PORTI ANH OFFERS A MARKET 1 VllLillHU FOR YOUR PRODUCE VAUDEVILLE PHOTO-PLAYS Complete Change Saturday. Adult, Wpk day Matinee, 110c; Evenings, 40c. Continu ous! to 11 p. m. Children 10 cents all times. Shipherd's Mineral Springs HAROLD BAIN, Manager Carton, Waihlngton An Ideal Winter Resort. Special Winter Rates. Routes S. P. & S. Local from Portland to Car son, Wash. By Auto to Cascade Locks via Co lumbia Highway. By Auto via the North Bank Highway. Hotel American Plan, Modern Hotel Accommodations. Baths Hot Mineral Baths: Cure for Rheumatism, Liver, Kldnev and iStomach I roubles: Skin Diseases. Hunting and Fishing. Ship Your Cream Often Mutual Creamery Co., Portland Page & Son Portland, Oregon Write us for prices and market conditions on Veal, Hogs, Poultry, Fruits, Pctatoes, Onions, etc Forty Years in the Same Location. Eat More heat Maccaroni Spaghetti Ver micelli Noodles Alphabet Fresh Egg Noodles PORTER-SCARPELLI MACARONI CO. Kenton Station. Portland, Oregon. Hotel Carlton Ihojh i",!,,or'!and Mth and Washinirtn Popular Rates Fire Proof Buildine Victor Brandt. Prop. Harry Fletcher. Mgr. Real Franklin SERVICE Expert examination free All work guaranteed. Sen sible prices. We specialize in Complete Overhauling and Cylinder grinding. ANDERSON & MAYER GRARAE & MACHINE SHOP Moved to New Larger Garage, 9th and Hoyt, Port and Washington Cafeteria GOOD EATS AT POPULAR PRICES Rest Room for Ladies. 811 Washington St. Between Fifth and Sixth Streets PORTLAND, OREGON Do You Want a Job? Our EMPLOYMENT OFFICIO hf sistfl our students. We GUARAN TEE Olir t'l.i - pmnliwmunt Brick-Layinpr. Plastering, THe-Pnttinj?. Auto-Mechanica. Electricity. Acetylene' Welding. HEMPHILL TRADE SCHOOLS, 125 N. 5th St.. Portland. Ore. Send for our Free Catalogue Fall and Winter 1923-24 Tt will save you money when you want Sheeplined Coats, Leather Coats, Leather Vests, Macklnaws, Solid Lea ther Guaranteed Shoes, All Leather Leggings, Army and Commercial Wool Underwear, All-Wool Sox, Rubber Boots, and Cenulne O. D. Wool Army Blankets. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded. sililli GLASSES That Fit None Better CHARGES REASONABLE Dr. Harry Brown 149 Third St PORTLAND. ORECON EVAN G. HOUSEMAN Osteopathic Physician. Electronic Method of ABRAMS Phone Main 2963. 393Vi Yamhill at Tenth, Portland, Ore New Pacific Northwest Pocket Map The Union Pacific has just received from the press a new pocket edition in dexed map of the Pacific Northwest, which is perhaps the most complete and convenient map of Oregon and Washington ever published. A copy will be sent free to any address by Wm. McMurrav, General Passenger Agent, Pittock Block, Portland, Oregon, upon receipt of request by card or letter. Save 25 to 50 Per Cent On Building Material, Roofinir Taper. Taints. Varnish, Lumber, Lath. Nails. Shingles, Doors. Windows, and Plumhinfc Supplies, New and Second Hand. Mail Orders Promptly Filled. DOLAN WRECKING & CONSTRUCTION CO. Office & Yard. 4C0 Belmont St., Portland. Ore. CUT FLOWERS & FLORAL DESIGNS Clarke Bros., Florists, 287 Morrison St. We ptnrte'd our weekly auction sales Wednesday, Nov. 21st. If you have any thing to consign In horses, mules, cattle, harness or wagons, also farm Implements, you can chip direct to the North Portland Horse & Mule Company. Wire, write or phone Empire 0121, and we will give you prompt attention. North Portland Horse & Mule Co., No. Portland, Oregon. INFORMATION , 2 DEPARTMENT PleatingEmbroidery Hemstitching, Buttons Covered. stephaSts 1C5H Tenth St., Portland ATTENTION LADIES Sanitary Beauty Parlors We fix you up, we make all kinds of Hair Goods of your combings. .loin our School of Beauty Culture. 400 to 414 Dekum Bldg., Phone Broadway 6902, Portland, Oregon. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE Teaches trade in 8 weeks. Some pay while learning. Positions secured. Write for catalogue. 234 Burnslde street, Port- land.Oregon. BRAZING, WELDING & CUTTING Northwest Weldiug & Supply Co., 88 1st St. PERSONAL Marry if Lonely; most successful "Home Maker"; hundreds rich; confidential; reli able; years experience; descriptions free, "The Successful Club," Mrs. Nash, Box 666, Oakland, California. CLEANING AND DYEINO For reliable Cleaning and Dye ing service send parcels to us. We pay return postaire. Inform ation and prices given upon re quest. ENKE'S CITY nvp- wnpvc: Established 1890. Portland,Ore GOING TO BUILD? We have hundreds of plans at $10.00 and up. Send us a sketch of the home you want and we will sub mit similar specimen plans. No obligation except to return plans if not suitabie. O. M. A K E R S Designing and Drafting. 