G THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL,", PORTXA ND, - SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY ' 4, - 1920. ... , V :tl ,::! Princess W Years How Wizard's Prediction Turned 5 ' Out to Be Only a Heart SV' less Joke. ON'CK upon a time king was no un fortunate as to fall asleep while a I ttisard of his acquaintance was telling- a ; Joke. Bo enraged was the old necroman ; rar that he changed himself Into a green i'.fly and, after stingmg the , king good and hard, flew out of. the window, leav - In the monarch howling' with surprise. ' The courtiers came running to ease his I majesty's pain, but could not help re marking how dangerous it was to anger a wisard and predicting: misfortunes for , the near future. The king: himself felt - extremely uneasy and for several days ;". Icept wi eye open for trouble, but an . li&thlng happened he forgot all about the : inatter. Indeed, everything was going : very well very well Indeed, for the day ' fter the wizard's disappearance a little j yy y jrlnces was born and the delight of the J kin and queen knew no bounds. They V: v , had seven sons already, but had always . -wished for a daughter. "':-V V. ' '.'..J, " f , The whole kingdom rejoiced with their ''majesties, and half of It nearly came to the christening. The old wisard had re Calved an Invitation among the rest, and tl-'-: It-was not until he leaned over the little . princess that the kiing remembered the f:-f--L? inatter of the Joke. He hurried forward. ";: but ha was too late. Holding up one ' V ? finger, (he wizard called at the top of his . . .Voice: ., , i ''A. princess a pretty princess! She ' Wiall sleep 80 years of her life. He he he! Ha! Ha! ho!" Laughing wickedly. ' he drew his cloak about him and stalked out of the castle, leaving gloom and , consternation behind him. The queen a called for her smelling salts, the king ' v .-: for hla pipe, and the little princess be . 1 can to cry bitterly. The news spread from one end of the realm to the other, " '. and after that no one mentioned the lit ' tie princess without sadly shaking the bead. t ''As for the princess jierself. the poor i hlld was scarcely allowed to sleep at 1 alU ' For no sooner would she fall asleep than the royal nurses would Imagine ' the 10-year nap had set In and would at one awaken her. But, In spite of all : this, aba had the sweetest temper imagln- able and seemed, in spite of the wizard's y prediction, to be as happy and wjde . awake as the other little children of the realm. I 'The court wise men consulted the tars continually in their efforts to learn when the 30-ear sleep would begin;; the king lost the five hairs that used to : adorn the top of his head, while the , ojueeri could not sleep at all. Finally, , the oldest of the wise men, seeing that v things could not go on in this fashion without disaster, stated boldly that the princess would fall asleep In her twen tieth year and not until then. . This news cheered the king immensely, though It could not restore his hair. The .queen ordered the royal nurses to let the I little princess sleep undisturbed, and every one tried to make the princess as happy as possible, because any one who was to fall asleep for 30 years surely deserved a lot of fun before the calamity happened. ' . . "I have never known a more delightful princess nor a lovelier one. By the king's orders no one mentioned the wizard's prediction, and the little lady had no Idea of the awful fate awaiting her. When the princess was 18 not In alt the kingdoms for miles about was there a maiden more beautiful. The king's sons, ' Who often came on visits to her father's eour,t, fell In love with her one after the other, but never asked for her hand. . For they were frightened by the old tory and who cared to wed a sleeping beauty, pray? Mournfully they thought of her and mournfully rode away. After . a while the princess, who had many cousins already married or engaged, be i ran to wonder why no one sought her ; hand In marriage. Surely her father i was' rich enough well, well, it must be ' that she was too homely, and looking in ;. the (lass she would shake her head sadly at her beautiful reflection. Each day that marked the close of the princess' nineteenth year found the cas tle more gloomy. "Why Is every one so kind to me?" she asked the chief lady-tn-waltlng. The poor woman burst into tears and rushed out of the room, leav ing the princess very much puzzled, but she forget about It directly afterward, for the aueen was planning a wonderful ball for the evening before her twentieth i birthday. t :. She was to have every one she wanted j even the gardener's children