THE DALLES DAILY CHRONICA. MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1921. PAGE TWO HIGH SCHOOL NOTES The senior pay, "Nothing Hut the Truth," hps been very successfully plajed In eastern cities. A great deal of talon' tests In the senior elks, and It will be able to put on the drama very successfully. The cast which has been selected Is: Bob Bennett Kenneth Thompson Mr. Ralston "Norman Rossell Airs. .Ralston Eunice Bolton Blrhop Doran Chester Phllins Clr.ronce Van Dusen ...Chester Frit? Dick Donnely Grant Klrlf Owen Ralston ....Vivian -Merrlfield tjthcl Charlotte New-house Mabel Odessa Malloy Sabel Dorothy Longmlre Martha Katherlne Carpenter uMiss Owsley Is dramatic coach. The seniors have received their personal cards and invitations. The Steelhead for the month of April will be put out entirely by tho Junior class. Short stories, sketches, poems, Jokes, personal and pictures are some of tho things which will make this number one or (he most attractive Steelheads published so far this year. Hditor-lnchlef . . . .Gerlrude Freddcn Poems Doris Bennett Sketches Sarah Hartnuin Personals Robert Saunders School News Lcona Hardison Athletics ........ Clarence Lamborn jokes Clarence Allen . On senior flunk day, April 6, every senior went for a day's outing at Mill crook falls. Mr. Abramson, Miss Marsh and Miss Owsley accompanied tho class on Its picnic. ' Dr. Clark of Pacific University at Forest Grove addressed the students of tho high school April G. The sophomore class held a picnic last Saturday, April 9. Only 30 mem ber's of tho class hiked up Mill creelc, but those 30 certainly haul a good lime. ' .Soveral members of tho senior high school featured In a little comedy, "A Romance of The Dalles." Thoso niovlo stars were: Alan Woolley, the villain, Kenneth Thompson, tho hero, in love with Geneva Schoron, the heroine, and Isabel Crofton, a friend of tho heroine. This film will bo pre sented ut tho Casino Thoater next week. Mrs. Kelly und Mr. HosklnsI both of Portland, delivered lectures ito the high school BtudentH April 11. A Y, W. C. A. circus will bo given at tho high school April 29. It will bo one ol the biggest ovoius of Jit' school .year, tho coimnlttoo in charge announces. Main G0C1 Bonnoit Taxi Main 01 tt $5.00 Slabs $5.00 Green slabs, $5.00 per cord, f. o. b. cars. Van Dollun Lumber companv. v. 4tf MERMAID FROCK 18 LATEST SPRING CREATION Hj United rrM JiONDON, (By mail.) Tho freak fashions which Inevitably uceomimiw springtime madness promise this sea son to surpass anything that has gone before In tho way of daring and novelty. ' Dame Fashion has been having a confab with Father Noptune and tho net result Is decidedly "fishy." One of them Is the mermaid frock, which Is a close-fitting affair entire ly composed of pallottes which over lap one another In tho approved fish-scale stylo. These pallottes are of Iridescent ihades of silver, green and blue. No trimming or ornament of any kind Is worn with tho frock and corsets' are doffed so that tho sinuous mermaid effect Is complete. Another fishy lad Is tho ftlnllo com IKised of painted sea shulls. With this Is worn a head-dress of similar design, or, maybe, of tinted pearls. For thoso whoso systems cannot assimilate too much sea bivozo, n few Hawaiian inodoa have been thrown In, The one which Is likely to excite most comment Is the Hawai ian skirt This extends from tho walet FOREVER FREE from ASTHMA Hundreds of pcoplo are as tonished utKl delighted with the quick and PUItMAVKNT relief they have received from the use of our wonder ful new discovery. Asthma Sera. Asthma and Uay-Fever, with all their tortures, may now be 1IAN1HMK1) FOREVER. . Tear out this announce mo nt und Bend at ouce to R, M. . LABORATORIES t2i Alaika Bldg., Seattle, Wn. ALWAYS REMEMBERA CHAMP'S A CHAMP Johnny Wilson, middleweight champion of the world, is enjoy ing a nice hearty laugh on snort critics as he counts over $42,500 Wilson won the title from Mike O'Dowd of it. .Paul last year on a decision. The critics believed I and immediately dubbed Wilson a "cheese champ ana tried to force him into ' an Immediate ' return bout. Wilson seemed to evade the mntch couldn t be cornered, and all the while promoters were raising the bid on the bout Sud denly, ten days before St. Fat rick's day, came word from bos- ton to Tex Rickard thtWiIson would fight O'Dowd.. O'Dowd, overanxious and wild, was a target for the cool Wilson, Wilson laughed as he collected the winners nd to Just below the knee and is com posed of coarse, matted, hay-colored fringe and has the ragged, primitive effect of the garments of South Sea islanders, ' MOVIE MOVES ,Boy Star in "The Son of Tarzan'' Never Attended School In His Life Despite the stringent California F.chool attendance laws, which arc rigidly enforced, Gordon Griffith, the young boy-star, who plays the title role in "The Sou of Tarzan" feature serial, never saw the inside of any kind of a public or private school in his Hie, except as a visitor. There is a peculiar law in the Gold en State which gives the juvenile cinema actors an opportunity to se cure an elementary education while they are earning enormous salaries in the film studios of Southern Call loi'niu. Under this law, the produc ers of photoplays employing children not only pay the 'salaries .of these screen lads and lassies, but they are also required to furnish each child with a tutor, or lady teacher, who Is registered by the state, and who is paid $5 a day to teach the screen ac tors of school age tholr throe It's. Tho central bureau In Los Angeles, Cal., provides these teachers and also registers the juvenile pluyers. Gordon Grflffith began his photo play career before ho was ready for the primary grade and by tile time he had attained tho age othjer boys are learning their ABC's, Gordon was in such demand ns a child actor that ho did not enter school, nor did ho later. However, a certified teacher is with him four hours every school day and he has her undivided attention, which isa service rich parents pav highly for and photoplay children re- colvo In addition to their high pay, which is considerable, as thero are low really good child actors. The great jungle picture, "Tho Son of Tarzan," will be exhibited at the Casino theater tomorrow. Heat of Red Peppers Slops Rheumatic Pain Tho nnnctratinir hoat of "Red Pen- nor lluli" will hrlnir almost instant relief from tho pains of rheumatism, pleurisy, colds, lumbago, neuritis, liiu'kiii'hn. strains, snralus. sore mus cles and stiff, nchlng joints. 1 Pcnotrntlng hoat immeuiateiy treos tho blood circulation that carries off the congestion and pain Is gone. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers. The MIlHiri'""-'" THE CRYSTAL BALL and WHAT IT PREDICTS Crvstal Ball A class v - -f ball used by the ancients, who believed it fore told certain important incidents, in .one's hie. The Crystal Ball predicts a long life and a happy future for the possessore of bank ac counts. This mystic ball proclaims a SAVINGS ACCOUNT, the MASTER KEY which opens tho door to a bright future. OPEN an account with us, for we pay FOUR PERCENT interest. Vo Paid on Savings Accounts Citizens National Bank Telephone Mala 3101 ' Of'icert Directors P. J. StadohnHn.PreBldeut, v j Suauuan. Dr. J. A. Reuter, Vlve-rrc.. ' ASfuw n. B. Green, Cwhler 'r- i1- OHw J, F. Tureck, Aa't Canhler. ' I, Jlelnh J. J. Vu Dellea Johnny ilutv MAN-MADE 'DISEASES WASHINGTON, D. C, April 18 Many of the diseases that afflict mart may almost be said to be made by man, i,ays the U. S. Public Healtn service, for they are spread almost altogether by his .disregard for the simplest rules of sanitary lving. Typhoid fever, for Instance, is' spread by the contamination of wa ter, milk, and food by human filth which has been run into rivers or wells or left exposed for flies to carry to the kitchen or dining room, or which even more disgustingly, is carried to food directly from soiled hands. Hookworm disease and other intes tinal diseases are spread, to some extent at last, by the states which hIIow road-buildlhg gangs to work under conditions which too often compel them to scatter pollution to be carried by files to their own kitchens or to be ground into the soil to be picked up by the bare feet of children. Practically all hook worm disease i3 due to soil pol lution. Malaria, too, .is often spread by the ignorance and carelessness with which mosquito-breeding places are created or 'disregarded. Borrow-'pits, dug to obtain stone for road work and other needs and left will fill with water, furnish homes for thou sands of wlgglers, culverts Improper ly placed will produce pools that are equally prolific; ditches that are clogged and never cleared out are popular and populous; railroad and other embankments that stop pr check tho flow of water create con ditions that are Ideal from the mos quito point of view. Dr. T. F. Abercroinble, health of ficer of Georgia, has suggested that the convict and other gangs who work along the roads be required to fill up borrow-plts, place culverts properly, clean ditches, and attend to other small but important de tails that any man can do and that will deprive tho mosquito of many of "its breeding places. To accomplish this -along the roads is more important than it may seem, for a mosquito