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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1917)
Club Activities BY VELLA WINNER ' HE no parade and mui meet- i I ing this evening; glv promise ' ct bringing" out large numbtn of club women and others in terested in the advancement of the 'cause of patriotism. All people re irardleBS of ae color, sect, station in Ufa or nationality have been bidden to join in the 'parade which will be essentially .an industrial parade. Fol lowing;, the mas meeting at the Lin coln hirh school will be addressed by Mrs. Clara H. TEValdo, regent of Ore gon Agricultural college, her subject t being ' "What Women Can Do." i Arleia Association Xleets Arleta Parent-Teacher association held a suc cessful meeting Friday afternoon, when reports of the past year were given. Not ' only has the year been a- most successful one from the standpoint of ' accomplishments, but because of the harmony that has prevailed and the oneness of purpose which has actuated tha members. The election of officers resulted as follows: President, Mrs. W, J. Jefferies; vice-president, Mr. C. L. Wlnsor; recording secretary, Mrs. Minnie Zehirung; corresponding secre tary, Miss Estelle lllckey; treasurer, -Mrs. F. A. Nelson. The two-patoon system was discussed by W. 8. U'Ren and Chief Young. A piano duet was given by Gertrude Mclntyre and Esther LlndloKS. Muriel. Raineu gave a piano solo. Hoffman Association Elects, The entire list of officers of the Hoffman Parent-Teacher association was re- . J " .1-t. - ' ' t ' tion of the vice-president, who has re cently removed from the district to 5 take the prinrij.alshlp of another school. The officers elected yesterday are as follows: President, Mrs. George W.- Snider; vice-president, Mrs. George ..Booth; secretary, Mr. Charles A. Neg- loyaxju, irttuurer, Mrs. ii. KJ. reiui. Mrs. Bowman gaye a piano solo; Mrs. - JXckson sang two numbers. Readings were given uy Miss Edna May Root and .Mrs. Snider. Following the program there was a social hour, during which delicious refreshments were served. The refreshments and decorations were ""in charge of Mrs. Root and Mrs. Elton Shaw. Highland Association Elects, Mrs. W. B. Crcwdson was elected president of the Highland Parent-Teacher asso ciation Friday afternoon. Other offi cers chosen were: Vice-president, Mrs. B, M. Tike; secretary, Mrs. W. A, Van ,Atta; treasurer, Mrs. Hallie Johnson; auditor, Charles Iioyd. Mount Tabor Elects. Mount Tabor i oraii-iwuiiri iir-Mui;iai lull neiu its annual meeting Friday afternoon, at which time $50 was voted to furnish a rest room for the teachers. E. II. ' Whitney, prlnipal of the Ockley Green school, spoke on the 6 mill school lim itation bill. E. N. Wheeler, candidate for mayor, spoke. The following new officers were elected. President, Mrs. J. O. Hall; first vice-president, Mrs. J. T. Roark; second vice-president, Mrs. Farley; secretary, Mrs. George O. eoclal hour with, refreshments con cluded the afternoon. Railroad Womaa's Club, The psy chology class of the Portland Railroad Woman's club met Friday afternoon with Mrs. Charles Spencer, 715 Kearney street. The program was In charge of Mrs. Flora Peterson, chaiirman of the psychology department. Mrs. Helen Gregg gave a talk along the lines of metaphysics and mental telepathy. The meeting was well attended by members and friends. The last regular meeting of the club for the season will be held May 26, when the election of officers Will take place. A luncheon will con clude the club's activities, the date to be innouned later. Xdnnton Association Elects. The Ivlnnton Parent-Teacher association held- a business session Friday after noon, when officers were elected as fol- lows: President,. Mrs. Arnold Olsen; vico-presldent, Mrs. Mabel Young; sec rotary, Mrs. John Wilson; treasurer, Mrs. H. Kettner. miff. f i4SU- .jp J?' : VnPO . t ' -st i ' i a,Yjlfl VfUl v. - T 'iff jf' 3 rT'---- fan ounca of meat or fat every day?', 1 Very wan roaka it one out of a