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Spokane Chronicle from Spokane, Washington • 16

Publication:
Spokane Chroniclei
Location:
Spokane, Washington
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE FOUR. SPOKANE DAILY CHRONICLE. Spokane Daily Chronicle Official Paper City of Spokane; Member of Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also local news published herein. Published every evening except Entered, 41. postoffice st Spocane, as second matter.

Between 8 p. m. 7:30 a. m. call night Baltorial, 1121, 1130; subscriptions, 1123, numbers 1132: business office.

1121, 1131; advertising, 1124. Advertising representatives: John Woodward, New York, 110 E. 42d Chicago, 400 N. Michigan avenue; Detroit, 641 New Center building; Kansas City, Interstate building; San Francisco, building: Chronicle, Seattle 910 Lloyd building, Seattle; PortSpokane, Daily, Terminal Sales buliding, Portland; Chamber of Commerce building, Los Angeles; Globe building. Boston.

Subscription Rates. By city carrier or county agent 15 cents per week, payable weekly. By mail outside Spokane, payable in advance: One year, six months, three months, one month, 65 cents. Mail rates apply only in territory dot covered Chronicle carriers. Weekly Chronicle by mail only, one by year, $1.

HE WON HIS HONORS BY TRUE SERVICE C. PRATT, who for 20. years has been shaping the 'affairs of Spokane schools, has won well-deserved recognihis election to the presidency of the National Education tion in association. Mr. Pratt came to this city with the courage of pioneers.

He not afraid to try new things. He was not unappreciative of was the old, merely because it was old. He has evolved a school system which will stand up under comparison with the best. His administrative hand has been skillful, his financial management gratifying. But if any one thing might be said to be outstanding in his work here it probably is the fact that he has recognized human qualities in dealing with Spokane's children.

From the time they enter school till they receive the last of his appraising report cards the student is dealt with on a basis of his ability to live with his fellow students. If at the end of his term the National Education association will take from his hands this torch which he has held so high here, it will gain rich benefits from his elevation to its captaincy. GIVE YOUTH A CHANCE AND IT WILL WIN TOUTH is not a problem; it is the problems surrounding youth that must occupy our attention." That is the statement made by the Most Rev. Bernard J. Shell, auxiliary bishop of Chicago, at the Youth Institute conducted last week at the national capital under auspices of the National Council of Catholic Women.

It might be said this always has been the case. The worries connected with the discipline and guidance of children have changed, not to because the but children because have their changed environment fundamentally has been from altered. one, era another, At one time it was a matter of caring for underprivileged youngsters. Today it is a matter of helping them to steer safely between the Scylla of useless idleness and the Charybdis of hysterical, meaningless, "high pressure" activity. Young people succeed or do not succeed, depending upon their reactions to environment.

What that reaction is will be largely up to the older people who train them. THIS FUND CAN BE PUT TO GOOD USE TASHINGTON will regard as an important contribution 1 the allotment of $100,439 for public health service work which has been made by the surgeon-general at the national capital, This state has worked conscientiously to attain high standards of public health and it is good, naturally, to have that fact recognized. Future possibilities are even more important. This fund should help to do much during the coming year in improvement of sanitation and lowering of mortality. DAILY CHRONICLE TILAKUMS Tenas-Katsuk-Hyas-Kimta KATSUK GROUP TO HAVE CONTEST Our next contest is for the Katsuk group of Tilakums.

This group includes boys and girls 8, 9 and 10 years of age. The contest starts today and will close Saturday, July 11. Prize winners will be announced Wednesday, July 15. Children who are not now members of the Tilakum club will become members by entering the contest. Two dollars will be awarded in, prizes for the best original story and $1 for the best original drawing made with black ink on white paper.

Write your name, age and address on your entry and bring or send to the Big Tilakum at the Chronicle editorial office. CROSS WORD 2 3 10 12 13 15 16 18 19 This week our crossword puzzle is in the shape of a canteen. We hope it's as refreshing as a drink after a long hike! The definitions: Horizontal: 2-To walk in military formation. 4-Therefore. 5-We, 7- Soldier's water container.

10--Proceed. 11-Utilize. 12-Within. 13- Hurried. 15-Part of the mouth.

17- For example (abbr.) 19-Concerning. 20-Elude, avoid. Vertical: 1-Worries. 2-Ostrichlike bird. 3-Color.

4-Twenty. 6- To shoot from cover. 8-Sister of mercy. 9-Snakelike fish. 14-To grow old.

