church life. "Church membership to be worth much must abandon "crowd psychol ogy' and false emotionalism and be come consonant with reason and con science in the Individual, not of couise exrlud.ng true emotion. I'pon this principle liberal Christian churches base their appeal and be lieve that the time has come when an intelligent, modern man is more out of place outside than inside the church, and that he owes it to him self, to history and to the church universal to lie a member of that par ticular church that most nearly com ports with his intelligence and conscience." Christianity a feeble thing when we desrlve it of this pure passion of wrath against evil doing. The Christianitv of Christ ia a Christianity of love, but when was love pure and strong in which there was no Intensity of feeling against whatever would injure what was loved? Let a mother love her child and she will be filled with hate of all that Injures It. The more she loves the more she hates. It is her love that makes her hate. So again let men love the good and" they will hate ail that hinders or oppresses it. This Is the reason that many do not want the dance In the public school, and not to deprive the boys and girls of anv pleasure. The trouble with most of us is that we love so weakly and slightly, and have thought of love as if It simply meant unending good nature, and have not seen that it is a consuming fire. "If our fathers laid too much em phasis on "the wrath of God." we are ufrf-:nir tmm the reaction. V e need to remember that the wrath of God is against "all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men." And if we are to be godlike we must partake of his wrath aa well as his love. Let the men and women of our Christian churches be moved by this holy, sin less, anger against the wrongs of our social life, and these wrongs will wither in the heat of that Indignation." HlIILIllUHllUlUIHLliU i BECOMING FEWER j - A Foreign Women in New York Bearing More Children. BIRTH CONTROL DEPLORED Most Btviting Positions Offered ii, The Publishers of the Nation Offer You One of the Greatest of All Callings The Easiest Road to Success. JIX AND APE DISCl'SSED Scriptures IH Not Contradict The ory, Declare Dr. McKIvoon. "ls man a child of God or a des cendant of the ape?" wss one of the questions Ir. W. T. McElveen an -eeered last night at his "question forum" at the t irst Congregational cb urch. "There is nothing In the scriptures, r in science that prevents one saying thAt man is both." was the answer riven. "Read human nature one way.' sid the minister, "and man seems like a high-grade animal, but re.vd human nature another way and man seems to be the son of the eternal. Man ts a marvelously com pounded creature. He is made of many different materials. He is a muss of seeming contradictions. The sc-ent-.sts who have given studious attention to man'a physical origin are screed almost to a man that man. physically, is allied to the lower Jorms of life. The scholars who have concerned themselves with man's moral and spiritual nature, insist that mn is essentially allied to God. These two groups of students are not 3ooking at the same set of facts in liuman nature. So they are not con tradicting each other. Rather they ere supplementing each other. "When the theory of evolution was first announced it did seem to strike a killing blow at the unique dignity of man. It appeared to regard the Drutes and the birds as man's brothers and sisters. It did seem to teach that the ape was our great-great-grandfather. But the first statements of the evolutionists were not only crude, but presumptious. Soon we discovered that they were talking only of the antral side of man's being. Soon they confessed that they were not Interpreting the spiritual capacities and powers of man. "And soon the intelligent religion ists d:seovered that what the evolu tionists were teaching in no way contradicted the teachings of Genesis Genesis declares that "God formed man out of the dust of the ground.' put Genesis does not describe the methods by which the dust was molded Into the shape we now bear. Neither does it say that that creation was one act. or a long continued process. There is nothing In Genesis that prevents one believing that creation was an upward-tending evo lutionary process" ItK.HTKOl Si AM; Kit IS UYIXW Ir. Walter Henry Vusenl Wmux-s Trt'iitl of I'liristianity. Steaking before a congregation that completely filled the Central l'rrsb tt-r:an church yesterday morn ine. I'r. V alter Henry Nugent ex claimed: "What claim to the Chris tian name have we If we see lust degrading and greed oppressing and tjrannv crushing and are