Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR)

 - Class of 1926

Page 1 of 96

 

Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1926 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 96 of the 1926 volume:

The LEDGER High School of Commerce Portlanc1,0rcgon 5? Hn, -Y-MY Y A ,YW 4. JLNIQ 192 ? ? Tlfar 5 ia' xii - wvrf -x.-' , 1 H YS 1 .... X 14? 'QW Foreword Ages ago 21 monk worked painstakingly over a manuscript. His only light was that shed hy a slender taper, and as the taper grew shorter, the monk bent lower over his work. Finally the candle burned to its socketg the monk was forced to postpone his lahor until the following morning. As we Climh the ladder of the years, we trace the flowering of this seed into one of the greatest factors in life today, the only substitute for experience, that inexhaustihle well of knowl- C1.lQC-Il hook. 1 ' f . , ,,., N JAMES F. ELTON Pfiilflpllf R, They Build Too Low Who BuildBeneath the Stars CCLASS POEMJ F.-wif Howif, S. P. lVe've smoothed the bulging hummocks of black soilg lfpon our crying backs welve carried stones So that their humping sides could never spoil The richness of the upturned earth's brown tones. Now we have hauled great blocks of marble, white As stars, and strong as pine trees in a gale, And mixed a creamy mortar of the bright Shan-p-gleaming hopes and dreams that are so frail. Y'Ve stand with squares of marble at our feet And mortar laying ready to apply, And with the white stones heaped about, the fleet Sharp twinkle of dead white shows in the sky. The towers we build must pierce the heart of hlars, They build too low who build beneath the stars. JUNE CLASS SONG C'l'o the tune of Always J Kiixxriru L. Co1.1.1Ns, S. P. Always glad days go You will hold our hearts always. In life's ceaseless flow Good you were and kind We can't forget. Helping us to find Memories like beams Roads above the grind, always, alway Glowing gold with dreams Come softly yet. Glowing like a flame, always , , Is your noble name, always. Commerce days always will be B d , I Though our way leads on, C1 s in our ove rosarv. . ' ' lNow there blooms a dawn Commerce though we part, always For Commerce we'll strive on, yes Page 6 S. always ille- 0 tgafi.-'L I c BIBLIOGRAPHY The following books were used as reference in the compiling of this volume : The Last of the Mohicans ...,... ,,.,...,.,Elmer Lincoln Midsummer Night's Dream ,. .......... . .......l..........,.. Esther L0fStr8Ild M . L k d M .Al h' .... Hl B d N ll' B'tt- rs ec S an rs es me een auer an e le I ti Certain People of Importance .... Lillian Kaylor, Maysel Plouff Undine .,.........................,.,.............. ........,,,........ D orothy Baurchmidt l,G0ld,, Johanna Mcclure The Young Diana .....,. . .....Y... Lucile Belknap Loves Labor Lostn V Alice McKay The Smile ' '- -'A-' '-' ' R U t h Beynon -'Little Women ,,,,,,,, Margie McNair, Jennie Cole, Dorothy Veatch 'The Lady of the Decoration ....,,.. . ..,..,. Lucille Bowman npeter Pann Martin Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm ,... ........., Viola Bradley .The Skyrocketn H ----W-'Ruby Meadows Messr. Marco Polo , ...,.....,...........................,,..,,............ Orville Buckner .The Golden Treasury..-W -.'.- wcarlotta Mitchell Humble Folk - ,.., Florence Fuller, Mary Hoglund, Irene Camp .Ocean Gold., mW,Mary Mitchell Glorious Apollo .,.,...,,......,,............,. ........,.......,......,, E dward Cheney HAS You Like It,,m,-In um--.Lillian Morrison Rose Dawn ----4---- - ---- R Usalie Clausen --puck of P00k'5 Hill ,,,,,,, ,..,,..,. H elen Nelson Master Skylark ...,. ...,.............. K enneth Collins -.fl-he Crock of Goldw .-..-'.'... --..l,-.-,.. E dith Olson The Idler ---------- -----A-' R alfmond Dielschneidel' The Merchant of Venice ,,,, .. ....... Morris Overback Pollyanna ...... .... ...,...... M 1 lriraret Duffy .UI-he Wizard of Oz-,WAHM lllvwvllh Axel Pearson 'joan of Arc - ------ M alvina Feldsteln 4-The Beloved Woman ,,,,,,,,.l,A,,,.Al,,,,l,,,,,, ,..,..A,., L oi-na Pearson ULamb,s Essayn ' ' L Ydia Fimmel The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam ......... .-.l. G Gorge Pohl mrhe Deerslayern -- -------- N Ofman Fones The Sheiknn, ,,,A,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,l,,l,,,,,A,. ,,,,,,, K enneth Richards Nrom SawyerH ' i James Gilham The Quenchless Light ...... ....... M Brian RitiSel'lh0USe , ... 'Wh1rl1gxgs ......,,,........,..,,..,...,. .,.,,,, i fi- i Picture Books ' ...,........................ Oliver 1AlloverJ Twist ' 'Old World Lace .............. Evangeline .......,................... Webster's International ...... Sense and Sensibility ...... Java Head ..................... Child of the Wild ....... Wind in the Willows ..,,... 4 i 1 , . - 'Ariel' ......,..,,............,..,........,.. Happy Though Married ....,. Understood Betsy ...,.,..... A Pair of Blue Eyes ...... Two Little Conf ederates ,.,. Anna, The Adventuressn ..... 'Baron Munchausenn ....I,,..,,,.....,.,.. 'The Daughter of an Empress 'A Young Man's Fancy ........... Elizabeth Gourlay, Nazarene, Hutchings, Edna Baumgartner 'Some Things That Matter ..,.. ,. ......... Gunda Grueger, Josephine Bozich, Mary Homolka Helen Hergert, Elizabeth Watson Hanson .,,.....Arline Holloway Marie Houquez ...........,,.Faye Howe ,........Sarah Battaglia .........Ruth Beahm .......Nathan Campf ..............Ruby Eklof .,.....Edwin Gronquist ,.,....Bernice Hubbard .......Helen Inghram John Keats ......,........., Captain Blood .............. The Young Enchanted ...., The Man Who Came Back ..... The Faery Queen . ......... The Princess Far Away ..,, .. The Rover ............Y..,....... .. Our Mutual Friend ....,. .. .I ii Youth ........,.,..........l...... Ivanhoe ....,.,,............. Unknown Quantity .. ..,. Woman as Decoration ...... . Moonstone ., ........,.,......,... Portrait of a Lady ..... . ,.......,Siegfried Rosen ...,....l-Iarold Sammons ..........Helen Sheldon .........Walter Schumaker ..,......Dorothy Smith .........Lucille Smith ....,..Gladys Stierle ...........Mata Stitt ........Anne Streight .........Edward Turner .........Margaret Wellman ......,..............Merle Willis .,.......Katherine Sawatsky ..............Ethel Winship Dun Quixote ..,.......,,......... .......... ..................... J 0 hn Works . .... Evalyn Jensen The Charm School ...... .. .....,.............................,......................,.... . .........Ethel Keller ....,,..............Claire Thompson, Madge Webb, Doris Witteman ....,,,Elizabeth Keliy So Lee Kreml The Blue Bird ...,. ................Genevieve Neal ..,.....Esther Ls, Mar, Josie Hughes Happy Prince''......,..,............ Howard Van Wagner Larsen The Keeper of the Bees .,.... .......Mrs. A. B. Wicklund Page 7 4. , l James Gilham SDMJ ide nf Norman Fonts JL nicanf -at -Arms Kenneth Collins, fdiior Nfrs.WwMund xffduzlror ji -mf Cheney Sine Q Pagf S nu Dielschneidcr ryrtaasllffr Alice McKay Secrztary -1-i9 MRS. A. B. VVICKLUND JAMES KHLHAM President june '26 Class Hi-Y '25, Secretary-Treasurer '26 Football '23, '24, '25 l uture: A ring-nmftfr in Ringling Hrolhnr rirrru. Kansas State Normal School Vniversity of Oregon IXIOTTO: Timm' build too lou' who lzuilrl bfllfllfll COLORS: NORMAN F0NEs Athletic Letterman '24, '25, '26 Hi-Y '25, '26 Ledger Staff '26 l uture: l'ropfirlor uf Yr Lilllt' Gif!! Shnppff' KENNETH C01.i.iNs Silver Pencil Secretary '25 Ledger Staff '24, '25 Class Editor '26 l ulurc: .ln inrirlzflor in nfillirlii tlanring in llmlmu-Collin! luylxlulr. lfvilrl Urfllirl mul Green Pagr 9 lQDVVARIJ Cl-IENEY Football '22, '23, '24, Capt. '25 Basketball '23, '25, Captain '24 Track '23, '24, '25, '26 Futura-: .1 dirrrlor in 11 mania xiurlio. ilu' .vfzlrx R,xYMoND D1EI,scHNElDEk Foutlmll '22, '23, '24, '25 Hi-Y '24, '25, '26 President Student Body '26 lfrxluie: .-Imrrirafr port l!lIlfl'!1fi'. Ax.xcE McKAY Vice-President '26 Student Body Secretary '25 Class Secretary Room Representative '22, '23, '24, '25 lfntilic: lI'ill !rm'l1 tht- mzlirri of lfurnpr lull' tlrzmry. 'R B552 mn ul!! flffa nan 7Vlaluu1a. Teldfel n 40539 'URN 7114771 EV Helen Bauer '2V1ar7a ref Qllzan Wforrixon Cfaufen mffary Homolka Pagr I0 W 'Uwlet Qcnfon Qbuse IQcml . 'glljorks EDYVIN ciRONQUlST Football '24, '25 Lemon C '24, '25, '26 Future: .1 umtlrl for .lrrnff MARL-xN Rtrrnxuouse Delta Sorosis '25, '26 Typing awards O. G. A. award Future' llrfrrzlrr nl .lllffrl Tziuygnm FAYE Hows Editor Ledger '2-I-, '25, '26 President Glee Club '24, '25, '26 President Silver Pencil Club '24, '25, '26 Future: Ring l.unln1'r .v ,lrmirt nr mlm- lrrprlrl. Euzrxneru li0URLAY Ledger Staff '23 Blotter Staff '23 Secretary-Treasurer Glee Club '24 lfuluruz .-I rrvlnrrlzrr ol affinity :rims uulr. lVlARGARET DUFFY Beta Sorosis Treasurer '2 Room Representative '23 June '26 Class Play 5 Future: Plustfc Jurgeun. and brauiy rp,-rinlirl, Lmuse KREMI, Glee Club '24, '25 Rooters' Club '25 Girls' Basketball '25 Futurc: .I flaring fflldfkfll brlfkrtrrr. llElrEN NELSON Alpha Sorosis '26 Typing Awards O. G. A. awards Future: Thr leading lad Valrniinou Jurtrnur. ' fnllrzr ails. k Z - - ' -'AT' ELIZABETH KELLY President '25 Alpha Sorosis '25, '2 Future: .-l ,tuuntlrr ov a ll plum Cult. .VINA FELDSTEIN llonor Student Silver Pencil '26 Blotter Staff '25, '26 M .-x 1 l'ulu11': .l i m:tlrr'rr' 1,1 ltllln. How.-xRo VAN VVAGNER Basketball '25 Lemon C 6 umf' jnr Ur- Rnn umuiuu Room Representative '23, '24 '25 Future: Thr Wild' lllzrn in Rum BEAHM Ihr Cin ur. Glee Club '24, '25, '26 Future: l'rr1itlrnI Srttlkr lfllnrrunr' Lfngltf. Ros,xL1n CLAUSEN Sorosis '25, '26 nf thx Prnt,-r.vinnnl Future: .ln nfrnrr of rz pr! mankfy lnrm In Lu: .-ln,uwlt'5. Lll,l,lAN MORRISON Vaudeville '23, '24 Alpha Sorosis '24 llulure: .-l rlmruy elrl in Crr'rnez'irl1 I-'nllirr y or Rudolph Page II . ...,. AXEI, Pe,tRsoN Editor Blotter '25 Baseball '23, '24, '2 Football '25 Fu! ure: rl l1llIlf'r-1m1l- llffwf. 5, '26 rg: man i EL17,xRETH VVATSON Sergeant-at-arms '26 Alpha Sorosis '24, '25, '26 Typing awards Future: Ifxm-:'u1ur in Egyptian pyra mlrlr. l'IEl.liN BAUER Ledger Staff '25 Glee Club '24 Fulure: Thr flair all-:'in'r of Inn! '60 Vtousr LARSEN Glee Club '23 Secretary Beta Sorosis '25, '26 Future: .-In urrnrr of 1: flnntinc bmuly Jlmppf' nn the .lumzon Rlifrr. lNlARY Ho1v1oLK,x Delta Sorosis '26 Typing awards O. G. A. awards Future: The fin! SUUIIHUI G ofzwnor of Orrgo rr. Emru OLSON Room representative '24, '25 Future: Srzwlirlr rnnyul In India. JOHN WORKS President '25 Hi-Y '25, '26 Student Body Council '23, '24, '25 Vice-President '25 Class Play Future: .4 janitor in Ihr Rritirh Illu- Ifllm. 11. -QQSQ LER5ER qzuwfr Befknalv 6,'!U11:r QL Mar jane IH fiufry jVIeudau!J Jkuiatsliy K Cfaurc 7Aomj6.von I'z1g11' I 2 544 rc4fL,.Bc1.flcLy1z14 'ULULGHMO fur Domllzy Smlfh L CEVIFLIFDB 'Mal 53255 V . Ha I1 J 0 fl LUCILE BELKNAP President, Gamma Sorosis '26 Girls' Basketball '25, '26 Gold Medal Operator Future: Conrludar of the Portland Somfplzony Orrhntra. SARAH BATTAGLIA Glee Club '23, '24 Delta Sorosis '24, '25 Vice-President Delta Sorosis '26 Future: .-I di.ItinguiJlIrd nrtixt. HAROLD SAMMONS Hi-Y '25, '26 Football '25 Vice-President Lemon C '25 Future: ,fl prolrrxional wig mulefr for Ihr I'rI'1Ire of Walfs. HELEN INGHRAM Beta Sorosis '24, '25, '26 Glee Club '24 Room Representative '26 Future: .1 .furgiral nurn. JOSIE HUGHES Vaudeville '24 Alpha Sorosis '25 june '26 Class Play Future: A ruatinrr favorite in th: Roxzbull Gxrlx' Chorus. GENEVIEVE NEAL Gamma Sorosis '24, '25, '26 Glee Club '23, '24 Future: An' luir to a fin plate mag- 1Iaff'.I millwm. CLAIRE THOMPSON lahoma Typing awards Glee Club '25, '26 .4 -,- . VIoI.A BRADLEY Student Body Council '25, '26 Ledger Staff '23, '25 President Delta Sorosis '25 l uIuI:: .l ln1I'lII'luI' girl. EVALYN JENSEN Tennis '25, '26 Typing awards l uIuru: Thr zvinnrr nf Ihr Lenglrn- lf'rIn'rI rrmlrll ,mr rf-nrl1l'J rhnmpinn- .vlnp --19.52, VIVIAN lvl.-XRTIN Beta Sorosis '24, '25, '26 june '26 Class Play Gold Medal Award lfuturc: .-I .llark Srnnrl bathing llmllty. ARI.lNE HALLOWAY Typing awards O. G. A. awards l IItIIro: Prirvlfr n'IrI'lIIry to Ihr tnmlr ull ff0nInIf'rI'1'. ANNE STREIGHT Ledger '25 Sorosis Secretary '25 Room Representative '24- Future: flu ownrf of a lmngaroa farfn In .lurtmlIfI. RUBY MEAnows Secretary Joint Sorosis '24, Vice-President Delta '25 Gold Medal Operator l utIIru: SI'I'n'lrIry' of Ihr Orfgon Wait- rrr' I'IIInn. ETHEL KELLER Glee Club '23 '25 Delta Sorosis '25, '26 Rooters' Club '25 liuture: .4 book agent for .flltrndarf Hook Conzprzny. ICTHEL VVINSI-IIP Alpha Sorosis '25, '26 lfuture: .-lmfriI'f1'.f fnvnfitr 1IIn:'ir flap- prr. EsTHER LA lVlAR Gamma Sorosis '25, '26 Secretary '25 Room Representative '25 Future: The jirxf mrthiurt f'mIgnInt tu .llllVJ. DOROTHY SMITH Alpha Sorosis, Secretary '25, President '26 Ledger Business Staff '26 O. G. A. award Future: Inxfrurtnr in Burinnr Collrge ,lar .lllllfllr Dumb-bflli. IRENE CAMP Typing awards O. G. A. lfuture: .I lI14mrIn fly zulzen not rm- ployrd rr: Lalnzlhrtrrt Kirulergartrfz !nII'lIf'r. KATHERINE SAYVATSKY Treasurer, Alpha Sorosis '26 Girls' Basketball '24, '25 Gold Medal Operator Fixture: ,-I rinlinirt of noted ffpuia- lmn. ROBERT HANSON Entered from Ponca City, Ok- Hi-Y ' Silver Pencil '25, '26 Ledger Staff '24, '25 Future: jurlgz of tht Suprrmr Court. Future: A petit: toe damn at th: Bakrr thmtn. Page I3 25, '26 Mfew 77'er9'evf Mane ffffulfuez .0- Q' ZULLIICI Jlfzmvmcher' 'r1VIa7.rel 'Pio Qmlle Bowman -fc? gi Lcvsczl ap Fr'- 'Dorm Llhlleman IFIOYCHCP 'Fuller Jos 47111 5 ne Bogich Qnneth 'jiichards dwg Ylorotlj 'Ueatrh 3... fdward 'Ihmer Qarloifa 'Mitchell Szeyfried 'IQ:.ren Pngr' IJ HELEN HERGERT Glee Club '25 Beta Sorosis '25, '26 Future: Illvrtir anrl palm rrarlrr al Zapata Swamp, Cuba. JOSEPHINE Boztcu Entered from Jefferson O. G. A. award Typing awards Future: rl randidatr for Ihr Qurrn of Ihr Rorr Frrfival in 19:75. MARY MlTCHEI,I. Entered from Marion High School, Marion, Indiana Gamma Sorosis '25, '26 Typing awards Future: Chirl rank nn Ihr l'nrlinf. Esrnen LOI-'STRAND Glee Club '25 Future: Mix: l'orIIaml in thr Al- lanlir CIM' hrauly ronlrxl. M:lYSEL PLOUFF Alpha Sorosis '26 Rooters' Club '25 Future: Strand loan of ,hr in Ihr tra! . . . . 5 agrumt muon! and garlir in 191. Donorm' VEATCH Orchestra '22, '23, '24, '25, '26 Future: Thr ronirntrrl tvilr of KU. CARLo'rrA MlTCHEI.I, Typing award Future: Prrrizlrnf of irt'J illirunihfapi l'ni:m. JACOB FRtEDMAN Lemon C Basketball '26 Future: .l PIOVUJIOV of zoalogy in 0. .L L. J 'A 0 ,V IE, UEZ ro ' '25,l 6 'lve l Club ' , '26 Roo resentativ 25 Future: l trd rritic of rtvy. KENNETH RICHARDS Orchestra '23, '24, '25, '26 Silver Pencil '25 Band '24, '25 Future: Lradrr of th: Krnnrth Rich- arrlr jazz Band. GUNDA CIRUEGER Beta Sorosis '25, '26 U. fr. A. june '26 Class Play Future: .-I pmfrlror in a Chtnryr Jrhool of f1'm1u'hiJm. DORIS XNITTEMAN Tv ing awards .P Future: Ilrmnnriratnf 0 rrmhing .floors in Ihr fa has at il: rlogan, Brhind Ihr t Bakr l'f:'rn mpaign fvhirh ihlERI.E VVtLLts Glee Club '23 Beta Sorosis '25, '26 Treasurer '26 Future: Unr nf Fla ZirgfrId'r fa:'ariI.'J. TKERESA M. TIMMONS Entered from Girls' Polytechnic O. G. A. Awards Typing Awards Future: Prolrrxional pararhute jumprr. WVALTER SCHUMACKER Entered from Washington Room Representative '25 Band '25 Future: Thr pilot ol The Crrat Fly, ,Iamaur airplanr. EDNA BAUMGARTNER Sorosis '23, '24, '25 Glee Club '22, '23, '24 Fuilure: .I ro-xtrnlnl fwiir ni Ihr Pini- mr. FLORENCE FULLER Girls' Basketball '26 Typing awards 0. G. A. award Future: .I Frfrrirlarz- in Pfhing. Chinn. Rangrrf' EDWARD TURNER Entered from Franklin Future: Thr Sfwnfh .rlrrirtant Iv Ihr' Shah nf l'rrrfa. LUCll.l.E BowMAN Secretary Gamma Sorosis '26 Girls' Basketball '25 Gold Medal Operator Future: ,fl minionary in Ihr Fiji l,rlnmf.t. SIEGFRIED RosEN Editor of Blotter '25 Student Body Council '24 Ledger Staff '24 Future: Blower al bubhlry from raxtlu in Spain arr built. rhr Philanthrnfvf Il'I l'hilnlugi:I'J whifh Paar I5 .-ldvirrr 7W1qarene Hutchmrnjzxv ,Ma dye lljebb f Ry ILL 'Pu cynun 7Vl'ffzc' Biff? vu..- Qruille Buffy: er i 3 ,QQ J ' L is-. VJOIILIVYHLA ,MI CYLQ ru Dorotly Bauersclfam idt Pa ucilfe Smith Qclzfa rfrimmel Xl 40ma 'Peamon 'YV1ar7Le'McN41Lr ge 16 Iwata Stir-r 7VIary Hoglund A ' i f . -I - - 'J - ,Q : ,aa t NAZARENE HUTcHtNcs Ltt.t.tAN KAYt,ott NATHAN CAMP!-' President of Joint Sorosis '25 Ledger Staff '25 Student Body Council '25 Delta Sorosis '25, '26 O. G. A. awards Typing awards Future: Fin! woman Sxfrzlary nf Future: Slnr of n Hrozzrlruny Jmtrrr Slafr. - LUctt.Ltz SMITH MABGE WEBB Alpha Sorosis V.