THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, JUNE 25, 1922 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF ROMANCE ANNOUNCED IN ROSE FESTIVAL COURT AT END OF WEEK'S REIGN. City Editor Main 7070. 560-85 Sunday Editor Main 7070, 560-05 Advertising Department. Main 7070, 560-95 Superintendent ot Bids , Main 7070. 560-95 ORBGONIAN AT RESORTS. Subscribe with the following agents, at your summer resort, to secure the- most , prompt delivery of The Oregonian. City rates. Subscriptions by mail are payable in advance: Barview, Or Mrs. Georgia Fisk Bay City, Or O. E Shelly Bay Ocean, Or P. D. Mitchell Breakers. Wash.... J. M. Arthur Brighton. Or A. W. Rowe : Cannon Beach, Or . Cannon Beach Merc Co. Carson, Wash Mrs. M. St. Martin Carson, Wash Shipherds Hot Springs Carson, Wash Carl R. Smith Chinook. Wash R. Knutson Ecoia. Or Cannon ' Beach Merc. Co. Garibaldi. Or D. C. Ellis Garibaldi, Or . J. L. Kidder Gearhart, Or... W. J. Robinson Hot Lake, Or Hot Lake Sanitarium Ilwaco, Wash A. C. Pesco Long. Beach. Wash .W. E; Strauhal Manhattan Beach, Or......L. Stainaker ( Manzanita, Or K. Kardell Moclips, Wash Mrs. L. L. James K'ahcotta, Or H. J. Brown Neah-kah-nie Beach, Or.. A. C. Anderson Kebalem, Or D. C. Peregoy Newport, Or , ..V. B. Sharp Ocean Lake, Or.'. . ...L. Stainaker Ocean Park, Wash ..,... Emma Campbell Pacific City, Or D. P. Edmunds Rockaway, Or L. Stainaker Seaside. Or .Roth Drug Co Seaview, Wash. ...... .George L. Putnam I Tillamook, Or J. S. Lamar Twin Rocks, Or.. .....L. Stainaker Wheeler, Or R. H. Cady Wheeler, Or '. William Cypert. AMUSEMENTS. HIPPODROME (Broadway at Yamhill) Vaudeville and moving pictures con tinuous daily, 1:15 to 11 P. M PANTAGES (Broadway at Alder) Vaudeville. Three shows daily, -2, 7 and 9:05 P. M. THE OAKS (Amusement Park) The Armstrong Musical Comedy company in "Bits Prom Broadway." Take carl at First and Alder. Remodeling la WANnsD.-r-Three applications to " remodel present buildings for use as apartment houses and flats have been filed with the city council for considera tion. G. E. Wilson seeks a permit to maintain a two-story frame building on East Sixth street be tween Mill and Market streets, as an apartment house; TV. Dorres wants permission to remodel-a two Btory building on East Sixteenth be tween Belmont and Taylor streets for use as flats and N. A. Odalovich has applied for permission from the council for a permit to make an addition on a two-story building on Wheeler street between Halsey and Clackamas street for use as a six family apartment house. Bn on Pumps Considered. Legis lation placing a ban on gasoline and oil pumps on curbs in the city of Portland will be considered by the city council next Wednesday morn ing, It was announced yesterday.-' The proposed amendment would, if passed, prevent the installation of any additional curb pumps and pres ent curb pumps would be required to be removed by January 1, 1925. Advocates of the amendment state that similar legislation has been en acted in many of the coast cities. Strong opposition from garage and automobile salesroom owners is .ex pected to develop next Wednesday when the ordinance comes before the council for consideration. Street Vacation Wanted. C. P. Keyser. superintendent of parks, will go before the city council next Wednesday to urge the vacation of East Nineteenth street from East Yamhill to East Taylor street and the vacation of East Yamhill for a distance of 100 feet east of East Nineteenth street. The vacation will be sought so that the street area in cluded in the petition may be used by children for park and playground purposes. The streets are directly in front of the new Central East Side park and Superintendent Key ser feels that the vacation of the streets is necessary to safeguard the children who will use the park. New Church Organized. Formal organization of the Alameda Park Community church CCongregational) was effected last Monday night at a meeting of the charter members. Rev. Robert Allingham, pastor, -presided. Dr. G. M. King was .elected clerk. Edward P. Nelson and E. Newton Bates were chosen as dea cons, and J. Weston Hall, H. C. Var ney, O. W. West, E. Newton Bates and Earl W. Gordon as trustees; O. W. West is treasurer, H. J. Hatfield and Dr. G. W. King, ushers, and Jliles K. Cooper auditor. Bible School Will open. The dally vacation Bible school under the joint direction of the First Meth odist Episcopal church, South, Union avenue and Multnomah rstreet, and the United Presbyterian church of the Stranger, Grand avenue and Wasco street, will open for the two weeks' 1 summer session tomorrow, Rev. S. Earl Dubois is superintend ent of the school and a. corps of even instructors will assist him. Public Garage Is Favored. City Commissioner Barbur will recom mend to the city council Wednesday that the application made by the Portland Trust company for per mission to erect a one-story con crete building on Irving street, be tween Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets be granted. The building will be used as -a large public ga rage. ' f Garage Permit Approved. A fa vorable report has been filed with the city council by City Commis sioner Barbur on the application of Robert J. Stewart for a permit to erect and maintain a one-story class VI building on Union avenue be tween Glisan and Hoyt streets as a public garage and large machine shop. - Montana Club to Give Dance. The next dance given by the Mon tana club' will be on the Bluebird Thursday evening, June 29. The boat will leave the Jefferson-street dock at 8:45 P. M. Members of the club and their friends are invited. Dr. C. Smith Long's treatment for pyorrhea, trench mouth, crumbly or imperfect teeth or bad taste in the mouth is certain in its results. Consult the doctor at 310 Bush & Lane building, Broadway at Alder street. Adv. Three Divorce Suits Bgun. Di vorce suits were filed in circuit court yesterday as follows: Marie versus Hugh I Rosebrook, Eliza beth Howe versus Louis C Stahl and 3. H. versus Mary Andregg. A Man oi- Personality, pep and honesty, who wants to make money and believes that with training he could make a good salesman; give references. AC 759, Oregonian. Adv. Lockslet Hall, Seaside, was for mally opened on Wednesday, the 21st. Dining room is run with sea food as a specialty. . Write Mrs. M. A. Gough. Adv. 1 Dr. E. C. Rossman will return July 10, after an extended study of the newest developments of his spe cialty in artificial steeth. Journal building. Adv. Tired, Aching Feet can be re lieved. See our foot specialists for relief. X-ray service free. Knight bnoe to., Morrison. Adv. . -Rhododendrons In bloom at South Mount Hood; roads, fair condition. Rhododendron Inn. Adv. Perfection Plaster Wall Board. cheapest and best. Cress & Co., 184 Second street. Adv. Dr. Alfred Schilt, dentist, re turned. Broadway bldg. Adv. . Dr. M. M. Bettman hag returned. Adv. Ii i "TO- w i33Wk.?. .C t St I UliT- - -K M ' ..... It tT' . m-y v$ - - ii (iff I . nwnMiaw idm& ; t If 2f1&Btf if! fl - - , MADE IN PORTLAND ' f?:& QT t , 4- li I! BY PORTLAND CRAFTSMEN. I V T"? V W - f!,: m In manufacturing jewelry our. work is all done either " '4i4x ft;'r, f II in our own shop or under our personal direction V r V f'i'l! 1 by Portland experts. Many thousands of dollars are, " " "1' FJ ' thus left to circulate in Oregon instead of enriching UV A'fi fjWpa H , industries elsewhere.;, . , mwtfcyl. I? ' - ' fj . x We specialize m exclusive platinum, gold and silver Sw"""''1'"' 'TV' " ' ' ' ' "".'i'lil'ii ,"!, ll jewelry. "We design and .ereate trophies, medals and , ' Avlk JT 'm'.j'.i'i'.'