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About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1923)
The Secret of Being a Convincing Talker O FFER S A M A R K E T FOR YCfUR PRODUCE PORTLAND NORTONIA HOTEL Y m i W ill Keel Right at Horn* Hera SAFE AN D C E N T R A L —REASO N ABLE RATES E xc e llen t C a l l bpacial W e e k ly lUit»-* Hus M e e t« A il T raîn a 11th ana S tark. I'o r tL .id , Ore. I « Purtlai .! %rvKrou V A U D E V IL L E P H O T O -P L A V g Complete i ' hange Saturday. Adult*, Matinee. Jhe: Exening*. SA*. Continuous 1 L> 11 p. m. ChiUlren ID cent* all tune*. I • ( • « ! . « ~T* M I ACKERMAN A M ARR M E D U S A w ill m ake Silos, G ranaries. Husem eni*. etc.. W a te r proof. H otproof, Hat p roof and F irep roof. M edusa W a terp ro o fed W h ite Portlan d C em ent It the best fo r Stucco P la s te r on outside fo r H u n ft- lows— I>oes not stain and d irt can be hosed o ff W rite for Literature. Sold by A. M cM ILLAN 4k CO.. 840 ISO Eaet A nkeny Street W a te rp ro o fe d CE M E N T BAB’S RESTAURANT P O R IN T L tm A iO N N AfttW D H MO ID E & WOOL CO. UTH. PORTLAHI, 0RC00M. Write for Prices ai d Shipping Tag* 1£> Si RADI VARA _ l ü lO g e Q The Write us for prices and market conditions on Val Hogs, Poultry, Fruits, Potatoes, Go ons, etc. Forty Years in the Same Location. K IM B A L L of all kinds TANNED P ian o s and P hon ograph s sold on in stallm en t plan. M cC O R M lC K M U SIC CO. O regon D istrib u tors 429-431 W a s h in g to n S treet. P ortlan d, O regon W E B E R T A N N I N G CO. P ortlan d . Ore., 1710 M acadam Road. Dept. A . W r ite fo r prices and ship p ing tags. P ortla n d 's P io n e e r T an n ery, E stablish ed 1S89 No Commission Prompt Returns December 28 Market Price f r Top Quality Otherwise According to Quality Dressed Beef. 8c Hogs. 13c Veal. I 34 c Veal up to 300 lbs.. 8c to I Oc Dressed Lambs. 15c to 20c Dr?ss;d Mutton. 12c We can use lies and dressed turkeys, geese, ducks, and all kinds of chickens at market prices; also hides and pells. FRANK L. SMITH MEAT CO. •‘ Fighting the Beef Trust’* New Location 107 Front Street P o rtlan d , Oregon H otel H oyt L ocated Sixth and H o yt S tric tly F ire p ro o f and M odern. Near both depots and con ven ien t car service to all parts o f city. R H E U M A T I S M Jack King Cur»’s it. Ladies and Gents Exam ination free. 207 Dekum bldg., Portland. Ore R A IN IE R HOTEL tars 31 00 >e4 • » 128 N. Ml St. Per » 1 Or- Very Centrally Located. Convenient to all Depots, and one block from ma n P««stoffice PATENT ATTORNEY P ro te c t th a t Id ea w ith a United S tates P aten t. O th ers h ave m ade fortun es out o f Patents. W h y not you? T hom as B ilyeu, 202 S teven s Bldg., P ortlan d, Ore. [_____ f If your R A D I A T O R heats or leaks, send it to us Arm stron g A u to R adiator Co., 67 Burn tide street. Phonograph Known for Tone STK A D IV A R A PHONOGRAPH CO. Portland, Oregon F u r Skins Ws Pay Highest Prices for HIDES. PELTS. WOOL. M O H AIR CASCARA HARK. Address Department B Agent* wanted. Order direct from factoiy. 330 East Morrison St.. Portland. Oregon. __ o O n A rood i- ace to Eat axel Lire Well, Remarkable 40c luncheon at noon Open 7 a. m. to 2 a m SAt Stark St. Portland. Oregon END today fo r this F R E E book telling about m y guaranteed n o n -s u r g ic a l t r e a t m ent fo r Piles. It tell* how I have cured c a m of fo r ty year* standing. DR. C HAS. J. D E A N AKO MOl IHON eOftTlANfeOetOOM " ON T his PiiPtll w r N W IlTlM j >V O O I> RATS’ ARMY (iO O M E T H IN G must be done st ^ once," announced XI. < Wood Rat to her husbund one day. "liver since we had the picnic for the children, and Tabby Cat from the farm saw us, life has not been worth living “ But, my dear,” replied Mr. Wood Rat. “ Tabby 1* not afraid of me—or you, either, so what cun we do but be careful?" “ I ’ve been thinking it over," said Mrs. Wood Rat, “ and I think Tabby could be frightened away for good if only there were enough of us. An army of wood rats would be too much for her to face, 1 am sure." “ Y-e-s," answered Mr. Wood Bat. slowly, “ but with al! the rats in this part of the woods there would not be enough to frighten her away, I am aft nUl." ’^Perhaps not," said Mrs. Wood Kat, “but each one of us lias a shadow and at night, when the moon is shining, we could manage to run about so tliut our shadows would run with us and that would make Tabby see just dou ble our number, don’t you see?" Mr. Wood Itut argued for n little while with his wife, but In the end he INFORMATION department , PLEATING SPECIAL CuL ***am. hem and machine OC pleat skirt* ready fo r band. 0%J C c i U S Hemstitching, f» cent* per yard . EASTERN N O V E L T Y M FC CD. «.fth S t. __ I it» A T T E N T I O N L A D IE S ! L e a rn beauty culture, Join class; e v e ning school; w e know how. School 16 yea rs old. Fu ll course |40. Phone iid w y. 6902.