-PreSident '26 Fttturc: juifily-fjtlrnfur tzaitetr to the lYl7lllNIt'Yl1l t' I ll KJ' fl L'07lg7f'HH t' O' delegate '26 nn Ihr hfuuvllortl nn Ihr Slyx, Typtng awards Future: ,Gown dnignfr in Charhzt- pnym, 'fru. Gt,ADYs STIERLE LYDIA FIMMEL Ledger Staff '24 Glee Club '24- Glee Club Secretary '25 Gamma Sorosis '25, '26 Room Representative '25 Typing awards Future: Snrrtary to the l'rrTi.'lfnt on Future: .1 rzrrrt .tzrvirf agent on Ihr Ihr planet fllarr. Sahara Drrrrt. Mounts Ovetumctc RUBY EKLOF Future: Author' of Bland ant! Thuzt- cylee Club '24, '25, '26 drr Brtlladr. . ,k . I'uture: in frrrnlm fxplnrrr oy the Ungon Caztfr. Netue Btrre -IOHAEN MCCL Ledger Staff '25 1 o o 6 Glee Club '24 F e' . r o nf Hrnnafnnm Future: Pralzuinnnl utindutz' -zf-arhn. I' Mn MARGIE MCNAIR Onvttuz BUCKNER Entered from Franklin High Hi-Y President '25, '26 School Golf '24 Typing awards Class Play Manager jan. '26 Future: A Vamp in lllovifdom. Future: :I Wnrltfr Champion golfer, MATA STITI' MARY HOGLUND Entered from Girls' Polytechnic Alpha Sorosis '25, '26 Future: Conlrntzd hourzwifr. Entered from Girls' Polytechnic Future: A Grand Opzra Jingzr. jBNNte Cots Delta Sorosis '25, '26 Glee Club Spring '25 l uture: Tall lady in thx rirrur. Pane 17 Vaudeville '23, '24, '26 Yell Leader '24, '25 Blotter Staff '24, '25, '26 Future: .4 pralnmr in th: Salem Silrnl Yr!! I.rrtdfrJ' Inrtitttlv. BBRNICB HUBBARD President Beta Sorosis '26 Secretary Joint Sorosis '25 Blotter Staff '25 Futurez Thr foumlrr of an Orphnftt' llumr for CMJ. RUTH BBYNON Vice-President Gamma Sorosis '25 Future: Oivnrr nj rrnrodil: farm in .Vnrfhrrn .4lrtJhn. LonNA PEARSON Delta Sorosis '25, '26 Typing awards O. G. A. Future: Przirtlnr Pmrrnn, prfrlrr: dnl- tiff. BENJAMIN LEE Basketball '24, '25, '26 Hi-Y '26 Lemon C '23, '24, '25, '26 Future: .-I bnrhzthall :oath at 0.fl.C. DOROTHY BAURSCHMIDT Entered from a Montana High School Delta Sorosis '25 '26 Future: tlflodzl for Charlu Dana Cib- Jon. MARGARET WELI.MAN Typing Awards Future: A Private Szrrzlary for tht Cnvnnar of Orrgon. - - x ':, g All My Aprils FAYE HowE Eehtrateb tn the jliflemnrp nf: louise Brown, Qpril 4, 1926 Qklha Grunhquist, jfehruarp 10, 1926 ,HI my Jprils luzfve burned down Into the rlxlzes of nrzc fllays. ,ill my flprilx have gone down Corridored and golden 'Z,Ul1j'X. This Jjzril flllllf and wow me fast In the sharp stent of petalled uwb. ,ljzril fame and djrril passed- Lel me die with fljrrifs ebb. Page IS ng? km LJHSA9 Giww 1- 'R- R, RETURN OF THE BELOVED .IAUNITA rIlUNSTALL For fifteen years have I wandered, murmured Ahmed Ben Hassen as he lifted his finely cut head to the desert heavens, and now l return to my beloved father. Poor father! He was ever kind to his erring son, and even these long years of separation cannot have taken his love from me. And little Hermos-little Hermos- The clear gray of the young Arab's eyes filmed with tears of love and anticipated pleasure. Davna, the slim gray horse he had purchased in Cairo, moved through the early morning at a good pace. for he, too, was looking forward to the comforts of the oasis which lay twenty miles to the south, farther into the depths of the Sahara. It will be pleasant to hear the groans of the sleeping camels, and the sigh of the shifting sands once more, rambled on the dreamy Ahmed, f'and I shall tell my father of the ways of the American, and with the money which I 'have honestly earned, we will add a dozen camels to the string. For'my fair I-Iermos I shall build the little white house with vines, as the one in which resides my friend John Doring, and his wife. I vvonderff' The intense silence, which engulfed the silvery desert for miles around, was relieved by the mono- tonous thud of many hoofs on soft sand. It cannot be,'.'.,cried young Ahmed, that my father has heard of his son's arrival, and comes forth to welcome him .to the sanctuary of his home! But yes-they see me- Ahmed, as he sat the impatient Davna, looked down thoughtfully at his white riding breeches, shirt and light riding boots. I should have been adorned in the robes of my countrymen, he thought vaguely. A party of perhaps twelve horsemen topped a ridge of sand dune immediately before the boy, hesitated, then swept down the intervening space, leaving a lone horseman silhouetted against the gray sky, in which just ,a suspicion of dawn appeared. With a little cry, and a futile, protective move- ment toward the small fortune which lay in the carriers of his silver-trimmed saddle, Ahmed turned Davna and fled as if he were a man possessed. The flowing robes and majestic bearing of the lone horseman proclaimed a bandit sheik, a desert outlaw. When dawn came, with a breath of hot wind, a party of robed horsemen entered a quiet oasis. A slim gray horse, sweating beneath the weight of heavy, silver-trimmed saddle, though empty, tested the coolness of a deep basin of water. The tall, majestic individual sat his heavy black, his covetous eyes taking in the sensitive, drooping ears and slim legs of his recently acquired stable addition. lt is a wonderf' he spoke in an aside to one of his followers, it is a wonder that a dog of a foreigner should have such taste in the selection of a mount. Did you procure the papers from his body? I will then have coffee. Call Hermos! Thehead-dress thrown back, the renegade ap- peared' as he really was: a sad, bent old Arab. There was a light, half tragic, half satisfied, in his cold eyes as he sat drinking, with a lovely girl, the black desert coffee. li I lt is just one more point toward revenge, my Fairest of the Fair. We hope for the return of our beloved Ahmed, but he will never return. Nay, never! Those white dogs have him in their in- terests. He is no longer Ahmed Ben Hassen, proud son of the desert, but an American merchant. He cares not enough about his people to write and tell them how he fares. '- I A bitterness unusual even in the passionate tribe to which the old man belonged was in his voice. Bring to me the papers secured from this last degraded offering of fate, and we will see if he was worth the energy my men expended. A fair chase he gave, on that wisp of wind he rode, but now- Ah! But were all the tribes of the lowly white nations by his side, slain by the hand of Ahmed Ben Hassen's aged father! Hermos stood before him, straight and lithe in her soft silken robes. The papers were held in one trembling white hand, just out of the old man's reach. But, blaster, she ventured, 'fperhaps those men whom you have slain and robbed so mercilessly are the treasured sons of some equally fond father! Perhaps even they have a Hermos waiting for their safe return in some far country! O! Father of Ahmed, return to your gentle occupation of camel driver, and leave Allah to his work! Even now Ahmed may be returning to us, though for fifteen -Pagz' 21 - v . Z JQQE - A' LEDBER L years have we waited in vain for his coming!'! Nay, child! Speak not so. He will never re- turn. His withered hand shook slightly as he looked through a small packet of unimportant contracts, written in a hand which he could not read. They were placed in a small leather bag, in which many other such packets reposed. And now,', he murmered in the soft cadence of his Arab tongue, now we shall see who this last adventurer was. On Getting Off a Vrv1AN Who has not felt the joy of achievement in the accomplishment of a difficult task? Who has not gloried in the victory of a hard-fought battle? He knows how I feel after I alight from a crowded street car-jammed and packed to overflowing with people. Powell Street, bellows the conductor. Hur- riedly I collect my various packages, balance them on one arm while I ring the bell. Crash! There goes a. package to the floor. Good heavens! What a time and place to drop a package! I snatch it and begin my struggle to the door. You may believe that a football player has hard work breaking through the opponent's lineg but he has ten men to help him, while I, all alone, must go through a mob to the exit. With my books as a battering ram and my el- bows as spears, I push my way onward. VVith I-lermos' eyes fastened on the folded pa- per, the old man opened it, glanced over the un- intelligible words, and dropped his gaze to the name at the foot of the document. Slowly, with the white weight of his robes trail- ing at his heels, the father of Ahmed Ben Hassen emerged from the tent. The hot sun was climb- ing higher into the sweltering heavens. The desert bandit's eyes sought the hazy horizon, where twenty miles distant, lay a crumpled white form. He will-never-return--. Crowded Street Car CHARTER Umph! My history book punches an old fat gentleman in the chest. Owl My elbow pokes a young man in the ribs. Ouch! I step on someone's toe. I am sure it was on his corn. Hurrah! The vestibule is in sight!! I grit my teeth and clench my fists fmentallyf you under- stand.D I catch my breath and begin anew my struggle. Hurrah! The door is in sight! With my strength renewed, I resume the battle. Slashing right and left with my books, I gain the door. An- other push-I am on the sidewalk. I heave a sigh of relief-the relief that comes from the knowledge of a task well done. I look at myself-hat on one ear-books bent at the cor- ners-coat twisted half off-bow untied. But where's my free-for-all letter? Frost Flowers KENNETH COLLINS Now I, I fashion frost flowers In the amber night moon's beams. I love to fashion frost flowers Into delicate drifts of dreams. But oh! when the golden dryad Of day looks up from bed, My flowers fade into soft white mist And vanish overhead. Page 22 5 Q s - 4 e - T LE,R5ER s N f U VANITIES UNFAIR f tl 1 . IVIARJORIE PANGBORN M I Gizzard Washington, so titled because his pas- sionate affection for chicken had caused him to suffer the indignities of being a jail-bird, was angry with himself and with the world frepresent- ed by Clay Center.l In a streak of poker luck he had made a bet that he could be married at any time he chose. He had wondered at the eagerness with which his friend had taken the bet, but after days of secret questing, only black despair filled his heart. The looking glass had revealed the lack of beauty he had supposed was his. A hundred dollars was lots of money to lose for the sake of a wager. It would go such a long way in paying chicken fines, but it looked as if- I craves to knowah some knowledge which I 'speets yo to give me like a gen'men you ain't, broke in a drawling voice upon his thought . Washington's ebony jaw sagged in open-mouthed admiration as he surveyed the lemon-hued, vest- pocket edition of Venus before him. At yore dis- position, cream puff! he managed to shoot back at her, accompanied by a welcome to our city smile done in gold fillings. In return she displayed a set of non-false teeth that was the envy of all models for Pepsodent ads. Big boy, I wants to knowah whah Jedge Cum- min's lives and I craves the infoh now. Says which ? I'm nothin' else but his long lost relative late- ly of the Chawklate Cream Vanities of Noo Yawk. Sho'l yo must have heard of them. Elliel Danny! And there she was sobbing on his shoulder. Had his friend happened along just then, he would have endeavored to withdraw the bet. A few memories later, the two arrived at the seedy mansion of the Jedge. Danny's lower limbs were doing the Charles- ton from fear as he mentally measured the distance to the fence from where he stood and wondered if he could jump the enclosure in five minutes and sprint down the street to safety should her father make any hostile moves. By the next morning everyone received the in- formation by invisible telegraphy that Ellie's home- coming had been as cold as an Eskimo eating an ice cream cone in a refrigerator. But she was a block off the old chip and intended to stick to the last like a British bull dog on a piece of fly paper. When she met Gizzard that evening, she looked far from being the spark plug she was re- puted to be. Ah's feelin' like indigo, confided Ellie. Mah fawther disinterested meg ah'm almost homeless now. What say ? I ain't got no capital 'cept mah looks-but then, Danny, I ain't so bankrupt, is I? Gawsh, cain't yo see enthus'asm on my war town map? li Ah U-huh! Yo does appear kinda enthus'astic, but ain't so suah ev-thing's gwine to be all right. S'pose I make it all right ? Huhl Yo couldn't. Meanin' which, perzac'ly ? Yo millionaire idea is all air. Little old N00 Yawk for this gal 'less some hero does a rescue. Yore lookin' at him. Come how? lflfm he.Y, Washington was astounded at the cataract of laughter that greeted his ear drums at this juncture. He disliked the proposition of proving his state- ment to his doubting lady love, because it meant work. About the only way he could find to shine was to become a bootblack. His friend didn't know that he was courting death when he innocently nudged Danny and said Some chicken! His face came in contact with an enraged black avalanche which sent him sprawling into the gutter, dazedly Wondering why all the stars in the universe had chosen to fall on him. VVha fo yo disconvenience dat gen'men, Danny ? Ellie questioned when his wrath had abated long enough to enable him to think. Page 23 'Q , , 'L' LE.l2BER, . Nemmin' why. He stahted somethin' he didn't finish, said Danny with utter truthfulness and with a peek at the future. I sho ain't no evil tiding's gal. Yo never gave that gen'men a chance. No, ain't yo? He disregarded the last re- mark as insignificant. In fack, onless yo proves yo good 'tentions, I will- and she made a gesture in air that he knew meant his abrupt finish unless he strengthened her wavering affections. Purloining chickens was his only art. With a portion of his savings withdrawn from the bank, he bought a ranch on the outskirts of town, considerably out so to speak. A week he passed at a mysterious work. People complained of the losses they were suffering. As Ellie's heart attack decreased, his grew.more violent with determination. Although his inky fea- tures seemed as composed as the river Styx, he felt like a shrinking violet in her presence. g I Don't reckon yo is cravin' to inspec' mah ranch today, Ellie ? he said pleadingly. She had intended to snub him when she saw that he was going to speak to her, but at his words she looked interested. Yo learnt me a lesson, Danny. I mean to be yore best frien' from herever after. Meanin' what? I'll go! As they sped along in a hired machine, Danny glibly lied that his car awaited repairs at the garage, but Ellie seemed to be contented as she snuggled down beside him. They came to a stop at a sleepy little farmhouse which bore no sign of activity ex- cept that of the greatest variety of chickens in as- sorted shades. Ellie could not conceal her surprise. Wheah's the population? , VVhat yo mean ? Hired help. Oh they. Picnicin'. I allus lets them picnic on Sundays, prevaricated Danny without realizing that it was only Saturday. Gizzard,' was in a state of mental agony. He lacked the courage to tell the old, old lie and Ellie gave him no opportunity to do so, for she insisted upon leaving immediately for home. People were astonished to find that all of their fowls had returned to their nest apparently cleansed of the affliction of wanderlust. Into Danny's appreciative ear Ellie bewailed the fact that she had no funds. Why, cream puff, sho I can help yo. Didn't yo knowah I sold mah fahm las, week?,' Oh, Illl be so ,bliged if yo will. Such usual words were disappointing, but he reached into the recesses of his pocket and pain- fully extracted a roll of bills which he hadwrapped around a handkerchief to increase the size of the roll. The slip that cost him his pocketbook was, How much yo want, Ellie?', Five hun'ded dollahs is what I rightly need. Yo reckon yo could 'ford it ontil I gets back mah posi- tion F He sighed to himself. He had been saving his six hundred dollars for a rainy day, and this cloud- burst was more than he could comprehend. The next day Ellie was accompanied to the sta- tion by a bouquet of American Beauty roses and by Washington, still fervid. A wisp of lavender hand- kerchief fluttered a moment to the disillusioned Danny standing on the platform. The puff-puff of the train as it started on its long journey to New York caused a lump of self-pity to rise in the throat of the dusky Romeo. H He pulled out his wallet. It contained what was left of his savings. One hundred dollars was just enough to pay the bet. Of the two' aches, Danny didn't know which hurt