THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, J WEDNESDAY -EVENING, -JULY- 23, 1913. , Latest r&aypttsiss. iHE obiiventlori of Nation! Ladle' Tailor and Dremak-r association hold la New York passed approval on . the design thown In today' aketch, which will five an Idea of wfiat the fall ha; in ator for us In the Una of tailored auit.--"'VfV-'y-i' '. xhla li a three piece costume, con latina; of a coat and a aklrt to which chiffon walat t attached, forming a dress when the coat la removed. The material used la taupe wooien begaline. and it will be greatly favored or fall outings. , v ' The coat has lonr aleevea aet Into " wide -dropped armholes, and there are uff and deep collar' of ailver fox, which can be turned up high in back or tied: close about the neck with the taupe aatln tie which runs underneath. "in back, there is a long aquare ooattall bordered An the end with a band of the fur. Below thla hangs a fringed panel aaah - of taupe charmsu, which la a ;. part of the aklrt, hung from a waist .; line.'..!) , Th aklrt la known as the 'ieg-o'- mutton" skirt, and la draped in flat folda over either hip. Another novel feature ia the turned-up "cuff around "the beat, fastened with tiny eoutache buttona and loops. The chiffon blouse Is of the aame aaada of gray aa the ault and ia made ever a. lace-trlmmed net foundation. - with long sleeves puffed in the middle between toe deep cuff and tne lowerea Shoulder.. A little bib of the euiting rise above the belt in front and back. etltched close tos the chiffon blouse. ON CHURCH GOING By Edna, K. Wooley. "There are 47 reasons why girla aren't going -to church aa much aa they did," announced the young person with the . black eyaa, ' -v "Nam a few, I requested. "Well, for on thing" and ehe topped to giggle "the boys don't go eo's you could notice it, and If they do go the miniater herds them Into a class by themselves and we girls never aee anything of them." c, , t VBut don't you have young people's meetings? They used to when I was .' In my 'teens," I felt called upon to : remark.' . . , "Maybe on boy to 10 girls,'' uccinct ly responded the black-eyed girl. "Boy think it' a sissy thing to go to meet ings where there are girla, and the few "that do go have such a smarty air that W wouldn't enlarge their concel for world by noticing them. . "When w moved into this nelghbor " hood," aha continued, "mother and I de cided we'd go to church regularly and . get right into the work and be of some us and get acquainted. Mother Joined the Aid society and I - went to the young people' club and we, rented two eat In a pew for the year. We con scientiously tried to go to church and be Interested and to make ourselves agreeable to others. We road few nice friend, too ladles that mother met In the .Aid society. W entertained the society and my club during the year. We donated to the many little : appeals' that war alway coming up extras outside of th regular due, you know. . . '. ' ... . . "No matter how tired I was after my week' woik downtown, I arose early Sunday morning to get ready for Sun day, acbool, and mother had to hustle like everything to put on her glad rag for church. My clothe began to look 'tacky because I never had time to ; put them in good shape, and mother had enough on her hand without mending and pressing and darning and cleaning hoes and hats, i etc,' for ru. ; I was too tired t alt up night to do it, so started to: send my thing to profes sional -cleaner ' and renovator. That cost ; some mora money. - A business girl has to look well, you know, espe cially If 'she holds a fairly good post tlon. , And, of course,, we had to look pic and span in church If we were ,; going to hold the reapect of th con gregation, etc Ton simply can't go to churuh shabby, believe me, unlaes you want to be condescended to or over looked. - "Now, you know, I don't get such a dreadfv'ly big salary. So we began to feel th drain on our purses, and when at the end of the year we dlacovered we'd have to take the pew rent out of our rainy day fund, w thought It wise - to quit. . 