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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1924)
PORT! A Wn, v-rv A i-iX-kl mmr. THHTBI BnrOAPWAY AT ttWIIU, oui Page & Son Portland, Oregon THE CAMPBELL COURT HOTEL III IS 11 E I in 111 TNI sT D X eLats' mm Portland's newest and most'beautiful residential hotel opened Sep tember 1. 1923. Every Room with Bath. Unusual Dinlne-room Service ' Near Theaters, Banks and Shops. Garage. Cars to ail parts of city pass The Campbell Court HoteL , Rates Moderate, Eleventh St. at Main L I Rflol I7"r . 1,. 1 ? . Expert examination free-All work guaranteed. Sen lC(U 1 I C. 11 11 1 1 II "ble Prices. We specialize in Complete Overhauling and Cylinder grinding. SERVICE ANDERSON A MAYER GARAGE & MACHINE SHOP Moved to New Larger Garage, th and Hoyt. Portland Washington G00D EATS AT popular prices - Rest Room for Ladies. Cafetf-Tl Washington St. Between Fifth and Sixth Streets '" PORTLAND, OREGON Ha Was- ATIa .-.- I 0ar EMPLOYMENT OFFICE as- LfO IOU VY a.llt 3, JOD. ists our students. We GUARAN- . , T . , . , TEE our graduates employment. Brick-Laying, Plastering, Tile-Setting. Auto-Mechanics, Electricity, Acetylene Welding. HEMPHILL TRADE SCHOOLS, 125 N. 6th St., Portland, Ore. TORE POINT SEA FOODS. i ua Will Feel at Home Here. OYSTFR CRTI T V Opposite S. P. Waiting Room Fourth and Stark. tatUlXL, Ip ,TS ANYTHING IN FISH WE HAVE IT. swsl--m! Send for our Free Catalogue Fall and Winter 1923-24 It will save you money when you want Sheeplined Coats, Leather Coata, Leather Vests, Macklnawa, Solid Lea ther Guaranteed Shoes, All Leather Leggings, Army and Commercial Wool Underwear, All-Wool Sox. Rubber Boots, and Genuine O. D. Wool Army Blankets. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded. TliffOutiiw Store of p3HlandX)ra ) M THIRD ST.-COR. STARK. GLASSES , That Fit None Better CHARGES REASONABLE Dr. Harry Brown 149 Third St PORTLAND, OREGON EVAN G. HOUSEMAN Osteopathic Physician. Electronic Method of ABRAMS Phone Main 2963. 393V4 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. McMurray, General Passenger Agent, Pittock Block, Portland, Oregon, upon receipt of request by card or letter. Save 25 to 50 Per Cent On Buildinit Material, Roofing Paper, Paints, Varnish, Lumber, Lath, Nails. Shingles, Doors, Windows, and Plumbing Supplies. New and Bacond Hand. Mail Orders Promptly Filled. DOLAN WRECKING & CONSTRUCTION CO. Office & Yard. 4ti0 Belmont St, Portland. Ore. OUT FLOWERS ft FLORAL DESIGNS Clarke Bros., Florists, 287 Morrison 81. We started our weekly auction Bales Wednesday, Nov. 21pt. If you have any thing to consign In horses, mules, cattle, harness or wagons, also farm Implements, jrou can ship direct to the North Portland Horse & Mule Company. Wire, write or phone Empire 0121, and we will give you prompt attention. North Fortland Horse ec JHUIS tJO., 1NO. i-orimiiu, wi cuiii We Specialize in Hides, Pells, Wool, Mohair, Tallow, Casein, Oregon Grape Root Goat Skins, Horse Hair Write for Shipping Tags ft latest Price List Portland Hide & Wool Co. 101 UNION IVfNUt NORTH, PMTUND, MUM. Branch at Pocatello, Idaho For many yer ' have special iXi iu treating CI(..i I Mil poaitiv ly o UT , piUs or refund ; Urn. Seod lor FREE book. i - fHKI DEAN. M.D 2ND AND MORRISON M'!?; Use Blood of Worm i I Paris. A simple worm scientifically l-nowo. ns "frnllorln-nipllonella," may be the salvation of millions of human lives, according to the conclusions of Professor Metalnlkov, Itusslnn savant of the Pasteur Institute, after experi ments lasting since IMS. The "Ballerla-niellonella." according to Metalnlkov, Is the only living thing absolutely Immune to tuberculosis. From iti blood the Russian scientist OFFERS A MARKET FOR YOUR PRnniirR aPorilind, Oreron VAUDEVILLE PHOTO-PLATS Complete Changs Saturday. Adults. Week day Matinee, Sue; Evenings, Jc. Contina- 1 to 11 p. m. Cnildren 10 cents all timet. Write ot for prices and market conditions on Veal, Hogs, Poultry, Fruits, Potatoes, On'ocs, etc Forty Years in the Same Location. Eat More Wheat Maccaroni Spaghetti Ver micelli Noodle Alphabet Fresh Egg Noodles PORTER-SCARPELLI MACARONI CO. Kenton Station, Portland, Orejron. ROOT AND HERB REMEDIES If taken in time, prevent operations for Diabetes, Catarrh, Asthma, Lung. Throat, Liver, Kidney, Rheumatism, Blood, Stomach and all female disorders. Bladder Troubles. The C. Gee Wo Remedies are harmless, as no drugs or poison are used. Composed of the choisest medicinal roots, herbs, buds and bark, im ported by us from far away oriental countries. Call or Write for Information C. Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Company New Locatlon-262V Aider St., & W. Cor. Third, Portland, Oregon . Established 23 Years in Portland. INFORMATION . DEPARTMENT Pleating Embroidery Hemstitching, Buttons Covered. STEfHAN'S 166 Tenth St., . Portland ATTENTION LADIES Sanitary Beauty Parlors We fix you up, we make all kinds of Hair Goods of your combings. Join our School of Beauty Culture. 400 to 414 Dekum Bldg., Fuone Broadway 6902, Portland, Oregon. MOLEF? BARBER COLLEGE Teaches trade In 8 weeka. Rome nav while learning. Positions secured. Writ for catalogue. 234 Burnside street, Port land, Oregon. BRAZING, WELDING ft CUTTING Hortnwest Welding ft Supply Co., 88 1st St, PERSONAL Marry if Lonelr: most incr.AHafnl "TTnma Maker"; hundreds rich; confidential; reli able; years szperience; descriptions free, "The Successful Club," Mil. Nash, Boi 668, Oakland, California. CLEANING AND DYEING JOBK For reliable Cleaning and Dye- vaAvttsW K aarviea parcels to ua. JB We pay return Dostaa-e. Inform- In. IS ation n(i P given upon re- BPr ENKE'S CITY DYE WORKS. Established 1890. Portland, Ore GOING TO BUILD? We have hundreds of plans at 110.00 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 suitable. O. M. A K E R S Desffirninu and Drafting,, 511-12 Couch Building-, Portland, Oregon. Set of $0.00 Teeth, We guarantee material and workmanship. Painless extraction of teeth, 60c. 20 yea 11 in the same location. U. S. DENTISTS, 246ft Wash ington cor. Second, Portland, Oregon. USED jT FORDS r S COUPES, SEDANS, TOURINGS, ROADSTERS Easy Terms used rords Bought and bold FARNHAM ft WILLIAMS, INC., Went Side (Two Stores! East Side. 28 Nor, 11th St, and 211 Grand Ave., Portland, BATTERIES $10 OREGON BATTERY CO. 46 Grand Avenue. Phone, East 1001). PORTLAND, OREGON BUY THE BEST HORSE COLLAR MADE All long rye straw stuffed. Insist on having the collar with the "Fish" Label. , If your dealer does not handla this brand collar, write to us direct P. SHARKEY A SON 53 Union Av Portland, Ore. North Portland Horss ft Mule Co. will hold weekly auction sales at the Union Stockyards, North Portland, each Wed nesday at one o'clock. If you have any thing to sell In horses, mules or milch cows, or harness and wagons, we would be glad to solicit your business, as wa are always In touch with buyers. "LITE-FOOT" Powdered . DANCE FLOOR WAX Gives smooth. Gliding fin ish to hard or soft-wood floors. NO ACID, CREASE OR DUST. Your druggist has It If not, send ua stamps, 75e for one-pound package CLARKE, WOODWARD , DRUC CO. Portland, Oregon. AX CI TIM in Tubercular Fight Is now engaged In producing an anti tubercular serum on which the famous Pasteur Institute pins high hopes. Boy Kills Pal in "Indian" Gams. Qulncy, 111. While the two. with four other boys, were playing "Indian." Grady McKay, eighteen years old, uf Qulncy, was shot t tfcath by bis rors panlon, Charles Uadsell, thirteen yeari old. m root S i Kate Asks for a i I Raise I I Br JANE OSBORN (, 1J1, by MoClur. Newspaper Syndicate.) Kate had worked for Timothy Fan- shaw for nearly a year and dissatisfac tion was creeping upon her. As private secretary to Timothy Fanshaw she knew that others in his employ always had an Increase In wage or salary be fore they had worked for blm a year. It had never been the policy of the ad vertising concern of Fanshaw Jt Sons to pay large salaries to start Em ployees were made to feel that It was a privilege to work for a condern like Fanshaw's; moreover, there was the bait of higher wages. "As soon as you are worth more to us your salary will be Increased," was what the Fanshaws, father and sons, usually said when employing new help ers. But they seldom increased wages to employees who did not Insist on it The dissatisfaction of Kake Weston was so great that, after a particularly busy day In the office one December day, Kate Weston did not sleep at night in fact, she did not try. She was. try ing to compose a suitable speech with which to broach the subject of a raise In salary. She Imagined every possible contin