bun- . dred families, but keep in mind that ; all meat allowed to spoil and all meat ana rat rendered inedible by improper cooking, scorching or burning must be counted as waste. Make, It an ounce every other day or one a month. Such waste atill would be unendurable, when meat is scarce and when fat is of such vital food Importance to many nations. Waste ef meat or fat is Inexcusable. Every bit of lean meat can be used In soups, stewa, or in combination with cereals; every spoonful of fat can be employed in cookery; every bit of drippings and gravy can be saved so easily and used to add flavor and nourishment to other dishes. The United States department of agriculture, Washington. D. C, or your state agricultural college will tell you how to use bits of meat to make appetizing and nutritious dishes and how to use left-over fat in cookery. BedTirsveTaleyX. BY Cli ARiINGRAM "JUDSON The Boastful Grasshopper. rtH such a beautiful grasshopper. I I such a -great green At the Theatres AMFSEMEXTS BAKER Broadway and SUth at Morrlon. Dramatic atoek. Alcazar playera In "YON XO.N80N." 8:20 p. Bl. COLUMBIA Sixth, betwjten Waahlngton and Stark. Photoftlaja. "THJ9 WHtoBL, OW THB LAW," featuring EMILY STKVINA. Hit. and MRS. SID DREW, comedy, "Tbe wakening of Helena Miner." PORTLAND BOY BOUUT BALLY pictures. 11 a. m. to H P. B. II EI LI O park. HIPPODROME Broadway at Yamhill. Vau deTllle. . Headllner, 'THB iXLK SUCK IK8 " PbotopUy. LITTLE MARY SUN SHINES (Babie Marie Oaborne). in "Staadowa aud Sunahlne." 11 a. m. to 11 p. m. LYRIC Fourth at Stark, kfoaleaf comedy. I mentary Mrs. Clara H. Waldo, regent of Oregon Agricultural college, who will speak at the Industrial preparedness mass .meeting at Lincoln high school this evening. idieivaar THE DEVIL'S COilPACT.'- Walter Miller, wrestler, added attraction. p. I m. and 7 . m. j MAJESTIC Washington at Park. Photo i play a. "BABETTB," featortng PEGGY ; II Y LAND ud 11AKO M'DEHMUIT. Com Ditone acenlc. Corned. Oregon Journal Hear t-Pa tbe Semi-Weekly Pictured Newa. 11 a. m. to 11 p. m. . PANTAGES Broadway at Alder. Vaoaerilie. ucaonuer. I tit, TEXAS itOL."il-uf , 1'botoplay aerltl. Thlrteontu eplaode. "Tbe Secret Kingdom." 2:30 p. m., 7 and 9 p. is. fKOPIXS Wet Park at Alder. Photoplay. MADAM SARAH BERNHARDT la "Mothers ot Krajice." 11 a. m. to 11 p. m. STAR Washlngtoa at Park. Photoplay. "THE HEART OF A HERO." featuring Robert Warwick and Gail Kane. Eplaode four of Pathe a serial, "MYSTERY OK THE DOUBLE CROSS." 11 a. m. to 11 p. m. STRAND Park at Stark. Vaudeville. Head liner. BOMIG AND MASY, blackface com edian. Photoplay, "THE BIRTH OF PA TRIOTISM," featuring Irene Hunt and Leo Pieraoa. 1 p. a to 11 p. m. SUNSSP Broadway and Washington. Pho toplay. "GOLD AND THE WOMAN," fea turing Theda Han. Keystone eomedy, "FATTY AND THB BROADWAY STARS," featuring; ratty ArbockM Burton Holmes' Trarelofae. 11 a. m. to 11 p. m. ART MUSEUM Fifth and Taylor. Honrs 3 to S week days; 3 to 5 Sundays. Free after noosa of Tuesday. Thursday. Friday. Satur day and Sunday. beautiful grasshopper!' t Over and over again that little re frain sounded to the accompaniment of whirring wings. "I wonder who that can be talking away about a beautiful grasshopper. It never seemed to me grasshoppers were very beautiful creatures. I won der who thinks they are?" And the big shining black bird peered around the yard but saw no one "That's funny!" ho exclaimed. "I thought I would 6urely see some one." Just as he was craning his neck his very hardest the voice sounded again, this time directly under the tree on which the blackbird was perched. : 'Oh such a beautiful grasshopper, such a great green beautiful grass hopper." "Now I will see who that Is talk ing," declared the blackbird determin edly, and ho craned his neck this way and that but he saw no one! "Am I dreaming or what is the mat ter," he grumbled crossly. "I must be getting as blind as a bat! Now I will see who is talking!" He watched very, very closely and in a minute heard a whir of