'That meant quitting th whole - church business, because w certainly j PISGAH HOME IS A REFUGE FOR QUTCAST i The men and boy discharged from . th county hospital, though no longer 111. are usually too weak to work for a week or more, and usually they are without funds, ; What doors are open to them? ' Men and boys, after serving jail sen tences, com eut dirty and disheveled, wearing impossible clothing and other wise unfit to even eek employment. . What doors are open to theraT Boy drifting about the country find their way Into Portland, and, knowing BO one. fall Into bad company and soon. are penniless. , What doors are open to them? Ordinarily the answer to all three of these .question could be answered in two words the Jail. Portland 1 fortunate, however, in possessing a refuge home for these un fortunate people. At PUgah home, all these men and boys ar received iid given a plain but substantial meal and a clean bed. Every possible effort Is made to help them get onto their feet and, a soon a they ar able, they ar put to work either in the home (for all work about the institution 1 done by the Inmates) or job are secured for them, and as long as . they remain there a. part of their salaries go toward the upkeep of the- home. -' A thorough investigation of the home and Its method has been made by The Journal, and thla paper is now making an effort to raise a $2000 maintenance fund for a year. Already several nun drd dollars have been subscribed by . men and women who. on learning of the excellence of the institution, have glad ly contributed toward its support. Lara subscriptions ar not asked, but It i desired that all subscriptions be made on a monthly basis for a year. ;..; ;;na ia Coupon. . , Fill in -the coupon published below and all either to Mr.- Hatti B. Lawrence, Lent. Or, or to The Journal off loe. The THX PIStiAH HOME. ; -Wt. '.h'L ''.'. ' ' i . . 'vA 'V : ,'"' mmdm: njwm--- I hereby subscribe th sum of monthly from date, for one year, to Mr. Hatti B. Lawrence ("PUgah Mother"). . ( This subscrfbtlon 1 for th purpose of maintaining Pisgatr Home, a ChSlstUa Kefug for men who ar la distress through poverty and mi- tcirtun.'. - - ' - ' - -, , (Eitned.) ..r.. ...,..,.., , ,, ...,. . Awyiusi .......,...... , ....a..... ....... , . ..... ................... Showing some new features of the fall styles. weren't going there as poor church mem bers who couldn t pay our way. I went back to going over my wardrobe, wash ing my hair, etc., on Sunday morning, and resting up for th next week's work. "AH week I work hard and Sunday is my let up day. I don't want to have to study for a Bible class section. I Jon't want to have to dress up early n the morning. I don't want to have to look nice and smiling and all that when my face needa a reat I want to sit around in a kimono and clean my white shoes and freshen up my leghorn haven't time during the week. I want one free day that I can spend at home, all any, if I want to, with my hair down. "Ther were aoma thing X liked about church,", she thoughtfully concluded, "but we didn't get enough return for the time and money and energy we spent there. I didn't even get a healthy beau, though an occasional parlor sit ter called and partook of our good 'eats' without inviting us anywhere in repay ment, except to a free church social." The Ragtime Muse Dad's TaU Talk. Say, I'm worried 'bout my dad, 'ause, to hear him talk. He was simply never. bad Always "walked the chalk." My dad dun whut he wuz told. Minded every one: But if no one has to scold You don't have no funl. My dad never soiled his elo'ea, Never told a He; Never punched a feller's nose, Dtdn t never cry; Didn't tease to sit up lata, Didn't never fight. Wanted to be good and great t , And. to do whut's right! Ses he loved to go to school An' to do the chores. Never broke a single rule, Kep' his pets outdoors. My dad surely must have been Sissy, anyhow. Or else say, he makes m grit He is fibbing now! .. IN STAG ELAND Any person wno can estaDiisn a rec ord of three years as an actor, is eli gible to membership in the Actors' Equity association. The Equity associa tion is in no sense a social organiza tion, but has for Its object the quit able arrangement of all business mat ters pertaining to those who follow the art of acting, and especially pertaining to those who are member of th as- subscription may be paid either to Mrs. Lawrence directly or to The Journal. The following subscription already have been made: The Journal (per month for one year) $15.00 James Cranston (per month for one year) J.60 J, P. Fin ley A 6on. substituted for A. L, Fin ley (per month for on . year) j.oo a. iiraizxe (per montn lor one year) 6.00 1.00 2.60 1.60 S.OO 2.00 2.00 H. L. F. (per monuth for one year) U Samuel (per month for one year) Friend (per month for one year) . . A Friend (a total sum of) Mrs. It. E. Moore (a total sum of) 8. Rasworthy (a total sum of ) . . . Ira F. Powers Furniture company per month for one year) 1.50 A Friend (per month for six months) inn Kooeris .tiros, (per montn lor one year) 2.80 Theodore Kruse (per month for one year) 2.00 xonsetn Floral Co. (per month for one year) inn casn (per month lor one year) .... 