511-12 Cuuch Building, Portland, Oregon, f $ .J. .;. .;. j, .;. . ! ! inir Set of Q.OO Teeth, V We jruH,rante material and workmanship. Painless extraction of teeth. 5"'c. ID years in ttje name location. U. R. DENTISTS. Uffft Wash ington cor. Second, Portland, Oretfun. USED FORDS COUPES. SEDANS, TOURINCS. ROADSTERS Kasv Terms Used Fords Bought and Sold FARNHAM & WILLIAMS. INC.. West Side (Two Stores! East Side. 28 Nor. 11th St. and 211 Grand Ave.. Portland, We Specialize in Hides, Pells, Wool, Mohair, Tallow, Cascara, Oregon Grape Root. Goat Skins, Horse Hair Write for Shipping Tags & latest Price List Portland Hide & Wool Co. tOt UNION AVENUE NORTH, rWTUNO. OREflON. Branch at Pocatello, Idaho GLASSES WILL SAVE YOUR EYES Jjp Expert fitting at lowest prices. All mS styles of Glasses. Lenses duplicate! HPffy from broken pieces. Mail in your bro ken glai's. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dr. A. E. Hurwitz, 'S First St., Portland. Ore. BUY THE B3T HORSE COLLAR MADE jgfo. All lot.it i ye stiuw stuffed. VtKM Insist on having the coll, it- Kg with the "Fish" Label. If M Ijj. you i' dealer does not handle mm Rm thin brand collar, write to 111 P. SHARKEY 4 SON 53 Union Av., Portland, Ore. CHAS . J SEND TODAY for my FREE book conlainina infor mation YOU should hv. on rectal conditions; also how 1 GUARANTEE to cure your Piles or refund your fee. DF.AN.M D 2ND AND MORRISON PORTLAND. OREGON menti ON PAPO WHfN W P I North Portland IIor.se & Mule Co. will hold weekly auction soIch at the I'nl'in Stockyards, North Portland, each Wed nesday at one o'clock. If ; ou have any thing to sell In hordes, mules or niilh cows, or harness and wac'inn, we would be glad to solicit your business, as we are always in touch with buyers. w im BAMCfc FLOOR "LITE-FOOT" Powdered DANCE FLOOR WAX Gives smooth. Gliding fin ish to hard or soft-wood floors. NO ACID. CKEASE OR DUST. Your druggist has it. If not, aerid us stamps, 75c for one-pound package CLARKE. WOODWARD DKl'G CO. Portland. Oregon. Mail Robbery Loot Located in Refrigerator Pueblo. Two hundred thousand dollars In canceled checks, n sheaf of others which have not been canceled and a dozen or more money orders were among mall matter, supposed a part of the loot of a robbery in Texas, which was found In the Ice hunker of a refrigerator car here by Post Office Inspector C W. PlatTenberger. Most of the checks were on the Alamo National bank of San Antonio, Tex.. r.nd were for amounts ranging from a few dollars to as much as $27,000. It Is believed the loot was taken from a mail pouch which probably was stolen at Seguln. Tex., In September and bad been left In the Ice bunker after the thief had tuken wbat he wanted 'Wanted: A Painter" Tornadoes have been known to carry children a mile. : By JANE OSBORN : Ufiit, 1818, by McClure Newapuper Syndicate.) Mr. Bailey sat musing, pipe In mouth, before the blazing logs In the open fireplace of the cheerful little village bouse where he and his young est and only unmairted daughter lived together. "1 don't know," ho was saying, half to himself and half to his (laughter, who was correcting "compositions" ut the Uttle desk at the other side of the room, "I don't know's Aunt Til ever did a mean tiling in her life, but she did more than one fool thing. Leaving this chimney this way, 'stead of fixing It so's we could have a stove, was one, and another thing was having the house built of clapboards." Rose Bailey laughed a little. She was often amused but never In the least annoyed by her fatner'8 conver sation and apparent rusticity. "Of course Aunt Til built the house for herself. Site didn't know how short a time She'd have to live ln.lt. I sup pose we ought just to be thankful that she left It to us. And as for the open fireplace, you funny old daddy, no one has stoves in the living room any more. And of course for this style of house white clapboards are the only thing" "Don't see that," Insisted the fa ther. "Now, If she'd had stucco or even brown shingles the house wouldn't ever have bad to be painted except once In a while the white trim around the windows and doors. I could most likely do that myself. But this having the whole house of clapboard! is foolish. Painters are getting too