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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1915)
THE SUNDAY OREGOMAX, PORTLAND, MARCH 21, 1915. GREATER YEAR FORESEEN IN SCHOOL GARDEN WORK Supervisor Weed Completes Laying Oat Plots for Season Abolition of Awarding Prizes Explained in Statement That It Destroys Value of Work. v & r A MBITI'OUS that their homes shall be Xl. 1 i. i. 1 4.4. L.MJ 11 1 VI 4 ifZf- pHAT the Portland school gardens again will set the pace tor 1915 is the prediction of Garden Super visor Weed, who has Just completed the laying out of the plots for this season. The actual planting by the pupils Is the order of the day. The gardens will follow along in much the same manner as heretofore, but with certain changes as improvements in methods are worked out. For one thing there will be no prizes offered. Last year the pupils worked for the prizes, with many disappointments,-of course. Prizes, to a certain extent, destroy the educational value of the garden work, as they lead the pupils away from the purpose of gar dening. The educational value of the gardens will be impressed upon the pupils. Much can be learned in na ture's grand outdoors in a garden. Gardening shows the nobility of labor, the processes of plant growth, the value of the conservation of soil mois ture, the object of cultivation and In all ways many things regarding the A, B. C of agriculture. Wood I awn is to have no garden this year. The land upon which this famous garden has been grown is not owned by the school district and can not be rented this year except at a price the Board would not consider. Several lots across the road from the Woodlawn School are being prepared for a garden next year by being planted into potatoes this year. But while the people of the Woodlawn district are disappointed in not having a garden this year, other gardens will be bet ter than last year, so that upon the whole the gardens of the city will make evert a better showing than here tofore. At the Lev ellyn School, the garden is located Uion school property just back of the building, and from the way the principal, Mrs. Allhands, is taking hold this garden will be a show place for visitors this year. The garden is 200x75 feet and will hav-3 both vegetables and flowers. The Montavilla garden also has been en larged, the boys' garden club doing the work of fencing, and the making of hotbeds. The hotbeds were construct ed a month ago and the young plants are coming along nicely. Much of the garden produce at Montavilla and Brooklyn will be used in the school canning, in the Brooklyn district many of the vacant lots being used by the boys in commercial gardening. At the Kenton School hotbeds have been made on the roof of the boiler-room, so that the garden Idea can be carried out all through the school year. At the Stephens School the Boys' Corn Club will be continued this year. with their famous popcorn. Last year the best seed was saved for planting so that a superior seed is now at hand At the Glencoe School Principal Strong is to try a new experiment growing flax. This will be watched km v im m y. A tX : ee 4 ii-L-Ti f Pi back- IV J Li I have to lie flown be lore l X tS.CJJU ItCclL ailU. dllldLUVC, CIU1UIC11 vvca dressed and family well nourished, thousands of women in our homes are sacrificing their health to duty. They cook, wash, iron, dust, mend and sew, until some female trouble fastens itself upon them and their every day life is a continual struggle with weakness and pain. ' Lydia E. PinkhamV Vegetable Compound is the greatest American Safesruard to woman's health. For thr generations it has been relievins women from the worst forms of femah C7 tJ , ills until there is hardly a town or hamlet where women do; not resk who have been restored to health by its use. How Three Overworked omen Found Help. Their Own Statements Follow Cumming, Ga. "I tell some sufferinwo man every day of Lydia'E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound and what it has done for me. I could not eat. or sleep, had a bad etomach and was in misery all the time. I could not do my housework or walk any dis tance without suffering great pain. I tried doctors' medicines and different patent med icines but failed to get relief. My husband brought home your Vegetable Compound and in two weeks I could eat anything, could sleep like a healthy baby, and walk a long distance without feeling tired. I can highly recommend your Vegetable Com pound to women who suffer as I did, and you are at liberty to use this letter." Mrs. Chaelik Baglxt, R. 3, Cumming, Ga. . Florence, So. Dakota. " I used to be very sick every month with bearing down pains and backache, and had headache a good deal of the time and very little appe tite. The pains were so bad that I used to sit right down on the floor and cry, because it hurt mei so and I could not do any work at those times. An old woman advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and I got a bottle. I felt better the . next month so I took three more bottles of it and got well so I could work all the time. I hope every woman who suffers like I did will try Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. P. W. Lanseng, Box 8, Allyn, Wash. Adrian, Mich. ' fered terribly with male weakness and ache and got so weak that I could hardly do my work. "When I washed my dishes I had to sit down and when I would sweep the floor I would ?et weak so that 1 would lave to lie down before I did my dusting. I got so going into consumption. hams Vegetable Com rlv that my folks thought I was e day l read wuat J.yaia fc. nnn. 1 T J pound, nas aone ior women, l snowea Zi. 1 1 1 V, IA 1 UTi lon'f trnn f fr it ' T H tH and after taking 2 bottles I felt better, and after 3 months use I am welL" Mc. A. E. Baker. 8 Tecumseh St, Adrian, Mich. Every sick woman owes it to herself to give Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, for it cannot harm her, and there are a hundred chances to one that it will completely restore her health. THE LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE COMPANY, LYNN, MASS. !.- 9 . 'IPfUM with considerable interest and it may prove the development of a new In dustry for Portland. McCIellan Estate Bond Filed. NEW YORK. March U. George B. Mc CIellan. former Mayor of New York City, has filed a bond for $150,000 in Essex County, New Jersey, as admin istrator of the estate of his mother, Mrs. Ellen M. McCIellan. who died in Nice, France, on February 12 last. The United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company furnished surety for the bond. Black Bear Killed Near Seaside. SEASIDE, Or., March 20. (Special.) Paul West, who lives a few miles up the Necanicum River from Seaside, yes. terday brought in the pelt of a black bear which he shot near his barn re cently. The fur is In prime condition. The skin measures six feet three inches from the tip of the nose to the tip of the tail and six feet six inches from tip. paws. to tip of the outstretched In Germany on men in 213 son to col lege; In Scotland, on In tt'JO: In tha United States, ont In 2000. and in KngUnd, on In StKK). EMBROIDERY DESIGN OF JAPANESE ALPHABET FOR SHIRTS, ETC. v 4 V A )k 1 B- I V 1 imM ' f -Jl I " l I 7 a ' i f m II rf " U . V A I IWV 1 Iff i U hX. -...r ! mm-- i J -A Japanese alphabet for men's shirts,- towels, ftc. - The directions re as follows: Cut out the letter wanted. lJJri tosether with two heiHs of writlnit paper, lay on a blanket, and with a piercer, made out or a fine nn-rtle and a cork, the cork usd for a handle, perforate along the lllirs of the pnttt-rn. You can easily make 100 trannfers with a perforated pattern. io it will ry to msk the perforations close. Rub the pattern with lln.eeil oil. turpentine, or coul oil before using. It will make a butter and clearvr Impresnion. Stamp with any kind of a powder, paste, or liquid, which may be purchased at any department store. .Jf you prefer to tiihke it your 'lf. dlolv a email tube of blue oil paint in half a pint of gasoline anil with a piece of felt rub the smooth side of the perforated pattern with the liquid. until the pattern shows. Embroider solid in -silk to match the colors in tlio fabric,, then outline with -tine sewing Bilk in black. .They are pretty, too, on colored lineo for the Summer cottage arranged as a monogram. - .. .aj. JJj- .. .JJL JLlJU--JtJ.J--AJLJ KH 1 lO.O