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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1915)
'.4 THE SUN'lJAY OREGON! AN, PORTLAND.' JULY 18, 1DI5. ' "fifty, yard and lortg jump finish 'and. Bill bit off the end 'of . hit iongue-Khett'ihe lit and lost the' race by'gunt, ifs tough tuck." IN THE STY" 4) j - jr-!'-- " " V '' 1 w Gootey-Goosey Gander, XYkcrf cUd you vsdndert" "Just been far acrots the ocean teaching Frili and Lena the goose ttcpl" " ' Is i ";""-..! "Stand atUl. Pup that' tchat ma give ut evS Sat day night." i j t "The champeen hurdle racer and the best Bombay player at ever vea m these part." 7 c '-'-y.--- Vt' ' - "l'wtt already had most of it Pup go away and Ut me get m Uttlchlt.- . Mr u , f-i --Jt. V , . . sr III) r iA Ay AJ v- ? 3 iK: 1 & J ' ' AVi - w J - ' i "Hey. Pop C'monl Lc's have some fun." rm 2 If "IKmA tea Bryan and had a parrot like that," Buttermilk and baked pota toes make. rosy cheeks t and bright eyes and, O, my sis ter's fresh butter and Grandma's hot biscuits." "Last night I fell doicn rath a basketful and Old 'Emily Ileii felt sorry and laid a lot more." ! 't ' - y-ryv vjl I J m . . t x" t .12. . 11 i I it . f LI 1 I,- a-. i IIS.' r- 1 ".if,' kJ.i X --jt - Iir. Jt Xt' pi.y otit to. the sta tion to meet Papa 'Biggs on drivin' firstf m i ,1 1 - - II "Don t eat my. hat. Jlajor dess cat iKc grass, an' I'll get some more."-' T MAT be all right to think of shopgirls, hot and tired, and shoppers, stretch of Calf-molten upout pave- for tun poor vniiaren of ihi- city tnm feveryluinu la new to them and grown-ups In the city in the Sum- equally hot and tired. But when one ment year, owing; to the financial stress in strange to them. and. there is the lrre- tustio gateway into a new realm 01. with living things, aside from his ha adventure and interest. mn cmPanlon8- Here Is where the country has a liJ The child In the city comes more in ,,rai education I . store for him. For touch with the artificial side of life the emphacls in the country is upon mertime, but when one gets to thinks of Summer and children in the And so one thinks of the children of whic". the Associated Charities finds slstible stimulus of th rnmitrv tmo.- thinking of a hot, midsummer city and same instant, one has to have a settlns: Portland this Bummer, in their nrooer itself: hut In iclta of this, there will nliere thit ih .nrlrn nf iif. Kh- tries to fit the kiddies into the picture of green fields and farmhouses, or, at element, down at the seashore, out in be many small parties of the kiddles bling within them until they can run than with the deep, warm sprinirs of thtnits that trow in the sunshine and ""u '"o-v tnem seem line tney oe- tne very least, big. breezy playgrounds the parks or back on the farm, where sent to the country by individual en longed it can't be done. t and parks, where the thermometer la erandma and uncles or aunts can en- temrlse and benevolence. ine city in bummer can flow, with never, never allowed to play the tricks tertaln them and where they can grow, some appropriateness, men with their that it can play between two canyon like sunflowers, out in the open air. cats on, sweltering in offices, and walls of ateel and masonry or over a and play as they have never done be- the universal life. He la too Intimate things that are created in wonderful living organisms that cannot be tub For these little ones the trip Into the Instrument for the Invention of a, new thing that can be turned on and off 1, . A,..H,t- k.,. ... tTJ nV.I open country la a Journey. back to the game.. and every turn of the country and taken to places with a acrer-drlver. wUh and loved before one can under- fore, and every stick and stone la the with things of wheels and sprockets. There will be no fresh-air excursions land of fairies and wonders once more, hichwav or footpath passes through a to form very Intimate - comradeahlpsstand them.