not moved to oppose and condemn"' The ques tion came In the midst of a discourse in which the preacher lamented the lact that "righteous anger is dying i out of the world. ""The xleal Christian." said Dr. "Nugent, "is popularly supposed to be meek ar.d gentle soui, who never savs an ill word nor a condemning word ahout anvone or anything, no matter how much It may be deserved; on who never raises his voice in trotest against wrong, never fee's lie glow of righteous ind;gr.ation in, fcts heart, and never stands up to op- 1 agression and tyranny, and speaks the fiain. blunt truth abom them. This ' Is entirely a wrong Idea, and I tell von wa miss the strength of the pavior of men when we miss the aoachtnjr of bis ancer. .We make SO-CAIXED CRAZE ANALYZED Christiana Held to Have Failed to Keeognize Biblical Teaching. - "Failure of Christians everywhere to recognize the biblical teaching of spiritual glftsi and the formula for their use. has led to the faith-healing erase, which has confused and swept the church." declared Rev. George H. Bennett, pastor of Patton Methodist church, in speaking yesterday on "Mustard Seed. Faith and'Mlracles." "Amasing powers, called spiritual gifts, were bestowed on tne propneia of Old Testament times by -the Lord, and also upon the apostles. They were employed In performing mira cles and uttering prophecies lor tne rpose of attesting the divinity ot God and redemption through cnriai. Saint Paul speaks of the two classes of spiritual gifts. The inferior class included powers requisite to perform ing physical miracles and wonders, while the superior class included the s-ifts of Dreaching. teaching ana evangelism. "Jesus endowed the apostles with power, as he gave them authority over unclean spirits to cast them out. and to heal ail manner of diseases and all manner of sickness. Omnipo tence was thus placed at their dis posal. Moreover, Jesus gave them the formula for using the miracu lous prayers: "Whatever ye shall ask. in my name, with fasting, that they may believe thou hast sent me, believe that ye receive and ye s-hall have." These are Christ's instructions to his disciples in making use of their spiritual gifts in miracle working. They are not his instructions con cerning prayer proper. "Miracles of Old and New Testa ment times were all performed' by someone endowed with such spiritual gifts. There is not an exception. Kaith as a grain of mustard seed only was sufficient to work a mira cle, Jesus said. Faith was the lever that moved omnipotence, but do not forget that the spiritual gift was the fulcrum upon which faith moved om nipotence. The spiritual gift from God was in all cases the first requi site. Without this gift, faith was inoperative for performing miracles. Failure of Christians everywhere to recognize the biblical teaching of spiritual gifts, and the formula for their use. has led to the faith-healing erase which has confused and swept the church. If you have the spiritual gift you can follow the formula given by Christ and perform wonders if not. yoj will faiL If you have such a gift your cures will be immediate ana visible as Christ a were." Fashionable Homes Reduce Their Maternity to Seven for Each 1000 of City's Population. REED PRESIDENT BUCK MR. SC1IOLZ RETIRNS FROM EASTERN" TRIP. . arm's of Talks "Speakers Obtained for it College Are An nounced to Students. That the colleges of the United States realise the necessity of a co operative enterprise in the national education and that there must be a diversity of college educational types in order to contribute towards this national education, was the word brought back by Richard F. Scbolz. president of Reed college, who re turned late Saturday from the east, where he attended the eighth annual convention of the Association of American college presidents, held in Chicago. From Chicago he went to New York in) Washington and then to California. On his trip he visited several east ern colleges, held conferences with ex-Reed students, and obtained data on new types of architecture for libraries and dormitories. Dr. Alfred Zlmmern. noted politi cal student of Oxford, was obtained to give a series of lectures on impor tant International questions here. Mrs. Zimmern. who will accompany her husband, is a talented musician and will be a member of the music department. During March and April Dr. K. K. Robinson, professor of his tory at Stanford university, and Dr. Moulin Chiang, a member of the Chi nese arms delegation and acting chancellor of the University of Pekin. will be visitors in Portland. TRAIN HITS AUTO; 4 DEAD Car Passenger Engine Wrecks Near Globe, Ariz. GLOBE. Aris.. Feb. 5 Four persons