wings and what do you suppose a grasshop per hopped out from under the tree into the sunshine. "Do you mean to tell me," demanded the blackbird now thoroughly roused, "that it is you, you, yourself who has been making all these nice compli- speeches about grasshop- By Vella Winner. THE TACTFUL WIFE USES DIPLOMACY A wonYtn, livinf , on . the Main L.ine, FRATERNAL NOTES Portland Knights of Columbus Will Institute New Council. Knights Going to Bend. The Knights of Columbus of Portland will institute a council at Bend, Sunday. The de gree work will bei in charge of Frank J. Lonergan, newly elected state dep uty. The Knights have chartered a special Pullman for the trip. The train will leave Portland Saturday night at 7:10 from the North Bank depot, - arriving in Bend Sunday at 10 a. m., and leaves Bend Sunday night at 10 o'clock, arriving back in Portland Monday morning at 8. A large delega tion from eastern Oregon and the 'Wil lamette valley will make the trip. Al . tnemoera or Portland council or any . outside council who desire to make reservations for the trip will commu nicate wtth P. J. Hanley, chairman of .'transportation, Broadway 727. A. G. Bagley, supreme agent, will represent -'the supreme council at the Band in ' Itiation. Mount Hood Masons Hold Social. .. The stag social of Mount Hood lodge, A, r. and A. M.. Friday night, at 334 Russell street, was enjoyed by a num ber of guests and members. Woodmen at Porest drove. The head tamp degree staff. Woodmen of the . World, will exemplify the new ritual hitio work at F&rest Grove tonight. Those taking part will be: E. P. Mar- ?.. tin, deputy head consul; V. O. Chess man, M. D. George and L. W. Oren of " Multnomah camp, No. 77; H. Li. Bar bur' and John Adams of Webfoot camp. No. 65; T. J. Hewitt of Prospect camp. No. 140; Herman Schade of Portland :amp. No. 107; O. W. T. Meuellhaupt knd C. O. Samain. organisers. Mem- bers from tho various camps of Wash ington county will be present. A large na.su vi candidates win oe lniiiaiea. T. ef A. Or and Court, The grand lourt. Foresters of America, will con ,. f rene in the F. of Al hall. 129 Fourth street, on Tuesday. A large amount whose letter obviously must remain anonymous, writes: "I was Interested in reading several days ago of the littlal1oy who lived up to what his mother expected of him. Do you not think men can be handled In much the same way? For they are only big little boys after all. "I believe that the tactful woman cannot only get what she goes after, but manage at th same time to make her husband think foe is following hia own Inclinations in doing that which she wants him to do. "This may seem like an argument for anti-suffrage; on the contrary, I am a remlnlst In the fullest sense or the word. I only believe that under existing conditions a woman must use the weapons she has. Tact is one of them. A man's vanity Is so colossal he is rarely successful in concealing it, and a woman by catering to his weakness in this direction can by a little di plomacy persuade him that he is only carrying out his own ideas when he is really acceding to her wishes. "For instance, after we were mar ried . my husband began to exhibit a distaste for dressing up for any but very formal affairs. This appalled me, for I hate to see a man grow careless. But did I complain? Not at all! When he did put on his dress suit or his dinner coat I would draw comparisons between him and other men I knew who had grown careless about dress ing in the evening. It worked like magic. My husband now is most par ticular in this respect. "This in Itself ia a small thing. But in more Important matters men can be swayed by the same means. To use a homely maxim, it is the old story of 'catching more flies with honey.' " quart bowl lined with a cloth Into which flour hai been rubbed. When the dough has risen to the top of the bowl turn out on a hot sheet iron (a dripping pan Inverted will do), over which 1 table&poopful of flour has been sprinkled, and put it immediately