much. Blessed if i wouldn't like to try painting It my self." Rose Bailey quickly put a damper on any such enthusiasm to save money. And she was successful in persuading her father that he had enough to do with his chickens. This was his hob by, but since his retirement from more strenuous farming and his removal from the old farm to this house that had been left to him by his sister whom he and his daughter both culled "Aunt TH" it had yielded enough to provide some of the luxuries which he might otherwise have regarded as ex travagances. Mr. Bailey continued his musings anent the painting of the house off and on for the rest of the evening. "We'd best have done It this fall," he went on. "Whoever put the first coat of paint on didn't know enough to fill up the knot holes. Seems to me there must have been a scarcity of putty the year Aunt Til built. Of course the house Is looking shabby, but I could stand for that. What I can't stand is having 11 run down. If you were left alone and wanted to sell you couldn't get what the house was worth out of It because of Its being run down for lack of regular paint. Still, painting Is pretty expen sive nowadays. Blessed If I see how the painters have the heart to take their money, let alone ask It. Paint ing Isn't worth that much." "That's union wages, I suppose," commented Rose. "I suppose there are men you could hire to paint It for less and maybe a man like that would do with you here to give him direction." "Oh, sure," commented the father. "Like as not. Still I wouldn't want the Job done by any one who wasn't a genuine painter." The next evening while Rose Bailey had another batch of "compositions" to correct by the light of the new elec tric table lamp in the living room, her father began his comments with: "I forgot to tell you, Rose. And 1 don't know how I came to forget. I Should have spoken of it at supper time, but It slipped my mind. This afternoon when I was down to the boarding house with the eggs Mrs. Slmklns takes four dozen three times a week, so she must have a good many board ers I happened to mention what a pity Aunt Til didn't have the house made of stucco or brown shingle so It wouldn't be so expensive having It painted. "And I said I kind of had a notion that I'd get some nonunion fellow to do It and she looked kind of interest ed and said that maybe she knew the fellow. Seems she has a boarder there now from the city. He's a mile run down and wants to stay In the country for a month or so, but siiy he really can't afford to 'cause It I so hard to get work down here. Ami funny thing about It Is he's a painter I didn't see him, but Mrs. Slrnklns says he's a nice, quiet-spoken young fellow. So It occurred to me maybe we could make a deal with him. We'd take him In here and give him bis room and board and not hurry him with the Job, and like as not he wouldn't ask much for doing the whole Job, and with plenty of eggs and gar den truck now so plentiful, don't seem that It would cost much to feed trim. And It wouldn't be a whole lot extra work, do you think, Rose?" "Why, no," said Rose, a little du bious. "If he'd do It, I suppose It would be all right. Did you speak to him about It?" "No, but Mrs. Slmklns Bald she would have a talk with him and some thing might come of It." Rose Bailey went on correcting .pt English papers and the next Interrup tion was a knock on the front door. Rose looked at lier father and gave her hair a little corrective pat or two, and her father brushed away the pipe ashes that hud fallen on the front ol his waistcoat. Aud then Rose went to the door. The young man who presented him self looked a little surprised as he entered the room, "1 wonder if this is the right house. Mrs. Blinking said that you were interested in my work, is this Mr. Bailey?" "It certainly is," assured .Mr. Bailey. "You're the youug painter she was speaking about, aren't youV" "1 am, and my name is John Lewis. I don't know whether you've seen any of my work," he was saying, and Mr. Bailey interrupted. "Oh, that wouldn't hardly be neces sary," he said. "1 expect one paint ing job is pretty much like another, so long us you know how to mix the paints and lay It on smooth." John Lewis looked pu..led and then he laughed. "I guess you are about right, though we wouldn't all admit It. May 1 ask what sort ol work It is?" "Clapboards," said Mr. Bailey. "It'ud be the whole house, and since it's been white once It might