the mostg his broken heart or his broken pocketbook. Page 24 a se -' A' LE.DBElZs PORTRAIT OF A DREAM GEORGE Pom. II. Herr Americaner, I laugh at you. Yesterday I watched you wander through these galleries, your graven face fraught with eager interest, today--the same. This Diana is a beautiful canvas, and I do not wonder at your enthusiasm of the pettiness of life but of more interest to me is not the Diana you see before you, but that it is painted in the curious plane, the same livid, impressionistic tone as the portrait. Will you read me the monogram in the lower corner? As you see my hunched back ridi- cules the desire. The Portrait, sir, the portrait of whom ? Ill' 1 1 Of myself, or as the artist names it, Destiny. Surely you knew the picture. CI am a fool and blind, not merely a twisted cripplell But surely you know the black precipices of Destiny, veined with this grey of Diana, monstrous, and sinister, with pinnacled peaks flung recklessly against a sullen sky. The rocks are weighted with the burden of utter hope- lessnessg here they have slumped to an indistinguish- able mass of stolid dejection. The blackness of Hell lays his smug hand about while his sister, still blacker white, melts behind his shielding cloak. Tremulous with dizziness the cliffs sway slowly upward, inv accessible to dim sight and terrible in their portend. Gaunt, obscure shadows crawl from ledges, creep from Caverns, andlgo slinking to thesvoid below. A slender summit thrusts out its crow-like head, and clinging to its beak is a whiteness, a foreign speck, infinitesimal, yet awfully apparent in its unreality. It is horrible! The rocks are strangely still, they smother my thought-outcry. I cannot hold. My fingers bleed on the glazed rocks, and the clotted blood baffles their gnawing hold. I feel the blood trickle down my arm and form a tiny pool in the hollow of my chest, shuddering with the rise of breath. I must fall! I looked below, an immensity, an eternity hungered for me. A sob of hope forever lost flows down my throat, and chokes me, and blinded by the switch of heavy air I fall--down, and down, and down into the ghastly nothingness--I died. ll l7hCYCDt? Undoubtedly I abuse your intelligence and credulity but first you should know, sir, that as a child I was a weakling, victim to a malignant disease, and extremely reticent in nature. Stumbling through youth with these hand- icaps, it is not to be wondered that I soon acquired a taste for the morbid, and eccentric in literature, in lifeg to console me in my contempt for the man in life mob. This perverted leaning had grown like a fungus on my mind, craving the distortedf-and with a fierce indulging laugh, I drank deeply. Sometimes at night I awoke with some repulsive dream or fancy my confused brain had pitifgully evolved from the maze of lives I had lived in the printed word. I watched the dusk deepen with dread, yet awaited it with a sort of rampant pleasure, knowing well its inevitable horror but enchanted by that horror as one secretly loves best the things that cause him pain and misery. I lived a dissolute dream. I de- spised my own existence and thatlof the scurrying and aimless.-rats that forever woreuthe streets. It is a lie that youth loves lifel Q, vw, , ,my ,A H Then one day I came here. I saw Desiihy. I saw the portrait of one of myr--ima stubborn' dreams painted on the canvas, as I had lived it. It caused my mind to reel, to sicken, to dlrop doivnfand down, until the winch-like strain drew' me' intolai faint, but it was a conscious faint. I w,atohed,the,portrait of my dream. It fascinated ,metguitvrepelled meg it embittered fe. It kindled within me a fire, an un- reasoning desire for its possession. I saved my paltry marks and grew into man- hood. My father had died--in debt. I would tell myself, Today, I shall eat only once, and so hasten the dayfl One night I awoke with a deathly start, feeling a presentiment that the portrait was gone. Perhaps it was stolen, perhaps someone had pur- chased it. I threw my cloak about me and limpcd hurriedly to the great museum. All was still and silent as though to torture me with mock serenity. Great woven bars guarded the entrance, but per- haps I could creep- through? The two stiffened guards threw me into the bare streets. I oleaded Pag: 25 -u my dream, and wept for anger at their immobility. I cursed their black souls, and swore to avenge the wrong they did me. For twenty-three years I lived thus. I lacked one hundred marks. I gloated in the knowledge of Dexfiny at my finger-ends, and borrowed the gold from a dealer in usury lest someone cheat me of my supreme goal as I thrust out my hand to receive it. The director laughed at me when I demanded the portrait. He laughed at me,-my shoes were worn. Trembling with passion I thrust the money in his hands and gave him a wrinkled letter Creply to an inquiry I had addressed seventeen years before to the trustees of the institution-whether the canvas was for sale and the price?J He smiled now, at the money for which I had bled twenty-three years, but he sold Destiny to me. Nursing the tears of eagerness I ran to my sorry rooms in the West Quarter and wept, unconfined. The portrait was mine, mine! It was the happiest moment of my life. The grey of Diana was lovely, alluring, fascinating, the blended colors were in- describably beautifull 'll could feel the numbing influence of the colors creep upon my consciousness, binding slowly and carefully my senses in a mesh of tangled twines- and infuriating mel Destiny laughed at me and called me fool. Were I-I to yield myself to this bit of rag and smirch of color? Were I to permit this profanity of reason to persuade me, and to beat me into insensibility? It taunts me with hypocrisy! I seized the portrait and hurled it into the open fire and heaped a pyre of raw wood about it while I shook with vicious rage and spattered the oil about the grate. The fire leaped up in straining anxiety with the fire within me as I crouched in the blue glare and watched my dream shrivel into the nothingness from which it sprang. To a Dead Sparrow SIEGFRIED ROSEN How small you lie upon the sidewalk there, You, with your sudden bankrupt wealth of song, While your fellows fling their trifle lyrics through the airg But you shall not be cold nor lonely long. Come, comeg I'll build you a nest, Deep in the sweet warm earthg And you shall lie on your broken breast, And pause till your other birth. I'll make you a place with my slight bare hands Under this cherry tree, And its life shall take you to foreign lands As the seasons come and flee. And you shall sing. And you shall sing Brave lyrics from your pretty mouth, When sparrows make the April meadows ring With songs they purchased in the South. To One Lost CARLOTTA Mrrcri ELL I wonder if forever I must dream Of valleys where the blue smoke idly drifts, Must all my dreams be mingled with a theme Of mountain-kisses, splendid fleeting gifts? And must each flower nod and point the way, That I shall follow in my tired questg Must I in dreams relive the sun-filled day She left that quiet valley of the west? O, city windows with flowers on the sill, ' I know she comes at morn to one of you. O, tell me do her brown eyes ever fill, As she looks westward when the sky is blue? Page 26 -11-LY . . BEAUTY AND YTUAEB lEdit0r's Note-As the -'word . ugliness is unpleas- ant, we have taken beauty and tts. reverse as the title for this artifle, the first of a series to he 'written by .Hes belies amies, it makes me so happy to think that at last I can reveal to you the secrets of my beauty preparations, which can be found in every drug Store and on every dressing table of your so- wonderful America. Before beginning, let me make sure that you understand the derivation of the word cosmetics, one of the most frequently used terms in the expla- nations of my marvelous CEditor's Note: and lucrativel methods of rejuvenation. The singular of the word cosmetics is cosmos . After many years of exhausting research, I was finally able to discover that Cosmos was a Glreek word, which by those oral changes which are so frequent, was distorted from its original form cause . That is why, when a woman is asked the reason for her use of these complexion aids, she answers causc . Truly, the use of cosmetics is the cause of many things. One of the basic rules of beauty is that its seekers should always carry my rose-petal powder, creamy scarlet rouge, etc., with her, so that the moment she finds that the freshness of her appearance is vanish- ing, she may apply them. This is often a tres bon ex- cuse for not listening to the long but simple annals of a boor QI am not very well acquainted with your English poets, but I do know some of the best selec- tionsj for you can appear preoccupied with even spreading of votre poudre. When going down Main Street and finding it necessary to pluck two hairs from your left eyebrow, and then re-blacken it, be sure to say I use Madam Cerise's toilet prepara- tions in a pleasantly conversational tone at the con- clusion of your operations. Often men object to the use of cosmetics. This, mes belles femmes, is all bluster, or as you Americans Madam Cerise, the famous French exponent of facial emhellishmentsj say with evident reference to the color which the man turns when called Canother quaint bit of phraseology, which, I believe, originated at the tea tablej, all huff. Your lovable Lovelace expresses this false masculine viewpoint in these lovely lines I could love thee, dear, so much, if thou loved lipstick less. As for the question of superfluous avoirdupois that is the bane of many womens' lives. There's no question about your President Coolidge's belief in his words Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look. He thinks too much. Such men are dangerous. Let me have men about me that are fat, for he immedi- ately appointed a Cabinet composed largely of stout men. There is a moral hidden deep in this incid- ent, mes belles filles. It is: don't think too much. As your clear-visioned president has said, it is dangerous. I am not allowed to print the names of toilet preparations in this column, but I believe that I can, without breaking a plank in the editorial policy, recommend a very reputable line to you. It is manufactured by a famous French beauty specialist, and goes under the name of Madam ,.,,,,.,.,,,..,. 'S Beauty Aids. I shall permit you to fill in the blank as you wish, for as the Irishman said, You know me name, Al. In closing this, the first of my messages to the American public, I would say that Mark Antony hated Cleopatra because she did not use enough of my lip-rouge, Henry VIII had Anne decapitated because she did not put my perfume behind her earsg Queen Elizabeth ordered Mary Stuart executed be- cause she stole some of the royal cold cream which carried my label, and you-may profit by their ex- amples. Page 27 's LEDGHR CONTIEST WINNERS Front Row: Kenneth Collins, Juanita Tunstall, Vivian Charters. Back Row: Carlotta Mitchell, ClareneeBo,lkenback. Roderick jizmsva Wkimir O, we were sailin' the briny deep Six and forty strongg Below in the alley, a bloomin, slave VVas singin' a pirate song. Our ship was lungin' from side to side, Full speed we dared not checkg And the waves, they seemed to lash the more When Roderick came on deck! O Roderick, the captain of Our mighty pirate crew, He sailed on all the seven seasg He plundered and he slew. i'Roderickl Roderfckl The bilgea they did quake- t'Twas only his mother a callin' him home From canoeing on Oswego Lake.D ljflgl' Autumn SIIZGFRIED Rosex The leaves are released From the somber trees, To scatter about And lie at ease. Over the dead grass They fitfully walk, Exciting themselves YVith querulous talk. The sun has burnt Everything brown, There tumbles a leaf Like a tragic clown. Suddenly a man Comes over the grass, Grinding tense leaves Like shrunken glass. I '.r' 'f J, I Cleopatra 1 FAYE Howe . . I V Lltopatrzfs beauty, peacock-wise, Still borrows buried dreams of men, and still It flaunts its flaming memories and flies Through the great tomb of time-across the sill. The wind that cries among the stars repeats A whisper 'fCleopatra faintly then, Or stronger, as it mourns through webbing streets Of cobblestones and clay that once were men. Dreams follow back the transient star trail blade by the centuries which since have passed And find, unbeautiful but flower-frail, Dead embers that have yet a warmth to cast, For Cleopatrais beauty, flamed to ash, Still lives, yet other Antonys to lash. 28 '??.'1e2? gif? Jukzn 10 1l1ifone my un on Hue if 2 K Qjf' XQXJ 1 x QF F--.V 1 Q5 1 1 11- -'L' LE.RBER, L INDEX OF ORGANIZATIONS Violet Stewart James Gilham Thelma Stabenee Edwin Gronquist Lucile Parmele Evelyn Boody Agnes Gronquist Agnes Gronquist Rosa Halemba Bertha Kristol Narne if dvisrr President Swretary BLOTTER Lilah Bradford Siegried Rosen GLEE CLUB Gertrude Hoeber Faye Howe HI-Y Mr. Elliot Orville Buckner LEDGER Rita Banfield Barger Faye Howe LEMON C Ben N. Carpenter -Iohn Nagel ORCHESTRA Gertrude Hoeber Dorothy Veatch SILVER PENCIL Sabra Connor Faye Howe Daryl Belat SQRQSIS Elizabeth Cornell 1 Martha Davis Gertrude Bauer Cora Hopkins Srle'gjI2JE13IgiLBODY James F. Elton Ray Dielschneider JR' PENCIL Faye Howe Marjorie Pangborn JR' 2LIgER PENCIL George Pohl Berniece Hill o. Pugr' 30 Q- 1 . BOUQUETS and BRICKBATS In the words of the poet, it's only a step from the sublime to the ridiculous , so we herewith hand QEditor's note: In the accompanying lampoon, we claim the right of poetic license-and we're going to take plenty of it. If these promising buds who inspired our doggerel threaten to burst with outrage, let us assure them that it could have been worse, supposing we had This page a bunch of blossoms holds: Some handsome, and some not so fair, But all of them, as you can see, Are specimens of flowers rare. There's Pearson, shrinking violet, Whose manners are the teacher's joy, And Cranston, red and blushing rose, Before a crowd he's very coyl There's Nagel who's a Johnny-jump-up. He jumped up high and stayed up there, And Nathan Isenstein's a daisy', VVho'll stand a lot of hardy wear. Harrison's a dandelion g O'er copious acres he will spread, And Berg is just a sweet, shy pansy That means a deep and thoughtful head. And Kerr resembles bleeding hearts The way he moons around the hall, Gronquist's a shining morning glory Who gets there late or not at all. And Harold Brown's some baby breath, And Fones some gangling hollyhocks g His brother, Norman, has such charm The girls crowd round about in phlox. to the noble order of the Lemon C's ai-bouquet! worked out our little allegory in fruits or vegetables! Now. isn't it better to be likened to a sweet little flowerlet than to a crab-apple, quince. or raspberry, or to an onion, potato or cabbage head? Yea, verilyll Gilham's a Canterbury bell, - More to the point-a Commerce belleg And Oppie is a tulip bright- The reason why-'we'll never tell! Althouse is pale forget-me-notn: CYou canyt forget his mammoth smilej Grass widows who live all alone Are Harold Sammonis favorite style. Maurry Levoff's a Jack-in-the-pulpit For a loud, long lecturer he can beg Friedman's a pretty cherry blossom, Growing on a chestnut tree. Joe Blair's a dangerous, prickly cactus Don't try to tread upon his toes! While Dielschneider's a sensitive plant VVho doesn't like satiric blows. Ed Cheney's elusive hop-vine, Charlestoning each night away Along with Johnny Works, who comes Back home at four o'clock next day. And Benny Lee's a prim wall-flower , And Carpenter, our football coach, A tiger lily. Upon the erring He pounces with a stern reproach. Yes, spring is here with many blossoms, And warm romance pervades the air, So, girls, select your favorite flower, And tend it with a loving care! Page 31 fi? f LEDBER, l From left to right: Axel Pa-arson, Nathan Campf, Fred Meyers, Howard Kerr, Harry B1-rg, Bennie Lee, Harolll Sammons, Norman lfonvs, Ray lliclschnuitlcr, Howard Van Wagner, Art Iiish, Ed Chr.-nvy, Earl Cranston, K1-'nm-th Althuusn-, Ed Gronquist, Rex Fone-s, James Gilham, Morris Levoff, Bob Omwie, Jacob Friedman, Joe Blair. l l CLASS PLAY CAST First row: linlwarnl Flu-m-y. Alien- McKay, Vivian Martin, Juhn Works. Second row: Malvina Fvlilsu-in. Gumla Grin-5:1-r, Nlarirarvt Iluffy, Miss Rita Andrews, Coach. Third row Harold Sammnns. Janws Gilliam. Naihal: Campf. Pagf 32 -I .. I- ' fla -' A Experiences as a Dean CILADYS GRONQUIST I certainly have had many funny things happen since I've been dean, says IVIrs. Wzlcle, dean of the High School of Commerce. I-Iere is just one of the funny little instances that scatter themselves through her busy hours: f'One day a peculiar incident occurred. Freida came into my office crying as though her heart would break. 