6
THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, MAY 21, 1923
PARLEY JIT GEN
GETS 1 RESULTS
Tardieu Declares Methods
Used Were Wrong.
CONFERENCE IS FAILURE
I'lan for Reconstruction Offered
s Economic One When It Was.
Essentially Political.
BI AXDRE TARDIEU.
Former French Hiph Commissioner to the
United States.
(Copyright, 1922, by The Oregonian.)
PARIS, May 20. (Special by Wire
lees.) One supreme conclusion
evolved from the finish of the Genoa
conference, namely, that all the Eu
ropean powers, with their hundreds
of delegates and experts, conferred
from April 10 to May 19 without
bringing; about a single useful result.
Impartial judges will agree that this
is BO.
There Is room for reflection in this.
There was to be a great concerted
effort toward economic reconstruc
tion. It completely failed. What can
one eay except that the method was
wrong? If success now is desired,
then other methods must be found.
Genoa Plan Conceived In 4b21.
Lloyd-George conceived the Genoa
plan at the end of 1921 along the
lines suggested by Keynes, which he
bad scornfully flouted in 1919, but
has since adopted. He offered this
plan as an economic one, although it
was essentially political. He took for
granted that revision of the peace
treaty -was a prerequisite to economic
reconstruction,- Starting from this
hypothesis, Lloyd George has strug
gled six weeks with failure as the
result. How can this surprise you
when you reflect that there were half
a dozen states In central and eastern
Europe created by the war and the
peace treaties' -which never will agree
to take any such step?
Hatreds Are Sharpened.
Thus we may conclude that if we
desire to do any constructive work
economically it will be better not to
begin with destructive work. Keynes
sndi Lloyd George's thesis was that
for economic reasons it was necessary
to modify Europe's political charter,
especially so far as it concerns east
ern frontiers. The result belies this.
The eoviets will not renounce com
munism nor propaganda, the Euro
pean states refused to allow their
frontiers to be brought into the dis
cussion. Through failure to realize
these plain facts all hatreds have
been sharpened rather than appeased.
Isn't it time now to try the contrary
system, recognizing that the war-born
frontiers are the expression of na
tionalist ambitions and to start with
this fact when working for economic
reconstruction?
t With the problem thus clarified, we
can see that the Anglo-Saxons have
a large share of responaibllity for the
economic disorder for which they
llame the treaties. If, when the
armistice came, the English and
Americans had not been so quick to
break the economic ties entered into
during the war, Europe would not
suffer so bitterly today. Ruined Eu
rope is told to un'te and sacrifice in
dividual interests to the common wel
fare. When, eaMy in 1919, the United
States and England forced dissolution
of the inter-allied economic organism,
refusing aid toward avoiding or lim
iting the exchange crisis; when the
English mines, because of high ex
port prices, lost their foreign mar
kets; -when Anglo-Saxon countries,
creditors of the whole world, under
took to oblige debtors to pay without
taking into consideration unpaid sums
owed these countries by others, it
hardly can be saldi that London and
Washington were inspired by a desire
for solidarity and reconstruction. .
In short, accepting not" only as a
right but as a fact Europe's present
political statue, efforts should be
made toward consolidating it instead
of constantly -weakening it by prop
aganda for revision. When that's
done, consider the economic problem
in itself and you can understand
Europe -will not be reconstructed by
ukases from England and America,
but through Joint labor. Such is the
outline of a plan respectfully submit
ted for attention after the total fail
ure, of the Lloyd George method at
Genoa.
Unhappily, no authority sponsors
this plan. France had a wholly nega
tive policy at Genoa and The Hague
meeting, which the United States
, wisely declined to attend, will be a
pale continuation of the efforts which
l-roved their futility at Genoa. Noth
ing will be accomplished there except
further irritation of Europe's sore
spots.
The Anglo-Saxon reconstruction
plan is bankrupt. When shall we
have a continental plan? When a
French plan?
SOIL SURVEYS PROGRESS
Complete Map of Valley to Be Made
in Next Three Years.
OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL
LEGE. Corvallis. Mav 2(1 rsnAMai
"Soil survey of the Willamette
valley will probably be complete
wiinin tne next three seasons. On
the completion of the work a map is
planned to be made of t.h vniipv
together with a report of the man
agement or tnese soils," says W. L.