us wi ll be white." Mr. Lewis had allowed his gaze to wander to the face of the little school teacher at the table. He was study ing the graceful line from her chin lo her temple, but at Mr. Bailey's Last re mark he looked up with a real gasp, "Oh, I see," he managed to say. lie again looked at the pretty young school teucher. "And the bleu was that I might bourd and lodge here while I did the work. 1 think 1 would like that. The country uir would do me a lot of good. When could 1 stun in?" The details of the work were set tled on and three days later John Lewis was to be seen standing hall way up a very long ladder brush in hand, dipping It from time to time in a pall tied to one of the rungs of tils ladder. He often whistled as he a. uud Mfiti s 'hool hours I e v.u- apt to come down iioui u.s ...v. ... .... frequent chats with Rose Bailey. The three of them Hose, John ami Mr. Bailey- spent many pleasant eve nlngs together and meal lime w as B pleasure to them all. John seemed to enjoy Mr. Bailey's remarks and Mr Bailey in turn listened intently to ev erything that John told him regarding life In the great city though he spoke of it cautiously and not often, li seemed before many days had passed as if John Lewis hud always been a member of their household. "He's a mighty pleasant young man," Mr. Bailey told bis ilaughlei one day ; "but 1 can't say I thhik he's an awful smart painter." "I'm glad you like him, dad," said Rose. "1 like John, too, and I may at well tell you that John likes me. In fact, he wants me to promise to marr him, but I'll make no promise wllhoui talking it over with you, dad." "Well," said Mr. Bailey, "medita lively, "I like John a lot. But I'm wondering whether he could support you. I can't say he's been real smart at the painting of tills house." Fortunately lor Mr. Bailey's peace ol mind Mr. John Lewis .came Into th( house ut this juncture. lie had Ho ished painting lor the duy ami hail been taking u wulk down the village Street by way of recreation. "We were talking about you, John, said ROM, "I thought we ought b tell dad and dad said " "1 didn't mean Just what I said. stammer d Mr. Bailey. "That is, John, I was Just expressing the bopi thai you d be able to support my daughter decently. I wus Just hoping you'd be tilde to get enough house painting to do." John Lewis laughed and then leaned down and kissed the hand of Row Bailey. "I had better confess," he said. "I'm a pulnter, to be sure. But not u bOUSt painter, ."lis Simklns didn't quite un ilerstund. .Mie told me tbere was some one interested In my painting who would Ilk to talk over some worli and I thought, of course, It was QQ well-to-do summer people here who wanted portrait work. I have done a little portrait work with pretty good success. But of con se It's my city street scenes that have attracted most attention. 1 thought , osslbly some of you had heard of me. I've worked hard and been pretty lucky for u man of my ace. But I had worked too hurd. I bad lived too close to tin city anil the doctOTI told me the lies! thing for me to do was to go to the country and forget the city for a wblh I told Mrs. Simklns I was a painter und she asked me how I was making out, and I told her I wouldn't be abb to do much work In the country, 01 something like that. Anyhow, she must have got the Idea I wus a bouse painter out of work. And now It has all ended beautifully. I am quite my self again, and " "And you mean you want to marry my Rose?" asked Mr. Bailey, much to Rose's confusion. "I do," said John Lewis. "And In tidentally, now you know all about un and the wuy I've been deceiving you, may I get a real, honest-to-goodness twelve-dollars a-day house painter to put the finishing touches on this house?" ! STATE NEWS ! USE FOR SULPHITE LIQUID Sewing Machine Made in 1755. The parliest attempt at sewing by machinery of which there Is an authen tic record was In 1755, In which year n machine wus patented In Knglitnd bv 0. F. Welsenthal. laaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaAuaaaaa Albany. Immediate action will be started by the Linn county court to procure the Santiam road over the Cascade mountains by way of Fish lake from the company that now holds It, It was decided recently. Pendleton The 3-year old sou of Mr. and Mrs. Will Morgan who live on the Elmer McCormmach wheat ranch Is recovering from the effects of an acci dent recently when he fell under the wheels