and the '1 little lame seamstress who lived in , i one of the top rooms of the castle. The ji princess Was very much excited. She rl had never planned a ball all herself and , to be able to invite everybody! Well, It -was splendiferous. While she worked j! away happily the court servants were I' always running off to wipe their eyes, U and the king was put to it to keep his ' ace in any sort of cheerful order at ! alL The day before the' ball, as the 1 i . princess Was sitting under a tree looking over the list of guests, a king's son rode Into the courtyard. He had come from a country far away and knew nothing of her history. At sight of the winsome little princess he reined in his horse; then,' without a word, turned and rushed into the palace. "Tf I -wish, to marry your daughter!" he exclaimed, almost upsetting the king, Vhom he met on the terrace. The king . atghed, deeply and then related the old Story.,' '. "impossible !" exclaimed the klngs' son, taking another peep at the . princess, p "Nonsense :" ;?TeU me again Just what the old ras - cat said 1" Patiently the king repeated the wizard's sentence. Now. this was no ordinary young man, let me tell you he had written a poem and seven books end was versed In logarithms besides. wlU marry her, nevertheless, if can make her love me !" he cried. And ' my dears, he did make her love him in just two minutes after the king gave bim permission to try. And that night aX the bail a very remarkable thing hap penea. . nigm inr uie miasi or a merry - quadrille the king's son leapt from . bis place Into the middle of the room. 'f"Of course she will sleep 30 years of tier life!" he spluttered. "We all do 30 years of nights! The princess will 'Uve to be 80, but counting the nights spent in slumber she will sleep 30 years o that timet Aajoke on your hfcrhnesa. a miserable joke on the part of that wretched wizard I" The more the king thought about it the more he saw the ' sense of. the argument v "But how did you ever guess It?'.' he asked over and FOR BOVS AND G! RLS BY RUTH PLUMLY THOMPSON ni.ni" i ii 'iA- '' " ' " mm-mmmm m '3u "'eytwMWWW,, lmm munuamimmjjiii wwiiiiiwuwiwx fliiamiWy f Supposyville on Safety gIR SOLOMON TREMENDOUS WISE Is trying somehow to devise Some safety skates that will not spill The elders of Supposyville! For instance, where the stout ones fall They simply spoil the sports of ajl. The baker fell Oh, mercy sake! He sprained his knee and broke the lake From side to side, which caused dismay And stopped all skating for that day. Sir Solomon was in his path And also got an icy bath! Which brought the matter to his mind Quite- forcibly. "Some way I'll find To stop such accidents," he wheezed. "I'll make some safety skates!" he sneezed. For seven days and nights he thought And seven different models wrought. While all the kingdom breathless waits To see his magic safety skates. The eighth day the Supposy nation Were summoned for a demonstration. over. To which the king's son replied, "Just love and logarithms that's all !" And that is the end of the story, for. of course, they lived happily ever after ward, but did you ever think that you would sleep many years of your life ! I didn't think that old wizard was a very bad joker; but, I say, should a wizard ever tell you a joke do laugh at It whether it is funny or not It's safer. Wet Weather Do provide your dolla with umbrellas. rubber coats or capes. It is very trying to a doll's constitution to be out in a rainstorm. Better still, keep them In the house and amuse them. All dolls love to play school! , An Adventure Dear me, did I tell you about the wood en Hon? No? Well, the Nurseryvllle folk were having a big party in the bam and the Hon was not allowed to come because the lady dolls were afraid of bim. The Toyland Takes Rest OLD Teddy Is snoring Off Under a chair. The dolls have retired Without combing their hair ! And standing or falling Each toy soldier sleeps. The Noah's Ark famllr Are dozing in heaps mouse family wanted him to Join them, but the entrance to their little kingdom was not large enough for him to get through, so he wandered out of the nursery and somehow managed to find his way into the bathroom. Ted found him there and proceeded to shave off every single bit of his beautiful silk mane with the safety razor. He looks very queer, but Dr. Dollby hope he will be able to make him another one. Mean time he's under the end of the radiator and he won't come out. I don't blame him, do you? Dr. Dollby The dear old doctor is taking a much needed .vacation and has left the Red Cross nurse in charge of the doll hos pital. Glue and paint have been used in large quantities