.' (M . emblems that. are different. S JaegerBros. Portland's Only HALLMARK Store , 131-133 Sixth Street MISS IMJRIS HKNNINGSEN, PRINCESS TO Q.T.TEEN HARRIET, WHO IS TO WED -SEVERIN HARKSO.V. Coming as a happy climax to the activities of Queen Harriet's retinue was the announcement of the engagement of Hiss Doris Henningsen, princess of the Rose Festival, to Severin Harkson. The news was told at a tea given by Miss Henningsen yesterday for a large group of society girls. Dainty rosebud cards bore the names of the bride-elect, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Henningsen, and Mr. Harkson, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Harkson. The tea table was presided over by Mrs. C D. Bruun, Mrs. Frederick Nitchy, Mrs. W. F. Henningsen an d Mrs. Ralph Walker. X, bevy of girls in dainty summer frocks assis ted in the dining room. Miss Henningsen is a graduate of St. Helen's hall, and attended Miss Dow's school, Briarcliffe Manor, in New York. Mr. Harkson is a grad uate of the University of Nebraska. His "father is the Danish vice consul. During the Vat he was In the aviation service. The wedding will be an event of July 15, and will be -one of the most important functions of the season. Welfare League to Elect. Per manent officers will be elected and standing committees appointed at a meeting of the Irvington Park Wel fare league to be held at th,e Ken nedy schoolhouse tomorrow night at 8 o'clock. The organization is con sidering plans for the development of that section of the city and aU residents of the district have been invited to attend the meeting. The organization committee consists, of H. F. King, F. E. Schwan and F. E. Burkhardt. Schoolhouse Firemen's Entry. The float of Engine 31. in Friday's floral parade, represented a little red schoolhouse and bore the sign, "For Oregon." Mention of the float in yesterday's paper said that it tjore a firehouse designed in flowers. The "boys" of the company said thai they intended it to look like a schoolhouse and not a firehouse. Radio Club Meets Fridat. The scheduled meeting of .the Sellwood Radio club, which should have been held at the community club house, in Sellwood, Friday night,, was post poned until June 30, due to the Rose Festival. At the regular meeting then a name for the organization will be considered and other, busi ness discussed. Apartment Permit Asked. J. R. Creighton has appealed to the city council for a permit to erect a two- story frame building on Ladd avenue between Hawthorne avenue ana Palm street, for use as an apart ment house. The application will be referred to City Commissioner Bar bur . for investigation and recom mendations. , Annual Dance to Be Held. The annual dance of Laurelhurst club members will be held on the Swan tomorrow night, the affair being sponsored by the women's progres sive unit of the ciud. ine owan will leave the east end of the Morrison-street bridge at 8:30 o'clock and the usual agreeable party is predicted. Picnic Reunion Today. Ex-residents of Klickitat county, Washing ton, will gather at Columbia park today fop their third annual picnic. The committee in charge of arrange ments has requested that those at tending bring basket lunches for the dinner. Herbert Gordon Asks Permit. Herbert- Gordon has filed an applica tion -with the city council for a per mit to remodel a building on the southeast corner' of Grand avenue and East Ash street for use as an au tomobile sales room and a public garage. . . i ' Store for Rent. The store oc cupied by H. W. Jacobsen, tailor, on Morrison street, will be for rent july l. Apply Portland hotel. Adv. Jewelers to Her Majesty, Queen Harriet of Rosaria 'THIS CROWN, worn fcjj Queen Hat' ' riei in the Portland Rose . Festival is of 14 gold and contains 856 gems. On dis- 4 play all this meek at ; Jaeger Bros. " Jaeger Bros, have won distinction again. They were chosen to be jewelers to Queen Harriet of Rosaria and to design and create the crown and scepter worn and used by Her Majesty last week. As a result of these orders being given to Jaeger Bros, eveiy part of both pieces was KEEP YOUR MONEY IN PORTLAND This is not a' selfish ap peal on our part, but a ; plea for Oregon indus tries. We live here let's support our own state first! III I Paris Address No. 8 Rue Lafayette were caused by shrapnel and shot in world war. r Ha birth mark on left hip: several brown tpots quite large. Has tatto marks which look like ink stains on right hand. Smokes cisarettes incessantly. Drinks