'VVhy, Freida,' I said, 'what is the matter?' 'Oh-li-h-hl Mrs. VVade, Oh-h-hl' sobbed Freida. HI tried to get her to. tell me what was wrong, but I could get nothing but sobs from her. I took her to a cot and told her to lie there for a while. Later, when I returned she was crying harder than ever. 'llihat on earth is the matter? I asked. After a few more sobs she exclaimed in a shrill voice, Lhly puppy diedl' - '- I wanted to laugh so badly, but I hit my lip to keep from doing so. Wlieri I had control of myself I said, 'I'm so sorry, Frieda. When did it happen, dear?' 'A week agof said Frieda, still cryingf' Dedicated to all Boys ALICE RAMSEY It was only yesterday that I paddled him because of his dirty neck and earsg And for thinking that cleanliness meant a job. It was only yesterday that I licked to repenting tears. When I found, in his trousers, a pipe, a corn cob. But today I need two pairs of glasses when I gaze upon his hairg And the cresses in his pants-they are such a care. It was only yesterday I asked him why the terrible grouch at soap, VVhy the passionate reverence for dirt. It was only yesterday that I asked him where he got the dope That twice a month was time to don a clean shirt. But now, six times a week is nothing to my darling dove, Yes, today-can't you guess?-why, he's in love. Page 33 ie 3 1 -1' 1 1 Ek RT ROOXI Appreciation LixURE'r'rh VVHEELER In our haste in this whirl of school life we some- times stumble blindly over those things which seem so insignificant hut which in reality are very important. Every minute-every hour-every day-we are thankful for many things hut, alike, we are all thankful to have with us Kliss Phyllis Kluirden, our art instructor. It is with patient earnestness that she has worked with us and for us in teaching us the appreciation of art. By so doing, she has stimulated our appre- ciation for a subject that will not he forgotten by the closing of a book or the ringing of a hell. liach term the students eagerly await the coming of their semi-annual magazine, the Ledger. The seniors are proud to take it with them as they step from the door of Commerce into the street of life. Then in years to come. glancing through its well-worn pages, they will find before them, greater than could he embodied in words, the expression of an enthusiastic interest expressed in the sketches of skillfully guided pens. Pagf 35 - - , E fl' LEl2BER,. l FRESH M EN FROLICKINGS WHY? HARRIET BURNS It was a beautiful, richly furnished room. A lively little canary sang gaily as it hopped about in its gilded cage. A white angora kitten purred con- tentedly as it dozed in front of the fireplace. The whole room spoke of luxury. One knew that the owner's every whim was granted. You would na- turally think that the occupant of such a room would be as happy as a king. Yes, you would naturally think so, but if you were to look in the center of the lace-trimmed bed you would have seen a fair- haired little girl crying as hard as she could. Did you ask what it was all about? No, the child was not ill, neither were her parents. Why, then, you ask again, was she crying? lVlerely because the twenty dollar doll that had been given to her that morning was dressed in pink instead of blue, as she had wanted. She cried. lt was a dark, evil-smelling room. Ar the win- dow one lonely, red geranium lifted its head toward the sky, as though in a wan endeavor to leave this drab world of ours and fly away to a happier home. A lean, hungry-looking cat walked restlessly back and forth in front of a greasy black stove. ln one corner a dirty, ragged little girl was talking to an old rag doll. 'Don't cry, Emma Jean, We'll find something to eat pretty soon, and then we'll go down to the square and watch the carriages go by. Oh, what fun we'll have! She laughed. l wonder why? THAT APPLE STEALING DEED ESTHER ZUSNIAN We wandered toward the farmyard, Toward that juicy apple tree. We were off to pick some apples, There were Ned and Ted and me. I bet that I would get the must. Said Ned, l bet l do. Said Ted, Now stop the quarreling, boys, Why, l'll heat both of you. And so we climbed the apple tree And stuffed our pockets full. VVhen suddenly Ned shouted out, nv Oh, boys, here comes the bull! Now we had bright red sweaters on, And Ned a crimson tie, Says I, This is an awful place For Ned and you and l. We dashed down through the farmyard. Outwitting this dashing steedg We were sorry we had ever done This Apple Stealing deed. Page 37 THE LAST GUM DROP EVELYN V. MowLDs It was the last gum drop, the last of the five cents' worth Johnny had bought that day. It was one of those two-for-a-penny, licorice-flavored, sugar-coated gum drops. The others had paved the way for it. Johnny had turned it lovingly over and over in his dirty, sticky fingers before at last putting it into his dirty little mouth. He had taken it out of his mouth every little while in order to make the flavor last longer. At last it was gone. Gone, but not forgotten. He licked his lips. Then glancing down he espied his fingers and decided to lick them too. He gave one last parting remark as to how he could die eatin' 'em, then vanished around a nearby corner, with the last gum drop all gone. A MUSICAL NEIGHBORHOOD MARION I live in a musical neighborhood- In a flat of stories five- - From above, below and all around Come such wails of doleful sound 'Tis a marvel I still survive! Above me lives a bachelor Who plays upon the flute, night and morn those notes forlorn, That mournful toot-ti-toot! And for hours two at From above me comes WELLS Below, Miss Smith the piano plays, And sounds of torture come, When joining in the merry din Her father plays the violin, And two boys bang the drum. You ask me why I stay? I'll tell Why I am loath to go- I fear that elsewhere 'tis my fate That me they would not tolerate, For I play the banjo! LULLABY ANNIE PICKARD A voice drifts through the purple night When the twinkling stars are bright, Just a sing-song drowsy tune Like the hum of bees in June. FRESHMEN Flora Pinardi You may think that we are babies, And that our ways are odd, That we are little green things That spring up from the sod. Teacher: How did you break your tooth ? Tiny Harrison: Oh, shifting gears on a lolli- pops, Page Rock-a-bye, oh, Iullaby, Silver moon is in the sky, Go to sleep, for shadows creep Through the forest cool and deep. 'fFifty miles an hourf' yelled James B. Are you brave ? Yes, I'm just full of grit, replied lNIarie I. as she swallowed another pint of dust. He: Can I call you by your first name? She: Yes, if I can call myself by your last name. 38 9 - V 'TS i rv i ORCHESTRA Front Row: Lucille Parmele, Phyllis White, Richard Harrison. Second Row: Dorothy Veatch, Cleo Seeley, Josephine Lambert, Joe Blake, Marie Brady, Ida Horwitz, Ludwig Berardinelli, Kenneth Richards, Murshall Suter. Edward Shaw, Burton O'Mealy, Howard King, Miss Gertrude Hoeber, director. SILVER PENCIL CLUBS Front Row: Mabel Davis, Berniece Hill, Rosa Halemba, Viola Anderson. Second Row: Rosemary Heffaner, Eleanor Marsten. lietty Winchell, Margaret Porath, Louise Oesch, Harriet Burns. Third Row: Joe Blair, Evelyn Hoody, Malvina Feldstein, Melvina Halstrom, Billie Wylde, Kenneth Collins, Fourth Row: Siegfried Rosen, Marie Houpzuez, Agnes Grondquist, Faye Howe, Thelma Thomas, Thelma Stabence, George Pohl. Pa gf 39 BEN W. CARPENTER THE COACH BOB OPPIE 'Twas the day of the game, And all through the gym Not a person was speaking, Nobody but him. He was saying, Fight hard And play the game square. He repeated our motto, We always play fair. He told us of victories, Of deeds of the past. He spoke of the honor Of our school and our class. Here was no laughter, No smile, and no grin. We all had but one thought, To fight hard and win. We played hard and square. We thought, Fight and Win. Q- .. J ,, ,Q . Jl If L BASKETBALL Sink it, lklocol Com' on, Johnny! Atta boy, Benny! Not so rough there, Rowdy. Boy-hooray Commerce wins! And who said basketball was a girl's game? The Big Green finished one of the most thrill- ing and hectic of all seasons. Beginning in late November and finishing in the middle of March, the Lemon and Green warriors battled through one of the longest, toughest seasons that has ever been known at Commerce. It is true, the boys did not win the championship, but we, all Commer- conians, are proud of the showing our rugged, hard-fighting, never-say-die basketball team made. They won from the strongest teams in the Portland High School league. Twice they upset the dope in the league standing, first by defeating Franklin, and second, by trouncing Washington in a close, hard-fought game. It took three minutes of over- time to settle this dispute. Hats were smashed and smelling salts were needed! Commerce won! It was the greatest fight of the year. llflanager Rogoway had more work to do and did it as well as any manager Commerce has ever had. He received special recognition for his work. Coach Carpenter used foresight in building for next year. Ayres, Dobson, lsenstein, Brown and Hunsacker, second string men, each got into at least two league games. Graduation will take only two lettermen, Benny Lee and Norman Fones. So with Levoff, Nagel, Kerr, R. Fones, Friedman, and Oppie, all lettermen, back, Commerce should finish at the top. ANOTHER FAIRY STORY Now can any one tell me what a myth is? asked the teacher in English ll. Then after our Victory A solitary hand raised, and a voice exclaimed: Our thanks went to him. It's a female moth. Page 41 Q- Q ., Q 1 px? A' ' LE,DBER,. a Echoes From Our Athletes VVhat are you going to do this summer? Our esteemed athletes answer: 'fTrucki' Althouse: 'iMy father says I must do manual labor to keep in condition: so I suppose I must peddle my bicycle and weiniesfl Freddy hleyers fno relation to the millionairej : I have a most important position coming up in the woods, for I will have control of all the men in camp. I will have control of them, because when I blow the whistle they will start or stop work. Tiny Harrison: Like fRed' Grange I expect to become a famous football player, but I am going to train by throwing ice cream kegs around instead of ice. RowdyH Kerr: I don't know what I'm going to do yet, but I think Illl be kept busy dodging a job that Dad has lined up for me. Joe Blair: Now that I have the necessary equip- ment, I think I shall spend the summer in California playing in competition with that famous golfer, 'Bobby' Jonesf' Morris Levoff fthe Walter Johnson of the high school leaguejz I think I shall indulge deeply in the national pastime as I did last year. Bubs Dielschneider: I think I shall work in the woods as I did last summer, but I hope I do not spend the last two weeks of this coming vaca- tion as I did the last two of my other vacation. 'fGyp Cheney: Ulf the prospects I have now are as I hope they will be I may have a chance to dance for money instead of applause. Thus chorus the huskies who represent Com- merce High on the athletic field. LITTLE GEORGE CAN'T TELL A LIE George Goss: VVhen I was through the Cas- cades recently, I came to an unsurmountable cliff eight hundred feet high and found no way to go around it. Merton Boon: VVhat did you do? George Goss: Rolled up in my blanketsf, ED. LA SPRONCE Our Janitor A better fellow than our janitor could not be found. He is always cheerful and Willing to help and console others with advice. His disposition is the greatest asset of all. Ed has said that he sent three children through Normal, and two through high school into a busi- ness college. Ed has had enough education to ap- preciate now, more than ever, its great need. He realizes education is necessary to everybody who wants to make a good living in this world. He even made one of his boys go back to school When he threatened to quit, and that boy patted Ed on the back when he finished school. That boy said it was the best thing ever done for him. Ed La Spronse is an ideal janitor in every respectg the kind that makes the boys appreciate him more than they would a grouchy janitor. Ed may look a little gruff at times, but his twinkling eyes belie the fact. Page 42 - 'L 4 l Y? 'L' LEDBER, 2 L LED GER STA FF First Row: Eleanor Marsten, Axel Pearson, Norman Fones, Jane Reeves. Center: Faye Howe, editor. Last Row: Thelma Stabence, Dorcas Case, Melvina Halstrom, Alice Ramsey. l HIY Front Row: Reuben Miller, Bennie Lee, Earl Cranston, Axel Pearson, Harry Berg, Fred Meyers. Second Row: James Gilham, Howard Kerr, John Works, Harold Sammons, Wayne Cupper, Merton Boone. Third Row: Ray Dielschneider, Rex Fones, Norman Fones, Art Bish, Edward Cheney, Robert Hanson, Orville Buckner. Page -I3 2, L LEIPBEK?, LIBRARY 'Nessay and 'Ninterview a la Mode LifTA CARTE I walked past the library and saw lXfIiss Hazel- tine surrounded by students. Yes, she was busy too, but I said I would get an interview or die in the attempt. I went up to her-no, not exactly up to her, but as far as I could get, behind the bevy of boys and girls. It seemed hours before the crowd cleared away, and I heard my voice say, There seems to be an equal amount of students at both the poetry and fiction book shelves. Yes, poetry seems as popular as fiction. Com- merce students read it not only as an English re- quirement, but for their own pleasure as well, she replied. The Silver Pencil and the Junior Silver Pen- cil clubs have stimulated zeal for poetry. Next to poetry and fiction, the students like biographies and books on office training. Have you 'Frecklesf lNIiss Hazeltine? a boy POOR FISH Hale and Hearty: Don't give up the ship, old fellow. Dreadfully Seasick: How can I? I didn't swallow it, did I? rushed up to the desk and asked. We both laughed. That reminds me of one little freshman boy, who came to the library not long ago, she said. He did not seem to know where the various books were kept, so I asked him, 'What book are you looking for?' H I was looking for 'The Three lVIusketeers,' but I just saw a fella take 'em out. One day I saw a girl standing by the book shelf who seemed at loss to find what she wanted. 'Can I help you find a book? I asked. 'Yes, l am looking for 'The Crooked Stickf but I can't find it here., Because I am used to hearing books so often mis-named, I knew the book to which she was referring was 'The Bent 'llwigf Another girl who was evidently acquainted with the use of 'Crisco' in her baking, asked for 'The Count of lVIonte Criscof NOW HITS A PRUNE Mrs. XfVKJFkSI .IiJlIHI1I' has just eaten eleven plumsll' Mr. Works: Call the plumber! Page 44 - 4 ' if rf' 1 ' BLOTTER STAFF First Row: Joe Blair, Malvina Feldstein, Marjorie Pangborn, Nathan Campf. Second Row: Dewayne Dun- ham, Edgar Martin, Nathan Isenstein. Last Row: Siegfried Rosen, editor, George Pohl. Dorothy Jackson was absent when the picture was taken. CROSS COUNTRY RU This year is the second year Commerce has ever C. Bollenhack, W. Dobson, and Leo Blaufus, who entered a team in the annual cross-country run from ran this year, were new to the game but neverthe- Gresham to Franklin Bowl. There were only three less, they did well and ran with all that was in veteran runners this year, Harry Berg, Leslie Page, them-that is all the best of us could do and all and Norman Fones. The other runners, Rex Fones, anyone should ask of them. Tony Ignazzitto, H. Hunsacker, Fred lleyers, The team won sixth place this year. l STUDY BODY coUNc1L Billie Wylde, Evelyn Boody, Agnes Gronquist, Ray Dielschneider, Sarah Callan, Viola Bradley, Alice McKay. Page 45 1. gaimfiigwgai BASKETBALL SQ UAD Back Row: Harold Brown, Jacob Friedman, Bob Oppie, Bennie Lee, Morris Levoff, Charles Edison Howard Kerr, Norman Fones, Rex Fones, John Nagel. Front Row: Nathan Isenstein, Wesley Dobson, Fred Burton .Nam r Entries Record Recognition Ivame Entries Record Recognition Nanif Entries Record Recognition Name Entries Record Recognition EDWARD CH iaxm' 100 yd. and 220 yd. dashes 10-4 seconds in 100 yd. dash Two year letterman BENNY LEE 100 yd. and 220 yd. dashes 10.5 seconds in 100 yd. dash Participated three years. NoRMAN Fomzs 880 yd. run Sl running broad jump 2.