hatched at the road moment you apply Red Peppor Rub you feel tho tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the congested spot through and through. When you nre suffering so v can hardly get. around, just get i; jar of Rowlo8 Red,, Pepper Rub made' from re1 peppers. It casts lit tie at any drug Btore. The quicke relief known awalats you. Use It al .ways for cold in chest. Adv. K. side does not have to wander in search of food; all It has to do , la to wait for food to come to It. More over, if it is of' the anopheline spec ies, which spreads malaria, It has excellent chances both to acquire the malaria germs and to pass them along. Until it bites someone who lias had the disease, its bite, though no more pleasant than that of. any other mosquKo, Is not any more dan-( gerous. But a single malaria patient, driving along a ditch-bordered, mosquito-infested road, may provide hun dreds of the Insects with germs which they may pass on to every traveller along that road. Dr. Abercrombie; by making the roads of Georgia safe for man, may materially reduce the malaria hazard of the state, and, according to the! Public Health service, his example deserves to be followed. 'EDPING BELLS t runk It. Knox of Moro and Miss vpimii Elizabeth Byers of Fifteen Mile, were quietly- married Saturday afternoon at the residence of the Hev. John L. Bogue, pastor of Cal vary Baptist church. Friends in The Dalles today were greatly surprised to receive an nouncements telling of the marriage of Mrs. Myrta E. Morehead, until recently in charge of the women's clothing department of the local J. C. Penney company store, to. William J Stevenson of Kansas CUy, Mo. The wedding was solemnized last Friday at Denver. Mrs. Morehead left The Dalles the first of this month, with the an TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY RANTED Woman to do laundrv work for single man. Apply Chron icle office. 19 WANTEDCimrning and painting by day or hour. Call mornings or evenings. Red 3961. 23 FOR SALE Thoroughbred Duroc sow with eight pigs, five weeks old F. A. Bushey, up Chenow'lth creek. Route 4. 20 WANTED Man and wife to work on ranch, or woman to cook. Good wages'. Permanent. Mrs. J.A. White, 711 Calhoun street. , 20 A New Timknx ' Roller Bearing Hyatt BoUt Blaring New Deporttarm MtUl Bearing nounced intention of spending five or six months resting at the home of friends in California. Word was received of her arrival In. Los An geles recently, but friends had no inkling of her Intended marriage. Mrs. Morehead formerly lived in Kansas City for a number of years She was with the J. C. Penney or ganization in The Dalles five years'. The announcement' stated that Mr. and Mrs. Stevenson will be at hoine at 912 Benton Boulevard, Kansas City Mo. "Union Station Scenes," April 20. Get seats at drug stores. () Watch For "The Little Tycoon," operetta to be given by high school glee clubs April 22 and 23, high school auditorium. 19 EMPRESS Owing to the failure of our feature "The Cheater Reformer," with William Russell not arriving Sunday, we were compelled to substi tute the Farnum feature we have billed for Tuesday "The Scuttlers." Showing Tuesday- "HIS TEMPOlT JFg" 'The Scuttlers" will show tonight at The Grand Theater The Plaything of Broadway" it, -!' e0r ' With ' JUSTINE Local Service for Motorists To provide motorisft and otheri interested in automobile service work in this section witn prompt, expert dependable service on bearings, we have established an authorized local service station for the Bearings Sern vice Company v The Bearings Service Company is tae national service representative for the Timken Roller Bearing Com pony, Hyatt Roller Bearing Company and New Departure ManusactuHnf Company. ' ' Supplied with authentic engineer ing records by these ny miffeturcra and having immediate access to com-' plete stocks of new bearings not regrpund or second hand stock- wa can provide service in which you can place absolute confidence a bearing service that is exact, depend able and promptone that will maks it unnecessary for you to be without the use of your machine pending the receipt of bearings from far off factories. VVALTHER-WILL1AMS COMPANY, Parts Department Service Company 'FORMER VICE-PRESIDENT ' TO SPEAK AT ALBANY By United Press ALBANY, Ore., April 18 Thomas R. Marshall, formervlce president of rAlrTn&t on "Some Governing Principles. !Mr. Marshall's speech is under the auspices of the Albany chamber of commerce. TaxlMaylleld's Taxi Telephone main 5021. 27tf Typing and Stenography done at reasonable rates. Rosina A. Fleck Office Hotel Dalles. Reel dence phon- red 2332. tf JOHNSTONE i i i . m