into a very hot bven. After 10 min utes lower the temperature somewhat and bake for one hour. PLAIN CAKE pers The grasshopper paused a minute, glanced down his nice shining legs and congratulated .himself on being a grasshopper, instead of a stupid black bird! Then he condescended to reply. "Indeed, Mr. Blackbird, you have quite misunderstood me. I have never made a speech about grasshoppers but I have often remarked about my own beauty and grace, who could help it?" "Shame on you," squawked the blackbird, "I have always been named the most boastful of creatures but I "Well, I truly feel sorry for you for I mean to eat you up!" never talked about myself as loudly as you do!" "Small wonder that," replied the grasshopper primly, "for you have less to talk about. You are ugly and black while I am graceful and green, you squawk and flutter while I whir and fly In a graceful fashion, I really feel very sorry for you, poor bird!" That was too much for Mr. Black bird; for like everybody else in the world he hated to be pitied! "You feel sorry for me. do you," he scoffed. "Well, 1 truly feel sorry for you for I mean to eat you up!" Down from his leafy perch he dart ed, chased the now frightened grass hopper over the yard, caught him and ate him up! A sleepy old owl up in a tree blinked his eye and remarked, "What a pity te be so much better than ev erybody else one should at least keep still about' it." and then he went to sleep! Beauty CKat A BY LILLIAN RUSSELL, Too Lazy to Think? RE you afraid t6 think, or Just too lazy to? Are you one of the people who do not permit their minds to shift from the narrow grooves into which their duties di rect them? Or are you one of the number who believe deep thinking is conducive to nervousness? The most nervous people I know are those who spend their lives in the pursuit of diversion. They seek some thing that will entertain or amuse them without avail. Business and professional men and women often feel that they must be entertained as soon as their day's work is done. They are gpverned by the theory that to re main Jn their homes in solitude and thought for an evening "would mean a "case of nerves." They ftel that they expend a due amount of thought through their routine work, but there is nothing so conducive to self con trol and perfect poise as meditation. Recreation is necessary to human welfare and happiness. 'There are times when we should seek entertain ment that will "take us out of our selves" but the suppression of the creative and analytical powers of the mind is unwholesome and prevents progress. Mental concentration is a subject that is given much attention. Mental training is essential to success, prog ress and happiness. Train your mind in the proper grooves. Just as you would a vine about a trellis prepared for it. A vine, as you know, if left to Itself will often clamber over that which is nearest, regardless of sym metry and beauty. Indeed it will fre quently drop to the ground and mix with the filth of the earth, when neg lected, instead of reaching xor tne trellis that would raise it heaven ward to be.klssed by the sun. So it is with our mindg. We can make much of them or neglect them so shamefully that they grovel in the filth of the world. I have heard people complain that they are too busy to concentrate their minds upon any subject that is not thrust upon them. When they com plete their duties they want some body else to think for them and en tertain them. How absurd! The mind is the real motive and creative power back of all our efforta It is always ready to absorb new thoughts and handle them for you. If you merely contribute thought to those things that are placed before you for considera tion you will not progress. Concen trate your thoughts on your tasks, .but also devote a period of time to the consideration of something bigger and better than that which you are doing. This means mental expansion and .growing power. Thinking men and women are the ones who progress. They