-1 seconds for 880 yd. run One year letterman TRUCK ALTHOUSE Shot put and discus throw 109 ft. for the discus 'l'wo ye.1r letterman TRACK AVIIIIIF Entries Record Recognition Name Entries Record Recognition Name Entries Record Recognition Name Entries Record Recognition H owa RD KERR Pole vault 10 ft. 10 in. Out one year 'it L1 Grlnde High 'l'APvY FRIFDVIATN -140 yd. dash None Out two years CARI. AYRES High jump None First year out Rex FoNEs 1 mile run -1-.40 seconds Cross Country SPRING FOOTBALL Howfxizv KERR Change oipace, the cut-hook principal, straight of good passing attack--all these ind 1 multitude arm, and oily hips, the how and why of block- of other technical detail are explained in spring ing, tackling and catching the ball, the correct football at Commerce. Practice this yeir covers ten stance for each individuai position, and the secret days. Pays' 46 'E- S A' gagwfgsyfii L GIRLS BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS Marion Isenstein, Leuta Owen, Leahmary Ryan, Gertrude Fones, Daisy Posenen KOUNTRYKLUB We suppose that our readers are acquainted with so-called Kountry Klub, an organization whose members consist of those students who feel that, through no fault of their own, they have fallen be- hind modern waysgl' and that in order to be loyal to their school, they should effect self-improvement IN RIQGARD TO COSIVIIQTICS l. What is a shoe-tree? Ans.: A shoe-tree is an unusual plant of south- ern Asia which is thought by some girls to bear shoes, all that is necessary being to pick a pair and wear them. 2. VVhat is a compact? Ans.: A compact was the formal written pledge drawn up by the Pilgrims on the lVIayflower. 3. What is a henna rinse? Ans.: A henna rinse is a chicken dip, Page in modern culture. CPlease do not misinterpret this statement. K'Culture', refers to experience in modern methods of recreation beautv culture. etc. 7 . The following is a list of selected questions asked at the last meeting of the organization. AND FEMININE UTILITIES 4. What is lVIaybelline? Ans.: lVIaybellinei' is the heroine of Shake- speareis modern comedy, HA Knight in a Beauty Parlor. 5. What is a permanent wave? Ans.: A permanent wave is one which resembles the road to my Uncle Silas, farm. 6. WVhat is vanishing cream? Ans.: Vanishing cream is the cream which dis- appeared along with Johnny the day that mother had company. 1Continur-rl on Page Sixty-Throvl 47 is l?, Business Ledger Staff: Emma Midalstedt, Lula Nevalain, Thelma Thomas. Second Row: Mary Henderson Thelma Hedges, Robert Hanson, Elin Bergman, Retha Kiser. The Terrible Tragedy of the Trial Balance VERNONA HOLLAND It was a drowsy afternoon in springg the quiet of the school was undisturbed except for the distant clatter of typewriters. Life moved along sluggish- ly at the High School of Commerce. Suddenly it was called to life by the clang, clang, clang of the handbell and the continuous ring of the gong. The fire drill was in full session. This was not an imitation fire as all the others had been. It was real, only too real. Girls screamed, and a few of the fainter hearted ones swooned away. The smoke rolled and billowed, and the ugly red flames leaped hungrily toward the ceiling. The wild, weird wail of the fire siren joined in with the rest of the noise. Everyone was safely out, and it was thought that some of the equipment might be saved. But stayg after all there was one person still in the building: a girl. A brave fireman dashed into the clouds of smoke and was soon back. K'She won't come out,', was his report, and she fought like a wild-cat when I tried to bring her out. She must be crazy. Another brave man disappeared to try his luck. The building was doomed. It almost swayed in the strong wind. The second man finally staggered out-alone. He was gasping for breath, and he was almost blinded with smoke. She says, he managed to say between his labored gasps for breath, that she . . . won't come out . . . , that she won't . . . stir till her . . . trial balance balancesf, Crash! The roof fell in, and the determined young lady was buried under a ton of burning tim- bers-a martyr to a trial balance. Page 48 fi? LEUBER-,i..5 ALPHA SOROSIS BICTA SOROSIS GAMMA SOROSIS IJ E:I.'lxA SORUSIS Payz' 19 LED.6ER, T. .1 : dl? Arn-4 Y f 17+ in KN Yus fsjdiw Y efprtanas noi I o B? owouh DTV 0 Ljeeli U 5 MY Unsudi us on Pwr vaclnovw w TYHSE Prem I5 1 Ke-YS L-CL Z U F C1111 SeeK X L-Frovn --- Qoorq tg- EH -me Two Lecicfeii fll my A- xx -' 'ff Q X + Q M Hn. . ' -'GLEQEEEEEEEEEEW 'rn wkf+'1fv- I A X-gi mefckmdye ':'55ifEEE?ff!!?yx i S me Tu-uno efy-QP-I . O. B U u .. - ' lj Lf- LA T' 5 CL-Avo mlxrecums bw 1 cfm T'5Qv2IAQK5 SRQB, jg.: U ,W A 'f VT' U 1' X L Q7 Lwcido. mm- ' v f Q :HMT Shoxocgg-bCH tb V mfxe' J ,ug D fonowed H656 f 1 , 1 Gmvperce , , X J' , V cmd moggghhwi 1 '13 I QQ N ' if 'IIB 5 XN E' 5 Q e:d.! ks if 7 SES:-4 an J K 1 U: Xi A 4 THE HAL.. Q.. Page 50 GQ Gu ical! f GTI CZ if I2, a List of Advertisers Allen, A. W. Balch Grocery Baron's Shoe Store Beauty Maid Shoppe Bengale jewelers Ben Selling Benson Apartments Berg, Charles Bergman Phonograph Co. Berthelsen Sz Co. Bradbury 5: Johnson Bradford Clothes Briny's Pharmacy Brown Bros. Tailors Burgess Lunch Burroughs Adding Machine Co. Button 8: Pleating Shop Butzer Seed Store Cantilever Shoe Store Chown Hardware Clark Bros. Florist Coffman's Confectionery 8: Lunch Colonial Bakery and Restaurant Commercial Grocery Commercial Sign Co. Cook Sc Lyon Crantford's Florist Crimson Rambler Products Corporation Damascus Lunch Davies Studio Del Fount Grocery Dimm Sz Sons Dunlap's French Shop Electro Painless Dentist Engel's Market Fashion Cloak Sl Suit Co. Fendall's Barber Sc Beauty Shop Frederick Post Co. Gelvin's Goodie Shop Glisan Street Pharmacy Golden Pheasant Cafe Golden Rule Grocery Goodyear Shoe Co. Gwendoline Beauty Shop H. 8: M. Signs Hazelwoods Heilig Sweet Shop Hibernia Commercial Sz Savings Bank Hicks-Chatten Engraving Co. Hinkley, C. W., Dr. Holly Wood Studio Howell, D. O. Hruby Sz Vesley Hyland's Book Store Indian Motorcycle Co. Ingram, Charles Joe's Bicycle Shop Kahn, J. C. Keene, A. W., Dr. Kenworthy, VValter C. Kern, A. E. 8: Co. Knickerbocker Restaurant Knight Shoe Co. Larson's Pharmacy L Cafe Lewis, R. N., Electric Shop Lipman, Wolfe 8: Co. Long, A. G. Inc. Lowey Sz Co. Page 52 Lubliner's Florist Lundeen, A. Luther, Dr. Malone, F. T. Marlen, Fay C., Dr. Martin Sz Forbes Mary Elizabeth Shop Maus Drug Store Meers Market Meier Sc Frank Miller 8: Co. Model Boot Shop Modern Shoe Shop Montgomery Barber Shop Montgomery Delicatessen Montgomery Pharmacy Multnomah Hotel Myers, M. S. Nalley's Food Products Niklas Sz Son Nott's Sweet Shop Northwestern National Bank O'Brien-Eckert Oregon Agricultural College Oregon Typewriter Co. Oyster Loaf Peters Realty Co. Portland Bakery Portland Bootery Portland Trust Ez Savings Bank Poll Parrot Sweet Shop Putnam, H. A. Quality Auto Painting Co. Rader Window Shade Co. Rankin, J. H., Co. Rebuilt Typewriter Co. Reidel, Joseph Remaley's Book Store Roberts Bros. Rogers Candy Roos Bakery Roy 8: Molin Ruggles' Cleaners Schmale, A. W. Seiberling-Lucas Music Co. Shell Company of California Singh, Paul Staples Star, S. D. Stephan's Sulliv:-1n's Market Superior Typewriter Co. Terminal Beauty Sz Barber Shop Third Street Service Station Tie Shop, The Trinity Transfer 81 Storage Co. U Drive Taxi Co. United States National Bank Van Duyn's V Sz V Cafeteria Van Gorder's Delicatessen Vedves, O. Vetter, William, Dr. VVestern Dairy Products Wholesale Typewriter Wilkinson, Ray Willamette Printing Company VVright's Gift Shop Wyman's Cafeteria Q9 - , T AT LE.UBEB. COMMERCE MENAGERIE MALVINA FELD51-EIN ,-4,,,, ,,,,,,,. O wl ,,,,,,, .,,..,,,. B ecause of her never-changing expression and big, wise eyes EVELYN BOQDY ,-A.--,,,,. ,,,.,.-4 S wan ,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,4,,,,,,,,,, Dignified, serene, and graceful FLORINE Moon . ,..... ...... . . GEORGE POHL ...........,.... ........ NATHAN CAMPF ..........,,.. ......,. L ion .......,. JOSEPHINE MENNISS ....... ........ S hark ....... SIEGFRIED ROSEN ........,. ........ B eawr THELMA STABENCE .......... ........ P nrrof ..,v... CHARLES CROFT ............ ........ G irflffv ..... ALICE RAMSEY .....,........... ........ H awk ....... CELIA GERSHFIELD ,......... ........ C :wary ..... ED CHENEY ..,,,,,............,......,............. Kangaroo 'RAY FOR THE IRISH The foreman looked him up and down. Are you a mechanic? he asked. No sorr, was the answer. I'm a McCarthy. WHAT THEY REALLY SAID Caesar: Brutus, you done me dirt. Beau Brummel: I'm some sheik, and I don't mean maybe. Launcelot: Hey, Art, give me a can-opener. I want to take off my suitf' Samson: If you must cut my hair, give me a bob. Mary Antoinette: I wish they'd put snubbers on these ox-carts. Sir Walter Raleigh: Step on it, kid. Columbus: So this is America. Diogenes: This lantern smokes something terrible. liu SHOCKING Margot L: I took a tramp to Oswego Lake today. Elleanor III.: Did you leave him there? MRS. HEFTY A stout woman drove up to a filling station. I want two quarts of oil, she said. VVhat kind, heavy? asked the attendant. Say, young man, don't get fresh with me,,' was the indignant response. AROUND AND AROUND Mr. Murphy: What's the matter, Nellie? Nellie Bitte: Nothing. just a bit dizzy from writing this circular letter: that's all. Bird of Paradise ..,....... Colors so vivid, manners not frigid Terrier ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,., Barks but never bites .........Ability to roar history .........Builder of thought ,.......,Chatters a lot ..,......His height .........Such bright, sharp eyes ..... My Heart At Thy Sweet Voice ...,, Fast Mover -with his feet SPEEDY Your stories are punk, administered the editor. They're too long drawn out: the reader would fall asleep waiting for the climax. Speed up toward the end of your story. Thanks for the tip, said the aspiring author, and hurried back to follow the advice he had re- ceived. This was the ending of the resulting story: The villian took a cocktail, his hat, his departure, no notice of his pursuers, a revolver from his pocket and, finally, his life. SAVE THE PIECES! Mr. Smith: I have fetched my wife to have her picture took. Photographer: Full length or bust? lylr. Smith: The hull full length. If the machine busts, I'Il pay for it. GALLI GURCI NO. 2 Naomi M.: So you work in the composing room? Sarah R.: Yes. Naomi M.: Won't you sing something you've composed ? A WISE FURNITURE DEALER'S ADVERTISEMENT Buy a davenport and keep your daughter at home. - TOO COPIOUS FOR IMMEDIATE COMPREHENSION G. Pohl: Do you understand English ? Nate lsenstein: Yes, do you speak it? Pagr 53 R 0 : : Q0QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQoooooooooooooooooooooooeegqq DA IE ' Tl DIO jfzme '26 Class Photographer Special Discount to Students 107 Broadway, Portland, Oregon Page 54 ..., 0 O I 0 O O O 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 O ll 0 0 0 0 lb tl 0 II lb 0 0 O O lb 0 0 0 lb 0 O 0 0 O I 0 0 0 0 lb 0 0 O lb lb O 0 0 li I 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 tl 0 0 0 0 0 IP 0 0 0 I O ll 0 0 O 0 O O 0 ll u O 0 0 0 lb 0 II O 0 0 0 n 0 4 ll ji. iw - il, nik TIT FOR TAT I ' ' '1 I A farmer went into a hardware store in a nearby 8 Ever get fired of packing H town to buy some goods. Before he got away the S 4 nf -- - -- -f - I - - 2 enterprising salesman made an attempt to sell him : Pape bay I0 'whoolf Ge! 8 biC5'C1C- S alrice fwarm lrlncltpitillel I guess Iid rather put the money in a cow, he S 'd fl t' l '. 0 ' 'I fe ec : Montgomery Delicatessen g The hardware man chuckled: You,d look funny . AND CAFETERIA in riding 'round the farm on a cow, wouldn't you?,' s 382 Third Stregt wear Montgomery Ll No more foolish that I would milking a bicycle, i li retorted the farmer. . .'------.'.'--------------'-..--' 3 2 JOE REIDAL'S 4, . ll . . ll EE W. S. MYERS 5 EE N ew f1 f'Se1'f'0 EE if ' Barber Shop Q :Q Pins for All Occasions IQ Main 6513 11 1: 1: Y. M. C. A. ANNEX 0 ,, 326 YAMHILL ., 2 501 SWETLAND BUILDING Between Sixth and Bl'0ldWly ll First Clan Service ic: ttttt :::: ttggt :: tsgts ::3:::::::: P-00000000000 00000 000 000000000 :::00:::::::2222::C:::::::::::::::20:22:22:31 ll X ll 'P ll l il ll nu K' EE 1: 9 nu gg BAND INS l RUMEN l S :: ll 0 5 Choice of Portland's Leading Orchestras 5 I ll Dwight Johnson's Strollers, Herman Kenin Multnomah Hotel Orchestra, Chuck Whitehead, 1: Peoples Theatre, WillOughby's Imperial Orchestra, McElroy's Spanish Dance Hall, Bill Darby's 1: Orchestra, Bill Kenton's Band at DeHoney's Dance Hall, Larry Simpson's Entertainers, Frances H Rose Orchestra, Orpheus Girls: are all using a very great majority of Buescher Instruments. ll 22 WEYMAN-BANJOS-VEGA :g 11 LUDVVIG-DRUMS-LEEDY HOHNER HARMONICAS ll 'I ll Everythmg M uszcal EE 4- ef 1: 0 ll SEIBERLING-LUCAS MUSIC CO. ll ll PORTLAND'S GREAT Music STORE 5, 11 FOURTH NEAR MORRISON 12 il 1? g ll 3:53:32-'::3:5I::i::3:33::3::::::::3233333333:tA-::':::::::::::3'::::::::d Page 55 ,,4?f Ay q 15 4 T 2 ooeooaoooeoqocQoaooeooooooooooooec 0 ll 0 ll ll ll 0 H tl ninkerhnnker estaurant anh uffee Qbup 0 0 li 0 ll ll ll ll 0 0 runnin T uummnnn iuumuum nlivivin'uWviniv muhinu 1 E 0 U 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 ll U lb 0 O 0 0 l 0 0 O nr ll 0 0 0 lb ll 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 ll 0 ll 0 0 0 0 4, BROADWAY AND STARK STREET li s: sf: R2 u fl :I Wlzere quality and service preziail and Q fharges are most reasonable 0 1+ ll 0 0 0 n 5.....--------.......----------.....u P213231221I: :illiiiliiiiltllilq ll 1 ll I ll 0 0 0 0 o 3 2 3 009030039QSGUUQGSUVWQVUSUOQQOUUU g 2 a 0 ll ' ll l ' 3 if ff 'whiff ana' you will follow 5 3 your nose fo z ll o ll ll If R 0 0 S B A K E R Y I I fl CLEAN AND NEAT II 0 , 1 Q Q n H GOOD 'I HINGS 'I O EAT H ll 0 If sixru sr., NEAR HARRISON If l O If o ll O 0 0 ll 0 ll ll If II nr mawcmnuvonmfmvnrmnoomvoxzmuannzmof 1: II 1 ll ll an 0 U U ll ll U Ill II ll L:::::::--:::::-:::::---::::---::::4 Page BRIGHT REMARKS FROM COMMERCE HISTORY PAPERS Answers in history test: Julius Caesar was the son of Mr. Caesar, and was the hero in Shakespeare's playf' Pounee De Leon was the man who searched for the foundation of youth. 'AGeorge Washington watched his father build the house in which he was born. MORE STATIC English Barber: How's the 'air to-night, sir? Customer: I'm not interested in radio, old top. SO HELPFUL Miss Albin: Erase the board and put on the example please! Arthur Freiter: l'll erase the boardf' IN THE PACK Policeman: You can't sleep here. Sleeper: l can if you'll keep quiet. 3313323iit32Zitiiiltiiiiiiiiiiid 4+ 0 ll Q 0 Annouacenzents Q Q Y s. 'fa Q S m C4 S- Q. mf. Q s 3 se . ll Przaters and Engravers jg ll ll Ufhere Conzmerre Buys Its Typing Paper 2 0 0 U I 0 U U 0 0 O C 0 U U 0 ll ll 0 ll ll ll ll ll ll ' fl 0 . Q 1 ll li 3 Willamette Prmtmg Co. 3 If 226 Sixth Street at Salmon 0 ll ll ll U . 1: Phone ATwater 2-I-12 li 0 ll ll 0 ll ll :I ll -., I ' T n- - :- l 0 if ll ll lu u In I 0 ll I ll A L....--..---------................- 56 Miss Newell: We will take the life of Gibbons Pagr 57 Qu 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 p-:::::::::::::::::::::::-::::::--::----::-----::1 :::::-:::::::::--::::: D' f-P 3 P c F' C 33 3 I Q, 4 ' 'U 2 F' US' 2 3 Q on as 2 r-1 ru fn 7' O Q . g 3 ru C? W 52' : gg 3 3 E' 5 5- 'U 3 5 23 ' 5' m 2 Q3 8 3 T- ,L E m 3 sl -. fx I 6? '1 Q 3 3 3 ' H 3 -2 'Z 3 55 -U 1: E E YQ 2 U1 E 'U ':. -' : W :I cr S33 g 3 2 3 2 2 rn 77 g 5 w is 33 'D 33 3... . , , O Q H 51 U3 , N 2 PU 3 Fa 9 S 33 rv 3 3 Z 3 '12 Q T3 3' 1: 3 5 33 D Q Q P1 '? 1 W Q B -1 Q 3 C 5 :x , rn ll 3-U no 3-1 Q Q Z E' I 1 Q F5 2' F1 3 Q-. fb 73. Q ,U 3 3-D 3 3 3 -1 A 4 '-' 3 w P 1 E' : D -3 33 Q C 3' Q 5 ff 3-. 'Q fb 33 3-+ 00- 3 3 '- 3 rr 5. 2 ' O A S 3 Tn 11 3 77 Z Q 53. 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EH CD gs :5 3S:3s2bw 23.52 ' 0 O SD 3 ' 2 'H 3 2.2-O F 52 3 3 2 2.:.' 3 8 V4 ' fl' ' 0 S 'U E Z 2 -1 1 3 ' 0 5 3 Pd . 0 Q gr gb 333 ,., tc, 3 4 Q 5 sf 3, gg! if 0 UD O O Q :.. 1: A -C : - -1 - , 3 3 'C 2 fb 1 A A 'U Q Q G . . E : --4 3 Q-Q W' O , 3 Q Q V -1 5 :P -3 Fw :. : Z. E. E 5 i' O 1 3: Z :. R4 ' ggi E3 ' 0 U P+ 3 A -4 3 :E fv . . O S G rr : -, -3 ' 5 i 3 3 3 , -, 7 - - 3 -- --- 3 3 :P vi 3 5 rs. I D: 0 3 -4 C1 63, :. : Q '33 0 3 X, K1 11 gg ' :3 T' Q 0 O 4- Q an 1 Q . Q Q E q O -4 '11 3 Q 3 Q91 E Q Q ,X J -'A LE.I2BER,. L Q 0 Broadway 7000 , , n E M y 0 - Y Q,! 