gency, and so vivid was her Imagina tion as she lay In her small boarding house bed that she could almost see Timothy Fanshaw's look of perplexity, She almost heard him say, "Miss Wes ton, I am sorry. But It Is bad policy to pay i person more than he or she Is worth. Your work Is satisfactory, still there are others who would accept your salary who could do the work as well" Kate Weston'j face flushed with In dignation there on her pillow and her fists clenched under the blankets. "Mr. Fanshaw," she whispered, "If there are other women who can do my work as well you had better get one. If you could afford to pay me $30 a year ago you can afford to pay me more now that I am doing twice as much work as I did then." Then she saw Mr. Fanshaw's good- looking face smile mildly. Women In an office always seemed to amuse Mr. Fanshaw a little. If she were a man and were doing the work she was doing now he would pay her twice thirty dol lars, she was sure. But Mr. Fanshaw. like other men, Kate concluded, never liked to let a woman earn much money. Yet It was men like that who threw money away on the women at horae wives and daughters and sisters and mothers who didn't do half so much to deserve it. Why were men always so much more willing to throw money away on a woman than to pay her for what she honestly earned? Kate worked herself up into quite a fever of excite ment and heard the clock strike three before she closed her eyes. Meantime Timothy Fanshaw, napping on the lounge of his sitting room at the club rather than going comfortably to bed, little dreamed he was figuring as an oppressor of poor working girls In any one's imaginings, least of all In those of Kate Weston, his secretary, But he, too, was finding sleep difficult He had something on his mind a prob lera he wanted to .thresh out with him self, and he did not want to turn In for sleep In bed until he had settled it. Toward dawn Fanshaw solved his problem, but he was too sleepy then to take the trouble to go to bed for the brief remainder of the time that he could sleep. So Timothy Fanehaw was no more refreshed than his secretary on the De cember morning that followed. Still a certain sort of excitement served at a stimulant to make him forget bow weary he really was. Dictation, however, flowed along In much the same way as usual. Timothy had a way of attending to certain of his letters almost mechanically and Kate knew so well what he was going to say that the dashes and dots, pot books and loops flowed out from the end of her well-sharpened pencil almost before he bad uttered the words they Indicated. Then came luncheon time. Kate bad decided to approach her employer after he bad eaten. She had an idea that he would be more tractable then than when he was hungry. "I have been rather worried lately," she began. "In fact, I could hardly sleep last night" She had planned this beginning. But Mr. Fanshaw's reaction was not at all according to expectation. She had thought he would merely (mile amusedly and continue signing letters or checks. "What a coincidence," Is what he really said, and be let the pen fall from his hand and pushed the letters back from the blotter on his large flat-topped desk. "You see, I didn't sleep either. I was very much worried, I have come to a fork In the road. I must choose which waV to turn." "So have I," said Kate. Which wasn't what (he had planned to say next, but he managed to get back Into ber role In spite of the false cue. "I have been here almost year, Mr, Fanshaw." "It seems much longer," sighed Tim othy Fanshaw, "We have met here day after day, rain or shine, every day bat two weeks In the summer " "Yes," Interrupted Kate, "and I have grown to know your work so well that I know what you are going to ssy be fore yon tay It" Kate was going to suggest that she could really attend to snost of hit correspondence and there fore might become more valuable to blm. But Timothy Fanshaw Interrupt ed. "And I have become so well acquaint Ml with, yon that I kaow just which way yon are going to look under any given circumstances. Funny, Isn't It?" 