since Christmas and a needle and thread is a very necessary article. ' The holiday's past And the girls and the boys Have gone back to school. And the tired little- toys Are so simply played out They will sleep for a week Too exhausted to move dears And ducksor to squeak 1 " Skates The king, who was quite stout, agreed To try the safety skates. "You need Feel no alarm," the old sage chuckled As carefully the skates he buckled. A rod ran from the right-foot skate Up to the shoulder. "These feel great!" The Jolly king exclaimed, and spun In circles. "Try a double one," Called Solomon. The rascal knew A double circle always threw His majesty. The king essayed A double circle, then dismayed Began to fall, but, oh, my word! Just then the strangest thing occurred. From out the rod a pair of wings Opened like lightning. Pshaw! the king's Surprise was comical to see They held him 1ip quite easily. Then, when his balance was restored, They closed, ears, of their own accord. And since that time in S'posyvllle There hasn't been a single spill! (For they all wear safety skates.) Forgetful Poet The Forgetful Poet made a resolution last Thursday to make no more verses. but you see he has already forgotten It and I, for one, am glad that he did, for his verses do tickle me. Can one hear A postage stamp? Can one see A candle run? Does a turnip Really turn? No it simply Is not done 1 (What, nonsense 1) I'm afraid the dear little fellow is little pessimistic. Just read these verses, will you? He's not so young as he used to be, I can see that. In Jan. you worry over coal And croup 'and rheumatiz. In Jan. you worry over bills Oh, what a month It In Feb. you worry over colds And bursting pipes besides And broken bones from sundry falls On icy walks and (I don't! Do you?) A Queer Accident Elsie Wooden Doll was shut up in the folding bed for three days. She is feeling very faint from her experience and all the roses have left her cheeks. Baby Blue Eyes fell out of her high chair and bumped her pretty nose on the stone porch. Dear, dear 1 It made quite a dent in her nose, I mean. Another thing don't leave teddy bears or dolls on the tracks of your electric trains. EvaJIna China Doll haa a broken cheek and Teddy a torn paw from just such an accident. i Clothes When you choose the clothes for your doll, do not get heavy underwear that Is not warm, but the lightest, wannest you -can find. It is not good to wear clothes just because they are heavy; It makes the dollies all tired out. Also see that your dolls have on shoes and stockings. As I have said before, nothing Is so mor tifying to a doll's pride as bare feet or stockings witlf boles. . y . CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Lecture A tectvr on Chrwttaa adaoos by PmI Staik Sector, CL S. B., Mamber of the Board of Ic turathlp of The Mother Church, The lint Church of Christ. Sdantiat. in Boston, lfus., was delivered in th Second Church of Christ, 8ri eotiit, Mondaj and Tnaaday aTanincs. The lae tura follows: MART BAKER EDDY, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, was the child of Puritan parents. She grew to womanhood among the hills and vales of New Hampshire, the Granite State, possessing a rare personal charm, culture and affection for the best things of life. She had ever shown an unusual love for the Bible teachings and early in life accepted implicitly its won derful promises of health. With the years of womanhood came sorrow, sep aration from dear ones, and prolonged illness. From every trial she turned the more resolutely in search of that certain law of healing which she believed a cor rect understanding of God would bring. In this search the theories of allopathy, or regular medicine, were explored in vain, then homeopathy, a step away from mere drugs toward a more mental form of healing, and afterwards hydropathy. Mrs. Eddy recognized after years of investigation and experiment that this certain law of healing was not to be found in any of the accepted systems, and she then turned away from the ma terial and human to the spiritual and divine. It was in 1868 that Irn. Eddy over came a serious injury through reliance on spiritual, as wholly apart from ma terial, law and became convinced of the present availability of this law for suf fering humanity. For three years there after she studied the Scriptures most dil igently and from them derived a fuller understanding of this spiritual law of life and its applicability to every need of men. The results of these and the pre ceding years of consecrated study and research were given to the world in 1875 through the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," which has become, next to the Bible on which it Is founded, the most widely read book in the Christian world. Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross, wrote of Mrs. Eddy with pro found admiration. "Love," she says, "permeates all the teachings of this great woman so great, I believe, that at this perspective we can scarcely real ize how great and looking into her life history we see nothing but self-sacrifice and selflessness. Mrs. Eddy should have the respect, admiration and love of the whole nation, for she is Its greatest woman. CArSE ASD EFFECT j A sreat statesman has recently said that the work of uniting the nations in the bonds of brotherhood is an effort to enthrone the conscience of the world. What is this conscience of the world that we are so desirous of enthroning as our lawgiver? Is it not the collective or com mon consciousness of right, of justice. law and love? It is this universal con science, the common consciousness of right and good, discerned as yet but dimly, yet discerned and obeyed in an ever Increasing measure, wnicn in its full unfoldment Is "God with us," the Mind of absolute good. It is the house of the Lord and, in the thought of the prophet, all the nations of the earth are mentally flowing into it Job discerned this Incorporeal and unlimited sense of God and spoke of God as being in one Mind. Christ Jesus spoke of this parent Intelligence as Father and Spirit. John regarding the kindness, mercy, and pro tection of the Father Mind spoke of Him as Love. "God is Love; and he that dwelleth in (thinks In ideas or) love dwelleth In God, and God In him" (I JtShn 4 :16). But we only know Mind as we know Ibe ideas which express it and the high est of these Is man. The world ts com ing to honor and to recognize the mental man, that state or consciousness wnicn most clearly expresses the ideas oi tne true Mind or God. Mrs. Eddy has given an illuminating definition of man in Sci ence and Health (p. 475), where she says "He is the compound' idea of God, in cluding all right Ideas." Consider If you will why it is that tne world has recently so honored a small group of forward looking statesmen, the peace delegates at Paris. It la not because of anything physical, -neir weight, their features, or the color of their hair. The material is wholly sub ordinated. What men honor in them is the mental man, the Individual state of consciousness which expresses right ideas. In the proportion that they have voiced what is right they have struck a responsive chord in the minds of men everywhere, for their brothers are per ceiving, though yet darkly, the truer sense of manhood and honoring it. This is In its full unfoldment the spiritual man, tne expression or uoa, dcbi ex emplified by Christ Jesus. Man, then. seen as the creature or Mind, is recog nized to be simply an individual state of right-mindedness always thinking in ac cord with God, the true Mind. He is the compound idea of God. including all right Ideas" (Science and Health, p. 475).. CONCEPT OF MAS REFUTED Isaiah sought to turn the thought of his people away from this erroneous mortal concept of man with the admoni tion. "Cease ye from man. whose breath is in his nostrils : for wherein is he to oe accounted of?" (Isaiah 2:22). In other words, stop thinking of the mortal, ma terial sense of man as the true man, for there Is absolutely no way to account for him as a creature of God. In Ro mans 9 :8 Paul makes the perfectly ex plicit statement. "They which are the children of the flesh, these are not the children of God." and elsewhere he sneaks of the Imperative necessity to "put off the old man, which Is corrupt and put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness" (Epheslans 4:zz-z). Christian Science not only presents the true concept of man but shows that it is attainable in some considerable measure rleht here and right now. It shows that In each and every one of us, and there is no exception, no. not one, there ts a natural ability and competency to men tally work our way out of the wilderness of material beliefs, out of the of terlal selfhood into our natural unity and agreement with ever present y, -a Mind, the consciousness which is God, our real life and being. The process is wholly mental, as Paul indicated when he said, "Be ye transformed by the re newing of your mind" (Romans 12 :2). Well, then, how does one begin to apply the teachings of Christian Sci ence? First of all he begins mentally to resist evil. He follows the Scriptural advice to resist the devil, which his study of Christian Science has taught bim Is but j the counterfeit evil mind which tries to operate through evil thoughts