__ 400 D ekum bldg B R A Z IN G , W E L D IN G & C U T T IN G N o rth w e s t W eld in g & Supply Co hS 1st St C L E A N IN G A N D D Y E IN G F o r reliab le C lean in g and D y e in g s erv ic e send parcels to us. W e pay return postage In form ation and prices g iv en upon request. _ E N K E 'S C IT Y D Y E W O R K S FJtablished 1890 P ortlan d C U T F L O W E R S & F L O R A L D E S IG N ® " C larke R ios , F lo rists, 887 M orrison ^t. F O U N D R Y A N D M A C H IN E W O R K S C o m m ercial Iron W orks, 7th & Madison F O O T C O R R E C T IO N I ST F e a th e rw e ig h t A rch Supports made to order. J. E. T ry ze la a r, 618 P itto c k Block, P ortlan d , Ore. M< *1 l K BARBER t OLLEGB Teaches trade in 8 week*. Some pay while learn ing. Positions secured. Write for catalogue. '¿■A Burnside street. Portland. Ore. M O N U M E N T S — E. 3d and P in e Sts. O tto Schumann G ran ite & M arble W o rk s PERSONAL M arry if L o n e ly ; m ost successful “ Hom e M a k er” ; hunureds rich; con fid en tia l; relia b le; years e xp erien ce; descriptions free. “ T h e iSuecessful Club,” Mrs. Nash, Box 556, Oakland. C aliforn ia. SHIP US YOUR W l ><>L Cleaning, carding and mattresses. Crystal Springs Woolen Mill**. 760 Umatilla. Portland. W ed d in g Bouquets and Fu neral P ieces L u b lin er F lo ris t*, 348 M orrison bt. “ IF IT HURTS DON T P A Y .” G uaranteed dental w ork. C row ns $5 00, P lates $15 uo, B lid g e w o rk $5 00 a tooth. T eeth extracted by g;is. L a te s t modern I methods. Dr. H a r ry Sem ler, Dentist, 3rd ind M orrison. 2nd flo o r A lls k y Bldg., P o r t land, < >r. W rite o r phone fo r appointm ent. V E T E R I N A R I A N — C a ttle a Specialty Dr. Chas. M. Anderson. K en ton . Portland. INTELLIGENT PRODUCE MARKETING S Hov# I Learned It in One Kveiling. m eans h igh er retu rn s fo r farm produce. Q uit old hit o r m iss plan and tr y our new m ethods b efore sending a n y produce to m arket. W rite , fin d out when and how to ship R esu lts w ill surprise you. Mur 17 y e a rs ’ exp erien ce is at y o u r service. RUBY& COMPANY, 215 FRONT ST. P O R T L A N D . O R E. E x p e rt a d vice on an y incom e ta x pioblem s. S ev e ra l years' actu al exp erien ce In G overn - D f t i i D i C M C >ent Hi icau s Is o ffe red I 11 U C l . [ I m O 1 hose u? Me to v isit our ofn ee. ¿state your troubles b rie fly and send in with $1 and we wilt g iv e you hon- eat to goodness advice. It w ill pay you to get in touch w ith us now E. J. Curtin, Room 806 L e w is Bldg.. P ortlan d . Oregon. INCOME TAX ANOTHER VIEW OF MR. DICKENS American Review Writer As for seif pity, his grotesque sensitive ness to the most piddling of criticism. serts That He Was Side- ; liia comically transparent excuses for Tracked Actor. I appearing in amateur dramatics, his Had Dickens livct’ In the Twentieth gallant and undeniably Thespian ap century, the Freudians, taking one ponranc.: and his flamboyant raiment, shrewd, amused, infuriatingly perspi rings and all, which distressed bis se cacious look at him, would have an date friends but satisfied something alysed him on the spot. They would within him. They would have noted have noted his clumsy efforts at play all these things and published In some writing, his adoration of Macready, his oltscure journal an article written to wistful loiterings at the stage door, of demonstrate that Mr. Dickens was suf which the faint, uninistakntile aroma fering from an exhibition complex. was ever the breath of his nostrils, This would have maddened him. lie and his disarming readiness to laugh would have dictated 16 furious letters and cry at the most ordinary of per demanding retraction, growing the red formances in any theater. They would der in the fuce ns he paced the floor have noted his pantomimic gyrations because he would have known that it when in the throes o f composition. was all quite true. That half smoth They would have known that the ered desire gnawed at him through ail young novelist who walked the night- j the years o f his growth until at last It msntted streets of Paris in an agony found an outlet which