of a loaded wagon and suffered a fracture of the pelvis. Medford. Already much Interest has been manifest in the campaign Inci dental to the primaries next spring at which Jackson county will nominate candidates for county judge, sheriff, treasurer, assessor, clerk, school su perintendent and district attorney. Albany. John Fisher, S6, sustained injuries from which ho died two and a half hours later when an automobile driven by W. T. Uodd, Montana tour ist, struck the horse Mr Fisher was riding, three miles south of Alb: "'. Friday afternoon. The aged man was thrown to the pavement. The horse was killed. Pendleton. When Rev. J. M. Cor nelison, for many yenrs a missionary on tho Umatilla Indian reservation, goes to Chicago in January as IiIb first stop on an extended lecturing tour in behalf of missions for the Presbyterian church, he will be accompanied by Par sons Motanic, prominent Indian farm er on the reservation. Salem. Arrangements were com pleted hero Saturday for the annual convent ion of county judges and com- missioners to co neiu in Kaicm Janu ary 10, 11 "and 12. Many matters of vital interest to the county courts will ho considered at the meeting. Besides the business meetings there will bo a number of entertainment features. Salem. Many eases of smallpox and measles have been found at the Che mawa Indian school, and It is likely that the institution will be placed un der quarantine. This was announced Saturday by Dr. C. 10. Cashatt, county health officer. The physician said he would make a check of the cases und then determine what action will be taken. Salem. Valuation hearings affect. Ing the properties of the Great South ern railroad company, operating be tween The Dalles and Dufur, and the Sumptcr Valley railroad company, with headquarters in Baker, have been set by tin; interstate commerce commis sion, according to letters received at tho offices of the public service com mission Sunday. Baker. A buckskin puise contain ing between $500 and 00 in gold dust, the property of W. A. Krouse, prospector of Greenhorn, was on dis play here In tho city Friday, and brought back to mind the. olden, gold en days. The dust was the reward of three weeks' work by Mr. Krouse and. his partner, Fred Smith. It. Is being cashed by a local bunk. Salem. The number of applications for 1924 motor vehicle plates received up until Saturday night almost doub led the number of applications receiv ed on the same date lust year, accord ing to a report prepared here by Sam A. Kozer, secretary of state. Mr. K zer attributed the unusual demand for licenses prior to Christmas due to the appeals sent out. by his Office. St. Helens. Both of the sawmills In St. Helens closed down Saturday after noon and will be shut down until Jan uary 1. This was necessary In order to give the plants a general overhaul ing and make repairs to docks and buildings. During the time the mills are closed several steamers will load cargoes, so the docks will not be con gested when the mills resume. Baker.- Traveling In a house on wheels, drawn by oxen, Mr. anil Mrs. J. C. Barrang passed through here this week en route to Medford, Or., from Westchester, Conn. They have made a bdsurely trip across the continent, taking three years. They carry a can vas tent to protect the oxen In .bad weather. A radio set supplies the travelers with music and other enter tainment. Bend - Bend police plugged the li nk In the city Jail, which has existed for some weeks, when they discovered a duplicate key hidden In a woodpile nearby. For some time complaints have been made that prisoners were being seen about the streets at night and on more than one occasion the tally at the Jail would be Incomplete shortly after dark, but would he com plete before morning. Alcohol and Fuel to Be Derived From Paper Mill Waste by New Process. Waste sulphite liquid that now pours from paper mills into rivers will be utilized in manufacturing alcohol and fuel by means of a new chemh-ul process recently discovered and thor oughly tested by chemical engineers. This announcement, considered one of the most Important In years in the paper Industry, will be made before the cellulose division of the American Chemical society by Prof. R. II. MeKee, head of the chemical department of Columbia university, who was asso ciated with Dr. Max Kahn, New York, In the discovery and preparation of Intarv'.n, one of the two recently dis covered substances