projected into his conscious ness, or through the physical senses. He learns to become a sentry at the door of thought and, to reject every thought or suggestion Which is not good, is not an expression of God, the one real Life, for he has taken his mental stand for what God has made bim to be and he is determined to assert and prove his men tal and living unity with the Mind and Life which la God. knowing that it la natural and right for him todo so and that God has endowed him" with the ability to do it. The real meaning of the word heal is to make whole, to restore to original integrity. Christian Science alone among the healing agencies of the present day accepts this word at its full meaning. Christian Science not only heals the mental or physical disorder but sets In motion those processes of thought which result inevitably in the 1 restoration of man to his original Integrity as the tndl-J Only 40 years ago the first Christian Science church was organized in Boston. Since then nearly eighteen hundred or ganizations have been formed through out the world. A publishing society em ploying more than seven hundred people is supplying the ever Increasing demand for literature explaining the teachings of Christian Science. Christian Science is offering to the world today a volume of testimony as to the efficacy of its neaung work unexcelled in the history of therapeutic systems. From business men, educators, lawyers, judges. Dhvsl clans, ministers, and men and women of ail trades and happiness restored to the individual. These testimonies mav he heard in the Wednesday evening meet ings of the church or read in The Chris tian Science Journal, the Christian Sci ence Sentinel, or the Herald which is published in French and German. FBATEE It has already been pointed out that the practice of Christian Science involves mental activity, an effort to think in ac cord with God, the good Mind. This right mental activity is true prayer and is the one way by which individual man can cast off the shades of hell and abide In heaven. The Bible admonition, "Pray without ceasing," is then seen to mean to think rightly always. It Is right mental activity based on a true concept of God and man. This is true prayer, a vital, living, thinking activity. It is all a mental- process. Every Indi vidual must sooner or later, here or here after, learn to pray aright, for only In this way does he loam to live aright When one really discerns what true prayer Is, his prejudices give way and he perceives It to be the highest Joy and privilege of man, for it is the as serting in thought and life of his natural unity with God. BIBLE AND SCIENCE AND HEALTH The Bible and "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Marv uaKer n,ddy, the Christian Science text book, are to the Christian Scientist the statute books of life. From them he learns the truth that is science, religion and medicine. Who can hope to solve the problem of life while disregarding the teachings and laws Bet forth by those wbo have most clearly perceived the primal facts of being, including the great Way-shower who overthrew the claims of incurable disease and of death with the understanding of spiritual law. Merely to believe that Christ Jesus once lived on earth gets one no nearer heaven than to believe In the personal existence of Christopher Columbus. It Is the un derstanding of his teaching and his methods that saves. The Bible states, Science and Health amplifies and clari fies, the teachings of spiritual law. Tomorrow Morning Begins Our Removal Inventory Sale Before Moving to 101-103 Tenth Street, at Wellington and Stark Streets $ 5sll tlit laal lists ill l Player Piano S675 tit eaak. It thlf Our Removal Sale Offers the Last Opportunity to buy at former reduced prices than will prevail on the new stock when It arrives. Owing to considerable rises In the cost at factories for material, workmanship, and owing to coal shortage, eastern factories were closed down for several months. Consequently prices will go The Most Valuable Pianos in the World Including new 1920 models, new factory samples and discon tinued models chiefly the best and most ex pensive styles at prices you need pay for cheaper pianos. lSteger...750 435 JStegers.. 750 485 Z Stegers.. s50 535 11 Stegers.. 760 562 2 Stegers.. 800 560 4 Stegers.. 800 595 2 Stegers.. 900 675 New Grand Pianos 1 Steger... 11050 $797 2 Stegers.. 1150 682 1 Steger... 1200 975 Prices are for cash or 150 to $100 cash, f 12 to 25 monthly. 1920 Model Player. are the wonder of this age. Tou must see. hear and play our "Natural Player Pi 15 Singer. $950 900 900 900 800 4 Singer. 