1.00 ami xi. A. Morns (per month for one year) Cash (per month- for one veer).. 1.00 .1.00 8.00 2.00 John 8. Beall (per month for one yearj Joneph Supple (per month for one year) , A Fjlend (per month for one year) Mrs. W. J. Burns (per month for 1.00 1.60 M 2.00 S.OO 1.00 2.60 5.00 one year) A Friend (per month for one year) Charles S. Archer (per quarter for one year) Morgan, Fleldner ft Boyce (per month for one year) Cash (per month for one year).. Owl Drug Co. (per month for one year in drugs) A Friend from McMInnville (a total sum of) Cash 6.00 Cash (a total sum of) 10.00 X, B, X. (a total sum of) S.00 Nathan Strauss (a total sum of).. 10.00 William Oadaby (a total turn of) 10.00 John Deere Plow company (a total sum of) , , 16.00 A Friend (a total sum of) , J.60 roniana union btocKyaras (a to tal sum of) .10.00 -rwusnfl. Oregon......... mi. ............. . dollars, payable ociatlon. Free legal advice is one of the benefits of the organisation. , "a....;.:, . ., .':":' The all English company of actors who will appear In the famous Arnold Bennett - Edward Knoblauch play, "Milestones," this . season will arrive from London late in August and at once begin rehearsals. - Miss Charlotte Walker, awho la to make a transcontinental tour under the Klaw & Erlanger management in "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine' this ses son, haa purchased a farm In Maryland and ia to employ her leisure weeks' tlm in rsislng chickens. She is a .southern woman and looks wltn contempt upon northern chicken. ' TgfieMimiiMivSide lWHKiaiMiiariadiWH By Walt Mason. "You look unusually disreputable thl morning-," remarked the professor, "I feel the same way," replied the low-browed man. "Somehow or other I mistook yesterday for the Fourth of July, and before I realized my error I was a shining example. I consumed liquid refreshments In such quantities that I couldn't decide whether I was going or coming, and my head feels like a castoff heating- stove thl morning." "It seems a strange thing to me," commented the professor, "that a man will deliberately drink ardent spirits when' he knows how he must suffer the consequences. The fact that so many men thus carve out misery for them selves leads one to doubt the existence Of the quality known as common sense." "That's all very fine, professor.- but what is a man goin' to drtnkf He must have something to sprinkle his interior with and lay the dust Night before last I picked up a magazine and read a scientifio article pointing out the deadly nature of water as a beverage. Water is full of germs and microbes and the magazine gave pictures of some of them, and no man in his senses would swallow such reptiles. Or if he did swallow them his peace of mind would be gone. He wouldn't be able to think of anything but the menagerie he had swallowed. "Some of these germs represent typhoid fever and others distribute samples of malaria. Every germ in the collection, according to that magazine. Is traveling In the Interest of some deadly disease, and a man can't side step them unless he fries his drinking water, or distills it, or runs it througli a sausage stuffer. I'm a busy man and I haven't time to sit around the kitchen baking my drinking water until it is brown on both sides. If I loafed around the house that way Aunt Julia would Interrupt me with a saucepan. "In the same magazine there was an article contending that all milkmen should be in Jail, with rusty fetters on their limbs. The milk they sell is worse than the water of commerce. Milkmen, it seems, always make it a point to keep cows which are afflicted with tuberculosis and leprosy and other unfashionable diseases, and the man who drinks the milk from such cows Is marked for an early grave. The germs In milk are tougher than the germs in water, and it does no good to boll them. Tou can't kill them without using a pile driver, and a poor man can't afford such expensive machinery. "The doctors all Insist that coffee Is deadly, containing a. poison that leaves him a nervous wreck if It doesn't send him to the morgue, and tea is even worse. If a man drinks tea right along he soon begins to see strange animals with striped horns, and sooner or later his relatives wrap htm up carefully and send him to the booby hatch by parcel post. So what is a man going to do when he needs Irrigation? "When I woke the next morning was so Mry that my breath looked like gasoline smoke, and I went .down to the pump for a drink. Then I recalled those germs whose portraits I had seen in the magazine, and I pimply couldn't j, I 1 . n. V W . . - - . 