Powers, chief in soils, Oregon Agri
cultural college exDeriment station
A year ago last summer 60 per cent
of the Willamette vallev was soil
surveyed. With the completion of
field work in Polk county, there will
have been manned 2.69R.795 nereo r,H
there still remain to be mapped in
Linn, Lane and Marion counties
2,264,176 acres.
College Debaters Elect.
OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL
LEGE, Corvallis, May 20. (Spe
cial.) Paul Knoll of Corvallis. col
lege debater and member of Delta PI
Sigma, honorary forensic society, was
chosen president of the Forensic as
sociation last night. Other officers
elected were J. Q. Corrie of Corvallis,
Mask and Dagger Dramatic society,
vice-president; Olga Samuelson of
Oregon City, Zeta Kappa Psi, girls'
honorary debating fraternity, secre
tary-historian; and E. L. Kimball of
Fall Creek, Lincolnian Literary so
ciety, treasurer.
POPULAR TELEPHONE MALE QUARTET TO SING FOR THE
OREGONIAN RADIO CONCERT TOMORROW NIGHT.
r.iv j?!, -rKS HN
iM -wv I
' 1 j
PLANES ARE USED
TO COUNT S
English Fliers Receive 10
Cents on Each Catch.
WORK NEW FOR AIRSHIPS
Four singers who Trill give programme of southern melodies and old-time
song; top Ferris Aobett and Stark Daniels; center Denton. Deiunan)
bottom Hal Young1.
"HOLY CITY" TD K SIB
RADIO FANS TO HEAR CHORUS
OF PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Telephone Mule Quartet Also One
of Many Features on Week's
Wireless Programme.
(Co7itiTiud Frorn First Page.)
evening concerts broadcast trom The
Oregonian tower during the week on
the regular broadcasting nights for
The Oregonian station. KGW; Mon
day, Wednesday and Friday.- Besides
the evening programmes the Seiber-ling-Lucas-
Music company will con
tinue its series of special afternoon
concerts, featuring local artists.
The telephone male quartet has
been engaged for the Monday night
programme. This group of artists is
considered one of the best of its
kind in the Pacific northwest and
through frequent concerts has won
unrivaled popularity in Portland. Its
programme will consist of southern
melodies and old-time songs and will
be full of life and humor. The quar
tet consists of Hal Young, first tenor;
Denton Denman, second tenor; Ferris
Abbett, baritone, and Mark Daniels,
bass. Miss Ruby Lloyd will be at
the piano for the quartet. .
Besides five numbers by the quar
tet, Miss Evelyn Drewery, a talented
young soprano soloist, will sing sev
eral selections. Miss Drewery has
already sung several times over the
radio and is a great favorite among
the host of listeners. Besides her
contributions there will also be solos
by Mark Daniels and Hal Youne,
members of the quartet. The pro
gramme 'was arranged through the
kindness of Fred Spoerl, manager of
the telephone company.
In rsponse to many requests re
ceived by The Oregonian to put on a
radio concert of Hawaiian - muslo,
"Johnnie" Schaeffer's Hawaiian or
chestra has been booked to play the
first hour of Wednesday night's two
hour period for broadcasting. The
arrangement was effected by the
Journalists Elect Composer.
OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL
LEGE, Corvallis, May 20. (Special.)
Professor E. T. Reed, college editor
, was elected to honorary membership
in Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic fra
ternity, at the last meeting. He came
to the college in 1912. As an author
Professor Reed has gained an en
viable reputation in the literary
world, with two books of verses. In
land Waterfalls," and "Lyrics." He
also wrote "Love Letter Days," a
waltz ballad, and "Today," a foxtrot
THE OREGONIAN RADIO PRO
' GRAMME THIS WEEK.
Tonight, 7 P. M. to 8 P. M.
Oratorio, "The Holy City," by
Central Presbyterian church
chorus of 35 voices.
Monday, 7:30 to 8:30 P. M.
Telephone male quartet- and
Miss Evelyn Drewery, soprano
soloist.
Wednesday, 8 to 9 P. M.
"Johnnie" Schaeffer's Hawaiian
orchestra. 9 to 10 P. M. Solo
concert.
Friday night, 8 to 9 o'clock
George Olsen's Portland hotel
orchestra.
Every afternoon except Sun
day Special concert bySeiber-ling-Lucas
company.
A whistling solo by one of the corps,
with a piano accompaniment, was an
especially novel number which many
of the fans reported by telephone as
having been an unusual treat.
The other selections were "Satur
day in Church," played by drums and
brass instruments; "In the Town
Hall," a choral number; "Pay Day,"
"Bugla Calls" and "Paris March."