all -he can get, but does not show effects very much. Can drink almost a quart of whisky without showing it. - Has decidedly Scotch accent, rrommem an affidavit signed by1 her and charging him with bigamy in New York. . While these documents were be ing examined, detectives also began an effort to identify a number of rthntne-rfl nhn nf wnm.Ti 1 fmmd in I lower -Jawbone. Brown eyes which change Stewart's effects, with the nrHic- from gray-brown to deep brown with iis tion that originals of some, at least, would be added to the list of women he is alleged to have married. Mrs. Osbaldeston -prefaced . the the claim that "in all the world, 1 1 " t'l.'!,ery c"rly' i. i t : i patcnes. moods. Swears and uses filthy, bad language at all times. Can pass as a-min of edu cation, both in dress and manners, as well as tramp or laboring man. Clean shaven. If he grows a mustacne Beard only grows in Has strange ideas about women and t . 1 A.ninatin,r in (hen, falla About 5 feet or 7 Inches tall, y an nimseif a ..ho man." a "cave man" and a "beast man. Collar, size 15; shoes, size 8. Has bad wound from appendix re moval. Wears eye glasses with narrow tortoise shell rims, or spectacles, no rims. Mrs. Osbaldeston's diary .tells of her life with Stewart; his alleged marriage to another woman who later posed as i his sister; asserted attempts to swindle other women; his alIegred,addiction to drugs; state ments she at first believed but later concluded were lies; of his deser- iinn nf hAr for other women, and Of ( India and thA PhiHnnina. invn.lit kJ . " ?a8. . . iaw was her love for him and determination able personal and international and. wiry very strong muscularly. Black, curly hair, streaked with white. No teeth in either upper or lower jaw. Wears top set of false teeth all the time. Has a lower set, but does not wear them at all. Age 39 years; says he was born in India, an illegitimate child of a man named Duncan (surname), . his mother at the time being married to David Stewart of Leith, Scotland. Mother's maiden name, Harriet Suyden. Date of birth, November 17. 1880. " - Has lower jaw broken-: scars .on left side of jawbone and in neck,- scars on leg (right) from knee to middle of shin bone. Scar on left foot, instep. Just CHI'S LEADERS CONFER STUDENTS VOICE SENT1MEN 8 AGAINST WAR. Gale Seaman Visits Cotton ; Mill Where Women and Children Work 1 2 Hour? Daily. You can't lose things in a desk like this! STUDY the convenient arrangement of the desk above the deep vertical files in bottom drawers, the spacious compart ments in the uppers and center. A place for everything. . Contrast this with office desks where the very arrangement discourages good order. Note these striking 'advantages of Facts concerning the recent inter national conference of Christian stu dent leaders from 32 nations at Tsinghua college, near Pekin, are contained in a letter received by H. W. Stone, general secretary of the Portland T. M. C. A., from Gale Seaman, international secretary of the Pacific coast region, who for merly made his headquarters in Portland. Outstanding features of the gath ering, Mr. Seaman said, were the strong sentiment against war, the desire for complete independence on the part of euch nations as Cores, Droken in a light in a ta house in i,Trt limit nf her Shanghai. China. Teeth knocked out a to nelP h,m to the Umlt ot Jer same time. Says wounds in leg and foot I pow er. RADIO TO KEEP AMUNDSEN IN CONSTANT TOUCH WITH WORLD Hardy Explorers of Bygone Days Underwent, Hardshifls That Latest Polar Expedition Will Not Have to Encounter. Vice Crusader Is Believed to Have More Wives. Nation-wide Search I,annclie4 for Additional Victims. LOS ANGELES. June 24. A pri vate detective agency has be gun a nation-wide search lor still more women who may have gone through marriage ceremonies with Donald Duncan Stewart, unfrocked clergyman and vice cpisader, who is alleged to have taken four known women as his wives and who is held here pending extradition to Boston to meet charges of