have died as a result of a collision be tween an Arizona eastern passenger train aid an automobile at Webster's crossing, near here, late yesterday. The dead are: Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Hatch. Ashurst. Ariz.; Mrs. E. T. Bryce of Ashurst. Ariz., and Andrew Brown. Fort Thomas, Ariz. Mr. and Mrs. Hatch and Mrs. Bryce died at a local hospital during the r.!sht. Dewey Bryce. -3. son of Hryce. wss the only occupant of car not injured. NEW YORK, Jan. 23. In analyzing the birth statistics for the year, the health commissioner. Dr. Royal S. Copeland; said that it was a sad com mentary on present - day conditions that there should be birth-control discussion when native-born mothers are decreasing in this city. He pre dicted that if the decrease is kept up the prominent families of this city will not be those whose ancestors came over in the Maynower or wicn Lord Baltimore, but those whose parents came here in immigrant steamships. Of course, he said, the war had so changed conditions that it would probably be some years before final Judgment could be pronounced. In 1919 68.7 per cent of births in this city were children whose mothers were born in other countries, rrac tically the same relative percentage obtained in 1911. Then came the war. War Has Its Elf feet. "In general the figures tend to show that foreign-born women had more children last year than did those of native stock." said Dr. Copeland. "The war had" its effect upon births In this city, .and it yet remains to oe seen what effect the restriction of immigration is going to have. When you combine the fact that the chil dren born to native mothers are less than those born in other lands, with the further fact that infant mortality is greater among babies of native stock, there is indicated that our population is becoming less American, more foreign. "The statement that there is great er mortality among infants of American-born mothers will, no doubt, sur prise many. One reason for this is that foueign-born mothers generally nurse their children. This is a nat ural function and goes toward the making of a low death rate in this class. It is also accountable for ths low death rate in congested districts of the city, where it might be ex pected there would be more infaat deaths. "We find the death rate for chil dren under one year of age is 90 per 1000 among infants of native-born mothers, while the rate of deaths of Swedish-born mothers is 68, Scotch 43. Russian 4. French 79, Austro- Hungarian 69. Bohemian 5. Besides failure to nurse there is another rea son for the story told by these fig ures. That is that American mothers are less inclined to make use of the baby health stations of the depart ment of health and public health education promulgated by the de partment. Foreign-born mothers are accustomed to depend on these and other governmental agencies. "The American-born should consid er these figures seriously and take a lesson from them. We have a nat ural pride in our country and our Americanism, but we leave it to our foreign-born to have the babies. Fashionable Families lax, Picking up a sheet covered with figures from his desk. Commissioner Copeland continued: "Here we have a district that will illustrate what I mean. It is a section on the fash ionable upper east side bounded on two sides by Fifth and Park avenues. The birth rate in this district was seven for each 1000 of the population. In the rest of the borough of Man hattan the rate averaged 25 per 1000. Thia district is typical, for it con tains well-to-do persons of American birth whose lineage goes back to the Mayflower and who are counted as of the first families of America. "If this state of affairs is con tinued through a score or more years. these first families will dwindle until there will be others and more recent first families. On top of this and in the face of these figures it is time that very serious attention should be given the subject of birth control." Would you like to get into a business that insures a g-ood earning; power and employment anywhere in the civilized world ? The publishers of America want you to work for them if you have as much as a good grammar school educa tion. The work is very nearly the same as operating a typewriter for six or eight hours a day. The atmosphere surrounding the work nowadays is as agreeable as that of a counting room, and the associa tions are just as pleasing. It is attractive to talented women as well as to ambitious men, from 18 years old upward. A school for the purpose of training you in thirteen weeks has been established at Macon, Ga., in connection with the Georgia-Alabama