also acquire mental poise, which is essential to suc cess. Perhaps your employment gives you ample opportunities for mental ex plorations. If not, when you leave the duties that are part of your rou tine devote a period to serious thought each day. There is plenty to make you think and unless you think you will stand still. Consider the big news Items that are constantly before you In these history making days and strengthen your mentality in this way When evening comes go carefully over every one of your actions of the day and see where they could have been Improved. See whether there was not something left undone that might have been finished if your mind had been under perfect control. Think ahead. Make mental prepa ration to occupy the position ofths man or woman Just ahead - of you. Don't waste thought. Our great mas ters of industry and all successful people do not waste thought and en ergy in useless processes. They make every thought worth something, and they all think for themselves. Nervousness Is produced by worry, emotional excitement and lack of In terest in one's work. Yet some people mistake worry for deep thinking. The adoption of unscientific mcth ods for conducting your affairs, wheth er they are simple household tasks or involved in the management of a great business concern, will be likely to leave you a "bundle of nerves before your life is half tpetit. - On the other hand, the man or wom an who has his or her business and affairs well in hand accomplishes more, comes mrougri with better re sults and can find pleasure in solitude or In a throtid? These people never grow old. They think right. Monday Underslxed Women. Public Is Invited To Travel Bureau Union Pacific Opens Office la Mtw Tork Solely to Olve Information to People Who Travel. Travelers from tho west who go to New Tork are invited to visit the re cently opened travel bureau of the Union Taclflo system In the Astor Trust building, 601 Fifth avenue. Just around the corner from Forty-second street. This office is unique in the railroad world. You may buy tickets, plan trips, get validations, reserve Pullman accommodations, secure tbe advice of travel experts in fact, do anything and get anything that you can in the conventional ticket office only the counters, ticket racks, time table, ag ricultural products and posters of the usual office are missing. Instead there are lounges, tables and easy chairs, soft rugs and rich hang ings, mural decorations and oil paint ings. Well Informed attendants take the place of clerks behind a counter. The atmosphere of the place la that of a club, residence or high class hotel. After cream has come well to the top of a quart of milk, pour off care fully 4 of a cup, add to 1 egg and of a cup of sugar well beaten to gether, then 1 teaspoon of vanilla or lemon. Stir all together, then add 1 heaping cup of sifted flour. Sift again with 2 teaspoons of baking powder, "4 teaspoon of salt, and bake a half hour in a good oven. Frost with white or chocolate frosting. (Be sure to cream sugar and egg well before adding cream.) KITCHEN WISDOMScre can b e p r e- RYE BREAD ne Quart milk, two tapiespoons sugar. four teaspoons salt, two tablespoons butter, one cake compressed yeast, three cups, flour (one cup being wheat and tne remainder rye). Follow the directions for making wheat bread according to the short process until after the bread has been molded the second time. At this point tne aougn should be placed in a 8 vented from rusting by smearing them with a mixture composed of one-half ounce of powdered camphor and one pound of melted lard. Allow it to re main for 24 hours, then remove with a soft cloth. Copper cooking utensils can tr cleaned by scouring Inside and out first with soap and sand. Very stub born stains can be removed by oxalic acid. An eiderdown sack can be cleaned by dipping in gasoline or by rubbin flour or bran into it and allowing it to remain for 24 hours before shaking out. To clean alabaster ornaments, im