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Page Six PROFESSIONAL CARDS OK; L_ G. rim-_> Office at White's Drug Store Residence MM Star Root* St, Res. phone 36, Office phone 126 }. L. GILLELAND. M. U. Res. Tel. 2373 Offico Tel. 6 Office on Alder St. Disease* of Women and Obstetrlcts Specialist DR. ML J. BEISTEL Physician and Surgeon Large X Ray for Diagnosis Special treatments for eye, ear, nose •nd throat diseases—Glasses fitted H. F. NEWBROIXJH, D. C. Doctor of Chiropractic 114-15 First National Bank Bldg Calls Answered Office phone 32; Roe. phone 1734 DR. LOIS M. FEAR Osteopathic Physician and Surgeon Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays Realty Bldg. Phones: 66 and 3 D. C. Dow Neal E. Dow DOW & DOW Attorneys at Law Realty Bldg., over Corned Drug Store. Tkos. Neill F. E. Banger NEILL & SANGER Attorneyr art Law First National Bank Building DR. A. A. ROUNDS Dentist Office in Emerson Building Phone 63 DX. A. E. IH'DSON I>entistry Dental X-Ray Equipment Office, New First National B'k Bldg. Phono 166 DR. FRED D. JOHNSTON Dentist Office in Emerson Building Phone 333 ~w7ii. STRAUB * Optical Specialist ''/s^~ < Strictly Correct %^6__^__>^\ Glasses Guaranteed !*'' Room 3, Emerson Building Phono 3681 lilt. FREEMAN L. BALL Eye Specialist , Graduate McCormick -^^-^^fe Nodical College, Chi _>_^f^'S^&* 'a«°. ill., for Eyes and ""^Sg^s** Nerves. PULLMAN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION To provide a systematic and abso lutely safe plan for the Investment of savings, and to aid its members to acquire homes of their own Is the object of the Pullman Savings and Lean Association. The Association Is in every sense a HOME Institution. Who It's For It is tor the Practical Man, who realizing the uncertainties of busi ness and health, and of the folly of spending all his money as fast as ho gets it, provides for an emer gency. It is for the Prudent Woman, who oat of her earnings or allowance, de sires to put away a little money monthly, where it wil'. be securely and profitably invested, and give her the least trouble and where she can get it when needed. It is for the Young Man possessing the manhood and determination to save something every month from his earnings as a reserve fund, to draw on when sick or out of a posi tion, for providing a home or for a start in business. i It is for Boys and Girls, to help them to be economical and industri ous and to encourage them to ac quire the habit of saving, provide a •*und to educate them and to make them independent. It is for Societies, Fraternal and other Organisations wishing to in vest their Income for the purpose ot treating a reserve fund, or for build ing. It is for all Seeking a Home or who want to improve their property, or pay off a mortgage or to provide a fund fcr any other worthy purpose. Call on or write M. K. SNYDER HELMER NYQUIST Auctioneer Phone MI6X2 Pullman, Wash. Geo. N. Henry REAL ESTATE • and INSURANCE CHILD SAVING WORK IN ARMENIA TOLD BY AN AMERICAN / — Charles V. Vickrey Gives Facts of Near East Relief Pro gram for Orphans. Charles V. Vickrey, general secre tary of the Near East Relief, has re turned from a trip of Inspection throughout Central Europe and the Near But, and made a report to the trustees of the Near Bast Relief In which he covers in detail the actual work of child saving now being con ducted by the great American relief organization In the Near East. Mr. Vickrey believes that "a few millions of dollars wisely expended at this time In the education of the children of the Near East, In character building and In moulding these young lives, will be worth vastly more to the world IJ/SsmWammmmmSm xMLW-' ' <tS CHARLES V. VICKREY. than billions of dollars spent later In [ suppressing International warfare and strife." Mr. Vickrey considers the need In the Near Fast and especially in Ar menia greater than anywhere else in the world, because, as he says, "In the countries of Central Europe there are going governments which have merely been temporarily Impoverished by war. lv the Near East, on the other hand, there is no such thing as stable gov ernment. The whole fabric of the state has to be