August Stavo played "Taps" as the
concluding number by the corps.
Between the drum corps numbers
ten of the public school memory list
phonographic records were played.
The programme - was arranged
through the courtesy of Seiberling
Lucas company.
The Oregonian radiophone station
operates on 360 meters. Call letters
are KGW.
TENANTS ' WILL HAVE RADIO
Business Building in San Francis
co to Be Fully Equipped.
SAN FRANCISCO, May 20. Tenants
of the 16-story Matson building, now
in course of construction here by the
Matson Navigation company, may
"plug in a jazz concert or a bit of
daily news" via radio, to ease the
humdrum of their daily toil, for the
entire building i3 to be wired for ra
dio sets, company officials announced
today. As far as is known it is the
first business building to be so
equipped while in course of construc
tion.
The service will also enable the
general manager of the company or
any one else to call up one of the
company's boats at sea with the same
ease that he would call up his club.
Any tenant who applies may obtain
the radio service.
BARRACKS GIVES CONCERT
Vancouver Post Holds First of Se
ries of Radio Events.
VANCOUVER, WASH., May 20.
(Special.) Radio station CL8, Van
couver barrack3, Thursday night gave
the first of a number of concerts in
the post, sending broadcast to un
known thousands an unusually fine
programme.
This station, In charge of Sergeant
Benjamin Silvermaster, has been
sending out a programme daily from
7 until 7:30 in the evening on a wave
length of 400 meters. These concerts
were chiefly phonograph records, fur
nished by Peter J. Flynn, and govern
ment bulletins, but arrangements
now have been made to give various
kinds of musical programmes, including-
concerts by the 45-piece infantry
band. In the near future.
$300 Radio la Installed.
CARLTON, Or., May 20.(Special.)
Like most other places throughout
the state, the rad'o bug has hit Carl
ton and an outfit costing $300 is be
ing installed. A subscription among
the business men and residents of the
town and surrounding country was
taken to defray the expense.
Surveying of Timber Land In Far
North Also Made Easy by
Employing Aviators.
NEW YORK, May 19. (Special.)
The use of the airplane for exploita
tion purposes in Newfoundland was
described by Allen S. Butler, a young
English flyer and sportsman, who,
with two friends, has organized the
"Aerial Surveying company," with
headquarters in St, Johns. Mr. Butler
said that the accomplishment in New
foundland last winter had started a
new era in aviation, and that the pos
sibilities of the employments of planes
in the commercial. development of a
country like Newfoundland were un
limited. Mr. Butler is on his way home to
England to buy new equipment with
which to extend the operations of the
company this fall. He told of the many
phases of commercial aviation in
which he and his friends had engaed,
including mail carrying to districts
which had previously been shut off
from communication for weeks at a
time; seal "spotting" by planes and
direction of the seal boats by radio,
and surveying of large tracts of tim
berland from the air.
Butler Competes In Derby.
Mr. Butler, who is 23 years old, is
a director and one of the principal
stockholders of the De Haviland Air
craft company. He competed in the
last aerial derby in Enjland, finish
ing third. His associates in the New
foundland enterprise are Major Sid
ney F. Cotton, an Englishman, and
V. S. Bennett, whose father is polit
ically prominent in Newfoundland.
Three planes were used In the ex
ploitation work last winter a West-
land, a Martynside and a De Haviland.
The hangar was at St. Johns and the
base of the company is at Botwood,
on the northernmost point of New
foundland. Supplies are sent from
England and are distributed during
the summer to a number of sub-bases,
including points in Labrador.
In the seal hunting .the planes cover
a distance of about 300 miles over the
Atlantic north of Labrador. The seals
are "spotted" in much the same man
ner that army fliers spotted army
batteries, and the locations are sent
by radio to the seal ships, which break
their way through the ice to the loca
tions given. A contract has been
made with a conference of Newfound
land seal hunters by which the "Ae
rial Surveying company" receives 10
cents for every seal under three
years caught as a result of informa
tion sent from the planes. Mr. But
ler said that the planes had found
hundreds of thousands of seals during
March, which is the principal season
for seal hunting off Newfoundland.
Aerial Surveys Successful.
Surveying of timberland by airplane
has proved very successful, Mr. Butler
said. "Surveying and inspection of a
tract that would have taken two years
by working on the ground has been
accomplished in an hour,' he said. "By
a irplane photographs it is possible to
get a very accurate picture of a tract,
showing just what parts, if any, have
been burned out.