12 Th'pson. 10 Th'pson. 6M'd'n'l. Used Player Pianos Weber $750 S395 Stark Co.. 750 495 Singer 950 675 Reed&S'n. 1000 675 B'rry Wd 1750 595 Prices are for cash or $25 to $50 cash and $12 to $25 monthly, includ ing a combination play er and piano bench and $10 worth of player rolls. New 1920 Models Containing latest Im provements, fully 60 per cent more tone and efficiency than found by comparison in older models yet before re moval, we are offering the best styles a t prices as low as the cheaper pianos are sold In Portland. 11 Reed&S $675 f 495 2 Reed AS. 675 465 1 Reed & S 650 47 6 Reed & S 750 562 6 Singers. 625 468 4 Th'Bon. 625 468 IM'nd'U. 625 468 anos" to appreciate the wonderful progress in player pianos. 5 Stegers U&0 $862 2 Reed&S 1050 750 IReed&S 900 . 675 TDIITUTIII anVEQTKING Tnls 8tor InUinrUL MU I til 1 10 III U sincerity this sale. DBIPE inCKTITY Why should pianos not have a price Identity? Why should market values rniwC lUdll III Why should you pay inflated prices? Let us finance your piano purchase. s or more mommy. llfl EM I flW IIP C Al FQMAN ves full? 20 in our cost of selling. We are not interested In your address If our 25 tlU lULLUII'Ur Onktomnil fewer price inducements do not sell you. There is no need to pay $600 to $750 for a piano now. . I IDCDTY DniinC or other securities taken In part or full payment of Pianos or Player-Pianos during this sale. LIDr.nl! DUftUO Also, your old Piano, Organ or Talking Machine. ORDER YOUR PIANO BY MAIL J?tt&'JttSl M mA Mt 70B MIT flC TflWII RIIYCDC VI PREPAY AND MAKE FREE DEUTEXY OF PI ABO TO TOUB HOME within 200 UUI'Ui'lUlin DUlLld miles, and tha piano will be shipped subject to exchange within on year, we allowing the full amount paid. This virtually gives you a one-year tnal of the piano you order. Rvery piano or player-piano purchased carries with it -the Schwao Piano Co. guarantee of satisfaction, as also the usual guarantee from each manufacturer of Ahese new musical instruments. Sell Maaafatrers Coast UtribUrm, 111 Fearth Street, I Tfaihlagtoa. Wherein Do You Get More For Your Money Than in Your Daily Newspaper Tha sreotnranririf artiela by Richard Bpfllana In tha Philadelphia, tdtar b of timeljr interact to all newspaper reader. . From W. N. Jennings of 1305 Arch street, Philadelphia, comes the following communication : - "Good morning, sir. Tou are always suggesting better ways of doing things for other people. So I want to retaliate. "There is much talk of making ' the newspapers reduce the number of pages. "Why not take the bull by the horns and reduce the else of the Public Ledger by folding It crosswise and making the columns run the other way from the present path? This would make the paper about the size of the Pall Mall Gazette and be a boon to railroad and street car riders, who are nuisance to their neighbors white turning the present far-too-large pages. The siso of the ads could be cut In halfcharging the present price and they would look" as big on the half page as they do now on the whole page. There may be some dead wall or blind alley to block this scheme, but If you can see a way to give us the Public Ledger in large magazine form, a little bigger than the Post, with pages cut, so We can turn them easily bless you." ITIIE TABLOID IN HISTORY There la merit but not novelty in Mr. Jennings' Idea. Thirty years' ago Frank A. Munsey bought the New York Star and changed It from standard size to a fie column newspaper, exactly as Mr. Jennings suggests. The new paper was called the Daily Continent. It was much easier to read than is the newspaper of today and gaire more opporunlty to display news. And it gave a better showing to the Ads. Mr. Munsey was ahead of his time. Traffic by subway, surfaco and elevated road was not so heavy then as now, and the need of a paper of modern width was r.ot bo great. There is one objection lo the news paper of narrow width. That is in the increased waste of newsprint by reason of the additional margin, but that is not sufficient to offset the adventages. Some day the paper of the size of the Dally Continent will be established To turn the pages of a newspaper In a public conveyance today without an noylng the persons on either side cf you Is difficult. Many persons do not know how to fold a newspaper so they can read and their neighbors will not bave cause for irritation. The majority of humankind is thoughtless or indifferent There are persons who make almost as much of a job of turning the pages of a newspaper in a crowded car aa they would of turning a feather mattress. EARLIER EFFORT FAILS Many students of newspapers believed Mr. Munsey would have succeeded with the Dally Continent and forced a change in the size of the newspaper page had he persisted, but lie did not have the wealth then that he tint today, and the Star was moribund when he took U over til Jaallty 395 tti caob 111 moathly much higher on all new shipments. S712 3 Th'pson $550 $395 6 Th'pson 600 375 2 Mendil 600 375 lOSch'der "475 3 56 Z D'vls S'n 475 335 $25 cash, $10 or more monthly. Factory Rebuilt and refintshed pianos, some aa good as new, now sold at but a trac tion of their original prices. Steger ....