merse them in milk of lime, then wash in clean water and when dry dust them with French chalk. Milk of linie is prepared by mixing a little slaked lime with water. To remove grease from a blackboard, make a solution of pearlash and soft water with as much unslaked lime e" it will take up; stir together, let It set tle, then bottle. Dilute with warm water when using and work aulckly. as if it is allowed to remain long on the Doara, it win remove the color. When the top of a preserve Jar sticks, insert the point of a knife un der one corner of the metal to admit a little air, then it can be easily re moved. Abstinence. The stomaoh beta and claaaora, aad listens to no precepts. Aad yet it is not aa ebdarate creditor; fcr it is dismissed with small pay meat if you only give it what you ewe, aad hot h mnea u you rsn, fiennra of business will be transacted by. the delegates in a two days' session. Eassalo Confers Degrees, Hassalo lodge, I. O. O. F., met last night to con fer the second degree. The temple at First and Alder streets was comfort ably occupied while the lodge was con ducted by J. Q. Erlckson, noble gTand. Daughters of Covenant Initiate, Nine new candidates were taken into the Daughters of the Covenant by Oregon auxiliary Tuesday night at B'nal B'rtth hall. Mrs. J. Lauterstein and J. Savan were elected delegates to the local congress meetings. TBteln delivered an address Tueadav night at B'nal BTith hall before Theo dore Herzl lodge, I. O. B. B., on the obligations now Testing on the Jews In the present world crisis. The lodge Bombing the Stomach The fallacies and pitfalls of dieting fcy mail are treated unflinchingly in the May issue by Dr. "Wiley, former Chief U. S. Bureau of Chemistry, and now head of Good House keeping Bureau of Foods. AND YET valuable as Dr. WOey's Bureau is every month, it is only ope feature in a magazine composed of many equally valuable and interest ing departments such as Fashions, Fiction, Facts, Furnishing, The Institute. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING May issue now on $al evtrytehere 25 cents initiated 13 new . candidates. Dr. N. Mosessohn and Rev. R. Abramson were elected delegates to- the local congress. A. Q. XT. W. Meet. Members of Port land lodge, A. O. U. W., held a- get-to- getner meeting Friday night at 129 Fourth street. Wartime COOKERY An ounce of edible meat lean meat fat and lean, suet or fat trimmed from steak, chop or roast seems hardly worth saving. Many households take Just this view of the matter do not trouble to put such an insignificant scrap into the ice box or soup pot do not bother to save for cookery a spoonful or two of drippings or a tiny bit of suet or fat. Yet if every one of our 20.000,000 American iamuies on the average wastes each day only one ounce of edible meat or fat. it means a dally waste of 1,250,000 pounds of animal food 466,000,000 pounds of valuable animal food a year. At average dressed weights, it would take the gross weight of over 876,000 steers, or over 3,000,000 hoga bones and all to provide this weight Of meat or fat for each garbage pail or kitchen sink. If the bones and butcher's waste are eliminated, these figures would be increased to 1,150,- ooo cattle and 3,700,000 hogs. Or, again, if the waste were dis trlbuted according to the per capita consumption of the various meats (ex eluding bones), it would use un i combined herd of over 638,600 beef animals, 291,000 calves. Over 626,000 sneep ana lambs; over 1,112,000 hogs. Millions of tons of feed and hay, the grass from vast pastures and the labor of armies of cattlemen and butchers also could be scrapped by mis meai-w&sie rouie. But every household doesn't waste WhenW UaU line Stairs did Stripe Be IM mr led in France? When it comes to the question of an immediate expeditionary force to France, there seerns to be a division of public opinion. Opponents of the idea argue that our trained soldiers are at present more needed here to train, the new armies we are raising, and