bigamy, grand larceny and conspiracy. ' That announcement was made by the Log Angeles Times in connec tion ith its pu'Nieation of a diary kept for two and a half years byJ one of Stewart's wves, Mrs. Utnei Turner Osbaldeston Stewart, who also is wanted in Boston on a charge of having conspired with Stewart to effect his alleged mar riage to Norma Ehrenseller, from whom he is accused of stealing $2500. . ' - In addition to these two, Stewart is definitely charged also with hav ing married and deserted Mary Bar bara James Mitchell at Wilmington, Del., by whom he had a child, and Bertha Ellen Grannis at Indianap olis. He went through, the cere mony with Mrs. Osbaldeston in New Tork. He is said to have admitted the marriages to all except Miss Grannis. - - - - . Mrs. Osbaldeston, who says she "loved him now and always will love him," and that she hopes to "cure him of the drug habit," told in her diary of her life with Stewart. SAN FRANCISCO, June 24. Cap tain Boald . Amundsen, discov erer of the south pole, who sailed from. Seattle last week in an attempt to drift across the north pole, will be the first explorer to keep in constant touch with the out side world by means of radio. His predecessors did not possess, the modern equipment that will be an important part of the schooner's scientific paraphernalia. Amundsen is the latest of a long line of explorers who have devoted their lives to conquest of the poles. Polar conquest has always bean a strong lure for the adventurer, es pecially to those early mariners who did not know the earth is a sphere and- who, consequently, faced the added danger of "falling over the edge" into 'eternity. In the north, also, had to be encountered strange animals, uncharted seas, together with long periods of day and night, wierd flashes of the, northern Rights and floating mountains of ice;, with the weather often so cold that a human eye, if left exposed for an instant, would freeze in its socket- all of these made polar conquest a veritable conquest of the supernat ural. The earliest explorer of these re gions was said to have been an ancient Greek, Pytheas, the date of whose exploits is uncertain. He claimed to have discovered an island Iceland, perhaps where the sun never set all the time he was there. Aightened at this, he ' hastened away to the northward, and his ter ror increased on discovery that he then was in perpetual darkness. Confronting a great black wall, which he supposed was the naraDet which extends around the edge of the world to prevent people from falling off, he hastened home. This wall has since been explained as "frost smoke," a dense "mass f fog which rises in the Arctic when win ter gives way to milder tempera tures of spring. -, Later navigators followed to as certain if Pytheas' story were true. Then came the intrepid vikings, who explored for adventure and are cred ited by many with the discovery of North America. Systematic conquest of the north was not begun until the theory that the earth was a sphere had been ac cepted and men no longer, feared to fall over the- edge.. Sir Hugh Wllloughtiy sailed from England-in .1553, seeking a north west passage! He was followed by Davis, who explored . the 'strait which now bears his name. Henry Hudson discovered Hudson's bay in 1610 and then Baffin sailed through what later became Baffin's bay. In 1818 Captains Boss and Parry of the British navy mads apprecia ble progress in the northward march by the discovery of Lancaster sound, Barrow strait and Melville Island, arousing keen curiosity as to whether a passage existed between I the Atlantic and Pacific oceans tic. which was. completed on foot, however, that this passage did exist. At this time the race for the north pole was between the Amer icans and British. Lieutenant Rob ert E. Peary, U. S. N., at the close of the 19th century reached the northern coast of Greenland at a latitude of 82, eight degrees from the pole. Shortly afterward Nansen, a Nor wegian, put into practice his scheme of drifting across the pole, start