$760 $435 Stelnway.. 760 4 3 5 Cable 475 295 DavisASon 600 345 Leland..... 450 245 Singer 475 295 Story-Cl'rk $00 395 Kingsbury. 450 265 Singer. 600 435 Bush-Gerts 476 290 i( la p 675 675' 645 595 Gay lord... 475 3 1 5 vose&sons 475 235 Christie.... 375 235 Resale Used Pianos Farrend ...$425 $265 Stelnway.. 750 3-45 Thompson. 625 335 Steger..... 760 485 Thompson. 650 395 Thompson. 600 '365 Automatic. 660 1 65 Haines.... 650 26b Kliera 475 . 3 1 6 Starr 450 2 4b J. P. Hale.. 250 235 satisfies the people through its unprecedented values. Truths fully named. is our chief business policy. We tell you now, prices are going higher after wan Piano Co. Portland's Largest Plaao DlstrlbmUrs - and, besides, Mr. Munsey - was itot a newspaper man. ' As a matter of fact, the newspaper page has been decreasing In else stead ily ifor many years.. The newspaper page of the mldnlneteenth century peri od was far bigger than the standard page of today. It was called a blanket sheet, and Justly so. By-' the way. It is an open iusstion whether the public has any appreciation of the real value of the newspaper. There is nothing in the world so ch.ai. You have the panorama of the world spread before you for 2 cents. Think of it! Two cents Why, you'd pay 5 cents for a small bag of peanuts. To produce a newspaper like the Pub lic Ledger (or The Journal) requires the work of a mighty force. . The printers, editors, reporters, telegrapher. carriers, electrotpyers, pressmen ami office workers generally make up but a portion of the army. There are pectnl correspondents and the press represen tatives in all the news centers the world over. News gathering and news prenen- tation have become a very big Industry, and this great Industry finds expression In the paper you find at your doorstep In the morning or -buy from the dealer t the corner for 2 cents. The newa: of the world brought to you for I cents. What of all that you purchase brings to you so much for Bo little? Teacher of Lane County Weds Man Of Cottage Grove Cottage Grove, Jan. 8. New Year s day, at the country borne of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Powell, Miss Ruth Powell: Lane, county teacher, was married to Vlnal Randall of Cottage Grove. Harold White sang, accompanied by Genevieve Jury of Seattle, who also played the weddinfe march. Little Mls Eleanor White carried the ring. Tlif bride was attended by Miss Lucile ChI llson and the groom by hi brother. Marvel Randall. Rev. P. r KellcmH of Eugene performed the ceremony. Amonir those present were: l'r. P. 3. ' Bartle and family and Dr. W. B. Neal and family of Eugene. Mr. and Mrs. R. C Swetland of Portland, Prentla Calllsnn of Pleasant Hill, Miss Mabel Olsen of Eugene, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Goddard. N. W. White and family. Alfred White and family, W. B. Cooper. Mr. and Mrs. George Kappauf. Mr. and Mrs. W. r Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Powell, Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Heine. Mr. and -Mrs. George Massey. Mrs. J. Q. A. Young, Mrs. George Kebelbeck. Mrs. John Kebelbeck, "Grandma" Martha Baugh man. Miss Llisle Knight, Miss Mabel Small and Martin Anderson. monthly ' flMesih.-ZS - H. Bord....$275 $ 7" HTtAD'vts 450 195 Collard 250 65 Sterling... 475 265 $16 or $26 cash. $6. $10 or more monthly. Used Grand Pianos N.T.PTte $1000 $265 Parlor Organs Sold now at but a fraction of their origi nal prices. Sterling $ 96 $25 Plloubet 115 25 CloughACo. 100 28 Packard 126 28 Sterling 185 35 Schweninger 145 35 Packard 135 35 Needham.... 125 , 38 Sears-K'b'ck 115 38 Needham.... 145 45 KsteyCo.... 160 48 Kimball..... 146 4 8 Chi. Cottage 166 58 KsteyCo. ... 165 58 Beckwlth... 175 65 M's'n-H'mlln 176 65 $10 cash, $3 to $5 monthly. New and Used Phonographs $5 or $10 in Records purchased sends one home. Lakeside ....$20 $10 Kdlson $60 $20 Kdlson 50 15 Columbia 25 15 Victor 60 45 Lewald 75 58 Domentlc ... 100 H& Victor ....... 10 85 SEW lit! TFr- Tabte Type $25 Tabl Type...$32.6 Table Type., $50 Table Type 7 Cabinet .,......$120 Cabinet $125 Cabinet $140 ii. $6 or more per month. not be observed ? $16 or more cash. WABBArTTF.V BACKED BT UAY MILMOff 19 CAPITAL r -I fl