created from the be ginning, and the. Innocent and help less children have to be trained to the responsibilities of future citizenship. Peace in the Near East and, in great measure, throughout the world, will depend very largely on the character ■it citizenship of the peoples of the Near East." Irresistible Appeal of Orphans. Describing the orphanage work of the Near Fust Relief In the Armenian ; Republic, Mr. Vickrey said: "We have at Alexandropol in the Caucasus, one orphanage where there ore approximately 10,000 homeless children, fatherless or motherless, many of them having no known living relative. Seme of them do not even know their own names, or the place of their birth. They have shown wonder ful recuperative powers, and to see them play their kindergarten or other games under the direction of our Ameri can relief workers, one could never be lieve that they had passed through the years of suffering that most of them have experienced since they, or their parents, were driven from their homes in Central Turkey five years ago. "For the accommodation of these or phans there are sixty splendid stone buildings, erected as barracks for the Russian army. These buildings are now given to us by the Armenian gov ernment for a period of ten years and lend themselves admirably to relief purposes. "This orphanage at Alexandropol is lan one of the 229 orphanages 'hat the Near East Relief Is now operating In various parts of the Caucasus, Anato lia. Cillcla, Syria and the Constanti nople-Straits area. "Thirty miles from Alexandropol, at Ears, there Is another group of Rus sian army barracks, which were given us by the Armenian government for relief purposes. i was going through the dormitories of this orphanage at Kars when the young American col lege girl In charge turned to me and said: 'Mr. Vickrey, It sometimes makes me feel Just a little older than Me thuselah to he ailed "Mother" by 6,000 of th*'s,. Armenian children.' And that is exactly what she was— the only mother that these 6,000 Ar menian children have, except as she avails herself of the organized assist ance of native Armenian women, In I caring for this large family. "In the hospital at Kars I found 1,150 heds, which, the day I was there, were occupied by 1,288 patients, It frequently being necessary to put two or more children in a single bed. At Alexandropol we have lr one hospital, or group of hospital buildings, 1,560 trachoma patient* At Kuraklls, forty miles east of Alexandropol we hire an orphanage devoted exclusively to the car,' and training of the blind children. At Deli Jan we have another orphanage, located on a mountain side, for the care of tubercular children, this segregation being as much for the welfare of the healthy children in the Orphanages as for the care of the; unfortunate consumptives. At Erlvan we formerly had twenty-ate distinct orphanages, though they have now been reduced and consolidated to seven in number. There are some thing more than 6,000 orphans In the rejlou of Bar] out " SCHOOL CODE FAILS; DEFERRED UNTIL HUM Olympla, Wash., March 4.—For the second and last time the pro posed new education code on passage 111 the senate yesterday lacked one vote of polling the constitutional ma« jority of 22 necessary to pass any bill in the senate. As the bill was already on reconsideration yesterday it can not be brought up again this session. It is the iii-i administra tion measure to be defeated in the present legislature 01 to be even seriously Questioned. The vote on final passage was recorded as foi lows: ForCarlyon, Chary, Coman, Da vis, Fawcett, Froff, Hastings, Karsh ner, Lambert, McCauley, McCoy, Metcalf, Rust, Sutton, .watford, Tay lor, Westfall—2l. Against—Adamson, Barnes Bish op. Cornwell, Cox, Crawford, Hall, Hutchinson, Johnson, Landon, Loo mis, Mothland, O'Hara, Ryan, Sin clair, Wells, Wilmer, Wray—lS. The floor maneuvering to final roll call, Johnsoa tried to send the bill to a referendum, and wis beaten .6 to 14. On his fi.iil effort to shelve the code Cornwell moved ih;/ refer the bill back t( the rules committee with timber consideration of it deferred unci the session of 19.3. Cnrlvon and other pn mlnent members of the senate organization Bu>?ortod this effort, but it. lost on .1 rote i:f 22 to I Satur^y~ fc^ _ OPERATED BY J.W. A.LENDER. INC. "Tj""^ Sunday ■ " . B „ , ■„. , fc .......... - # _ . „,.. pwm^h »»»>v, > • . .v* < „ , ,« v «mm,. Wl >,^™„, u t \„.