that for the moment our ships can accomplish more by taking food to our Allies. But the other view finds eloquent advocates among our press, and Washington dispatches seem to indicate that the administration has been converted to it by the arguments of the French Commission. Marshal Joffre, ad dressing the American people through the correspondents, urges us "to let the American soldier come now." , In THE LITERARY DIGEST for May 1 2th, you will find all phases of the Government's waT activity at Washington covered in an intelligible, comprehensive way. The full force of public opinion as indicated by the newspaper p ress is presented in all its shades. Other articles of immediate interest in this number of THE DIGEST are: "What Can I Do to Serve My Country?" This Article Answers the Question For All, The Cash-Register of Patriotism Rainbow Visions of the War's End Feeling the Mailed Fist Ireland a War Factor Mr. Root As a Friend of Revolution England Hard Hit By Submarines Russia's Greatest Danger What Will Latin-America Do? What One Charge of Gunpowder Means No Matter What Your Age or Condition Birth-Control for Flies Why Drinkers Drink Modern Shoes a Menace to Health Ourselves As Posterity Will See Us The American "Camouflage" German Crimes Against Art Too Dangerous for Us to Read Steps in Russia's Religious Emancipa tion War-Perils for the Children The Best Illustrations, including Cartoons "The Digest" the Busy Man s Bible, the Doubting Man's Dictionary Those of us who are busy, and which of us is not in these superstrenuous times, frequently sigh over the arid wilderness of irrelevant information through which we have to struggle in our daily papers in order to obtain those diamonds in a dust-heap, the items of vital fews for which we are seeking. THE LITERARY DIGEST not only sifts the news, but derivesits resume of the news not merely from a single paper, which would be to retain the latter's view-point, but from a weekly gleaning of all the worth-while publications of the world, recording the result without comment or partiality, adhering to no view-point but reporting all. The facts 6f the day, focused from all points, are yours in IThe Digest." May 12th Number on Sale To-day All News-Dealers 10 Cents M A7 nU A I mav now ODtaui copies of "The Literary Digest" from our local agent IN j VV O-Ll-iAl-illiIXiJ m town or where tie is no. agent, direct from the PublUhers. Tls a LXaxlx of Distinction to1 a Reader of ,Tha Litaraxyy Digest FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary). NEW YORK Whn wrltJnr to or ralllBa; on advertls?, please moot Ion Tbe Journal. A5t.) m P3 Id i 31 Slept tight on the HprthBoiik iron Also, the only ill- daylight train Inland Empire Express. No Snric Better to SPOKANE and EAST CENTRAL OREGON Standard tnd Tourist Sleepers to Bend. Ticket Office 5th end Stark. Brdwy 920. A-6671. 3 AMUSEMENTS A. XV XL rV Morrison Mat. Today Last Tim Toolfbt. Tbe Ale-scar ptsrrs la YON YONSON Revival of tbe famous Swedish . dlalrt Niofd. Gratr toaa r. tfalugt: 23a,' toe. 7f: Mats.. ZV, COc. Nest wses "TUX COMMON J.AW" LV" R I f atUliC AX. BTOOX x 4th en taj list. Daily at i Sft lOo Only. Xi'sta Continuous at 7 lie, tic. BIO DOUBLE SHOW TONIGHT. THI DEVIL'. OO-tJACT" A Riot of 'ue, Muste smt HtartUiig Effects Kitrs A1! Feature WALTra KILLES World Champion Mildl-wtf ht Wrestler. Meeta .all comers. forfeit. AT HE1LIG THEATRE is'i'i'-Hl - rTXXT STJaT., JCOW, TTTX, WZD. ZTXXT WXII. RUTH ST. DENIS Ted Sbawn ud the enlehewTi Damcera 7 OTX OAFKIVat ACT 7 HUit. 9&U7. 10c to &Oc; sdffcts. 10c to TS PANTAGE6 ii ftlATINES UAH Y 2 3A SwF TEXAS ROUND-UF With Adele Vis obi ami Cowx-ny of Btoco Kilters. Coffins. Lariat Termers aad atrvit- cbu Heaters. OTXZX BIO ACTS Tbree Her forma ece t'slly. Msbt Curtate at 7 and l. Oregon Journal Hearst Pathe News Neet picture) of northwest mni national events will appear each, week at leedlns; theatres tbrou ch eat tbe northwest, -including; Majestic. Hippodrome and IjTto f Portland