111. urinx wftier. i itvuv was pieiiiy ui milK in the house, but who would drink milk while thinking of microbes which looked like pink alligators? It was then that It struck me that it must be the Fourth of July and I went hunting a beverage that contained no crocodiles. Tou may say what you like against old booze, but there are no germs in the forty-rod variety. The toughest germ that ever came down the pike wouldn't give more than two kicks if dropped into a flagon of that liquid bonfire. "It doesn't make any difference what you do, professor, you're always tak ing your life In your hand, and if one thing doesn't kill you another will. Old Hankerman, who lives across the street from me, is so fat that he can't see half way to Ms feet. He' been that way for years, and It never wor ried him a bit until he read in a maga sine that a man of hi build was liable to drop dead of apoplexy at any time. So - he began taking long walks around town and yesterday he wss brought home, on a hayrack, all smashed to Pieces. He started walking across sidewalk that was built on poles about 16 feet from the ground. The side- walk came down with him and you really ought to go and see the hole In the ground where he landed. He may recover, but if he does he'll never want any more exercise. ' POLICE CHIEF ISSUES Los Angeles Matrons Invited to Inspect Jail at Their Own-Convenience. (United Prets Leased Wire.) Los Angeles, July 28. Society ma trons of Los Angeles are revising their engagement schedules today to include Chief of Police Sebastian's "at home" at police headquarters on the afternoon of July 21. Either certain of the chiefs city Jail prisoners, who claim to be familiar with approved methods of seconding a prin cipal at a tea fight, or a squad of Los Angeles' finest and handsomest, coached for the occasion, will "pour." The ladies who call will be accorded the freedom of the city jail, and if they desire will be given an opportunity to meet the leaders of the upper crust of erookdom. "This afternoon Is merely to give the women of Los Angeles sn opportunity to see the inside of a jail," explained the chief. "Many of them never have," he added. If the innovation prove popular Sebastian may establish it as a headquarters institution. . Shantung Silk for 8ummer Wear. For summer holiday wear nothing is more delightful tnan Bhantung silk, whether in the form of coat and skirt costumes or traveling wraps. The color of th . fabric is invariably- becoming, while it is equally attractive - en ac count ef-tts dust resisting qualities. A Bhantung coat or smart . design is trimmed effectively with groups of but tons ana finished with a roll collar and cuff of pongee in some contrasting had. , ;.. :,,..;, (i. ,, v, ,;y:t;";.Y;,,' CARDS AT HOME and whatever cua there may be for censuring- fashion, when just about any thing and everything seems to "go, the mod of. ftalrdressing must be ac- couniea , above reproach. Never were styles p- pretty, snlble and comfort able. Mountains of curl, puff, braid, and coll never were becoming, and by overheating the head they did more or les Injury to the natural hair, so lot us be truly appreciative of a period of respite from elaborate coiffures and much falseness. It 1 avery scanty crop of locks in deed that. cannot be made to transform itself into an effective coif now. but there is one point of danger the In clination to counteract the simplicity of ine arrangement of the hair by over ornamentation. Even if It were not gild ing gold to attempt to decorate these present coifs, whose chief beauty Is In their very simplicity, pretentious orna ments are out of place in summer cos tumes, quite spoiling the cool, comfort able Impression that the ideal summer outfit should give. Perhaps most charming of all is th coif that is guiltless of ornamentation of any kind, but if the hair Is uneven and disinclined to remain in order, cer tain schemes of decoration are useful, and for this season nothing is prettier than flowers. The bandeau of natural rosea as worn by Miss Green in