16-Anger, 18-Father. (Find answers in today's Tilakum column.) BIRTHDAY GREETING The Chronicle Tilakums wish "many happy returns of the day" to the following Tilakums whose birthdays come tomorrow and Monday: Rex Alstrom, E1602 Central; Katherine Ley, W1610 Fifth; Frank Hammond, W2117 Indiana; Esther McLaughlin, E3908 Bridgeport; Thonras Murphy, W2424 Second; Dorothy Totley, E2127 -eighth; Glen Salmon, W815 Providence; Edna Caudill, $529 Haven; Patricia O'Neil, E2218 Pacific; Robert Richards, W1508 Fairview; Virginia Barnes, N5511 Post; Bob Rickett, S211 Cedar: Bruce Russell, W1714 Twelfth; Floyd Newell, E2018 Sharp; Fred Timmerman, W1221 Twenty-first, and Bernice Cochrane, W1804 Dean. Monday's birthdays: Ruth Horseman, S411 Flake; Anna Johnson, E203 Fourth; Agnes Morton, E2029 Pacific; Jay Williams, route 1, Spokane: Mary Lou McPherson, W2604 Cleveland; Richard Slocum, E1213 Liberty: Marvin Peterson, E2213 Fourth, and Glory Albi, E2709 Illinois, Side Glances By GEORGE CLARK NEA SERVICE MIC RED PAT OF Now, please, Jerry, don't tell this know shoes because you sold in them on. school." and Wise -otherwise- I don't belong to a garden club But one belongs to me It has no officers at all Nor any entrance fee. It has no members on the roll, But, then, I beg your pardon, should have said it's To keep dogs from the garden.

Gout Nope? flivver According to a recent item, even the poor nowadays are bothered with gout. Probably the pedestrians, as in "goutatheway!" We are planning to do our bit for the country by putting out our column in nautical terms during the next "Navy week." For instance, we'll say, "Have you heard the yarn about the twain Irishmen?" Or swing into our old seaworthy vernacular: "Avast there, my hearties, it's comin' on to blow. Bend the lee scuppers; ahoy there, mates, and Pipe down a measure of grog, my bullies. Blow the man down." Which, to those unacquainted with sea, sounds like so much jargon. Better Yet.

Mother--Now, honeybunch, eat your rice, like a good boy. Honey don't like rice. just pretend you it. Honeybunch-No, I'll just pretend to eat it. Opera Comique staff members went on strike in Paris other.

night. While their a demands heart made known, they may include the following: 1. Laugh and a half for overtime gags. 2. Retirement fund for overworked or superannuated jokes.

3. Some kind of old- pension plan for eggs and vegetables to prevent their congregating around theaters. A Name For It. Mrs. Cassidy--My husband calls a spade a spade.

Mrs. Garner--So did mine--until he took one and started to spade up the garden and it broke in two. "Swift Workers Share in says a headline, It takes a pretty fast worker to share in anything these days. We've never been in an ambulance And we never care to brag on The time we were the city's guest In the good old jail house wagon. TIME TURNS THE TABLE.

Uncle Si Sourbier has quit helping his wife, Mirandy, into the auto since she took on so much weight. The other day she complained: "Why, Si, you ain't so gallant as you used to be when you was a boy." Si gave her a look and retorted: "Yes, and you ain't SO buoyant as you was when you WAS a gal." Freak Patents This patent was granted and is on file In the United States Patent Office. May f. 1900, archives of the 8. Patent No.

648,800, REGISTER FOR CARD GAMES. The symbols of the four-card suites Upon this cube are found. And when the dealer makes a trump That symbol is turned 'round. The cube is then placed at his left, Where every one may see The present trump and also know Whose deal the next will be. Children Need Mineral Foods to Build Teeth By DR.

MORRIS FISHBEIN, Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association. A factor of greatest importance in the proper development of the baby's teeth is the food which the child eats. Research workers have emphasized the importance of an adequate supply of minerals, such as calcium and phosphorus, and particularly of vitamins and for the proper development of sound teeth. Such essentials are included in a diet which provides plenty of milk daily or its equivalent in butter or cheese, eggs, leafy green vegetables and fresh fruit. For growing babies this is supplemented, of course, by cod liver oil.

doctors and dentists feel that coarse foods strengthen the jaws and help to harden the gums. When a new tooth is coming in, the coarse foods serve as a resistance against which the gums may work, to permit the teeth to cut their way through. Among the substances in diet most likely to be deficient, calcium is most prominent. Phosphorus is found with a fair amount of abundance in tissue of meat and Milk is the best source of calcium, as are also milk products, such as cheese. Essential Vitamins.