Business College. This paper is interested in the school because it sees the great need for the graduates. Employment at unusually high pay is assured at once if you but join the school and work faith fully to perform the tasks assigned to you. Letters and telegrams are received daily, from all parts of the nation, begging the school for operators. If you want to get into a work that brings you a big reward immediately and gives you an opportunity to reach a high place in the world, write for prospectus, addressing Typesetting Department, Georgia-Alabama Business College,, (Accredited) Macon, Georgia Eugene Anderson, President IS CONVICTS ACCUSED OF GET TING $14,517 ILLEGALLY. to PRIEST SINGS HIGH MASS Rev. Father Orth Participates at Pro-Cathedral Service. St. Mary's pro-cathedral was crowd ed at the 11 o'clock services yester day, when Rev. Father Henry Orth, who was ordained to the priesthood last Thursday, sang his first high mass. Deacons of tne mass were .rtev. Father I. McNamee of St. Francis church and Rev. Father Leipzig of the cathedral. The Rev E. V. O'Hara of Eugene was deacon of honor. The ser mon was preached by the Rt. Kev. Bishop Carroll of Helena, Mont. Rev. Father Orth has passed most of his life in Portland and is well known in the cathedral parish, where he served as an altar boy and attended the parochial schools and later Colum bia university. He compietea nis studies at Menlo Park. CaL He h&a been appointed secretary to Arch bishop Christie. Mr. the m-fect in Theater Suspected. WASHINGTON, D. C. Feb. S Be lief that some f'.aw in the structure of the Knickerbocker moving picture theater caused its collapse under a weight of snow last Saturday night, with more than 90 fatalities, was ex pressed yesterday by Harry Cran d:i. proprietor of the chain of thea ters which included the Knickerbocker. Girl Basketball Player Dies. PAN FRANCISCO. Feb. S. Miss Genevieve T. White of Fakersfleld died of meningitis, reported to have resulted from an injury received in a basketball game. a H. green rtamps ror casa. Holman Fuel Co coai and wood, MU M; 0-H. Adv. MOTOR ORDINANCES UP Salem Council to Debate Tax on Truck Operators. SALEM. Or.. Feb. 5. (Special.) The city council, at a meeting to morrow night, will consider two or dinances having for their purpose the regulation of motor vehicle traffic. One of the ordinances prohibits the parking of for-hire cars in certain parts of the business district, wnne the other ordinance provides for licensing truck operators who engage a contmercial business in talem- The license fee is fixed in the ordi nance at 125 annually. It was said today that the truck operators prob ably will protest against passage of the ordinance on the grounds that they already are assessed to the limit allowed by their business. Forged Bank Checks Declared Have Been Used to Obtain Money From State. ALBANY. N. Y., Feb. 5. (Special.) The crime wave has lapped the inner portals of Sing Sing prison. Convicts entrusted with clerical duties have been accused of forging bank checks and defrauding the state out of $14,- 617.06. The fraud, uncovered by expert ac countants in the office of State Con troller Wendell, was perpetrated, it was believed, by Inmates of the prison in eolluaJon with confederates on the outside. To cover up the crime, con victs employed on the prison books were believed to have falsified the schedules and records of the institu tions. So cleverly were the forgeries ex ecuted that the signatures could be detected only upon the closest com parison with the genuine, said the controller. Responsibility for the crime has not yet been placed upon particular individuals. The author ities have pursued their examination in the hope that the culprits will be unmasked in a short time. Another line of operations in which the state is the victim has been car ried on by convicts in Sing Sing. By means of false orders and vouchers. contrived and executed by convicts assigned to office and accounting du ties in the institution, the state was defrauded of $4165. The civilian prison clerks, said Mr. Wendell, have more work than they can do, and they have to depend upon inmates to helD without adequate safeguards that the work will be honestly done. The controller therefore will urge the leg islature to provide sufficient civilian help to keep the financial and in dustrial accounts of the states nrinona. He also recommended that in the future no convicts be employed on accounts. would see the great undeveloped 're sources as well as good business op portunities throughout the state, and that people interests.