«.. v yyivw ■ , I, ■■, -yi jujjjiiiiih^ii. -.^M«m*H fITV ' "~" ;, ■- N *"' » * SMiftM H/l PROD _® k^ A TPTTS? EX-TR-A i EuITION| ....... „. . i jV'_££_---4k^ i__. s. I A_i EDITION! <ic_. J^-Jr x. y«.' " 1 . -~*'''"*- ■*■■ ■!'**.«"■>.*■■■ -:r-x_^?:^^j^^-j>^t^,&axgixcc'ACs>^ys*- -^'.^i&iilKoco MMf _-_._-■_■.-. xl ■•■viv.-.-x-; :■;■.:'::. ■_ - ■ . ■ v.':>yV_2 AWT ,^4^^w^xrixc^^ p|B ". ■■'\*^ J^^^s_N^____o^§§_S_r;:> ■^'P^v ■ •Shdw : W ,<Wfci)l(| ■■K^.-'VyJi | Killing of * W^^lSm^ff^ f V*i Ape j GiRL NEWSPAPER- PU^l^^^^^l^l^ * «®_^. YOUNG REPORTER 1 A *•* *_nW» 1 \»* t__tfJ^'^ j^bL _H_l i-^^^§l__«^______K__^^S____H- <; >y- ?S AW^-^XA^ 11^ sN h . 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'"_>i*^S_ " ~ ~M ~MI "~~»~i»~i i___i -■ -. 3jjß^l — -■——p-"- ——— _JT.~ *" — '— — —-'" ■■* l'etwllMni k-M on \V adneaday I NYlurpl&Sr -^ffi'^ TmT__ >^rietor Also a Victimf -~-" ~ mm^W^+JL r^S** - V- i'"^ SS-^'t''-? *"•'"^'^«" Ihone _ i«««i itr nirt .m r .r»if ! * '*£ &is^;.?Swa!? «ftSFak. \ ■ I . _-" '■ — -S_£__y^-/^?7____i/,' ■' PHln—• ' "*Vu_t >( l* lb. »>•»•"> *! " '*' "^ 'J''7 "*-' ''*T (h W* Bwl" lT'winl/ flHH__i_P^M^ DM Y»««* '•» *W**e-4«. \ --_ -_._^-__j "^N_ ._/ __P*^%_fc * V^a-lul """'| opportunity o. m__irt|r a m~rr «,r*^ i<JJ •j«iii»"*ii»iu»iiii t-j.fn» "*rtl .. i_3&L_____b>-i_Sp^ i«h. -.-.nu-t »«_/?.__:r^^^^^ -■___Sll§iß&r'_^_-Y__ VgjJ/C^iJ;nliilmirf j* ■ ■■"*■* "*-■'.',.,., — M . «v«». :'■'.' I A. v*|pip|r I-"'"' ■•- i»n!y -.--___^^?-^^^i^_>Jferfryg .^. >T |;:v/:v^",.'.''.'o_n'.'..r* .WW >'..l .1 >.• »r,. n ~.T Ini io|oomll : /[*"' ">;," u'' i-" :--;l___2^s:™_?^^,^^^^^KS»^K T^fiSf^. li «"•'•'™-ul**, *''o°'"0°'" b"*'"*" V'h oT ™.d lo nir_r.*rn<l > .!dwiil\ A'*?*;r'^ Jf?^P^^fc_ /I""te'-T', *l "^ _^---^^_^__SS. 7 0"* /^ *<* I<_L--_^r-- *Jlt^!^ __-____a**'--B^^^^^^^_-___^___J--^**_^_^_i__p »_ _o_--^^3 / ~J^IT-18-B- f T_i^^' Ij f \ / *-~*^+4^ r ~ _r*?c / _y_^ 3BHBBE___^_=: ~- s^ ~ ■____JF/ ""' - --^j;. *^V* - I I^j^r_^^Ss«"*^p[ Mwii^ 3lHßin___? H_-_-_i_-_-Mflr^S9^________B-^^ H__iK s^y _^&P^^syfi\^^&~^y'*~~~~' m^^^m\^C^^^^^^rmmmm\\wt%mMMMWK^m^^^^^ '^^^^ A 'FIRST NATIONAL' ATTRACTION The Most Astounding, Fascinating, Sensational, Thrilling, Amazing Piclure Ever Made A Riot of Romance and Realism Routed from the Routine of a Reporter's Adventures THE PULLMAN HERALD J> It th:n went to final vote with Pott, a foriu.r supporter, absent and Ict't. Oi F.truary 26 it foiled (it ' final pass-ige through the. absence of Senator CJTj.n, Senator Wry had heard from home since then md switched his v..to to tin' negative, while Hasting? went over to support of the code and the odds ball. again with llyau vol- Ins aga'.n.U the hill on its second time around instead of gainst it a. j previously. i Failure of th? code means that lb" i iMic school administration will remain as before with Mrs. Jose-1 phine Corliss Preston at tho head as | r_te superintendent of education.! The administrative code does not at- ; t-inpt to extend Jurisdiction over her : (department, thai function having I leen left to the educational code, i which had been prepared by a com i? is'-ion appointed by Covet'_•}<■ Hart, viib Senator Su:ton as *hit.'man — Morning Olympian JOE DAVIS PROMOTED Joseph A. Davis, supervising of ficer attached to the local office of the Federal Board for Vocational Education at Pullman, has been transferred to Boise, Ida., where he will be in charge of a new local of fice as local supervisor. Mr. Davis In a graduate of the State College and a member of Kappa Sigma fra ternity. His new position is pro motion over ',the office held at the Pullman station. ■ -■ - ■>■- a™ FARM LANDS < -AND STOCK RANCHES Hately, McClaskey & Klemgard GET THIS!! "Old Bull Hide" Shoe Repair Shop Most Modern Machinery " Forty rears Experience— Very Best of Everything Try me once—give the new man a chance NOTICE ADDRESS: :Jl_ E. Main, opposite Pullman Garage C. BURROWS Phone ,„ ?™*>. >larchny4