'So, as I was going to say," contin ued Kate, determined not to be side tracked, "I have been thinking that un less this Is worth something to you I'd better try to locate somewhere where there will be a chance for advancement. I have ambitions as much as any one 'You ambitious?" exclaimed Mr. Fanshaw. "Why, I never thought of that. I didn't realise that you were that sort of a girl. I thought" 'I hope you didn't think that I was willing to see every one advance him self while I" 'While you, what?" said Timothy Fanshaw, looking now really amused. Kate's little hands became tense and her cheeks showed the color of Indigna tion. "While I stay here In this office get ting just $30 a week for the rest of my life." Tra blessed 1" said Timothy Fan shaw. Now Kate's Indignation was Increas ing. "Don't say Tra blessed' to me," she said, with fire in her usually soft thrown eyes. "You seem to think or try to make me think you think that Just because I'm a woman I've no ambition. I didn't mean to become angry, Mr. Fanshaw. I meant only to ask for a raise." Mr, Fanshaw here began to laugh. "If I should offer you $35 or $40 or $50 you'd remain?" he asked. "I suppose I would," said Kate, a little shamefaced. "For $50 I know I would." "And why should I? I can get a dozen girls who can do your work as well as you do It for $30 a week." "That's Just exactly what I thought you were going to say," said Kate, Timothy Fanshaw ignored the inter ruption. "But I can never find another young woman who will so perfectly co incide with my idea of a perfect wife. You see, Miss Weston, I'm humbly beg ging you to marry me, while you ap parently would rather continue as my secretary with an Increased salary." Kate Weston was still blushing furi ously and becomingly, but It was from embarrassment, not from Indignation. "You mean that that you love" "Certainly I love you." "I suppose It would be fibbing to say I didn't love you, too," admitted Kate. "But I never thought" But Kate never finished the sentence. EGYPT HAS MANY COURTS Mixed Population of Country Requires Brand of Justice for . Each. The doubt as to the nationality of a person suspected of murder In Alexan dria reveals the difficulties attendant on th number of Jurisdictions that ob tain in Egypt. The Egyptian Investi gating authorities are not recognized as competent to proceed In the case If the accused Is a German, while the German authorities will not take ac tion In the matter till It Is decided that he belongs to their nationals. Egypt possesses at least three con current Jurisdictions. The native courts deal with all crimes committed by na tives and all civil disputes between Egyptian subjects. The mixed courts, staffed with judges representative of all the European powers holding ca pitulations in Egypt, decide civil cases between Europeans of different na tionalities or between Europeans and natives. And the consular courts of the various powers decide all cases between their own nationals and charges of crime brought ugainst such nationals. Finally the "Sharla," or na tive religious Moslem courts, decide all cases of Inheritance and of what we should call "chancery" matters for Mo hammedans, while the different patri archal councils act In similar cases for Jews, Copts, Armenians and others. Manchester Guardian. Sensitive Ears. An amusing Incident, says a contrib utor, occurred at the Republican na tional convention In Chicago In 1904. The late George A. Knight .of- Califor nia, who bad one of the loudest voice of any public speaker of his time, wag one of the speakers. Among those who preceded btm on the program were some of the foremost orators of the party, whereas Knight was compara tively unknown. They struggled vali antly to make themselves heard by the vast audience that filled every nook and cranny of the Coliseum, but were frequently Interrupted by cries of "Louder I Louder I" Then came Knlght't turn, and he ad vanced to the front of the platform. "Ladles and gentlemen," he began, and the resonant tones rolled over the as tonished audience like a tidal wave. Before he could say another word a voice from a remote corner of the boll called out wltb startling distinctness, "Not to loud I" The laughter that fol lowed made It Impossible for the speaker to continue for several minutes. ! "Van." The Dutch have the reputation of be ing very economical and very careful In watching the details of domestic affairs, no matter how small. "Helnyi" called the father. "Vat?" answered the ton. "Run and count dem geese again. Helny." "AU