that check diabetes. "At present, for every cord of wood used In the paier mills the manufac turer obtains l.tXX) pounds of pulp and 1,000 gallons of waste sulphite liquor, Which flows Into the rivers adjoining the plants, causing death of fish, dis agreeable odors and other inconven iences so great that stringent laws have been passed in some states, nnd were they rigidly enforced, mills would have to close down," declared Doctor MeKee. "L'lkler the new process this wt'" liquor will be fermented nnd a good grado of commercial alcohol obtained. Then after the alcohol has been dis tilled off, the residual material will be evaporated and may be used as fuel." Milwaukee Journal. U. 8. Army Scattered. The United States has an army of 1.13.000, scattered from Sundy Hook I Manila, from Alaska to Panama, ' which only 05,000 are avullubl within the Stutes. LEADS IN MEDICAL SCHOOLS United States Has Eighty-two Out of the Total of 445 In the World. Out of nn approximate total of 4-15 medical schools In the world, the United States predominates with 82 schools, according to a list prepnred by the Rockefeller Foundation. Next come the British Isles with 43, fol lowed by France with 32. Russia with 28, German with 28, china with 24, Italy with 22, Japan with 20, India with IS, Spain with 11, Mexico with 11, Brazil with 10, Canada with 0, Netherlands with 8, Poland with 5, Sw itzerland w ith 5 nnd Belgium with B. Fifty-four other countries support from one to four medical schools each. Not only do standards differ greatly between countries, but even within na tional ureas, notably In the United Slules, medical ICOpOli nre of dis tinctly different graftal as measured by personnel, equipment, resources nnd Ideals. In spite of gqtnt variation in quality, however, nil these centers of teaching are more or less directly dom inated by tho alms and methods of modern medicine. It Is one film of tho Rockefeller Foundation, suys the re port, to hasten the development of In ternational cooperation in medical education, by ail available means. New Sugar Beet Digger. It Is said that a machine for top ping and digging lUgar beets prom ises to eliminate much of the buck breaking work of harvesting. The apparatus resembles u potato digger In general outline, but In front of the lifts that remove the roots from the ground is a revolving 0181 twenty Inches In diameter, so adjusted by a spring and roller that It measures tbe cutting distance from the top of the beet Instead of from the ground. Im mediately behind the disk are two lifts thut remove the beets from the ground nnd deliver them to an end less chain elevator 'that frees them of dirt and dumps them out behind the machine. As the top and head of the sugar beet contains an acid tbnt counteracts tho sugar In the rest of the root, a harvester must measure the beets and cut them ut tha right place. 'TenEoUnl "You lire not listening to me," com plained .lane Mitehmore at breakfast the ottier morning. "I didn't know you had suld nny thlng, dear," returned the meek Mr. Muchmore. "I havent, but 1 expect to," suld Jane. Howard COUrBSt Proverbially Speaking. "The Chinese nre pitiverblnlly hon est." '.I'eoplo.of nil races," observed Miss Cayenne, "are consistently honest In 'heir prove.rbs." "A SCOUT IS BRAVE" The tenth scout law "A Scout Is Brave" him a tom bing little Illustra tion la a story reported from a Pitts burgh hospital. As the nurse was bringing a twelve year old boy patient out of the anaesthetic after a seri ous operation, she found lying In the palm of the lud's right hand a scrap of crumpled paper, Straightening out the scrap to fcoc If It hud uny benr Ing on the lud's welfare, she read the words; acrawled In a boyish hand "A Scoot Th Brave.H H in fthe fincat prodiu Eotitsl tod In ibel 1 H world. Every woman who tins used H H it knows this stateniciil e he true. Yule Mail Sets Record. Chicago, 111. Christmas mall pass log through tho Chicago POStoftlc a fa tyyj SLrfci has broken an previous recoru. n was announced Saturday. Nearly 10,-1 BafloefS 000,000 pieces of first-class mail Wtttf ! with more mon through the Chicago office in one day rnoat perfectly eeiilpp. .1 Mug Mi Mmi in tne .iwt- la the hlKaV-ft. Trail tig west. Kit yourMelf for a hlcher position and this Included r.,000,000 letters mailed In Chicago. 'erinauant poaltlunn ensured our t'.rtiduatee Writ for catalog fc'ourui auu liunbli Port In nil P. N. U. No. 52, 1923