- in a manufac turing line would be especially inter ested .on account of the great supply of raw material Oregon has to offer. The committee was instructed to get all the available data for advertising the fair, along with the different at tractions Seaside would have to offer, and to take steps to see that this in formation was well distributed. ASTORIA MILL OPENS UP Shingle Plant "Employs 65 Men; Has Payroll of $200 Daily. ASTORIA, Or., Feb. 6. (Special.) A new industry, which promises to result in the creation of a payroll of no mean proportions was started in Astoria yesterday. It is the shingle mill just established in connection with the Youngs Bay Lumber com pany's plant. Operations were com menced yesterday with one shift, and February 20 another shift will be added with an output of 80,000 shingles daily. This company has Just completed a dry kiln with a capacity of 70,000 feet of lumber a day, as well as tha installation of a plant for cutting alder into dimensions. The alder mill will resume operations February 15, after a shutdown for several days to make improvements. The company is operating nine log ging camps, two cutting cedar for shingles and seven cutting alder. It employs 65 men and has a payroll of $200 a day. Obituary. Ed Fay. KELSO. Wash.. Feb. 6. (Special.) Ed Fay, a resident of Kelso for nearly 20 years, died yesterday at his home in West Kelso. He was nearly 62 rears old and was born in Kansas. He had been ill for several months. Besides his widow he is survived by nine children: A. R. Fay. Aberdeen; Mrs. H. D. Byrnes, Knappa. Or.; Mrs. La Vern Tracey. Ridgefield; Mrs. J. A. Klickman. Mount Solo; Mrs. W. E. Stone, Rankin Fay, S. E. Fay and Tula and Mildred Fay of Kelso. Funeral Bervices were held from the rresbyterian church Sunday after noon. Interment was In the Oddfel lows' cemetery. James Hunt. SALEM. Or., Feb. 5. (Special.) James Hunt, for many years a resi dent of the Broadacres district, near Woodburn, died last night, according to word received here. Mr. Hunt leaves a widow and several children, among them John P. Hunt, chief clerk of the senate during the past three sessions of the legislature. Funeral services will be held at Woodburn tomorrow. Philo M. Lonsbury. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 6. Funeral services were held yesterday for Philo M. Lonsbury, ex-member of the Wisconsin state legislature, who died at his home here yesterday. Jie was a veteran of the civil war. Ex-Policeman Is Dead CENTRALIA. Wash., cial.) William Louden, ex - member of the Centralia police force, dropped dead last night at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milford Louden. Ueaih was due to heart disease, from which he had suffered for a number of years. In adjitlon to his wife and parents, Mr. Louden Is survived by four brothers. SHARK BITE KILLS YOUTH Swimmer, Arms Almost Severed, Dies on Beach After Rescue. LONDON, Feb. 5. While swimming in the sea at Coogee, near Sydney, Australia. Michael Coghlan, 18, was attacked by a shark and fatally bit- Feb. S. (Spe-H ten, says a Reuter dispatch. His arms were almost severea. A returned soldier. Jack Chalmers, swam to the rescue and dragged Cogh lan from the shark's jaws. Other swimmers carried Coghlan from the water, but he died on the beach. 235 in Prlneville School. PRINEVILLE. Or., Feb. 6. (Spe cial.) The enrollment at the Prlne ville public school is now 2S6, an in crease of 20 over the total enrollment Tacoman Heads Optometrists. TACOMA, Wash., Feb. 5. Dr. W. A, Woefel, Tacoma. was elected presi dent of the Western Washington Op tometrists' association, which held its annual meeting here today. Other officers elected were Dr. Robson, Se attle, first vine-nresiriflnt Ttr n Tt ! Ridgeway, Olympla, second vice- president; Dr. Harry Appleton, Se attle, and Dr. C. A. Green, Tacoma, directors. The association will hold its next annual meeting in Seattle. Abduction Attempt Reported. DENVER, Colo., Feb. 5. Miss Ruth Wells, physical director in the city schools, was beaten unconscious, bound, gagged and kidnaped by two unidentified assailants last night, but escaped by leaping from the auto mobile driven by lver abductors while passing through the main street of Golden, Colo., ten miles from Denver, according to a telephone call received from her by her guardians here. Ex-Chief of Dry Squad Arrested. CHICAGO, Feb. 5. John Hennessy, ex-chief of the "federal sponge squad," who has directed some of the biggest whisky raids in Chicago, was arrested yesterday charged with violation of the Volstead act. Federal prohibition officers yesterday raided a saloon here and seized a large quantity of whisky. Hennessy, who is said to be the owner of the