It is necessary, however, to have both vitamins A and in sufficient amounts, to make certain that the body will suitably utilize the calcium and phosphorus for purposes of growth, The appearance and the development of the teeth may be used as an indicator of the extent to which the child is being fed properly. Of the vitamins that necessary, vitamin as has already been mentioned, is found most plentifully in halibut liver oil and cod liver oil, also in butter and eggs. Vitamin is found particularly in cod liver oil, and in the halibut liver oil preparations which are reenforced with vitamin D. Fruit Juices. Vitamin is found plentifully in orange and tomato juice, as well as in other fruit juices.

Until the first teeth of the baby appear, the mouth does well if it is let alone. After the first teeth appear, the gums and teeth may be wiped each with a soft, clean cloth dipped in water, to which a little salt has been added. This should be done very gently because of the tender character of the tissues of the child. Use Soft Brush. At about 18 months, a soft brush may be substituted for the soft cloth.

As the child becomes older, it should be taught to take pride in the appearance of its and to learn to brush them for itself each morning and each evening. If the child likes the taste of tooth paste, it may have tooth paste. If it prefers water with a little salt, it should be given that solution. Most dentists feel that tooth pastes, tooth powders and similar preparations are equally efficient so far as concerns any possibility of preventing infection. Their chief purpose is to cleanse and polish the teeth.

Claims prevention of acidity, or other similar medical claims, are not warranted. on SOUTH SEA ISLANDS GIVE BEACH DESIGN PARIS. (AP) -New Pareus -South Sea island costumes--designed by Heim year's beach parades--were lately shown at a private gathering in Paris. Old-fashioned bathing suits of the 1890 vintage also were displayed. Their long skirts, longer, pantalettes, high necks, enveloping sleeves and elaborate trimmings brought, down the house.

Quotations The simple heart that freely asks in love, When infinite wisdom established the rule of right and honesty, he saw to it that justice should be always the highest -Wendell Phillips. There is no fit search after truth which does not, first of all, begin to live the truth which it Bushnell. Songs of Other Days When the Work's All Done This Fall. A group of jolly cowboys discussing plans at ease; Says one, "I'll tell you something, boys, if you will listen, please. I am an old cowpuncher and here I'm dressed in rags.

I used to be a tough one and go on great Jags. But I have a home, boys, A good one you all know, Although I haven't seen it since long, long AgO. I'm going back to Dixie once more to see them all. I'm going to see my mother When the work's all done this fall. "After the roundup's over, after the shipping's done, I'm going right straight home, boys, ere all my money's gone.

I have changed, boys, no more will I fall, And I am going home. boys, when the work's all done this fall. When I left home, boys, my mother for me cried, Begged me not to gO, boys, for me she would have died. My mother's heart is breaking, breaking for me. that's all And with God's help I'll see When the work's all done this fall." That very night this cowboy went out to stand his guard.

The night was dark and cloudy, and storming very hard. The cattle herd got frightened and rushed in wild stampede. The cowboy tried to turn them, riding full speed. While riding in the darkness so loudly did he shout Trying hard to head them and turn the herd about. His saddle horse did stumble and on him did fall.

Now he won't see his mother When the work's all done this fall. His body was all mangled, the boys all thought him dead. They picked him up 80 gently and laid him on A bed. He opened wide his blue eyes and looking all around, He motioned to his comrades to sit near on the ground. "Boys, send mother my wages, the I have earned.

For I am afraid. boys, my last steer have turned. I'm going to a new range, I hear my master call And I'll not see my mother When the work's done this fall. "Fred. you take my saddle, and, George, you take my bed.

Bill, you take my pistol after I am dead. And think of me kindly, when you 100k upon them all, For I'll not see my mother. when the work's done this fall." Charlie was buried at sunrise, no stone at his head. Nothing, what but it little board, and this said: "Charlie died at daybreak, he died from A fall. And he'll not see his mother When the work's all done this fall." Sent in by Miss Rose Starr, Salmon THE CRESCENT Main 2341 RIVERSIDE MAIN WALL Store Hours to 6 Clearance! Entire Stock Spring Dresses 1-2 Price Every Spring dress in the Garment Room's stock, including many late spring arrivals, from $10.75 to $55, is now marked at exactly ONE-HALF the original price.

Prints, plains, in styles for street and daytime wear; also dinner dresses. Sizes 14 to 44. Every dress is distinguished in fabric and style. $10.75 Dresses 5.38 $15.00 Dresses 7.50 $19.75 Dresses 9.88 $25.00 Dresses $12.50 $29.75 Dresses $14.88 $35.00 Dresses $17.50 $39.75 Dresses $19.88 $49.75 Dresses $24.88 $55.00 Dresses $27.50 salesman how you should Saturdays when you were Mother Should Find Right Way to Reach Child By BROOKE PETERS At 16, Susan presented such ousous problem that the family professional advice as to her ment. They complained tha't the was contrary, intractable, morose increasingly withdrawn from I participation in life.