ing eastward from Norway. He was not successful in locating the pole, but, on foot with one companion, he reached a new "farthest north" of 85 degrees 57 minutes. Roald Amundsen himself com pleted the northwest passage, dis covering the magnetic pole. An Italian, the Duke of Abruzzi, then broke Nansen's record; but it re mained for Peary, on April 6,' 1909, to place the. Stars and Stripes at the north pole. SIX ACCIDENTS FATAL State Industrial Commission Makes Weekly Report. SALEM, Or., June 23. (Special.) Six men lost their lives in the 506 accidents reported to the state in dustrial accident commission dur ing the week ending June 22, ac cording to the weekly report made public here today. The men injured fatally were Norman C. Nielsen of Salem, a truck driver; K. H. Lee of Dallas, a night watchman: John McKinnan of Coch ran, a tongmanf H. M. Wallace of Newberg, a policeman; Henry Lar son of Silverton, a tallyman, and Herman Alto of Portland, a faller. Another document credited to her I along the coast of North America. was a character analysis oi the Sir John ranklin proved, in 1847, ex-clergyman, and stUl another Vas! by his own voyage through the Arc- CUTOFF FINISHED TODAY Concrete to Be Allowed to Set for - 30 Days Before Use. " VANCOUVER, Wash., June 23. (Special.) The hard-surface pav ing of the Biddle cutoff, J. 5 miles on the North Bank highway, will be completed tomorrow. The. pavement is concrete and will be allowed to set for 30 days before it will be opened for traffic The entire road will then be paved from Vancouver to Camas, 14 miles, with the finest kind of concrete pavement 20 feet wide. ' By going on the north side of the track- at the Biddle cutoff .two grade crossings will be eliminated so that the railroad track is not crossed between here and Camas In -Camas there is an overhead crossing on the road to Washougal. friendships, and the unanimous feel ing of utter dependence upon the teachings and spirit of Christ for solution of the present-day prob lems. The Anti-Christian Student federation, which sprang up about two months before the conference opened, had assumed some inter esting proportions, Mr. Seaman said, but the Christian leaders were of the opinion that in a year or two it will wear out. "While we were in the interior the north China war broke out," he wrote. The Chinese people cer tainly have n'ore patience and en durance and bear heavier physical an-5 social burdens than any people I have seen or read of. "I visited a cotton mill In central China, where fully 4000 people are working hundreds of them mere children 12 hours a day and seven days a week, most of the women and children workers geting less than 20 cents (our money) per day. To see men starting off with 700 or S00 pounds of coal or other mer chandise on wheelbarrows for a 60 or 70-mile trip over roads you could not ride a bicycle on seems impos sible. y "Politically, China is in great con fusion. There are a dozen or more somewhat independent provincial governmentsK which in reality are military oligarchies because nearly everywhere the military governor has more power thai! the civil gov ernor. It is generally admitted that the gxeart outstanding needs of China are a commoi language, a common coinage and a strong central civil government which can control the provinces and the military units. "Splendid progress is being made in education, though only 4,000,000 out of China's '40,000,000 of school age are in school." - 4 MICHIGAN WOMEN RUN Feminine Candidates for Legisla ture Make Announcements. , ' DETROIT, June 24. At least four Michigan women are ambitious to serve in the - Michigan" - legislature, that number already having an nounced their candidacies. - The list so far Includes Mrs. Eva Hamilton of Grand Rapids, repub lican, state senator and only woman member of the last legislature, and who seeks renomination; Mrs. Cora Mae Fleming of Kalamazoo, re publican candidate for the house; Etta C. ' Smith of Grand Rapids, a democrat, who aspires to a seat ;n the senate, and