place, gave bail of $2500. Snowbound Party to Get Relief. SAN DIEGO, Feib. 5. Two forest rangers, equipped with snowshoes left Descanso, 35 miles from here to day to relieve a snowbound party believed to have been caught in the heavy snow on Laguna mountain, 15 WZ&CLD RELIABLE REM ED' fyrdlds LIPMAN WOLFE CO YEOtf" ALBS. MEIER JUJIJ SSV "PRANK. CO 0 I ALIEN CO. LOCATION 14S "FIFTH ST ALLEr CO MOEZTSOJf SflSSSZ? hi 010 P0S1 CORBET T BI.T7G- 1 148 FIFTH STREET (Between Morrison and Alder) Will Be the New Home of .. Wiley B. Allen Go. After February 15th Our stock of pianos and reproducing pianos is unsur passed including the supreme Mason & Hamlin and other instruments of international fame. OurVictrola and Brunswick Phonograph display rooms are being arranged for your convenient comparison of the various models. Our Victor and Phonograph record section,' being con structed on the main floor, just as you step inside, will be one of the most complete and most efficient depart ments of its kind in the United States. In addition to unsurpassed stocks and facilities, this fifty-year-old organization stands behind every sale with both a willingness and ability to serve patrons as they wish to be served, by musically competent sales people. We cordially invite you to call at our new home after February 15th. MASON AND HAMLIN PIANOS MORRISON ST. AT BROADWAY CW SAM PRAMCISCO. OAKLAND. FHUM, SAM DIM MN JOSE. ACMAMENTO. LOS ANULU miles away. In the party, according to reports, are J. O. Butts, cashier of a bank in Imperial valley, his wife and two children. General Colvera Held in Jail. MEXICO CITY, Feb. 5. General Norbeto Colvera, military commander under Carranza, arrested Friday, is held in jail on conspiracy charges pending his appeal for trial by civil court rather than by court-martial Curve Elimination Sought. ABERDEEN, Wash., Feb. 5. (Spe cial.) To avoid a sharp and danger- 4M 3 PAYS t c- . I WORLD'S STANDARD FOR. TWO eoitamcua BEGINS actinic sithin ten seconds. Safest snd most dependable fan Or nmedy tar Colds. Headaches aitd La Grippe. Don't experiment Insist span Hilt's Caaeara Bromide Quinine. Worid'i standard Cold remedy for tw fenerations. Demand red box bearing Mr. RUTS portrait and signature. (301) Al All DmtllftO Cents W. H. HILL COMPANY. DETROIT fftV), Seaside to Boost Fair. SEASIDE. Or.. Feb. 6. (Special.) At a recent meeting of the commer cial club a motion was made- and Dassed to appoint a special committee to boost the Portland world's fair in 1915. Members of the club expressed the opinion that the fair in Portland for last year. The eighth gTado class I would ba of great benefit to the en la lb largest ia th hiaiorj, I lira atats. that persona coming here BAUME. BENGUE (ANl kLOESIQUE. I At All Druqqifts Keep a tub handy THOS. LEE.MINC.fr' CO. NEWYORK Dr. Harry Semler. 3Iy Persona Guarantee Is a Fart of Semler Service. Our Dental Plates Are Fully Guaranteed We make plates of any standard material you , may prefer. The work is done in our own labora tory by a specialist. We have a record which shows the names of satisfied wearers of our plates. We will be glad to furnish you with references. We not only guarantee each plate, but also give a satisfactory filate service that is, we are wili ng to make the slight adjust ments which may be made neces sary by changes in the- structure of the mouth. Gold or Porcelain Crown 95.00 Gold or Porcelain Bridge-work $5.00 Rubber Plates 15.00 Up aSlak3 Ajr. A. ts. sines Get Acquainted With SEMLER SKRVICE Personal Attention Dr. Harry Semler Second Floor, Allnky Building; Third and Morrison. Phone Main 657U. ous curve at the top of a Mil near the McCleary school buildings, on the Olympic highway, members of the state highway department have been surveying the road on Third street, their aim being to connect the main highway with this street. In this way the curve will be eliminated. Read The Oregonian classified ads. (food N0W!n n HERE Ufc.adL4.ntta,.. EmmI til lJ2to! aaatisi tonllnuons Daily Shows Start 11 A. 1, 3, !i. 7 and 9 P. 31. coaltujtefs do not guess at the solution to their heat ing problem. They order and then study the pe culiarities of their heat ing and cooking appa ratus.. Both steps mean cutting fuel costs. Ask for Superior Domestic Lump Sold by Most Portland Dealers Northwest Agent AS BOYD Henry Building PQSIXLAND ORG0N FIRST TIME SHOWN IN PORTLAND AT POPULAR PRICES WILLIAM FOX'S FAMOUS WONDER PICTURE OF THE AGE THE SAME BIG OFFER ING THAT PLAYED AT THE H E I L I G THEATER LAST SUMMER AT AD VANCED PRICES. OUR PRICES: MATINEES .350 EVENINGS 500 KIDDIES (Anytime) . . .200 These prices' include the tax. yjjj Jet W'' I 3 lOO.O i 1