right" Helny went; Helny returned. "Helny I" said the father. "Vat?" said the ton. "Did you count dem geese agsln. Helny?" "Yes." "How many vat dey, Helny r "Van." Daft right, Hslny." ctatp irPTTrc: 1 IN BRIEF. Silverton. Sufficient stock in the Silverton Food Products company has been subscribed by local fruit growers to Insure them the controlling inter est. This company has been Silver ton's cannery company for the past few years. Salem. Selection of a board of ar bitration to settle the differences aris ing between local journeymeu plumb ers and their employers probably will be announced at a joint meeting of the unionists and master plumbers to be held this week. Salem. The state tax on gasoline and distillate sales in Oregon during November amounted to $202,697.63, ac cording to a report issued by the sec retary of state. To date the tax on fuel oils has returned to the state a total of $4,869,826.17. St. Helens. Circuit court, Judge J. A. Eakln presiding, convened Monday morning. The first day was taken up in hearing motions and default cases The second will be naturalization day. Estacada. While running tha edger saw at the Electric Lumber & Manu facturing company's mill at River Mill Saturday, Elmer Crozier's left hand was severed after getting, caught in a saw. He was taken to Estacada where Dr. G. F. Midford gave medical atten tion. ' Salem Joseph Carl Krauger and Miss Lillian E. Maxwell, both of Fos ter, Linn county, were married "on high" here Saturday afternoon, in the words of Judge Kuntz, who performed the ceremony. The wedding took place In the capitol dome, more than 250 feet above the ground. Eugene. Work of constructic?; a ten-wire Western Union Telegraph line between Eugene and Klamath Falls over the route of the new rail way being built across the Cascade mountains by the Southern Pacific company, will start soon, according to J. A. McKevltt, manager of the company's local office. Hood River. The movement of ap ples, from here has resumed, following tlw holidays, and at present the Apple Growers' association, the total re ceipts of the organization reaching 1,496,464 boxes, has on hand only 270,774 boxes, less than 400 cars. The shipments kept up at a more rapid rate than usual during the holiday period. Eugene. Eugene's bank deposits show a big increase last year over previous years, according to state ments just Issued by the three insti tutions. At the close of business in December, 1923, the total deposits amounted to $6,667,442.74 as compared with $5,876,974.69 at the same time in 1922, an Increase of $790,646.06, more than 13 per cent. Eugene. Fire that started Saturday afternoon at 3:10 o'clock in the work shop of the Lane Automobile com pany's garage on Pearl street com pletely ruined the interior of the building occupied on the lower floor by the automobile company and on the upper floor by the Oregon apart ments, entailing a loss estimated be tween $80,000 and $90,000. Salem. County school superintend ents who have been In Salem the past week grading papers in the recent teachers' examinations completed their duties Saturday night. Several hundred papers were graded, and these have been turned over to the Btate superintendent of schools. An nouncement of the results probably will be made within the next few days, John Day. Supervisor Reid of the Malheur national forest announces a meeting to be held In Canyon City January 16 In the Interest of stock- growers and other persons Interested in the forest reserves. Grazing Exam lner Dalton, who has charge of general supervision of the appraisal work for this division, and J. E. Snow, presi dont of the Grant County Stockgrow era' association, will attend. Albany. Although risking an In junction, the county court decided to proceed with the 1924 tax levy under the old budget law and In doing so published the budget In Albany news papers Saturday. A public hearing on the budget will be held January 26, This procedure Is about a month over due but unless someone enters a suit against extending the tax utter the hearing the court will proceed under the old law. Grants Pass. A mammoth redwood measuring 23 feet across the butt and 70 feet In circumference, was cut this week in the Redwood forest, near Crescent City, Cat., on the Redwood highway. The tree, which was 