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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1920)
8 THE SUNT AT OREGONIAN, PORTLA5TD, JUNE 27, 1920 LIFE SKETCHES BY ARTIST WHO SENSES SPIRIT OF THE DAY II III The Door to Success is labeled Push," and with that maxim in mind Mrs. Ed. Mansir. whose hus- I; Sjf tiTfctU?i7M . ' ' 1 ? : j .,. , Hmnir hr darnedest to fl-et in with the rtcrAt people. Even I ... 1llfr,5Ai. Ha5t&V! 1 to be s by the right people is some something seema t Guy is one of those Successes of the social world who is always being taVen l . I v.. -1-1. -1 , kAU tkoir hat fill V n ttll ric-hfc off tAO bat just what is wrong with Mrs. Culver-Smith's hat and whether she should wear it a little o this side rr the other. Just what they thirilc of Guy down) iin father's office ia another matter. Judge Isaiah Blow is delivering a little ad" dress before the men's club on "Success Through the Golden Rule" about Und oing a helping hand to the fellow less for ' tunate, and all that. They do say, how ' ever, that Judge Blow-was too busy push ing aside any one who happened to be in his way to a successful career to bother irtuch about th Golden Rule. . . .. . rhree ladies waiting with bated breath for Mr. Tibbitaon, the literary success of the hour, and ?thor r.v,-i . i. nn,rfM."'tA cast a few pearls of thought at their feet. Mr. Tibbit son, who is getting a bit fed up on Mt-must-be-such-a-joy-to-be-aole-to-wrtte. success ia all it is crackedu-to hfi - l" is not so dead certain that :At the age of ten and a half Waldo, " . . . i '. - cannot quite make up his mjnd about "To champion the cause of the common people in the world-wide struggle success, whether to aim for a job in a against capital" was the slogan of Roebuck C. Fish, when he was at the garage, taking the cars' apart, or to go(bottom of the ladder Since that day. "however, rthe rubber goods industry into the movies. It's . a pretty serious of Roebuck C Fish & Co. has met with such phenomena.! success tha Question. " , Roebuck is beginning to think capitalists are a pretty good sort IterlL tfHT. ...'XV ' of i Ll i ' ;Wf Mil' -! j IJj ; ' f 4 Mm, - -Jvst to be beantifar is Ma belle's attitude toward a suc cessful life, and if there is any thing in the triumph! of mind over matter. Mabelle may get there. Well. I'm glad I'm not the flat failure that ht is!" thinks Mr. H. C Gurb, a success in the money world, as he gives Pennington Daub, artist, the once over. Pennington, who is a big success in his own line (his latest can .vas of the modern school entitled "Actions in Reactions" is quite the best thing since Giotto, according to critic ynvTTbe .Weeny Roview') ia thinkinjL.lhesme thing fatrt Mr- finrK Ivan's nwvel idea of success tn this hollow mockery of a safe and sane world is to reform everything and everybody by the simple means of turning everything upside down abolishing government, .ad that sort of thin. Success foe Beatrice be sure you say it Bee-a-treech-4e means living her own life and expressing her individu ality. Up tn dt Bertrto has been getting along fa raously. no on b. v t nq tri t0osto hec.inmiUverOft suit, -. ' '