brought him • of sympathy for the dying Paul Dom- ! peace. hey was a sidetracked actor, writes Not Always Helpful. Alexander Wool I cot t in the North American Review. They would have Many a worm has turned, only to noted Ids own incongruous capacity ! get itself bruised on the other aids. North Back and Forth Went the Kate. put on his hat and went out t " tell all the neighbors the scheme that Mrs. Wood Kat had planned. “ Now, all of us must get to the com crib today and each must bri » away an ear of corn,” he explalne i ; “ then tonight, before the moon is up. you are all to come over to our big rock and hide. O f course, bring your ear of corn with you and Mrs. Wood ltat will tell you just what to do after that.” I f Tabby had been watching that day ■she would have seen a strange sight, for back and forth went the wood rats to the com crib and Instead of eating the com every one carried aw ay a full ear, the lurgest one he or she could carry. But Tabby Cat did not set* them; she was peacefully sleeping behind the kitchen stove to be ready for the frolic | she intended to have that ulght in the woods, with no other cut about to shure in the fun. When all was still that night and the moon was peepiug over the tree tops, off ran Tabby Cat to the woods toward the rock where lived Mr.,and Mrs. Wood K a t; hut Just before she reached It out from the rock cum* the rats uriued with an ear of corn. Tabby was so surprised she stopped for a second, but she wasn’t afraid of a few rats. Of course, not. So she ran toward them, and then she saw there were not a few, hut a very large number, for she saw all the shadows as well as the real rats, you see. Then Just as Tabby was beginning to think there were too many for her to manage, each rat threw the ear of corn it carried and all the shadows did the same, of course. Tabby Oat turned and away she ran without once looking behind her and she did not stop until she was safe under the steps of the farm house where she lived. Such a frolic ns the wood rats had that night, fo r they picked up the ears of com as soon as they saw Tubby running for home, and there In the moonlight they danced and ate corn until broad daylight. “ My dear,” said Mr. Wood Rat to his wife the next morning, “ I never knew how clever you were until last night. How did you ever happen to think of such a plan for getting rid of Tabby?” “ You are really the one that made me think about It,” answered clever Mrs. Wood Rat. “ You showed me my shadow one night in the moonlight, or I would never have thought of the plan.” (© br McClure N e w ,p »p er S yndics«,.) *■* T H E RO M A N C E O F WORDS What’s in a Name?” “TURNCOAT" B y M IL D R E D M A R S H A L L Facts about your name; lit htttory; leaning ; whence H iras derived ; lignificane» ; your lucky ^aV and lucky Jewel CORA ARM ING LY youthful Is Corn, C H modern derivative of ancient Greek. Many feminine names in Greece were merely men’s names with a feminine termination in “ a" or “ e,” Irrespective of their meaning, and this is true o f Cora, which, qualut- ly enough, signifies tualden. However she is derived, Cora is the most feminine of names, and wus given to some of the most alluring heroines of romance. Originally the nanee was taken from Persephone's title, “ Kore,” a maiden, the Boetlan poetess who won a w reath of victory at Thebes. Corinna was the next step In the evolution of Cora, and she came about through the literary habit o f reviving old Greek names, a fetish with enterprising writers In search of s fresh title for a heroine. Madame de Stael named her bril liant Corinna after the Boetlan poet ess, above mentioned, and that estab lished her fame forever In France, where she has been handed down from one French maid to another through generations of poetic fancy. In Italy she becomes Corlnne through the "Hengliist,” a chronicle o f the Xllddle ages. Lord Byron makes her Cora In his famous poem, and through him her vogue is unquestionably es tablished in England and America. Modern writers favor her, both as Corinna and Cora. She Is the capri cious heroine of many a modern story, the most memorable example perhaps being the Cora o f Booth Tarkington's book, “ The Flirt." Poets have never neglected her, especially the poet* of the pastoral age. Her significance and the youthful charm Invariably as sociated with her through her evolu tion, made her almost a synonym for rural maiden. Just as Sylvia 1« a gen eral term for shepherdess. “ When my Corinna goes a M aying" Is