300 feet tall, was the largest ever cut by the sawmill operating In that vicinity It will furnish 250,000 feet of lumber, enough to keep the mill running for three days and It will furnish a cargo for two steamers of the size now en tering the Crescent City harbor. It Is pointed out that BO cottages, each containing 6000 feet of lumber, could be erected from the lumbor cut from this tlnglo tree. J. A MAN WHO BECAME FAMOUS Doctor E. V. Pierce, whose picture appears above, was not only a success ful physician but also a profound student of the medicinal qualities ot Nature's remtxlles, roots and herbs, and by close observation of the methods used by the Indians, he discovered their great remedial qualities, especially for weaknesses of women, and after care ful preparation succeeded in giving to the world a remedy which has been used by women with the best results r half a contury. Dr. Pierce's Favorite . reseriptloa Is still in great demand, v..'.:io many other so called "cure-alls i'. ; como and gone. The reason for , rhenomonal success Is because of its Volute purity, and Dr. Pierce's high iiauding as an honored citizen of liuilulo is a guarantee of all that is claimed for the Favorite Proscription us a regulator for tbo ills peculiar to women. Send 10c. for trial pkg. to Dr. Piorce's Invalids Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. Sarcasm, "Stockings!" Smithers pounded the table. "Stockings! Why, you've got gray stockings and red stockings, silk, lisle thread, canton flannel, wool, demi tasse and socks, stockings until why it takes two bookkeepers to balance my checkbook, Mary. Stockings! You want more stockings! Say, whadda think yuh are, anyhow, a centipede?" Richmond Times-Dispatch. ti 1 Hard to Imagine. 'J In whatever way It tomes to pass, ' we know that when we see a new star we are witnessing the actual explo- j slon of a sun. Vou know what occurs when a few grains ot gunpowder are j ignited; try to Imagine the same thing V happening to a huge globe weighing billions Upon billions ot tons! The force created Is a million billion times greater than that of an explosion ot dynamite. The Boycott. The word boycott means to combine to refuse to work for, deal, or as sociate with or assist a person; a species ot excommunication; to place merchandise under a ban to prevent its sale. It was a method of intimi dation adopted by the Irish Land league In 1880, and Captain Boycott was one ot its first victims. Drinking Coffee In Bagdad. For a cent one gets a cup of coffee in Bagdad coffee shops, and, in addi tion, a narghile, in which Shirza tobac co is smoked, The coffee uliop is the Bourse for the natives. Roman Soldiers Fed Hard-Tack Hard-tack, similar to the war bis cuit supplied to modern armies, was an article of food for the Roman sol diers during the Second and Third centuries, A. D. We Give What We Are. He is the best teacher of others who Is best taught himself; that which we know and love we cannot but com municate. Thomas Arnold. . Full of It. An Englishman has discovered how to make elecricity from wind. This being so we know a lot ot fellows who are human power plants. Dogs Traced Back to Pharaohs. Hounds of the same breed which were pets of the Pharaohs, Egypt's an cient rulers, were exhibited at the re cent dog show in London. MIRRORS AND GLASS Central Mirror & Glass Works Manufacturers of Hlrh flrnde French Mirrors; nevellnir; Damaged Mirrors Re-' silvered, sOo a siiuars foot, and Mirrors rramea, i.inss irir Auto curta na wind shields, Hradllfht and all Purposes. 305 vvuaeier Direet, s'oruana, uregon. CLASSES WILL SAVE YOUR EYES O Expert tittins at lowest prices. All styleeof Glasses. Lenses duplicated from broken pier. Mail in your bro ken alassea. Satisfaction (luarantAMi Dr. A. E. Hurwlts, W First St.. fortland. Ore. SUPERFLUOUS HAIR Removed without Injury to th iktn by Key-Ron, Depilatory, BampW on rw.uwt. NyHorn Lb tftloriM, 619 Morgan Bldg.. Portland, Onwon. il dmk for babyt clothe, will fcMp thtm ua ataaiMsarw-sawKltaa linlil Vnffi sMIf . Are Yoo Satisfied? SusiSd Is the blrcest, most perfectly aejulppod Business Tralnlns; Hrhool In the Nortk west. Kit yourself far a hiarhar position with mors money. Permanent positions issured our tlraouatee. Writ for atakjf a ourut ana laaihl! Portland. P. N. U. No. 2, 1924' i