the 11 lustration Is most effective for both purposes. It is charming, timely, and it holds the locks in place. Artificial flowers are of course the more practical, but In summer espe cially there is always a satisfaction in wearing the real and If they are carefully wired they will stay in place and remain reasonably fresh despite the heat of the head. The single rose, dropping by Its stem behind one ear or nestled in the soft -hair at th back, 1 still as delicately graceful as ever, and a new bandeau, that Is extremely be coming to most faces, comprises a band of single blossoms daisies, small roses, or what is very fashionable Just now, buttercups, with a straight bow of satin or velvet ribbon which is adjusted to fall at the side of the coif. Some of the headdresses in which flowers figure are very dashing and some are worn for the sentiment they express. Mme. Bernhardt's favorite ornaments are faahioned of flowers off the stage, and on when the role permits of any. In "Lucrece" It is violets, and violets afford an excellent suggestion, for the color harmonizes with almost kittle Stories An Unpleasant Surprise. 1 By Thornton W. Burgess. (Copyright, 1912. by J. G. Lloyd.) Leg are very useful when you want to run away; Long, . sharp teeth are splendid if to fight you want to stay; But a greater blessing, whether one may stay or quits, Is a well oiled, perfect balanced, sharp ened set of wits. 80 said Peter Rabbit as he sat in a snug hiding place in the Old Pasture and thought over what he had found out about the strange Rabbit whose tracks be had followed. They had led him to a rubbing or measuring tree, where the strange Rabbit had placed his mark, and that mark was so high up on the tree that Peter knew that the strange Rabbit must be a great deal bigger than himself. "If he's bigger, of course, he is stronger." thought Peter, "and If he is both bigger and stronger, of course, it won't be the least bit of use for me to fight him. Then, anyway. I'm too stiff and sore to fight. Of course he has no business to think he owns the Old Pasture, because he doesn't.. I have just aa much right here as he has. Yes, sir, I have Just as much right In this Old Pasture as he has, and if he thinks ho can drive me out he Is going to find that he never was more mistaken in his life! I'll show him! Yes, slr-e-e, I'll show h)m! I guess my wits are as sharp as his, and I wouldn't wonder if they are a little bit sharper.' Foolish Peter . Rabbit 1 There he was boasting and bragging to himself of what he would do to some one whom he hadn't even seen, all because he had found a sign that told him the Old Pasture, In which he had made up his mind to make his new home, was already the home of someone else. Peter was like a lot of other people. Ha wasn't fair. No, sir, he wasn't fair, He let his own desires destroy his sense of fair play. It was all right for him to put up elans in the dear old briar patch and the Green Forest, warning other Rabbits that they must keep away, but it was all wrong for another Rnbolt to do the same thing In the Old Pasture. Oh, my, yes! That was quite a different matter! The very thought of it made Peter very, very angry, When he thought of this other Rabbit it was always as the stranger. That PRESERVE BABYSSIul Assisted when necessary by Cuticura Ointment. They keep the skin and scalpclean and clear, sweet and healthy, besides s&othins irritations which often prevent sleep ancUf neglected.become. .Heal fly CUTICUM SOAP chronic disfigurements. ; Cutteur Soap sad Oiotmcot sold throat heut tbe world. Simple of web mailed (res, with 12-p. book. Addran poet-esnt "Cutleur." Dept. lia, Bat ton. , r-Xlm who tbs-re and stumpoo witfe CuUoura ' asp will find it pM for alia aa snip. ., , " k '''L ' .' '' .T'" " p. j" -y i'v"? '" ""''v "t't "! t ' ;i.v'".f.'T. 