'I Ierchandjse of Meril Onbvnl? CHARMING DRESSES l i That Appeal to Every Higlz School Girl Gayness is the keynote of these Frocks with flowing panels, fluttering scarf tie, uneven hemlines and full sleeves. Flatter- ing one and two-piece models in all the delightful Spring colors-and many are printed combinations of new colors- Fabrics, Georgette and Crepe de Chine. GIRLS' STORE - FOURTH FLOOR Page 58 .1 X -'lt' LE.DBER,. l. '3933tt Qttti Ott: QQQQQQ 3t333:?QtCCtt1 A 0 A man went into a restaurant and ordered soup. 8 The soup was brought to him. While arranging 0 H U . . I Lettuce dress 3 the silverware, the waiter casually remarked: : gg I . . , I d 0 ' It looks like ram today. ' 5 your M a for The customer looked at the soup and said: S you' lt sure does, but it tastes a little bit like soup. l ' 0 5 . :: WHEWl g 2 . . U Hey, Ma, Harold ate all the raisins off the paper 8 S that's got the honey on it. z Tocaoocooooo ooeooooooo 0 oooooettb 901 3 . 3 :: gg in 0 ig l l - g ll Il Il gl gg PAINTS OILS GLASS ll gr ll ll 1: BRADBURY 8: JOHNSON II 2 Il 0 0 W 'zh ta r gg HARDWARE AND PLUMBING gg gg ' ' y 1: II SUNSET 6932 lg 2 fm'-'h '9 0 0 O h ii 6317 Foster Road, Portland, Oregon tout es I ll 0 0 0 nu jg kc : : : :: ::-:::::---::----: :-: : : :-:::q L: 2 ::----------..--------.......... p............----..------::::::::::::::::::-:::::-::----::-::--:::-:::::::1 wg 0 ll II mu 0 ll II an nn ll Y-kg!!-f 31W N ' ' 4 ll 2 W hlch Side of the Ledger? gg 0 V :ga.Uia,:'?G2E5fFhrzi??if -ifig'i,' fini: ' ll ll ................ it- D D 0 U Q ' ll gg In balancing your own capabilities, on which side g - i g A - -wa, . - 3 i of the ledger does the item of Saving appear? . .lg ' R1 2: ' . . . . ll H ,I gg I- ',gH'l, gg I lf you can save and do save, it IS a liquid asset. 2 J, lg l ' -- If you can't or won't save, you are facing a tre- ll '?f 'llgi g J X -1.41, A mendous liability. ll Lili- lil - M il',5:il lt: .2 ' l ll Tljsj fglgggglgg X Z gggg g lg :ij--YJ ' I ll 3 -'F'f'llglg g l rg' An account here at the United States National gg ' .: l Bank will prove a net profit to you in many ways. A ' J , i ll ggggn. A 0 li l gg lllllg ff I 5 fl gg rl gil l! nu I II mg gggg glgg 1 nu ga 1 .gl gi .ln ge, lm ng 0 A ' 5,2 H. nr il U . 743 1: gg rested Estes gg 6 'l HOW Q16 the iVar1bwe5t's Nag-505255 365350 gg smaww and sum. an stark gg Great BanF.v', ll ll 0 in mg 0 L::::33::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::.I Page 59 3 'f .. 1 fl ' LE,DBER, L 00to0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000ooo0000000-0 Gi 00 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 V Qillls I e Qbbon gon d , HI, :: at 1- I ted .Stat xy lured fxpre THE J.K.Gl X 11135 B ue Ribbon on A High Grade W rz'!z'f1g Paper 200 Sheets of Paper and 100 Envelopes to match printed with your name and address-all for 51.25 The J. K. Gill CQ. Booksellers - Stationers - Office Outfitters FIFTH AND STARK STREETS -E 'o M 'o 'o 'o H N o 'S H H H 'o 'o 'o 'o N 'o H 'o N H 'o 'o go gi 02 'o 'o 'o 20 2 I O 0 O 2 O 2 0 H N H so o ooooc 00000000 00000000000 00000000000000000000 000000 000 000000 .0000000000000000000000000000000 0000000000000000000000..0..00 AAA A AA A AA000A-0000A A 0AA0AAA-A00A AAAAAAA0A A A AAAAAAAAAAA--AA AA Page 69 - ,srSwm'4 'A' LE.l2BER, SIMON STODDARD, SOPHOMORE Some Sentimental Short Story! Simon Stoddard, slim, simple student, stood stock-still, staring sullenly-suddenly saw Sadie Simpkins sweet sixteen stepping sturdily. Sam Sloane, sly sport, sat surveying surroundings sadly saw sublime Sadie sauntering slowly. Sam, seeking Sadie, saw Sadie seated silently, so Sam swaggered softly Sadie-ward. Sadie screamed-slapped Sam. Soon Sam sampl- ed Simon's strength-Sam, Simon struggledg Sadie shouted, Strike Sam! Soon Sam sped swiftly somewhere. FISH STORY Customer: '4Do you think sardines are healthy? Grocer: Did you ever hear one complain of being sick? ' THEIR MON EY'S VVORTH A prize fighter after being knocked down several times decided he had taken enough punishment. The promoter yelled at him saying: Get up, you big bum, or I won't give you your purse. What do you want for five dollars, a civil war ? replied the fighter. p-::::::::::::-:::::::: --::::::::::::---::-:: ' ' M st. A4 1 4 Q- 2. ii A: Ti E S '1' cr cr tr E- 'B' cn 1: s I :: Q 3 2 13 1 Q is 5 3 'P , o 4' - o 52 5' C, -Z-2' 5 U 3 CU -3 3 2 CU is 3 n - -3 ml 2. I . 2 -- H: x w N m ,- Q- 5 D w' 225' M-.asm rn sf- M'-JH H Y AH ' W 3 . n O ,A gg '1 I, 9 in 5 2 Q 9 , , B w 4 , 91 E 3 2 :s gg P1 4 g I: 2 5 S S 2 51 P 7 S 5 5 ft D Q ' ' .. v-. gg 2 '5'CQ Q o 3 X ZQHE.: J '?'5I wg'-.9-94,2914 N w :I UO. Q -42 55 r' 1: Q E E I E w 3 5 72 3 U, Ci E 2? 4 S lu H '-- -' , 4' N C Q C 4' 'Q :U m m N ii 'Q rf: 5' 5 3 Ti S L 4: 5 Q C gg in E .3 F.. F4 QB n o r- Q, g g 5 f' 9 l' Q- - cn C P1 4' Q O 51-1 UQ E 4' -E. 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E o o al 9 Q cm l l 5 EQ, l 4' , : B 3 fs S 0 -4 - 3- 1 0 0 fe o :,- 5' in 4' 2 5 Q.. K2 N 0 . rs M 0 z ' f' fi Q I 4' L ZQ 'U nd u o 0 3 f' -- o Q I 5 Q 0 Items'-5-gsjterrj S 8 me as-2 0 O :S Q , 5 :I E l-1 Q rm . lf 1? fi '4 CIO. ' : S 2 'QU 3' ,Q E Z Z gm T i 0 4' ,Z if F 4 :II Cf: E 0 E, QI- 5 U1 0 2 as . 2 : : F C U 3 C5 1 3 Q 1: 4' 5 N M Q' 0 ' 2 Q 0 E Q T' 0 If 'g g- Km g 25 E 8 : 3- rv Q.. S 1' ll :I his . H vo N' O 0 in Q ' z N- su ll . 23 z 9, :, 0 4' 0 at ' it ll 4' i nu l,:::::::::::::::::::::: L:::::::::::::::::::::: L::::::::::::::::::::::d Page 61 1 11211 1-11 1 1 1 1 1 iii U: rzuiuiozmiciuini 1:1 2 in reg Pagr 62 33333:3:::33::33::::::3--3333333333: A:::: ::::::3:::9'3:::::: 33333333' 333: 333313931 I c I ' n Q O 5 E ' 4 0 ' 3 2 ! Q 'U g 4 ,Q z i ' i '-I 3 3 Q I' E s 'H f-1-imnf O Q Db 3 U ' f91E' 5 '- O Z 3 ll M Z U, 9 52 W Q ,QU 2 H 'fa WD U Q 'U 55 FD :E - 0 II W, X-'C 'U Qu Q 'D U' m Q3 U3 I5 0 : 1 25,32 Q H w H, UD 'J . ll I' EU-3 Q ,R r'r 6,5 O fb g E , fe, QL Q -1 H VJ ff O 3 2 : - rw 5' 0 an 'D' cr - 253 - N UQ U 0 'D Q ro ' H N 5,224 5 .3 U' FS 5' H3 z H E i E U, 5 H K 5 H : 2 ' W Q E Q 5 I-1-1 g l 2 2 l E 5 ' 3 l f 3 4 ... ............... ................................................................ u LEIZBER- J fContinued from Page 475 In Regard to Athletics l. VVhat is a hunt? Ans.: A hunt is a small rabbit. 2. VVhat is a stolen base? Ans.: A stolen base is an act of thievery for which one cannot he arrested. 3. VVhat is a fly-out? Ans.: A fly-out is mother's favorite saying at Hswattingi' time in summer. In Regard to Sewing l. VVhat is piping? Ans.: Piping is an expression employed by plumbers. 2. What is a pleat? Ans.: A pleat is a goat's manner of verbal ex- pression. 3. What is French seam? Ans.: French Seam is the name of a large coal mine in France. 4+-Q'--'--O'-0-.Q----f ---'------- --1 4l 3 44 o 4I D i O ll unlap s o 1: : 44 1, French e ii 'I l 1lIluun-wld? i ll 'T ' Boot 44 4: . 1 44 4: gr: 5,33 U SE ikjw Cater: to E 44 A Z ll, Portlandfv 0 if I, I Younger Set, 5 I4 3 1 ,f ly Showing Styles 0 if 15 I Q Q and Quality of 4: 4 X Footwear 1: it W -K , , Unsurpassed Anywhere Q 4: - A W 44 1: ll 11 POPULARLY PRICED 45 at FE : 0 if 557.50 and 510.00 1 44 44 4I 0 4l 9 0 1: D U N L A P S 1 4' 0 li 361 ALDER 347 MORRISON E 4I 4: p.......---..---..4---------------- P11 ge F ' 'l 0 0 ' 44 ' I4 ' 44 4 : 2 Remember- 11 o . 44 . 0 5 CROWN BRAND 1 ll E SARATOGA CHIPS 44 4 2 e , . . EE 2 when planning that joyous outing or 1: 5 picnic! No more dainty or nourish- E ing food product can be bought al- i ready prepared in a sanitary pack- 1: 4: age. 44 5 Distributed by .. ll ll HRUBY sf VESLEY 44 SELL. 4552 PORTLAND, OREGON 11 4 Il 1 :: L,--..... .... so oooooooooo 0000006003 ::::2:::::0::C:0:::::::::0 ::::333 I EE 1 The 11 4? 5 MULTNOMAH HOTEL 11 9 ll o , , 4: 2 Where Portland Entertazns' ll 44 'I ll IE The Multnomah offers every facility ii for the perfect entertainment of It 1 your Portland friends or your 11 2 out-of-town guests 4? ll 4' E Luncheon - Dinner - Supper E1 ll 4: 41 44 W EE ll 4' ll I1 if DANCING 11 E Every Evening Except Sundays 11 6:30 to 8:30 9:00 to 12:00 14 .... ...... 63 3 5 ,R gl t 53 3 QQ oo -Q Q Too-- --------- .. -.... ----------....., .... -----------------------------.1 3 z 3 n 3 3 3 33 3 3 3 Young Folks Partirularly Like 3 7'he Store That Undersellsff 3 the Hazelfwoodr bemuse their 3 3 3 menus offrr g, 3 Because It Sells For Cash O 3 3 2 Both Restaurant and 13 3 ' ' 3 3 3 Fountaln Servlce 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 v . 3 Q wg- -L 3 3 No matter what time of day or 3 3 , I 3 3 evening you drop in you are 3 3 I 0 0 sure to find classmates enjoy- 0 o ,F ' 4 ll o . f gg 3 ,HIRDGMORRISON 3 mg our are. 3 mb- 1 3 3 Every lVIiss knows that Hazelwood candies 3 3 3 are unsurpassed anywhere for quality and , n 3 1 2 Complete New Stock of Sea- 3 3 goodness' :Z 0 gg 3 gn O nu 0 0 3 sonable, Trustworthy Merchan- gg 3 ,HE ' 3 g d1se for the Home and Person. gg 3 Z CONFECTIUNWISV gg 3 g 3 RESTAURANTS g 3 3 388 Wlashington Street 127 Broadway 3 3 3 East Broadway at VVheeler o 3 3 IE 3------------------ ............ ---1 ,..------------..------------------3 ---QQ0-Q-ocffoooooeoooooooooo--ooo-y .----------------..--------------.o1 3 ll 3 MISS CHUMLEY SAYS- 3 3 The 0 U I 0 3 It is very 3 3 BCFICCICY 3 3 3 ll 3 4 ' Y 3 3 I3 2 H'ghSCh0 1 3 3 CHESTERFIELD gg 3 3 ll 0 to wear 3 z z a Blif' 2 3 'Wylzrfs your hosier' 3 3 1 J -3 - I3 3 3 3 Aera' - 1 1'lllTfll,Ill - Beautiful I3 3' .fn . . ' 3 Nm ww 3 3 Factory Distributors , I I ng 3 IW' f Y'f 'J' flfly- 3 3 RADER YVINDOW SHADE CORP. 3 3 3 391 Yamhill Street 3 3 3 HAPPINESS Pure Silk Stockings 3 Special prices: 3 with lisle tops and feet. Both 3 3 3 3 Y I chiffons and service , 51.00 0 3 Mohalr' 3130-00 up gg 3 3 3 3 Vrlour 1595.00 Up 3 'or ewnnzg wmr- 3 3 gg 3 3 Nlade by 3 Maicl Tuware all-silk chiffons, Q I3 exquisitely sheer and good wear- 3 The Berkeley 3 'ng 3 3 e M95 2 Furniture Company 11 3 f 3 3 Incorporated 3 3 3 375 East Sixth street, North gg 3 wassnouxisgan 3 PORTLAND,OREGON 3 43 .----..------------------ L:-------------------::-----:------I Pagr 64 Y A -6 B55 OBLIGING Fisherman: lVIay I fish in your pond ? Farmer: Sure, go aheadf' Fisherman Ca few hours laterj: Say, I canlt catch any fish in here. Farmer: I didnlt expect you to. That pond was not there until the big rain night hefore last. TOO INQUISITIVE Lady to Conductor: Do you stop at the lNIult- Qqoqq-QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ1 l 0 E 2 M C: 5 U f-4 Q 2 0 fm ' E 5 Q N 1 E Q S F' gp S W 3 S -1 2 2 1 2--9 2 23 Ei. O S o 23 bi 5 U ' G 2 cg . 3 T 3 'E ' 2 o 3 2 I 3 5? :S Q -2 Q g B' 2 L::::::::::::::::::::::: nomah? Conductor: No, I have a house on the East side. -000000QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ S,I,RANGE E Phone BRoadway 1395 l'Where are you from? E , HI'm from England. z S You speak good English for a foreigner. I HENRY ENGEL' Prop' --li 2 Dealers in all kinds of lVIary B.: What was the most ticklish job that 2 MEAT z you ever tried doingyy g 1 S, FISH AND POULTRY U John D.: Hpicking my teeth While riding in 3 : 233 North Sixteenth Street Portland, Oregon sy Q F0 rd . ....... -----------------......- O000OO00OO000000'0 ' 'z :1:::::::::::::::::::::::::--::::-:: z BUY YOUR CLOTHES AND E g 3 FURNISHINGS U 0 , 3 0 Wlzere You Gel the BEST for LESS . BALCH GROCERY 2 3 Y T , 2 8 0 YOLNG MENS SUITS 0 W 0 Special 526.50 E I ou Know What You ant 0 S35 to 540 VALUES 2 41+ HALL STREET The J. H. RANKIN CO. 5 CLOTHIERS and HABERDASHERS-TAILORS 8 112 Sixth Street I ,,,,,,,,,---QQoooooo0O0000'00 51:22:2002::::::::oQ::::::::::::,:: :A , Trinity 3616 H 1: A.E.ROY A. W. MOLIN II z .,.w.m.al X Lhnmm, ,I z Graduate Optometrfst VVatchmaker :SL Engraver . N U Since 1907 21 Years Experience 3 5 S ll II 0 0 I in Q SWIEEM ll 0 I, U WNYIDIMI-HY' ll I 8 'I l Electrigx SIGNS Gund F N 11 2 k L 1, Jewelers and Opticians l 700 UNION AVENUE, N. 1: 1: 240 ALDER STREET, NEAR SECOND ll PORTLAND 2 I OREGON Phone MAin 7513 Portland, Oregon U 'I ll la::::::2::::2::::::::::::::::::::::A L:::::::oo::::::::::::::::::::::,::l Page 65 3:1 I 0 0 0 I 0 O O O O O O 0 0 O I 0 0 O 0 0 I I 2 E f ll E Qu g x -I I I l 51 I. W ooo 000000 00 ,0 0000 L0000000000000 YOUR APPEARANCE is a Valuable Asset KEEP IT SO BY SUITING YOURSELF dl BEN SELLING'S 1.000000000000004 .. 0000000000000-000000 00000000000000000000000000000000001 5 E Enjoy Mode1'nism al the BENSON'APARTMENTSl O 0 ll u ll A O O O O O O 50000000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000001 TYPEWRITERS EE Rebuilt Typewriters, All Kinds For Sale, Rent, Exchange U PVR Are Exclusive Distributors of Corona Porlable 00::::0::::: Supplies and Repairs - All Makes Oregon Typewriter Go. 94 FIFTH STREET BROADWAY 7169 3 4 L0000000000000000000000000000000000 p00000000000000000f 00000000000000001 0 Q 1: Phone Main 2508 384-W Third Street 3 II 3 ll 3 MONTGOMERY 3 II BARBER SHOP Il 1: lUnder New Managementj 11 LADIES' AND CHILDRENS HAIR BOBBING I 1: MANICURING AND MARCELLING 2 U SHOE SHINING PARLOR IN CONNECTION 9 ll 0 :I LAUNDRY AGENCY 3 ii SETH SMITII M. A. BISBEE l..--- ............. --------- .... ---I Paar HONK! HONKI Walter Schumacher: l'See if l have a flat tire, will you?l' Hltls flat on the bottom, but the rest seems to be O K HE KNOWS EVERYTHING ELSE Harold Sammons: There's one thing l want to know-'l Norman Fones: Yes? Harold: A'WhII waters the bulbs of the electric light plant?,' SH! SH! Hiram, why didn't you tell me this here Ford didnlt run before l bought it? Wal, the teller thet sold her to me didn't say nothin' about it, so l thought it was a secret. WITH APOIEIQO KIPLI NG: Said a Cadillac to a Ford, as the Ford whizzed by: You're a better car than l am, unk o' tin. P0000000000000000000000-.-000000000001 0 O 0 O II - - I ll Visit 0 il 2 ll , Q I M A L o N E s 5 ll 0 O Il O gg C and yl and I 0 II a f: VVashington and Fourth ,,,, VVashington and Park g II E ll 1,000.000000000000000000000000000000 W--- ......... --- ..... -- ..... - ..... .4 ll 4 Ir Q 2 I O O , O.VEDVEI , 9 0 I GROCERY AND HARDWARE I 0 O S 234- North Sixteenth Street, Corner Marshall z 0 O E Phone Broadway 1867 z O i PORTLAND, OREGON E I I .---- .... - ............. -- ........ --.I 66 R, IT ALL DEPENDS If your mother gave you a large apple and a small one, and told you to divide with your brother, which apple would you give him ? D'ye mean my big brother or my little one? HAIL! YE TENNYSONS If a square bird is a fellow who is honest, what is a round robin ? IVIr. Murphy to pupil: Will you please read your story now? Pupil: I haven't finished it yet.'l IVIr. lVIurphy: Well, just read what you have. Pupil: I haven't started it yet. Emil Wolff: Miss Black, I saw something last night that I'll never get over. Miss Black: Wl1y Emil, what was it? Ifmil: The moon. Mary had a little lamb But now her lamb is dcadg And Mary brings her lamb to school Between two cuts of bread. cs - A Q x ooo::oo::::o000:::0::f1 ':::::oooo:::::::::o:::o 3 3 a fl 2 a 1 0 O c o ,D 2 s o Q N Z o o 5 'U 0 2 m s 2 2 3 . 9 7: ' a K 2 bs fs 3 4 Q 2 Q ,f-5 E2 3' 3 I 2 N I 2 S ' ' 1 M 3 1' C ' 3 z Serial EE E .z ' -2 I 'U 2L's2'23HQ33'5Ei'5-1' 262 0 2 3 ':. 3 s 0 0 2 ' -1 ss 3, 'L 3 I K 4 fe N. G 0 0 is rs 2 7 O S Q C, N: is w Z 0 0 ' 'gh 5 ' Z 3 ' g E 'B Q gk P-4 E 5 3 I-4 A: Q U rl S E '-u. N 3 g Q S, n- K5 5- g z 51' 2 ,, 2 pu I 3. : N .. it 3 :SHS Z:af22s.fEif11 : e s s UJ 0 o g, 5 Q- Q Z o . W 2 an O . -: 'Q 'T r-4 . O 'H 0 V Un O o N 3 i I 2 -' ..3 o I is 8 S U1 3 0 0 s P o o o o 1 1 9 LQQOO000000000 00000001 ooooooooooooooooQeQQQ94 l ' 'i 0 4 g I IY L A N D ' S Q I , O E BOOK STORE. 2 O 0 0 I fliqh School Books Boughf, Sold I ' O I and Exrrhangea' 3 U 0 E 20+ FOURTH STREET ll 2 Between Taylor and Salmon L3333333333 333333?333i33 2123 iiii 2133 I'Ona'M ' n i 12 In E FENDALL'S gg 9 In E BARBER SHOP '11 ll 5 Bl'l1llfil'iIl1I.S' for the 9 Beau Hrzuumels and Shebas : from COIIIIIIFTCF 0 ll I +23 SIXTH 2 I In ap... ............................ .J g ' 0 2 BROADWAY 1967 E I O 5 BEAUTY MAID SHOP E g MARCEL Soc v O g Contour Bobs Il Sperially 0 g JI! Kinds of Curling 2 g Expert Operators Only g I O 5 606 Times Bldg., Washington, Bei. mi and sm I1 c I1 Lil? 3993393? 5339 33333 3339333337333'd ll I GRADUATION CARDS Q 5 and GIFTS 3 U U U g W R I G H T ' S 5 0 Q U 8 Thr Gift Shop of Portland E U I 181 A Broadway -- Opposite journal Bldg. I z 0 L. ................... ........ - -....l 67 4 in., - X I-,W 4 1' l II ''' 'l I II I I Have Your Dada Car Painted by II . II Q Q SZ.,, ..Y,-H.,..,..., -.-, ...nm g II O , g 1- II 5 Montgomery Pharmacy 5 5 I 5 I Everyihing for You I I I O ' I I ' 1 ' 'T I 5 5 5 ,A,., . . kA,., , , I II THIRD AND 1v10NTc:oMERY I I VANA'S QUALITY I I I AUTO PAINTING CO. II II I I 14th at E. Davis EASI 1266 I p.....---.. ............. .. .-..---.- L:::::::::::::::::::-::::2-:c---:::-If I: I II Shoes Thai Will Bring You f .5 . Q 1 II 55 You Cant Forget 5 55 Compliments . II II I OLD FAITHFUL 5 gg gg II II I ... 