one of the most charming lyrics'of that age, and familiar to ail. Cora's Jewel is the diamond, which promises her protection from danger. Saturday Is her lucky day. and 3 her lucky number. The daisy, signify ing Innocence, is the flower assigned to her. which has played H ISTORY, a leading role In the forma tion of many words whl. h are familiar to us today Is U eotly responsible for the e.ithet “ turncoat” as applied to a traitor or anyone who d< erts one cause In order to Join the opposing party. This word owes Its origin to Emmanuel, one of the first dukes of Savoy, whose domin ions lay between the two con testing houses of Spain and France, and who was, accord ingly, forced to temporize r.nd full In with whichever power qr peared to be in the ascendancy. Being so frequently obliged to change his allegiance, the <i ke had a coat made which was Mue on one side and while on the other, and might he worn either aide out. Where In the Interests o f diplomacy he thought It best to represent ttie Spaniards, the duke would wear the blu side outermost, while when he » as working with the French, his coat would appear to be white. It wns for this reason that he gained the surname of “The Turncoat,” to distinguish him from the other dukes o f the house of Savoy, also named Em manuel, and the term lias come down, unchanged, to the present day. by th* W h M ler Syndicat«, Inc ) -O iw * * 1 t AM E RIC AN N E W SP A P E R ASSOCIATIO N of Portland, Ora. 418 19 20 U. 8. National Bank Bldg. Gentlemen; Please mail me Dr. Law's course, “ Mastery of Speech." I will pay the postman $3.50 on delivery, which completes the transection and pays for the course in full. Thereafter the course is mine absolutely. Name —.— City ______ State ___ Write Plainly. Kindness and Light. Give us to awake with smiles, give us to labor smiling. As the sun light ens the world, so let our loving kind ness make bright this house of our habitation.— Robert Louis Stevenson. DAUGHTER HAD TO HELP MOTHER The Cuticura Toilet Trio Now Can Do All Her Housework Having cleared your skin keep it clear | h.v making CuUmra your every-tlay Alone Because Lydia E. Pinkham’s toilet preparations. The soap to cleanse Vegetable Compound Helped Her and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and per- I fume. No toilet table Is complete | Jasper, Minn. — 'T saw in the paper about Lydia E. PlnUham’s Vegetable without them. 25c everywhere.— Adv Compound and took it because I was hav- Death sentences of 11 non-commis ing such pains in m sioned officers of the 1’hilippine con stomach and throug my bach that I could stabulary were commuted to life Im not do my work. I prisonment and life sentences of 66 had tried other med privates were commuted to 17 years’ j icines, but none did imprisonment by Leonard Wood, gov me th e good th a t your Vegetable Com ernor-general of the Philippines. The pound did. Now I am sentences grew out of the riots of able to do a ll m y December 15, 1920, between the 1’hil work alone while be fore I had my daugh lppine constabulary and the native police, during which four Americans ter staying at home to do it. I have told a number o f friends what it has and seven Filipinos were killed. done for me and give you (lermiasion to use my letter as a testimonial.’ ’ —Mrs. His Two Best Friends. J es . se I’ e t e k s e n , Route 1,Jasper, Minn. See this Inst and this hammer (said There is no better reason for your try the poor cobbler); that last and that ing Lydia K. 1’inkham's Vegetable Com hammer are the best two friends I pound than this— it has helped other have in the world. Nobody else will women. So i f you suffer from displace be ray friend because I want a friend. ments, irregularities, backache, ner vousness or Bre passing through the — Oliver Goldsmith. Change o f L ife remember this splendid medicine. What it did for Mrs. Peter sen it may do for you. Airplane Fought Caterpillars. The Vegetable Compound stands upon A plague of caterpillars, near Seven- a foundation o f nearly fifty years o f oaks, England, was exterminated by service. scattering insecticide from an air-1' Rain-Marked Window*. ' plane. i Wise men are instructed by reason; to be seen cottages with sloping walls. men of less understanding by experi They were built slightly oat of the ence; the beasts by nature.