'V. ,) ' , BeeaityHelps V1 I ft t r ' s " A ' t i s ' f t . v vifsf ; J Ethel Green; bas hit upon a pretty summer coif decoration. - any gown and ,1s beautiful against hair 01 any coior. According to a French hairdresser flower ar the only aultabl decora tion for aummer toilettes, and It is In sisted also that the flower selected hall typify the poae ne wishes, or find It most natural or congenial, to assume. For Instance, popples, which are tre mendously favored, ar worn by those who affect the languorous pose. Chrys anthemums are for those whose man ner suggests elegance and luxurious ness: marguerites typify the cold, haughty type; orchids, those who like to seem mysterious: pansies the faith ful. The 'camelia stand for coquetry, the iris for constancy, and the hortensla for distinguished personality. for Bedtime how Just how unfair Peter was, be cause, you Bee, Peter himself was really the stranger. It was his first visit to the Old Pasture, while it was very plain that the other had lived there for soma time But. Peter couldn't or wouldn't see that. You see, he had counted so much on having the Old Pasture to himself and doing as he pleased that he was too upset and disappointed to be fair. If the other Rabbit had been smaller than he well, that might have made a difference. The truth is, Peter was just a wee bit afraid. And perhaps it was that wee bit of fear that made him unfair and unjust Anyway, the longer he sat and thought about It the angrier ho grew, and the more he bragged and boasted to himself about what he would do. "I'll Just keep out of sight until my wounds have healed, and then we'll see who owns the Old Pasture!" thought Peter. No sooner had this thought popped 'y Greatly reduce ci Ulostrsw tlon showinr tn book that la brought np to tn pr at In aocordaao wits anthoritle from great nnl yeriitle. This ; VAP?? SPECIALIZES Graduate, of 0, A. C. Takes - Remunerative Position as D, S, Teacher,' (SpeeUI te The Journal.) ' Oregon Agricultural College, Corval 11, Or., July M.'lt's ; the .strangeat thing- why so many people who have to make their own way do not peolall.' lays Mis Helen. Cowrlli a thla citv. who ha Just accepted the remunerative position of domestic science teacher in the Harney county hish school of Burns Or., within one month of , graduation. More than - that. Miss Cowglli .had : to turn aown two other splendid positions In accepting thl. ' "There are any number of bright and competent working girl, operatora and saleswomen," continued this speculative young lady. "who. af tr saveral year of experience are reoelving lea than ISO per month. And I know of. one middle aged woman who ha been Jn her pre ent position-of chief operator in a pub. Ho service office and her check still reads per month. And here I am, turning down offers - of about double tnat amount, and the work hunting me." But Miaa Cowglli did not Walt until graduation to begin the earning of her reward. She found ways to lighten col lege expenses and broaden college train ing while she pursued her studies. Her most remunerative employment while In school was In instructing a class of young women m- pnysioal culture. Dainty Parisian Hats. Dainty, coquettish Watteau hat ar to be seen in Pari, aimply trimmed with a bow of satin ribbon, and a nosy of old tlm' flower, while other hat of th Nlnlch category are tied with velvet ribbon and trimmed with hugo cows 01 tune or ouncnea of Nattier nowers. ueverai nets trimmed with black velvet and a profusion of oxeyed daisies, have .lately been seen on the boulevards, but the trimming of the moment is diaphanous tulle, fine black tune, witn wnicn every other smart hat seen in the French capital' . is adorned in great gossamer . like loop, forming an aureole around th crown of th Loul Seise hat, or posed like a huge black butterfly on the crown of the Belgian or other small straw hape. Wrist Ribbon for Handbags. The wrist ribbon has almost taken th place of the strap on the modish handbags. Ribbon appear on leather bags as well as on sitk ones. They are certainly more In keeping with the hot weather, and they can easily be renewed when too frequent use wear them threadbare. Into his head than he received a sur prise, such an unpleasant surprise! It was three heavy thumps right behind him. Peter knew what It meant Of course, he knew. It meant that he must run or fight It meant that he had been so busy thinking about how smart he was going to be that he had iorgouen to cover nis own tracks, and so the maker of the big tracks ha had followed had found him out Thump! thump! thump! There It was again. Peter knew by the sound that it was of no use to stay and fight especially when he was so sore and stiff. There was nothing to do but run away. He just had to. And that Is Just what he did do. while his eyes flUed with tear of rage and bitterness. Next story, "Peter Rabbit Almost Decides to Go Back Home." SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES For Cirla. Condnaad bv Ik fil&TEBB OF TUP UAI V NAMES OF JESUS AND MARY. Ormk. AftmkmU Ctlbtim Cmrm. Mule. Art, Elccmiea aad Coaaer dal Deptl. Xuim tmd Dv SWra. Karl ol Moral ud