The malls have been carried during
the winter to many points in the inte
rior of Labrador that previously have
been reached only by dog-sled, making
only 2ft miles or less a day. Two trips
were made into Labrador in a few
hours. . During the winter Belle Isle
straits, between Labrador and Newr
foundland,. are filled with floating ice,
and they are seldom crossed. The only
means of communication, therefore,
la to Canada, and then to Labrador by
Mainland, a distance of 2300 miles, to
communicate between points 400 miles
apart. The company, Mr. Butler said:
has some contracts with the New
foundland government for mail carry
ing, and the people in the-interior
are besieging their governmental rep
resentatives for regular mail service
by airplane.
lar case it must be admitted that if
there had been no system of party
primaries in Indiana there would
have been practically no possibility
of getting Mr. Beveridge into the
United States senate. The party local
organization was in the hands of per
sons unfriendly to him and he would
not have had the faintest chance to
get the nomination under the con
vention system.
Another objection made to the di
rect primary is that it tends to de
stroy party organization, making
party discipline Impossible, and there
fore is subversive of the whole theory
of government through political
parties. A man who has got his
franchise to public office through di
rect appeal to the people in the party
primary is not subject to party dis
cipline. President Harding, in his
speech to the women voters of New
Jersey the other day, made a naive
admission. He said:
I presume you have had some dis
appointments. I presume the party
has had. I have had some myself.
Political parties cannot always do all
they promise to do. That may seem
strange but it is absolutely true. It
has not been possible to do everything
that the party In which you and I are
associated hoped to do when we came
into power.
The reason for this inability to live
up to party promises that Mr. Hard
ing complains of is largely the direct
primary. Although Mr. Harding's
party has a great majority in the
house and senate, he is unable to
put the party platform through be
cause he has nothing with which to
threaten those republican members
who choose to defy Mr. Harding and
the party leaders. They owe no par
ticular allegiance to the party lead
ers or to the party organization.
The chief defect in the direct pri
mary, applied universally, is that it
is not equally well adapted to all
states and all communities. The ai
rect primary i probably best adapted
to communities like the state in I
which it started, namely, Oregon. Ore
gon is In population a relatively small
state with a markedly high average
of intelligence and a homogenous
people. In such a state it is pos
sible for the individual voter to have
some knowledge of all the candidates
for each office, and that knowledge,
when diffused among the kind of
population Oregon has, can be de
pended on to give fairly good results
in the primary.
In states with as large a popula
tion as New York the case is quite
different. It is practically impossible
for all or even any considerable por
tion of the people of the state to have
Adequate information about all the
candidates, and equally impossible for
any one candidate to make himself
known to all the people of the state
within the time limit of an ordinary
primary campaign. Furthermore, a
state like New York which contains
a large city, is apt to have a con
siderable element of population which,
-,n a political sense, is more or less
fungus. The large mass of foreign
born voters in New York city is not
as well adapted to function intelli
gently for the public good through
the machinery of the direct primary
as in a state like Oregon.
SCHOONER HAS MISHAP
(Continued From Flrrt Page.)
Seiberling-Lucas company and the
concert will include an excellent rep
ertoire of Hawaiian music
During the second hour, from 9 to
10 o'clock, another solo concert will
be given as a sequel to the first solo
programme last Wednesday night. In
this four artists will take part and
the selections will include piano and
violin and vocal solos.
Those who will participate in the
solo programme are Winnifred
Campbell, soprano, whose Blnglng last
Wednesday night was pronounced a
real triumph; Miss Dorothea Ander
son, pianist; Miss Kathleen Jordan,
violinist, and Elbert L. Bellows, ro
bust tenor.
The evening concerts for the
week will be finished by the reg
ular Friday night dance programme
by George Olsen's Portland hotel
orchestra. The Olsen programmes
of dance music have become an
institution for radio fans. George
Olsen, the director and man
ager, underwent a minor operation
last week and is at present in St.
Vincent's hospital, but will be back
with his band of musicians for the
next concert. While in the hospital
Mr. Olsen had a small radio receiving
set installed at his bedside and on
Friday night listened to the concert
by his own orchestra while election
returns were being sent out
RADIO PROGRAMME NOVELTY
Walla Walla . Drum Corps . Fur
nishes Several Features. ,..