The doctor, some questioning, suggested that mother give herself more to the But," Mrs. Smith replied, "I'm Susan half the time. She's always and out of my room; too much wish she were more occupied with own affairs." "Just as I thought," came the swer. "Susan always has to out. You are busy and concentrated on your own life.

I want you yourself freely, to cultivate the Let her feel she is important necessary in your life." Taken for Granted. There are many children in predicament. They are taken granted, loved because they are bers of the family, not because are one particular person. Smith had a place because she Mrs. Smith's daughter, not just cause she was Susan, an whose companionship her sought, and who was missed when was absent and eagerly welcomed her return.

Needs Friendship. CHURCH. a serisought treatchild and active after the child. with in so. I her an-; you to give child.

and Susan's for memthey Susan was beindividual, mother she As a child grows older and begins to feel her separateness from the world about her, a mother may need to be more than a mother. Her job as a mother is about over. She must be a friend. Many mothers forget this. They are so accustomed to the role of parent, to guiding and ordering and planning for the child, that they find it hard to readjust themselves to the fact that the child no longer needs this kind of treatment.

Points for Parents By EDYTHE WALLACE. This Father: "Doctor, I want you to look at Jim's burned hand, and if there is powder in it and you think best, give him some serum." Not This The Register and Tribune Syndicate Father: "I had lots of burns when I was a kid that were worse than that. Just wrap your handkerchief around it." Reviews of Late Books No. 29 of the Oz books is on the market. It is "Captain Salt in Oz," published by The Reilly Lee company of Chicago.

The author, Ruth Plumly Thompson, comes through with the same high caliber writing for children exemplified by L. Frank Baum when he started the famous Oz stories series. Fairytale it is, but what small child doesn't like and benefit from good fairy stories? Captain Salt, the "royal explorer of Oz," who is a reformed pirate, carries the reader away on a voyage on the Nonestic ocean. He and his merry crew come back with a hold full of fascinating specimens, new islands claimed for Ozma marked on his chart and 8 heart throb for children, after an exciting trip. A talking hippopotamus, flying fish, swimming birds, a sea forest and a big sea serpent are only a few of the things encountered on the voyage.

The book is well illustrated by John R. Neill. Sportswear Shop Clearance $4:95 $3:95 IDLER 8 20 Just 24 cotton chenille dresses in two- Just 59 knitted cotton 2-piece dresses piece styles; several different styles. In of string; natural, maize, pink, aqua and pink, aqua, maize, natural and blue. red.

Perfect for summer wear and for Sizes 14 to 20. early fall. Sizes 14 to 20. Originally $6.95. On Monday at $4.95.

Originally $4.95. On Monday at $3.95. Clearance of $5 to $10 Hats $4 Nearly 250 hats in this clearance group, all of them this spring and summer's styles. Fur felts in white and pastels. Panamas, leghorns, baku and Port Bonheur straws in white, navy, black, brown.

Styles for dress, sports or street costumes. Sizes 22, and 23. Originally $5 to $10. On Monday at $4. Collegiate Shop Clearance of Coats, Suits and Dresses The Coats include navy blue swaggers, The Dresses are spring styles, in plain and some light grays.

Also a few pastel colors and prints. For street and daycolor short jacket suits and navy swagtime wear; or for school. gers. Originally $19.75 to $29.75. In sizes Originally $12.75 to $18.75.

In sizes 13, 15 and 17. 13, 15 and 17. On sale Monday at $10. On sale Monday at $6. A Few Pastel Suits at $15 Tailored suits of sharkskin in short jacket type styles.

Mostly small sizes. Were $18.75 and $22.75. Clearance of White Footwear $3:88 Now the $6.95 white footwear has been added to the footwear clearance, which includes all $5.50 styles as well. This season's styles, of kid and buck, in oxfords, step-ins and sandal types. All sizes in the group, in one style or another.

$3.88. 9. This drawing was made by Lois Perry, 16, Hamilton, Mont. TODAY'S RIDDLES 1-What 1 is that which you and every living have seen, but will never see person, 2-How would you speak of a lor when you did not remember his name? 3-If a bear were to go into the Crescent store what would he want? 4-Why had Eve no fear of measles? 5-What is the difference between one yard and two yards? (Find answers in today's Tilakum column.) TODAY'S ANSWERS MARCH SO US CANZIZEN GO USE IN RAN EG PARZ EVADE Riddles: 1-Yesterday. 2-As Mr.

So-and-So (sew and sew). 3--He would want muzzlin. 4-Because she'd Adam (had 'em), 5-A fence..

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Pages Available:
1,319,550
Years Available:
1890-1992