5 PORTLAND BOOTERY I I II I II 109 SIXTH STREET 'I E E Opposite Columbia Theatre 'I I SUPPLIES I Ile:::::':::::::::::::::Ixxecccef:I ' I I 1-x-2:--x-cc:-2::xx--2: ----- -'01 O 5 0 gp o 'I II SODA WATER 5 55 1 5 .. 5 DR. C. V. LUTHER I I I I I DENTIST I 5 MAUS DRUG STORE 5 I II 5 I5 727 MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING 5 Sixth and Harrison Streets 5 I . 5 BEacon 1994 Tenth and Taylor Sts. I -.... ...... .. .-... ...nl .... ::--x::---m ....... -I w-Q-Q--Q,-Q ----------- ::-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1 'I II II II I ON S A VINGS I I 0 I 55 Oregon's Oldest Trust Company I I 5 Established 1887 I I I Portland Trust and Savrngs Bank g I I 2 :::::--:::::::,::::: ,:::::::::: ' Page 68 .. ,ggi-. if 'E LE.l2BE.R,. . A DIRTY ONE ff 'z 0 Ray I knowuyoug you're the guy that gave me that dirty laugh. nr . , . . I ' I l' A. Bush: You ve got a dirty laugh all right, but Former y Wit' I didnrt give it to yV0u.!7 R GEO. OLSEN'S ORCHESTRA ii- l Tearlzer of 'P WI-IO'S HIS PENMANSHIP TEACHER? 0 H g Q g BANJOamlUKE Q K Teacheri, ,Wir do mean by msemng 3 STUDIO: 207 SEIBERLING-LUCAS BLDG. 3 Applesauw m t lb bpeec ' Fourth Street, Near Morrison lRiesland: That isn't applesauceg thats 'ap- Res- Phone: Main 3320 p ause. L::-23: :::::::::::----::::::-::-::3 MR. ANNANIAS Y:1:::::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::: R. Lambert: Do you think I am a liarli' 3 Jake Melzer: No, hut you certainly abuse the E truth something awfullvf' 0 . U mi g Modern Shoe Shop TAKE THAT z Nature Lover Qgazing at a gigantic treejz Oh, SIXTEENTH rmd WASHINGTON wonderful, mammoth oak, if you could speak, what 3 would you tell me?,' I REPAIR SHOES Gardener fnear byj: S'cuse me, mum, but 'e 3 would probably say: If you please I'm not an oak, l'm n spruce- l--:::::x::::::,,::,::::::,,::,:::1 3Z1t39tt3Ctt33j2!t1t33tttZCSSDSGSQ 0..- 00.00- A 0 0 ll lb 0 0 H ll U lb 0 0 li lb ll lb lb 0 O O O ll 0 0 ll 0 0 O 0 ll 0 O la U f 0 0 DR. CLARENCE W. HINKLEY l C H 0 W N . . 2 H A R D W A R E C 0 . O CI-IIROPRACTOR 0 I S i z Exclusive Agents for i SUITE 31-I--315 COLUMBIA BUILDING i E Gold-grnith Athletic Goods O QNext to Rivoli Theatrej R Sporting Goods E l o Tools - Cutlery ,, , PoRTLAN1J, oREcsoN 2 s 147 FOURTH STREET II i I 5 : Between Alder and Morrison LOOOOOO 0 'O.0000 .O OOOQQDOOO: :-::0o4 C:::::o:::::::o00:::::O:::::-002:::3 Tf ':: xxx : : :xx : 1 : as : : 'I 'P ll U 0 0 0 l la' l I l fi 0 en zeezrem zz e if u 0 0 if Chinese Restaurant 0 0 E CHOP SUEY, NOODLES AND CHOW MEIN O 5 I It is a healthful food for Noon Lunch and after the Show E 128 FOURTH STREET OVER THE CIRCLE THEATER 11 Page 69 :,. - FP::A 1' -::::- 1: -:::AA H rm vvccaa-:- 1: F 'QT P-:A :-1'- 'I 0-::- 1: kg 5353 L2 Q 1: : --Cen 1: C 25: :rE'11I 'I 1, ::,A 1 wig-ms:-3 O 1 1. '11 -21 :I w52pf'if,,:-+1-5 1' g ro 22- 1:0 'ijaigfli O o :fig 2 I '---, 1:2 9P.'12s:':3' w..U II ' O 1 Lima- ' '--.. um 52153. '-H U, :I 3 1, o 75 : 2 ---, Q.aq ,, O O G Q , 1: 0 w :-42' I 0 0 gg , X 0 3 . 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Q 0 I 2 C3 F I o U '5 H P o - - , o 9' no 0 , F Q O , : Q P1 2 Z : -, 1, o H s ' 0 , Q: 2 , : w 0 Q + : If-,acl --- O- 0 1: cn ' ggi, 0 , gh 5 , : hi 4 cj : u ---,::-- 0-4 0 my z O E Q 8 1 E :-4 :U 8 3 '::::,- '--- 0 2 E m 2 o O fl Q O Q : ':::: ---,- O -' 0 5 :cs 0 1 1 1 2 I 2 ' 2: 11 11 Q 1 5 ff 1 ' ' 3 5 'C' 2 as ' 1 ':::-,- '--,- 9 Q :-1 E E 2 EE 3 Q 2 - ' 3 fi In M E' 3 : ':::,A 'O---- i 0 : . 0 3 F1 f E, 2' Ll i I, -::,--- -2- 2 z 3 m w 4: r-v rpg 0 0 . --'--,.. : :'o: :-- O C t z an ,Q rl 0 g gn '::::-:A 9 2 G :-H 1 Q 3 U' 2 Q o gg O 2 U '::::,l 1 1: -- s's:f,N':: M2222 1 POE 1:251m,.gg:-42:22-1' F':g:.r H352 E v-+. , W E mm 1:22-Sgmgifziix gif 11 5 5 9, 24 Q Q 2 o N ' Q U E. : E C E' 25 z nb 'PU '1 UQ fb 2 : 2 we p :P H ii ' 5' E Q- 3 '-1 F. O O U . G B U' 'Q 7' G 'Q U: Q fn In W . rr' E 5 D UU 5 gr, 23 9,553 SDf25'5EZW QFSWEQE 6,-TO : I s 2, L :U 9 0 2 5- H E H O o E D F S I C3 Q 5' PI . ,-4 1: 0 O U, -. 3 m S Q ga Q ,Q- T' '1 P-4 D2 g: H :E : :: svnafzq-:fffO:7,-U an Sgsww L: 33 Z 3 Cfagfrz:-QP S3525 -WEHE ':::::,A : : ' 5 5 3 1-1 , 9 ,, :Q gr '11 5-2, 12' --- 1: . an :-1 : 0 M ,. m O Gd 5. 2 -:::::- 1: . m U 0 3 DU 2 we O 0 U, C rs j : ., 'keg . 33' :-1 2 0 2 E 3 2 : fr C' gd ' W 3' , Z EL D ' ' .1 I '51 0 fb :U O QL -c- 9 U ' . O 'U as P3 5 rn 'QD Tse-- ' ' FU 5 ' 'Q 'U 2 fm N 7 ':::-- 0 3 Z L4 0 : N Q :-' A+ 0:- . . :- 'Q O H N U '::: Q U m xl O F' an CT' Lcc- ' 2 0 94 gg Q 2 Us -- '-- H 2 :r gg E H W ----,--,,,- i Q 3. Eg E.. E - ,Q O 5,- ' C .-1, 3 ii Page 70 c ii 9' ls E a N l r I 0 The bm of mm S PLEATING EMBROIDERING li 9 Is our delight 0 E 11 O . . 0 ll 0 Gzve us a trial, 0 0 , my U I IfVe'lI serve you right I f S T E P H A N S 5 E E ' PORTLAND, onacsou z S . 165 V2 Tenth Street I I X BEacon 7414 U g MEAT MARKET g g E I O U BRAIDING HEMSTITCI-IING H S 395 SIXTH STREET I: 8 ll i .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,,,,-,,,--,,,, A L..-----,--------------------------l I 1 0 ' On Presentation of This Advertisement 4: g Though theres' many a good plan' to eat. 3 We Wm Give a g Thrrr is one that mn nffver lm beat. 8 ZSIX, DISCOUN1' U 2 They gifvf you ll lot of tlle best to be got, z on All our ' A dr zl ' I t 1 1. 0 0 . - z 71 0 90 lffl II ll FLLII-V5 Il fed R 0 Q O . . 9 . flutomalu: Pencils : wi' l : . ll ' ' 'P ' A. E. KERN 8: CO. ' V. 85 V. CAFETERIA g 3 , , g . g Prznters if Stationers ,, 487 WASHINGTON STREET Q 0 . l 1, 0 215 Fourth Street Opposite Court House 1... ul In --..... -- U--- O Indian Motorcycles and Bicycles I I rlorior worn-out soles, BR. 4211 0 S O I surf ron heel your shoes z ' N 2 .1 torn plnre I can mend, 2 . , 'b,f,.....fA'3ll-f g llfiih .rl-ill, and work that recommends. E E 2 GOODWEAR Q S 1 f .il g SHOE REPAIRING E z , . 1 ,... ,- - 'Hg 'i' Z.:f,f' ' 'A . - ' I MR. A. lb O Tncycles and Scooters Q 9 wx: CARRY A VERY COMPLETE LINE or S Opposite Circle Theatre 0 z BICYCLE ACCESSORIES Y 0 ' Indian Motorc cle and Bic cle Co. z 13316 FOURTH STREET, DOWN STAIRS g MAIN use y ms THIRX STREET Lcooooooooo:::::::o::o::::::o::::::-J L:::::::::::::::::::::::o:::::::::: YOU DON'T SAY! Notice in Paper: George Y. Farnham, well rr' :: o 2 3 U vo fb :: ff 3. FY :r FD C N Q. 11 ..- 3 C DP C FY o G o B 'ca m D if E 1 .- shortly occupy the handsome Bacher Home, with his family, which he recently purchased. PRINTS EVERYTHING FIT TO PRINT Keep inside those fire-lines, there! i'But I'm a reporterf' Well, if you want to know anything about the fire, read tomorrow's paper. ooo Q0Qooooooooooooooooooooeeeooooooooooooeoooooooooooooooooo E Where people of good taste Van Duynfy Cbovofatey E Buy the 'Chocolates of Good Taste 6th St. and Washington o L,,,,,,,,, ..,,,... :::::::: ..., :::::::::::::---::::::::::::::.::::::oo::::: Page 71 I z : fail? 1 nib ' - 160 2' LE,DBER, ---00- v - v---000::0::::::0:: To Complete That Color Scheme Gel Your Hose and Ties at 000000 'M BLOODY SLAUGHTER At a small, country station a freight train pulled in and side-tracked for the passenger train. The passenger arrived and pulled Outg then the freight started to do its switching. U 9 : A well-dressed woman, not used to the language i T H E TIE 0 P S of railroad men, had alighted from the passenger 5 3 train and was standing close to one of the freight lb . 3 191 BROADWAY, HEILIG THEATRE BLDG. I brakeman' when he yelled to another' U 3 Jump on her when she comes by, Bill, run her i::::,::::--:::::::::-:::-:::::::::j down by the elevator, cut her and bring the head up by the depot. ff:::::::::::::::::::: :::: ::::::z Who can blame the lady for fainting? 4' 0 ll MULTO-MAID 1: -202 0 11 l Models with Low, Medium and MORE TRUTH THAN POETRY. ll Cuban Heels Dutchman: ln Holland we have Windmills. is P,-it-gd 'frgyn 38,50 American: ln the United States we have con- :: , gressmenf' It K N IG H T S gg A, 0 gg SHOES-HOSIERY WANTED: A HSPARKL' PLUG ii MORRISON Near BROADWAY She was only a poor telephone girl, but she kept l:::,::::::: ..... ::-,,-,-:::,: .,,,. ll plugging along. V .'0'0000000000 OOQO 2222022222221 '::::::::::: ':::::: ':::::::::::1 ll i I SATISFACTXON GUARANTEED OR S :I MAIN 5909 3 g MONEY' REFUNDED 3 3 s z :Ill our foods are prepared by a swell-knofwn expert S 1: 0 g t-hgffromLfl1?furfzouRCzYney Island 0 a eterz , '. . z D. O. HOWELL z , H 5 3 3 . W YMAN s CAFETERIA g H DENTIST ' 211 FOURTH STREET ' 0 0 1: g 2 PORTLAND, OREGON 2 li i . VVedding and Party Cakes a Specialty 3 1: Fourth Floor Uregonian Building 5 . Banquets Prepared for Orders or Societies 0 nr 0 9 U t353:11:3l3313::l33i:: 333333ii33 353 ti:!l:::13333:i3::l3l311l333ll33i31 d r -00-2--2---2--2 -0------ 02--02 2 1 22 2 2 2 2 2'--2 2 2 2 2 -- 2 2 2 2-0--20-01 se s I as 11 M Freli, I 2 The Laies! Devices ai II in , ll 1: arce zng O 5 .Nfozlerale Prices 1: an and mu II Water Waving A TI ., O BRIEN, ECKART ., 0 ll il PACIFIC SCHOOL OF : BARBER SUPPLY SHOP jg BEAUTY L CULTURE 5 gg is 5 is fl zzs MORGAN BUILDING 0 2 ROSE FREEMAN ff 2000000000 000000 222222 00000 22 0000 221 i::9:::::::::::::::: ::::::'::::::x Page 72 E51 NOT SO FAST! Passenger: Is this a fast train?l' Conductor: It sure islli Passenger: Well, what is it fast to? TEACHER O' MINE With apologies to Rudyard Kipling If in class I make a noise, Teacher oy mine, O teacher O' mine, I know who'll come and squelch my joys, Teacher O' mine, O teacher O' mine. If I'm engrossed in sweet day-dreams, Teacher O, mine, O teacher 0, mine, A session after school it means, Teacher O' mine, O teacher O' mine. If I lag behind the class Teacher O' mine O teacher 0' mine, I know who'll never let me pass Teacher o' mine, O teacher O' mine! TTS? I9E.DBEl2, r--:::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::1 0 II 9 QE Larson s Pharmacy lr Q :I S54 Vista Avenue - Phone Main 5082 E 0 O 0 2 EVERYTHING IN DRUGS g O 0 if HOME of PURITAN POISON OAK REMEDY s I :E WE DELIVER l ll I... ........ .. ..................... l woo- --------------- -N -------- Q-Q'-v 0 e 0 , 0 0 O 1: - 1: A ZVoolz, a Book and Tfwo E E I 5 A. W. SCHMALE EE z Q sso MORRISON g EE ' 21::::::002C220:::000::0:: O000 0000005 Pagr f:::::::::::::::::: -::---' x:-'-:1 TELEPHONE SELLWOOD 0071 5 I EE Q WALTER C.. KENWORTHY Q FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND 3 EMBALMER gg g 1: E 1532-34 East Thirteenth Street E PORTLAND, OREGON 4 5...-..--------..-------..------....- ll 2 Ekanc H 2 0 ' REPAIR Sl-IOP If 2 0 Q BEACON 7514 11 li 5 Prompt Service - Reasonable Prices ll g R. N. Lewis Electrlc Shop 5 402 MORRISON STREET i:3:3::l1i33::3:i3333:33335533333332 IMT:T:::::::::: 'TT 'm'l o Il O ll 3 II E MILLER 8: CO. ll ll 3 JEWELERS 11 O ll I WEDDING and ENGAGEMENT RINGS g O lr 2 330 ALDER STREET, OPP. ELECTRIC BLDG. lg a o E Main 3100 ' ll 0 O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O I O I O I 0 0 O O O l Mi z z E ! E z E : 2 I Qoooooooq ooooogqooog U DRIVE TAXI CO. A CAR AT YOUR DOOR z Rent a Car--You Drive 1926 Fords 2 50.2 AN HOUR - 34.00 PER DAY 0 3 TAIIOR 9296 , T 1256 Belmont Street at Forty-Second T O E- : : : : z z z 0 z : z z O E z L. 73 i ' : 10 , fly fi LEDBEl2, L 5 ? :U 2 E .. CE. CU . ro T ,T O O I Q, I PU E. 0 2 I v-5 -- cz w I r-1 51 5 N U :P ,E : X. ll Z : 3 In U E ..- ll P rs 5' ll E! S E ., 5' I F1 5 3 1 Q 5 ru G7 41 Q ET E 1, D as ll 93. C- 41 0 2 tw 5 5' In K4 1 9 4 il 52 3 4+ H V' 4: li lr -0--Q---000000000000q DR. FAY C. MARTIN EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Proteet Your Eyes-They Protect You '1 O I O 0 z. O0 00 OO as 'z 0 Ol O0 O0 O0 so .z 'z E: ll IO OO OO 00 O O O O O ff. 9? Q fm :az EH 575: 5:- O. ,,, l O0 32 P11 UD 5 Z 000001 0000000 '0000000 3 g B R I N Y S , 0 0 S Prescription Druggisi E S PORTLAND, OREGON 2 E-- E z z E 5 -0000000000000000000000000000000000q SUITS MADE TO ORDER at 000 0000 00000000000000000 0000000000000000 li 0 0 O I 0 3 O O O I O I 0 0 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O 3 TAILORS GOOD WORK and HONEST DEALINGS 201 THIRD STREET, CORNER TAYLOR Main 8744 PHONE MAIN 1318 I l The Button 8: Pleating Shop 2 S MRS. SADIE DAVIS l 000000000 000000000 Manufaeturer of BUTTONS, PLEATING, HEM- STITCHING and FRENCH EM- BROIDERY 2 509 Royal Building, Broadway and Morrison 8 2 PORTLAND, OREGON I ' I L : :00000::: :: :0::o0::0::000000000-00 Page AIN'T NO SUCH ANIMAL! Rex Fones: 'KM5' brother is as honest as the day is long. Alice R: That may be true, but your brother works at night. VVhat is the name of the species I have just shot ? demanded the amateur hunter of his guide. 'iVVell sir, returned the guide, I've just been investigating and he says his name is Smith. 0.--0-0.0-0-0-----0000----0----.001 0 5 Telephone Main 9157 , 0 BARONS H ll The Family Shoe Store il Q 0 3 Agenry for 3 0 W. L. DOUGLAS, BERGMAN'S and I WASHINGTON DRY SOX ll Q SHOES 2 O 2 230-232 Morrison Street, Near Second . PORTLAND, OREGON ll L...-----.. ..... --------.. .... ..---ll -00000000000000000000000000000000001 ll ll O nu 5 THE FASHION gg s i CLOAK 8: SUIT CO. E : I 5 Q l o 2 39+ VVASHINGTON STREET z Portland, Oregon I 0 I... ................... .. ........ ...ll 0000000 000000000 5 s I Staples The Jeweler Always Reliable- Always Reasonable- l Always flreommozlating- 0 S DIAMONDS, WATCHES, CLASS PINS g EVERYTHING IN THE JEWELRY LINE : 266 Morrison Street 2 I Between Third and Fourth Streets z O 0 4,..-------------...---..----..--..- 7 4 1 ANU Tl-lAT'S THAT! Editor of the Ledger: Well, how many orders did you get yesterday? Advertising Solicitor: l got two orders in one place. Editor: Wl1at were they?'l Solicitor: 'lOne was to get out, and the other was to stay out. Genuine Leather Footballs 351.00 Each. They wonlt lust long. -ooooooooooooooaqQQoooQooooooocoQ.Q1 --------- 'TI ir.. 'S' N ' -t Q i 'Q N 2: .H F I. N Q 3 Sl A.. ' ' St 2 Q N' N. 3 W vi 59- O Y 75 1. 'C ----------- The quantity? exact coco Q-- MEERS MARKET ----- -6- oo O N '22 'J rn 1-Q Y CD ru O O 'J Q.. CD -f -1 na rn ff Sf' P11 ..---- 2 S U DS et 22 7 9 Loo---ooooeooooocooaaaocQeaoaooooooi 1132222 ZZZSSSSZZZQZQZQZQQCCSQZZ I 2 I 1 1 . 5 3 Open Day and Night R E GPX 55 sa ,Qu PQ QTP oi :Ee ge Q-we 265 as 5 1 sf: 9: 1 9 C Q Damascus Lunch E Q 14s BROADWAY 2 l.. ................................ ooeooooooooooooo QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ g Z 'T CO 2 W O Q1 as ' :U r-H f m o O NL E 3 E H 5 5- l 2 m cu Q g Z U3 o 5' z af E S 1 O 5 m fm S l I m Q: m K Z pq w E' O za 3 z w ss o Z I 2 3 O Q 1 W .T- L::: ..... ::-::::::::::: Page All ll 5 :I il l 419951 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 2: O 50 Qs Z0 E.: D me 39 NO 0 0 O I O I I 0 l ooooeoaqqq oooooooooo Peter's Grocery and Meat Market j. PETERS, Prop. 26 if De 5 F 'S' P1 5' Q 2 S. E 2 0 '4 Z? CD 5 7:1 2 ' rfn Q PU n, 1-4 UQ rn g cn Lo------ O O O O 0 I 0 O O 0 I 0 0 I O I I I I O O 0 0 0 E 0 O O O O QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQeoooqgoqq . HoURs 9 A. M. 10 6 P. M. II z Ewrnings by Appointmrnt 3 E Office BEacon 0629-Phones-Res. BEacon +8-I-0 nu E GWENDOL YN 2 E BEAUTY SHOPPE E 3 251 North Twenty-Third Street g 8 ALL KINDS UF BEAUTY VVORK g E Winnifred Cole Portland, Oregon ' ll 5....------------------------------ Qoocoaaoooooooooooooooaeoqoooooqooq y . n S Have that confidential talk with our E O - - 0 2 appetizmg Lunch 9 I z or a box of E CoFFMAN's', CANDIES t g COFFMAN E g CANDY SHOP 55 5 211 ve - 213 BROADWAY STREET If L.. .......... .. ............ ........l .QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ1 ll ll Q ll ' The Star of . Corn Poppers 0 ll z was g o g s . D . s T A R 2 THE POPCORN MAN E L... ............ .. ................ .ll 75 LERBERQSS EQ pooo---QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ1 g g 1: Ask For 1 gg Crimson Rambler Cane 8: Maple Syrup 11 11 Crimson Rambler Butterscotch Syrup 11 Crimson Rambler Melomi Syrup gg Crimson Rambler Pure New Orleans Molasses '1 11 gg AT YOUR GRQCER gg 11 gg lv . g gg Crlmson Rambler Products gg 11 Corporauon gg 11 0 H F-SCQQCQCQ::3::2:::t33::::::::::ISSZ1 11 Q 11 gg BROADVVAY 7851 OPEN EVENINGS 11 gg 11 11 1 gg ELECTRO PAINLESS 1 11 g DENTISTS g 1 gg 31352 Washington Street, Corner Sixth gg In Tfwo Building gg DR. T. W. ARMSTRONG, Manager gg 1 PORTLAND,OREGON 1 1 1 p....-------------...-----.......--4 0 gg F R E E 1 11 11 g 11 gg JWARCELS -- IVA1 TBR WA VES 11 11 1' 11 gg PACIFIC SCHOOL g 1 of 11 11 gg BEAUTY CULTURE g 1 :E 225 MORGAN BUILDING h 11 1 11 L.Q.---------0---------o-o-------.. 