Another radio programme was suc
cessfully broadcast from The Ore
gonian radia tower Friday after
noon from 3:30 to 4:30 o'clock, when
the Walla Walla drum corps com
posed of 12 "Bills" who are attend
ing the Elks' jubilee in Portland
played a number of selections for
the large audience of radio fans who
listen in during the daytime broad
casts. ' . ..i.-
There were seven numbers ia all.
the crew were expressing disappoint
ment that they failed to get their
prize into harbor without losing her.
The Fearless will make another at
tempt to put a line on the Ozmo to
night and get her further up the bay,
where she may be repaired.
The Daisy was bound north from
San Francisco to the Columbia river
when she picked up the Ozmo last
Wednesday morning. She carried ce
ment and asphalt. Captain Devitt ex
pects to have the craft repaired here
by a diver. The Daisy carried a crew
of 19.
Distress Signal Halts Liner.
NEW YORJJ; May 20. (By the As
sociated wess.) The cry of man
overboard" halted the Majestic the
world's biggest liner, shortly after
she had passed through the narrows
today on her second voyage across
the Atlantic and led to the report
that she had grounded. A boat was
lowered but a 20-minute search with
1600 passengers lining the rails
failed to effect a rescue.
WAR AGAINST PRIMARY ON
(Conthnued From Firgt Page.)
immediate future repeat practically
the whole process. Having spent five
months in his campaign to defeat
Senator New for the republican nom
ination, he must now spend another
five months in a campaign to defeat
the democratic nominee. By the time
the election is over in November Mr.
Beveridge will have spent little short
of a year in the effort to represent
Indiana in the United States senate.
On the other hand, in this partlcu-
See My Special $50 and
I $100 Diamond Rings
Nomination Is Withdrawn.
WASHINGTON, D. C, May 20. The
nomination of George W. Upham of
Ohio to be a member of the federal
trade commission was withdrawn to
day by President Harding.
For almost thirty years
this establishment has
made clothes for
Portland's best
dressed men.
W. P. Kraner & Co.
Men's Tailor Est. 1893
C. W. STOSB . GEO. E. KRAMEB
SECOND FLOOR COUCH BUILDING
It Happens
Every
Springtime
Young men in numbers 1
seeking solitaire diamond I
engagement rings. To
1 those young men I have
but one message regard-
less of the size of the dia-
mond you select, let it be a
good-quality stone.
In my store you will find
only the better quality of
diamonds and latest style
of settings, reasonably 1
priced ; besides, you may
have ' 1
-Credit Accommodations i
Without Extra Charge f
L0DGEMEN LET CONTRACT
New Oddfellows' Hall at Monmouth
to Cost About $18,000.
MONMOUTH, Or., May 20. (Special.)
The contract for the new Oddfellows'
hall has been let to William Wechter,
a Salem contractor. Four bids were
submitted, estimates varying from
$17,000 to $23,000. Later Mr. Wechter
reached an agreement with the trus
tees, W. R. Graham, Ed . Rogers and
Charles Newman, whereby the lodge
will buy tne materials and wechter
will direct the work of construction.
The cost will be about $18,000.
When completed the Oddfellows'
hall will be one of the finest buildings
in Monmouth . It will be 80x80 feet in
size and two stories high. The first
floor will be divided into three store
rooms. The lodge room on the second
floor will be 44x64 feet in size. The
dining hall will be 34x64, with ad
joining rooms for kitchen equipment.
Class on Four-Day Trip.
OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL
LEGE, Corvallis, May 20. (Special.)
W. S. Brown, professor of horticul
ture, with 14 students in farm or
charding, left Thursday morning on
a four-day trip to the northern part
of the state. The class will make a
special study. of the management and
care of different farms they will
visit. The students will be back tomorrow.
Quality
Mathis
for
The man who comes here
for his clothes on the
strength of what other
men say of them will nat
urally expect them to
give him unusually good
wear. And that is exactly
what we intend you shall
get.
The Mathis label placed
upon a garment ex
presses quality to the
highest degree.
The price, also, is what it
should be.
$35 to $45
Some for a little less
Some for a little more
iw3
HEN'S WEAR
Fifth and Morrison
(Corbett Building)
New '
Athletic
Underwear
$1 and
up
worth, Dean Calkins and B. J. Groth
has been appointed to investigate,
with power to act. The club plans to
get an outfit which will accommodate
all who desire to come to the club
rooms and which will be sufficiently
strong to pick up distant points.
Newberg Club to Install Radio.
NEWBERG, Or., May 20. (Special.)