InteilecraalTralilnf. Write far AaaaucesMatAddiws limn turtRWK m. Mt' amf, rUmd Hill Military Academy PORTLAND, OREGON Send for Illustrated Catalogue WOMAN AND RECEIVES REVARP wm NOTHING more USEFUL can be desired than . this LATEST genuine limp leather bound dictionary. And after you get it for yourself you'll want other copies for your friends. This Modern Dictionary Makes an Ideal present. It Is bound in genuine limp leather, stamped in gold, and every one of its many features provea its intrinsic value. MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED Could find no other dictionary worthy 'of its T indorse ment Others are revisions of old plates, while this one is entirely new; others are "edited" by those who have long ago passed to their fathers, while thii one is edited by tha greatest living authorities. Get this MODERN dictionary. 'Youll. find today's coupon printed '. on another page, and others are printed in this paper every day. Tha entire, plan 1s captained wereitv MAIL ORnFRQ Dictionary Nerer Before Offered in Thit City v See :. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE BEGINS it forty. fifth school year SfSTCMBC" 1. 1S1. - DEGREE COURSES In many phases ol AQS.ieul.TURf., CNQINECRINCJ. HOMK ' ' ECONOMICS. MlNINO, FORCSTRY. COM : MCRCK. PHARMACY. . vV; TWO-YEAR COURSES In aoricuu ' TURt. ' HOMC ECONOMIC MCCHANIQ : ART. FORESTRY, COMMCRCC. PHARMACY TEACHER'S COURSES In manual ; training, agriculture, domestic science' ;nd art.- vy'i; -;,i? ljr- MUSIC, including piano; string, band ; : Instrument and voice culture. A BEAUTIFUL BOOKLET entitled "Tun Emmchmen o Ruhai, Lif and a Catalogue will be mailed free ; on application. Address B. M. TjtWNAHT, Registrar. , (tw-7-lltoM) , Corvallis. Owe.' BXUSOITT, OAXETOXirXA. Btlmont' scbool" dftes ' far its bora whit thoughtful and careful sarenti most with to hv dose. - Its loci Moo beyond the dtoerilOM and temptatloua ot town or city, the flnanau ol Its climate, the excellence of its equlpmtat and the spirit of Its faculty combine to make thla Doeatble. It oreDarea "bora for tha beat Co lift' and school! of entineerlng and offers In addition such tlccUTe couraae aa boy may wlaa who are not Dlannlna tor nnlTtraltV work laUr. Write for catalogue fifing detailed In formation, nil aamiater opens August is, ivii. VT, T. KEID, Haadmartar. OXLBIST W. SUXX, Aailatant Eaadnaster. Addraa Snparlntradent, Balmont. SB Mile South of Baa rranelsco. Jakarta af OttlaaS, CaOfaraia Tke only Waoua't Cellar the radii CeatL Chartered 1US. Uaaldiaats, Iitruca ssd tneoadoa rttolrtaiati aaahalcat ts tbow of Stanford Unrrenlrand Unlrcnlqrof Cal ifornia, nearby. Labonuoriai lor tdenci with modem eqalpaMM. IxcclJmevpoNtialtia kr kosw icoaomlri. library toiay, mm art. Madera rraiaaalBia. IpacUl care for baau of maanat wet door Ufa. ChriadaaiBAsancaai aadnoihtiaoail, Prealdiet laclla Clay Cartas. A.U..IX.D. For eeulo id addnaa Retlatrai, Dapt.O. MlUa Collets r.owut. PORTLAND Fits boys and girls for Iiltata aad Westers Collegei. Well equipped lab oratnrta In Cbamla try and Pbrslcs. A OyaaastOB la charge of a akllled ACADEMY J0RT1AXD. OSX00X Twinty-fifth Tear Opeoa Baptamtwr it, m. director. riald sad track athlatlca. Tha Academy inclades a nrlmary aad cram- mar school which receive soya and glria as nng as alx and doa tha work of tha gradaa n aaven years. EDDbaala on eaaentlala. Fhra. . leal tralnlne and Ires day in Gymnasium and en play-ground. All departments In chart of thoronehly cmalltlad and siDcrlanced taacbara. Catalonia oa application. THIRTEENTH AJTD atOHTGOXEBY ' Christian Brothers Business College OBAUD AVTNTTE AVO OXACKAXAS ST. ' OKAKXAB AND OOMMEROIAL DEPARTM'TS Aa ideal acbool for bora and young men. Couraea of studies tborourb matboda modern sod equipment excellent. STUDIES SEETHED TTTE8DAT, SEPT I, 1913 Stodents prepared foe bnainaaa Ufa; gradnatea placod ia deilrabla poaltlona wltb bnainaaa bouaaa; basks, railwaya and profsaalooal man. W neely mere application fur youag man than we can supply. BB0TKZB . AZTDBEW, T. S, C, Presideat Telaphonea Eaat STMi O SS0. HAKO IKSTRUCTION THE KING SCHOOL Of SPEECH A1TD tn BEADING EOS THE SEAT AtfD HABO OT HEABUTO Children who ire falling behind ia their grades because of deatnaa taught lip read ing sad enabled to Succeed ia bearing acbool. Adulta who ar hampered socially and in boaineaa will b benefited. Studio 80S PentrM blrta. Phono Mnrobull 21. upons a vxnjkanit Coupon on Page 17- Belmont School IK! . .' i . n