Mrs. Clara Knee on Grand Rapids, a democraticcandi date for the house. Other women are being urged to seek nomination and election in other parts of the state and those in touch with the political situation predict that a dozen, or perhaps 25, will enter the lists- during the next few w"eeks. SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES. Only installation in the Pacific northwest of Yale & Towne Change able locks. It's worth your while to find out how this lock differs- from all others. All sizes now available. PORTLAND TRUST COMPANY, Sixth and Morrison. Adv. S. & . H. "green stamps for cash. Holman Fuel Co.. coal and wood. Broadway 6353; 560-21. Adv. , 1 Miss Catlin's Schoo FOB BOARDING AND DAY TLPiXS Opens Tuesday, September 6. Now occupies its new building on WESTOVER TERRACES An Ideal Location basketball and Tennis Courts. Prepares girls for eastern as well as western colleges and schools, under a faculty of able eastern teachers. Num ber of Primary, Intermediate and High School Departments Boys Accepted in Primary Grades. College Preparatory and Special Courses Accredited to Colleges and Universities. Music, Art. Physical Training and Science. , French Taught Throughout the School. Boarding: Department Special Feature. Catalogue 8ent Upon Request to Wewtover Terraee, Portland, Or. Phone Auto. 612-72. The Efficiency Desk Office Furniture and Appliances "EVERYTHING FOR THE OFFICE" Printing Engraving Bookbinding Seals and Rubber Stamps Fifth and Oak Streets Broadway 6081 An exclusive Norman Brother, model de signed for men wi demand distinction inr4 drens. . . v Note the lapels, th pockets, the back, the .tile and fit. EVERY suit made here emphasizes the person ality of the wearer. Every suit is character ized by distinction, tone, dignity and finesse. EJvery suit makes an ir resistible appeal to the man who is content with noth ing but the best. . - ". Norman Brothers TAILORS ' 101-106 Mezzanine Floor Northwestern Bank Bldg. LETTERHEADS 3Hxll; 500 $3.00, $4.00 per 1000; $6.00 for 2000. Envelopes, $4.00 per 1000; $6.50 for 2000. C. O. D. or postage prepaid if cash with order. P. O. Box 825. . TACOMA, WASH. MAIL ORDER PRINTING CO. 447 Alder and 410V& Washington Commerce Safe Deposit Vaults. 91 Third St. Private boxes. Adv. S. & H. green stamps for cash. Holman Fuel Co.. coal and wood. Broadway 6353; 560-21. Adv. " C4nnouncing the SUltlltlER SESSlOIl Jnlt 1st to Sptmbar 1st C HE advantages available at the Cornish School Sum mer Session, recognized among the leading Art Schools of America, will surpass any here tofore offeced in any institu tion of the west SPECIAL CLASSES Under the tutorship of such eminent Guest Artists as: ADOLPH EOLM. Mtuttr Clou for Tlachert: Amattur and Professional -Dancers. CORNELIUS VAN VUET. Pri vate Instructions in Viohncello. SAM HUME, Arts of the Theatre; -Community Drama; Stage Manage- CsWllSlC SERGEI KLIBANSKY, Private and Class Lessons for Singers, Teachers. CTHE regular Faculty, 1 through whose efforts this institution has gained such popularity, will have classes in : Piano, Violin. Harp, Orchestra Conducting. Glee Club Con- Arts ana uecorations. Danyine.. Music History Ap preciation. Arts and Decora- tion. Arts of the Theater. cJJanCe School of the Spoken Word, Normal Course for Public School Teachers, Playground and oymnasium directors; French, Voice, Opera Classes. For our illustrated catalogue and complete particulars address The REGISTRAR. CALVIN BRAINERD CADY, Mu sic Education Normal; Piano. ANNIE LOUISE DAVID, Harpist. GODNI9I4 T ROY STREET SEATTLE, U.S. A WW It SLICK TOP Indexed Rubber Stamps The Greatest Time SaVer Ever Devised L For Use in the Bank, Office or Shipping Depi ' - . -t-e Patented June 12, 1917 N .,; Cam of Columbia River Ship BulkJin Corptil Jefferson Street Portland,Or8on. f rilJUIMISl'SI - '"fj Ju&t a glance and you have it. The celluloid keeps the index clean. Manufactured Only by IRWIN-HODSON 387 Washington St. (Pittock Block) Phone Your Want Ads to The Oregonian;, Main 7070 Automatic 560-95 0J