— Cicero. true because of a curious superstition that If a house was built exactly Blue at Mourning Color. I square it was bound to collapse. --------------------------------------------------------------- In Turkey, Syria and Armenia the ! women wear garments of celestial blue aa an emblem of mourning. Afre* >r ¥ °*n- A R AYM O ND 1 found that t ü r « was s right wsy und 8 wrong way to nrraeis? con.j s, to g*«e « f l mates, and to issue order«. * | • 1 up *«>me wonderful pointers shout how to give my opinions, sbout how to answer •inpla ta, sbout h >w to ask the bank for a loan, about how to ask fur extension«. Another tiling th.it otruck me forcibly waa that in stead of antagouuing people when 1 didn I agree with the in, 1 learned how to bnng them arouud to uiy way of thinkiug in the most pb'Bsant sort of way. Then, of course, along with those lessons there were r ha piers on speaking before large audiences, bow to find material for talkiug and speaking how to talk to friends, how to talk to servants, and how to talk to children. “ Why I got the ace ret the verr first even ing and it waa only a short tune before I was able to apply all uf the principles and found that ray word* were beginning U have sn almost magical effect upon everybody to whom l spoke. It seemed that 1 got tilings 'done instantly, where formerly, as you know, what 1 •aid 'went in one ear and out the ether.' I began to acquire an executive ability that sur pris'd me 1 »mouthed out difficulties liks a true diplomat. In my talks with the chief I spoke clearly, simply, convincingly. Then came my first promotion eine« I entered the accounting department. 1 was giveu the job of answering complaints, and I made good. From that 1 was giveu the job of making collections. When Mr. Buckley joiued the Officers' Training Camp. I was made Treasurer. Between you and me. George, my salary is now 87.50t» a year and 1 expect it will be more from the first of the year “ And I want to tell vou sincerely, that I attribute my success solely to the fact that 1 learned how to talk to people." When Jordan finished, 1 asked him for the address nf the publishers of Dr. Law * course and he gave it to me. I sent for it and foiling it to be exactly as he had stated. After study ing the eight simple lessons I began to aell to people xx ho bad previously refused to listen to me at all. After four months of record break ing sales during the dullest season of the year. 1 received a wire from the chi«*f asking me to return to the home office. We had quite s long talk in which 1 explained how I waa able to break sales records— and I waa ap pointed Sales Manager at almost twite my former salary. I know that there waa noth ing in me that had changed except that I had Acquired the ability to talk where formerly I Munply used “ words without reason,“ 1 can never thank Jordan enough for telling me about Dr. Law a Course in ltuaincsa Talking and Public Speaking. Jordan and I are both •pending all our «pare time making public speeches and Jordan ia being talked about now as Msyor of our little town. When rain spots a newly cleaned window the trouble can be remedied The Cat in Olden Timet. by using oil. Rub the window with a Oat* are supposed to have been first soft cloth moistened with a little par domesticated by the Egyptians; but affin. After a while pollah o ff with j the Greeks and Romans do not seem a cloth or chamois leather. I to have cared much for them. Happy Mistake. Color No Object. An item In a young wife's house Wanted— Girl for light housework, hold account reads: “ Hootmeal, 15 no washing, no objection to green or cents.” Evidently the Scotch kind.—• colored girl.— Classified Ad in the Boston Transcript. Hartford Times. Cottages Built for Luck. Varieties of Instruction. In remote parts of England are still * Cuticura Soap ’Complexions * A r e He a l t hy M AY BE REMNANT OF LOST TRIBES Descendants of Israelitiah Captives | fled from Vrumls, Persia, going over I Carried into Sabylonia 26 Centu j the mountains with ox teams and on j ries Ago Reach Erivan. | fo o t A rabbi, Vanock Slrotnlv, carried Chicago— Thirteen families, be with tim b e r■ >rd* » I Ich *< emed to con lieved to be remnants of the lost tribes nect the Israelite colony at Crum Is \ carried into captivity by Babylonia 26 with the lost tribes, according to the j centuries ago. have reached Krivsn. i cablegram. Armenia, according to a cablegram re Only 47 adults snd 33 children out j ceived by the local branch o f the Near of the large number that started made i East relief, it was announced. They ] the Journey safely, the advice* said. By GEORGE ” H ar« you heard the new« about Frank Jorduiif" The