4 731 iiiiiiiii iZZ1C33Z3iiL332iiiii1 1 1' 1 gg Compliments of 0 1 1 11 1 1 g Golden Rule Grocery g E A. E. CLEMENTS, Prop. 1 1 gg 1530 East Thirteenth Street, South 11 11 3 PORTLAND, OREGON 1 1 11 0 L.. ...... -------...---- ...... ....--4g MISPLACED CHARITY A minister, While passing a group of convicts at work on the country roads, became very much depressed at the wickedness of the world. HlVIy good men,', he exhorted, we should strive to mend our ways. Well, wot you think we're doing, asked No. 3298, digging fishworms? H HA! HA! Ed Cheney: I feel funny, Doctor. What shall I do?y' Go on the stage. vf::::::::::e:::::::: :::-: :::::::f1 11 BRoadway 7205 X Ray Diagnosis 1 EXTRACTING SPECLALBTS g 11 You Won't Be Dimppointed 11 gg gg DR. A. W. KEENE g 1 DENTBTRY g 11 Your Teeth Sleep While We Work 11 Above Majestic Theatre 11 35lVz Washington St. Portland, Oregon L:::::::::x:::x::::: ....::::::: ll 1'I'mmmomm'm'mmm'i g B E R G M A N g g PHONOGRAPH Co. g gg 3527.00 Portables 5515.00 g :I Springs, Party and Repairing 1 1 RECORDS v g gg Latest Hlts W ,, -1-5c, 2 for 31.25 gg 11 Open Evenings 7:15 to 9 P. M. 5 54-6 VVASHINGTON STREET, NEAR 18TH z 11 11 gg Broadway 204+ gg 11 an Loooooo-QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ oqaooooe Y-oeooooooqaooooQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ1 gg g 11 gg Shakexpeare said that HPlH'f0l.S' are hirdrf' 1 1: Bu! this' rannol he so, 3 E EIWYIIIJE Poll Parrot is a Palau- of Sfweetx. 1 1 3 IVHERE ALL THE SCHOOL KIDS G0 11 1 N26 1 11 1 11 g Poll Parrot Sweet Shoppe g 1569 East Thirteenth Street 2 ...--..---------..-----..---..---..1 Page 76 AQSF 222 E 2 K B av .4 2 0 Q 5?'f 5 N H Z-W -:- '-..1: D E E. an CD Q :J -::,::::: , isTE,feL:b 515.2255 :v YA E 'I ,,.. ' fD 96:1 I 2 :,Eg,2 2g,'322i ,,,.,---- s , 2 51 Y 2 i C12 . 7 H 1 --- 2 Q 2 5 --+ rib ' :H Az, ' I-I-5 g 2 CQ E gs 2 2 'ET3.r2 if-525+-H Acccfc- 2 Q .2 g ng 2 2 -. rm H Q o A::::- 0 F' x U Q W 32 5-7'4 3 E Kino Pimcci- 0 rm 'SS . g -5- T g 2, 5- s Q1 55 3 2 22 2 ' O Q ' ' 5 Q Q' ' 2 gf: 2 'QS CLE F . U 0 . 0 N 2 O . H :I 3, z 2 'H w 2' z 2 7 5 5 - 2 L '2'33' :w-3 775 2 3 -. 2 A Q 2 W -1:0 -4 H 2 8 O -2- S. E! 0 O 8 '-1 'E E Figs? ,gl B M13 U F1 W -U . O m R O Q F, W m --. P+ 2-2,1 2-2 ., CQ Q: , 2 3, 0 2 Q- g 2 Q, F- 2 gre H1 a 2. 22 1 O 2 8 V1 F' M 2 z : N E g ' 'D Q m E, 3 2522 E:v:5222Hi322,':s5 E52 23:5 :I X ow hi :D Us ce 0 2 -3 C3 99 2 , : 2-g 3 N m 55 Z V, in ,, M122 5111132 na mx: 22 14 2:2 img O.: 0 2 719-2 m C . O 71 mi Q O 2 P+ : 5 2 ,A J, Q E ' 3' 0 H 0 O rv o m T1 so 22 w R gg 1 U gg 0 2 W 3. '-4 2 ' 95 '2 'Q ' N 0 : 53 U- 12 51 'QE Uv O DP 2 2 2 Zi '17 2 2 2 5 F m ' 72 3 Q' E7 2 2 2' 211 Q 4: :P so 2-2 5 2 0 Q- I :S D 22 UE. QQ -Q. .4 S 3 m N Q E . 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O 2 E 2 2 ::35L '45-'42 :22s:,2ng2' 5 Sigwaism og 2 ze L 2 v25'Zf9 QC' 2gf1SFC'2ia-1 2 wmcm UH 2 '13 i I 0 'P 1: O Q 2 mms 4 H. . 22Q,,s.CH:z: 2 2 -4 .2 502 2 , N A:--- 8 Q Q C: . . O 5 Wpq ::- Q S Z CD M CJ . . 3 -----o::- 'WMU' mo 222529225 2 . sam . ---Y 1, 5 , . . EH3 O . Q -i L:::o :I CE F fn Z z 3 3-E Q 'vnu g I 1 ' --:::::::' 2 1 NS' +4 2 .2 'Z w ,-::::::-' ll E O 2 C7 Q L:::: 22 .. Q UD 2 ,, g -- Il F11 0 42 -,:::: 0 Cn ,B ' 22 --:::: 22 i 22 -:::: 12 L:::' 2 42: 22 ,--::' 22 -::::: 0 -::2:' k::' Q - ,Q 'Q .QQE f' HD5E2 l --QQQ.-QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ1 3 g o , ROHDE sf RUPERT, Props. 2 0 O 0 O 8 OYSTER LOAF 2 I O 0 O g Restaurant g 0 0 Q EVERYTHING GOOD T0 EAT Q 0 0 2 S+ BROADWAY, Near Oak, PORTLAND, ORE. Q 0 e 3 2 0 oooceo QQQQQQ oeooooooooooooaooqooi ::::ttt::::::t::::::3:::901:39:tt37 I 0 For an Absolute Surely of Service ana' Purity ll Go to Q 0 . 0 2 Gllsan Street Pharmacy gg o 3 Phone East 4279 z Corner Twenty-Eighth and East Glisan Sts. z FRED L. PETERSON 3 1 PORTLAND, OREGON ,Q ll 4,..-------------------------..----- 321131!j2LZZZ3I2233311332333123t131 0 0 s Type'writers - fill Mllk65 Repairedu 3 5 SPECIAL RATE TO STUDENTS ON RENTALS l l RENT 3 MONTHS FOR S56 DURING SUMMER MONTHS ooooocoaooqo QQQQQQQQQQQQ Typefuzriterr from 11510 Up--Guaranteed Superior Typewriter Service Lobby Railway Exchange Building ::::::1 ctt ' I 2 . +4 E E 5 3 2 O I '-1 0 o 2 E E w E- z 2 E N 9, o o E1 5 I-I l l 2 'L UU 2 S Q' 3 3 S 2 G o o 3 rg 2 8 0 0 U1 2 2 E' 2 2 'U 0 0 0 I ' s .....-- .... 3 ...- 000- 'U 2 5 fs ll EE The Terminal Barber Shop E 222 Sixth Street, Corner of Salmon II WE APPRECIATE YOUR PATRONAOE if Try Us for Appointments If Phone Main 2237 ll L -Q-QQ0QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ THE STENOCVS VACATION CSung by her bOSs.j My tYpust is oi her vacution, My trpist's awau fpr a week, Nfy trpudt us in hwr vacation, Wgile thse damu kews plsy hudge and seek. CJORAS: Oy, breng boxk, bting bxek, Brung hecj my bOnnie ti my, tp mr, Bjcimg hfxj, h6ng, hicvx, -heinino-omxy CH Helk A DEEP ONE Charles Van: K'What's the matter, little boy? Why are you crying? Red: I lost a nickelf' Charles Van: A'Don't cry. Here is a match. EVEN THE EAVES DROPPING VVhat a sad looking store. Why, because it has panes in the windows? UNO, the books are in tiers.', Ol z : z O z O : z a 5 E O -------l ASSOCIATED GAS and OILS THIRD STREET O 'J' ?j CD 2-gg F11 nw 'JU N : -34 A N ie!!! f-1 2255257 2552157 Oawle mfifuy NIOY O53-H Z-Hgh'-' ag O Z E 0 0 O O 0 O 0 O O 0 0 O 0 0 0 O I O 0 0 l U I Phone Main 1065 Portland, Oregon O O O O 0 0 O 0 O 0 O O 0 O 0 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 0 0 O 0 O 0 O 0 0 l 'U C 1 FP- L an D Q- UU as W' cb S '-4 0 0 0 O O O O O O O I O O O O O O O O O I 0 O 0 0 O O O 0 O I Phone Main 3772 FRENCH AND PULLMAN BREAD A SPECIALTY 643 First Street, Near Sheridan PORTLAND, OREGON 78 .. Q R,.g..fE PAGE THE CHIROPODIST Natural History teacher: I'Can you imagine any- thing worse than a giraffe with a sore throat ?I' Earl: Yes, a centipede with cornsf' SILENCE IS GOLDEN E. Vana: DonIt you think music is prettier when one keeps his eyes shut? H. Brown: UI think it's prettier if one keeps his mouth shut. ZOUNDS! 'S DEATH! ODD'S BLOOD! A. Pearson: Howard, is there anyone behind us? H. Kerr: Yeh, some sap with brass buttons on a motorcycle is trying to pass you.'I He: I'Would like to have a fountain drink? She: I wouldn't mindf' He: VVell, let's go to the Benson fountain. STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! Sign on Tiny Harrison's automobile: This car stops for railroad crossings, blondes, and brunettes. 0QQQQQQ.-QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ1 De Z C 2 C SQ I in ' L52 H Ee? rn nk-4 :PO '11 555 5-4 O :U R1 GROCERY -..---- 'U :f o :z fl L15 : g' Q -1 O ,.. Q S Q- -J- bi 3 3 as Q -c v-. U1 N. N Q TZ F. f- C11 5 Q DT' N- N C :: cn .. '1 fb 0 H --..- 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I o oe--1-0.01 --------.. Q 'B .. -4 Q 5 Ei 5 S E 'f 3' s- Z zu' 2- 5 w . N 5 ze 3 If -1 Q E C3 O 3 3 ---------- Ve t t e r DR. WILLIAM R. VETTER -.. fg NJ 2 E . fu -.... W PU fa- E IF os ,- LII 1, 75 rn U: F E na KF Ll! N If 'I-' --- Q- QQ 'O' C Lil L NI F11 v1 1 Z W C1 L E: rm Z 572 'Ls -og cm 75,-7 FE. F' s ,U F' - W F1 I5 .. C Z LQQQQQQQQQQQQQooqoeooc-oooooooeooooo IIII 5,1 f' ----- ----01 I : S IC I z I , I 2 OPEN AN Accoumr Q 2 I NOW . Q ! o o I K Y o . ZJIFIM I 1 g I 5A.,.Z'Z' I g , I Q , . Q I HIBERIIIACOMMERCIALA savuussa l I FOURTH AND WASHINTON STREETS t :OQO 'PORTLAND OREGON . !--::-. I ' T o I 2 P. F. Madigan, Prop. Residence VValnut 1627 I o , , I 2 Trinity Transfer 8: Storage 2 o I 3 EXPRESS and GENERAL HAULING 3 o I z FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING 3 2 A SPECIALTY g z Office: 603 VVASHINGTON STREET Q o o 8 Telephone: Broadway 9352 g o o I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I qqeoooeqqeqq QQQQQQQQ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I COMMERCIAL SIGN CO. PAINTED and ELECTRIC SIGNS 190 PARK s'1'REET - 323 THIRD s'rREET I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Q ooo- -Q -ao QQ L... E E30 Qttttttt ttzt cccttt z 0 'S ri 30 8 U' ' S 2 W 2 if fe? L2 I E' ri 710 o 2- Fir-U 3 I I 'U w C aI I C C HC' 2 a I F7 E' :QZ X10 3 in fo? 52 2 6 21? g I2 GE I I 5 3 55,25 I I 2 X' ZWQ 52 g 5 2 nb, f o - fy 2 2 5' .. U 3 I z CF 5 : 0 5 5' I 7 O w' I ' I S Page 80 . ' 6 x 1 3 L .E Rs 'L LEDBE STUCK ART APPRECIATION He: Klwhen Charify is neededtnlim always the As a great treat, mother took her small son to first to Pu? my hand m my Rocket' hear a famous soprano singer. Little Willie was She: Y es, and you keep it there. much interested in the conductor of the orchestra. lVIamma he asked, f'Why does that man hit at the lady with his stick? .AND THE BED SPRING 'KHe isn't hitting at. her. Be quiet. . U 'WVell, then, what is the lady hollermg for? Wayne C.: K'Did you ever hear 'Allegro'?l' George G-Y Quit kidding, YOU Cimyt heflf legs Dumb: Why did they kick that medical student ECFOW-H out of the library? ---- Bell: They caught him trying to remove the ALWAYS CARRHLS A USPAREH appendix from a book he was reading. Nathan C.: Well, John, Why is a pig 21 far- lT--..---------::--::::----:::---::E sighted animal? Y N d John N.: ifHe always carries a spare rib with . UM ee - H if 'ol A I it Sm I 1- ll ' E , in il THAT LET YOU ENJOY WALKING II OUCHI Il SUCH A sHoE is THE 1: Johanna McClure: Do you like girls?', E Joe Blair: MIN like pretty' girlstl' PM For Men, Women, Mitre.: and Children Q Johanna' McClure: Do you like me. 322 WASHINGTON STREET , 1061 50- l.. ....... .... ........ ...-..--...t.--1 lQ ia!! The life and soul of science ir in pracliral application. Qi .9n -LORD KELVIN HE competent man or woman in modern professional life not only understands the scientific principles upon which his chosen vocation is based, but also knows how to apply those principles in human service. True education combines theory and practice, and its goal is service. Oregon's Land-Grant College is dedicated to SCIENCE FOR SERVICE The Experiment Station and the Extension Service specialize in the appli- cation of science in every-day life. Training of youths for leadership in fields vital to Oregon industry, business, home and community life is provided by resident instruction in the following technical schools, all offering work lead- ing to the bachelor's 'degree and most of them granting the master's or pro- fessional degrees: AGRICULTURE IIOME ECONOMICS CHEMICAL ENGINEERING MILITARY SCIENCE COMMERCE MINES ENGINEERING PHARMACY FORESTRY VOCATIONAL EDUCATION The SCHOOL OF BASIC ARTS AND SCIENCES gives the foundation training upon which technical specialization is built and in addition, together with the departments of Industrial Journalism, the Library, Physical Education, and the Conservatory of Music, provides the general and liberal training essential to personal culture and civic efficiency. For catalogue and information write to THE REGISTRAR Oregon Agricultural College , 06' '3l CORVALLIS i- 'Bl Page 81 l2,. ff ' ' 1 A NEW KIND OF CAR 2 ATWATER 0753 Salesman: How many children have you going, 3 , to school? ll , 2 Farmer: I have three. ll - l Salesman: Why don't you buy them encyclo- II 2 pedias?,' 1 Il : Farmer: 'KI reckon they,ll have to walk like I 5 did H qu? 4 if E NOT DUMB-DUMBER! 1: 328 Morrison St. Portland Hotel 3 Did you See Service in Francepv 2..-..-,-.. .................,. ..... fl No, but I read his poems. f ----------'----------------- ---mf :'m 1 ll ll 1: O 2 ll O ll 1' 'l l U 1: 0 . . 1: 0 0 ll 0 'l 'l ll 'I 'l 'l g ll 'I 1: 1: 1: 1: 0 A place to meet II e e S II I ff 1 1: ll ' ll N Your friends to treat. E T H E K I N D ll li A place to treat 5 fi THAT GROW ll I Q 1 0 ll The fI'lCHdS YOU ITICCI. X l, You Can't Keep Them in the Ground 2 II l II 1 1: 1: 11 0 0 if CAFETERIA Q 1: Send for Catalog II 1 Q 1 E: Q 1: 1: 0 1: 1: 1: Broadway at Stark 2 3 J. J. E II QE E 1: FRONT AND TAYLOR STS. 1: 1: ' E PORTLAND, OREGON E 1: 1: . 0 ll LQQQQQQQQQQQ oooooo :::Qoo:::::f::::o 52:2:2::::::::::::::':::: ' 9904 ,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,.,....,, ,, ........... .......... Q ....o.o.ooooooooooo oo-1 U I 1 3 il E . in 'Broadway 2 876 do 3 Q fp. ,-, 0 1 -ee: . 6 U 3 405 g fetweenf OPUISOII 3 10271. and 11192. -5fI'92f . ll l ll ll gg: ----- oo::::::: ::::::::::::::::':::22222:::::::::::::::::::'::::::::4 Page 82 Promising Pets-For Exchange--Two Mountain P:09t90Q9bot0QQQQQ:9009QQQQQ 0 4 l ll Lions, year old male and female, eat anythinlg, QUALITY AND SERVICE ' - 0 VERY FOND OF WOMEN AND CHI since 1890 Main 0269 U DREN. ,, What have you? Apply to C. W. Powers, Columbus, New Mexico. 8 in ' ,, . U H '- 0 ' nr , ll Florzsts . Coach Carpenter: Why d1dn't you get that mi man running into homezpsx 3 354 WASHINGTON STREET , , l Outflelderz I wanted to see how close he would PORTLAND, OREGON come racing against the ball. i::::--::::::::A:-AAAAAAA----------3 K: ::::::::::::::::::::::: 1 ::::f:::Q? W:::::::::::::-::::--::::21 ::::::::x 3 li 1' I 11 We Make It HOT for You II Affff W' WW if Wm :Q 1: Or after the buggy ridr - 1: af Try the Heilig S-'west Shop :I 8 .ind you'Il Awin her for your bride. DELFOUNT GROCERY II U H H '1' S f Sh EZ 1 wee U EE At Fifth and Harrison Streets g op U li W. BRIGGS, PIOP. z 195 BROADWAY II ll 0 ll 2:::::::::::::::::::::o:::::::::::: 2??r:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::gJi TV::::::,::,::::::::::::::::,,,,,,,,m I' II ll li nr 1: SNAPPY-LOOKING SHOES MAKE 1: 1: :I 1 E cLAssY-LooK1NG FEET ll :E II I in 0 0 Q U 0 1' ll . 0 ., MODEL BOOT SHOP It 3 JEWELERSJNC II 1: 0 M5 wAsnmc1'oN sr. in U ll :I S ll 313 Washington Street ml ll Il II I1 bt::::::::::::::::::::::::o::::::::4 k:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1i K::::::::::::::,::::::,:::,,:::::::n r-:::-:::::--::::::---:::::::::::1:1 LI II ll 5' r II II ll ARTIST SUPPLIES li 1: COMPLIMENTS OF 3 H ,, gg 3 3 Prompt Service 0 ll ll U gg cooK sf LYON Co. :: 1: , 1: It Il fl The F rederlck Post Co. 11 I ll ll :I 91 FIFTH STREET ,, PAIGE and JEWETT AUTOMOBILES ,, ,, t jf ll ll ll In the Lumbermen's Building ' ll ll ll ll I, Il II il g::::::::--::-::::::-::::--::::::::.g L::::::....,.,,.-- Page 83' : 1,6 A 'A L 9 0 0 0 O I 9 0 0 O 0 0 0 9 O 0 9 l I 9 9 cv E P' 5 af g c: 'TJ c: :O ca Q 8 CLOTHES SHOP E 9 l f'Whe1'e Young llfen Bray l ooo oo- A GOOD UNDERSTANDING Croft: 'll wish you to understand that I do not stand on triflesf, H. Brown Clooking at his feetlz No, so I notice. IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUOCEED At a recent exhibition Ed Cheney was milled back five times. If he had done it right the first time, O Southwest Corner Fourth and VVashington Sts. Q y H 8 0 he would nt have been called back, says George L..--------------------------- l Goss. I -0 - - '-'-- '-'--'- Q Q'-.1 -------------------------------- -1 l Pass the salad, E lr V ' E l Pass the cake,' . Q Buttered Popcorn, Chewing Gum and O E glidi2Z'l:25e' 3 l tfantly after Your noon-day lunch-buy it 2 , . 9 2 from II. D. SIAR. 2 5 Gvvd Things to Ewt 2 l After Six O'olock Evenings z 3 l a All Day Sunday and Holidays l . 9 , O E Dehkatessen Stores 2 E Broadvflisrelaillfle Eamon g 9 9 l 1-Waohin t St t l 9 9 9 0 . gon t ree, met. 13th and 14-th 9 2-Union Avenue, bet. Russell and Brazee l 9 H' D' l 3-North 21st, bei. Flanders and Glisan 2 THE POPCORN MAN 5 9 cocoa.. QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ 0 ..,,..... . L.. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , l o 'l '' 'l 9 l CLASS PINS 3 E SHELL E g 5 g QW , gg J.C.KAHN g 0 uzc a , 9 9 , 9 Q 201 ALISKY BUILDING ' 2 Sfaffwg 2 2 3 l l z Third and Morrison l g 8 S Second Floor 3 l of California l l Il 3 x COMIVIERCE HIGH SCHOOL RINGS 51.00 gg L. ...... ..-....---.... ...... ...... g , , , n1tI33tCt QCCCCZCSSCCCS 903 ZZCQQLL 3331 :tt Stttttttstit t tttactggtt 3 aastg 2 :r g S,...,..T....H.f. g g THE OLD BOOKMART g 1: z 210 Third St. Il 2 2 New and Second-Hand School Il jf E Books of All Kzmls gg . Gc g gg Bought and Sold gg il '?3 E '-31 l ll Il A HA , II zss w..mngum,sum 2 gl S BOOK ll ng g g gg Il ' ll STORE II ll ll 0 ga L::::::::::::::o:ffo:: QOOOO ::0::::0 E22 OOOOOOOOOOOO 0000 000000 00000000006 Page S4 6 Q J V' Gooa' Book if more Q a P1f0a'arf of been minafs' ana' Jkillea' handy, ' than 50 mach paper, iype aaa' iakf. DI M a'g S PRINTING COMPANY HENRY BUILDING PORTLAND OREGON TELEPHONE BROADWA 4878 PgS5 l2, Pen Sketches of Om' Peclagogues 5 X, N. 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Suggestions in the Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR) collection:

Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Lincoln High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930


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FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.