The Newberg. Commercial club is
figuring on -installing a radio outfit
in the clubrooms for the entertain
ment of its membership. A committee
of three composed of W. H. Wood-
WATER RIGHTS DECIDED
Land Owners Get Permanent Ap
portionment on. Cowlche Crock.
YAKIMA, Wash.. May 20. (Spe
cial.) Second in importance only to
the pioneer case by which the water
rights on Ahtanum creek were ad
judicated, a decision has been handed
down by Judge ueorge is. iomen oi
the Takima superior court apportion
ing permanently the rights of land
owners in the waters of Cowiche
creek. Additional interest attaches
to this decision because of the fact
that some of the lands involved, in it
were settled early in the history of
white settlers here. One of the tracts
is the ranch of the late A. J. Splawn,
one of the earliest pioneers in Yakima
valley.
Judge Holden's decision follows,
generally, the precedent set in the
earlier water right rulings here; but
is made under the new state law gov
erning irrigation water rights.
Mad Coyote Is Killed.
Another case of rabies has been re
ported near Blitzen in Harney county.
A rancher shot a mad coyote within
a few feet of his house, according to
word received by. the biological sur
vey here. A number of similar cases
have been reported from the same
region recently.
Comic Opera Nets $93.30.
DAYTON, Or., May 20. (Special.)
A comic opera, "The Captain of
Plymouth," presented by local talent
under the auspices . of the Ladies'
Civic Improvement club, had a very
successful playing in the opera-house
here last night. Preparation of the
musical part was directed by Gil
Ogden, while the dramatics were in
charge of F. T. Mellinger. All avail
able space was sold and the gross re
turns were $93.30. Expenses, con
servatively estimated by Mrs. J. L.
Sherman, president of the club, will
be in the neighborhood of $50, and the
remainder will be turned into the or
ganization's fund for the erection of
a public building in the city park.
Symphony Concert Postponed.
The concert of popular music of the
Portland Symphony orchestra an
nounced for yesterday has been post
poned to a later date.
No. E 30S6 Patented
Diamond Specialist
348 Washington Street
, . .Morgan Bldg.
The New Mueller
Combination Sink Faucet
makes kitchen work easier
IT GIVES you all the advantages of the old-style faucet plus
a score of new time-saving and labor-saving uses, as illustrated
above. It saves the hands from doing the rough work. It
lessens the kitchen drudgery.
With it you can draw hot, cold of tempered water for any
need, from either the spout or spray by pushing the button.
You can wash fresh vegetables quickly and thoroughly water
and spray your plants scald greasy utensils easily wash and rinse
the dishes. The three-foot hose reaches all parts of the sink includ
ing the drain board. The Mueller Combination Sink Faucet will
last a lifetime and can be quickly installed on any sink. Price, $15.
It pays to specify Mueller Faucets whenever you build or repair.
' They have successfully stood every known test for over three gen
erations. If your plumber has not Mueller Faucets in stock we can
ship immediately. Write for illustrated booklet, "Dependable fhtmbing
H. MUELLER MFG. COMPANY, DECATUR, ILLINOIS
Makers of a Complete Line of High Grade Faucets
Branches: 145 W. 30th St., New York 635 Mission St., San Francisco
RidtitBowsa
'oint
BtU
Shaped
Shtqfftr
Palmltft
Cap
IB
iiodtl BB
Sterling
Silver
$3.50
Other
Stylet
$1 to $50
SHEAFFER'S
"Propel Repel Expel"
Pencil supplies every require
ment necessary for perfect
writing.
It is the only pencil that suc
cessfully reverses and protects
lead from breaking and affords
you a point when you want it
It is the one pencil that pre
vents the grouchy look by
eliminating point breakage.
Should be the proud possession
of every man, woman and
school child.
Simplicity and ease of filling its
greatest asset. Ask for a dem
onstration it convinces.
W. A. SHEAFFER PEN CO.
FORT MADISON, IOWA
NEW YORK CHICAGO KANSAS CITY
DENVER SAN FRANCISCO
SHEAFFEFfS
VPENS-PENCILSV
AT THE BETTER DEALERS EVERYWHERE
N2
Government Mineral Springs
CARSON, WASH. NEW ROAD NOW COMPLETED
Announces
the opening of the Summer season
TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1922
Good hunting and fishmg. The water is unexcelled for
the treatment of rheumatism, stomach and kidney trouble,
lumbago and other ailments.
L. B. MARKHAM, Manager.