question quickly brought we to th« little group which bail gathered in th« renter >t th« uifit1#. Jordan and I had • nay, within a month of e*< h other, f«*ur year* ago. A year ago. Jordan was taken into the accoui ting division and I was seut out aa salesman. Neither of ua was blessed with an unusual aniouut of bnlliaucy, but we “ got by” in our new jobs well enough to hold them. Imagine my amaieinent, (hen, when I heard: ’ ‘Jordan’s just been made Treasurer of the Company | ** I could hardly believe my ears. But there was the “ Notice to Kin|doyees ' on the bul let in board, telling about Jordans good for tune. Now 1 knew that Jordan was a capable fellow, quiet, end unassuming, but 1 never would have picked him for any such sudden rise. I knew, too, that the Treasurer of the Great Ea »tern had Le be a big man, and 1 wondered how in th« world Jordan landed the place. * The first chanee 1 got, 1 walked into Jordan's new office and after congratulating him warm ly. I asked him to let me “ in” on the detail* of how he jumped ahead a«» quickly. His story is so intensely interesting that I am going to repeat it aa closely as I remember. ” 1 11 tell you just how it happened, George, because you n»ny pick up a pointer or two that will help you. “ You remember how scared I used to he whenever 1 had to talk to the chief! You remember how you used to tell me tint every time 1 opened my mouth 1 put my foot into it, meaning of course that every time I spoke I got into trouble! You remember when Kaiph Hinton left to take charge of the Western of fice and I was asked to present him with the loving cup the boy* gave him, how flustered 1 was and how I couldn t suy a word because there were people arouud f You remember how coufused 1 used to be every time l met new people! 1 couldn't say what 1 wanted to «ay when I wanted to say it; snd 1 determined that if there was any possible chance to learn how to talk I was going to do it. “ The first thing 1 did wus to buy s num ber of books on publie speaking, but they seemed to be meant for those who wanted to become orators, whereas whst 1 wanted to learn was not only how to speak in public but how to speak to individuals under various conditions in business and social life. “ A few weeks later, just as 1 wsa about to give up hope of ever learning how to talk interestingly, I read ari announcement stating that Dr. Frederick Houk Law had just complete«! a new course in business talking snd public speaking entitled ‘ Mastery of Speech.’ 1 sent for them and In s few days they arrived. I glanced through the entire eight lessons, reading the headings snd s few paragraphs here and there, and in about an hour the whole secret of effective speaking wsa npeued to me. “ For example, I learned why I had always lacked confidence, why talking had always seemed something to be dreaded, whereas it is really the simplest thing in the world to get up and talk. I learned fcow to secure complete attention to what I wsa saying aiul how to make everything I said interesting forceful and convincing. I learned the art of listening, the value of silence, and the power of brevity. In stead of being funny at the wrong time, I learned how and when to use humor with tell iug effect. “ But perhaps the most wonderful thing about the lessons were the actual examples of what things to any and when to say them to meet every condition. I found that there waa a knack in making oral reports to my superior* S i -o- ▼.w. PLAYIN G THE GAME ■Ever try the war game?" “ Wall, I’ ve played croquat with mj : Colleg* for Deaf and Dumb. Gallaodet college, Washington D. C - la the only college In the whole world expresaly for deaf and dumb. It Is 'a firat grade college and the scholars art fine looking and intelll gent. W ill Determine* A cti^i. No action will be considered as | blameless unlesa the will was so, for 1 “ by the will the act was directed. R e d C ro s s BALL BLUE I eeed for heby*e clothea, win keep them tweet end eoowy-whlte eatil wore out. T ry h and eee for vowreelf. At J atanasnt Tilmm l f warywliff» F + *a. • ; as CaUaxrs UhortMrt« Dept X Mass e Von R lb v te J ? • i r r e i n a ^M isu ra, BEMNKE.W A L K E * » BUSINESS j s i n u s COLLEGE co lle « Is the biggest, most perfectly equipped T e ee Training Hi-kool In th* North- B in in poettloa w e e t F it ruureeu for a higher _ with more monar I ’rrm aneat position* assured our G raduate« W rite for batate«—Fourth and T ambili. Ptwtland_______________________________ P. N. U. No. 1, 1923