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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1920)
4 TIIE MORNING ORECONIAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY JG, 1920 MEXICO FIFOS AIDED BYU.S. IS CHARGE "Wilson Seems Hypnotized by .Carranza," Senate Hears. RADICALS' POWER WIDE Bolbbevlk I'orces Supported by Re gime Which Ib Recognized by Americans Is Assertion. BAN ANTONIO. Tex. Jan. 15. Propagandists of bolshevism have epread their doctrine of radicalism from Sonora to the Isthmus of.Te liuan tepee within a year, the senate eub-committee Investigating the Hex lean situation was told today by an American traveling salesman. The witness was heard In executive sea nlon in order that he might be guard ed to that extent against possible xeprisals by Mexicans. He begged that his name be not used because be expects to return to Mexico. Carranza, when forced to choose be tween two email armies in the south, one led by the- federal commander and the other known as the bolshevik force, declared in favor of the latter, ho assured the committee. Striking laboring men In- other districts, he raid, were, frank in their declaration NEW BILLS AT THE THEATERS I Heilig. j BY LEONE CASS BAKU. T SEEMS, If memory is to be re lied upon, that years and ve&rs ago there was a school of drama of a nature similar to "The Master Thief," which opened last night at the Heilig. It is interesting, therefore, for present-day theater-goers to have an opportunity to see frank melodrama, the type of play our ancestors en joyed. Regarded from this historical view point there is quite a bit to be said for the production. The question re mains, however, is the theater-going public particularly interested in his tory as such? "The Master Thief" is a fairly entertaining melodrama and it was well received by an audience made up for the most part of motion picture fans who wanted to see beau tiful Beverly Bayne and Francis X: Bushman in person. The undeniable beauty of Miss Bayne and the good looks of her husband, Mr. Bushman, and their acting interest, does not mitigate the fact that their play is totally without esthetic value, lack ing in ingenuous touches and highly illogical. Whatever popularity it may be destined to command is in' the final analysis due to the personal eqfuation entered in the appearance of Miss Bayne and Mr. Bushman. . Primarily the story has to do with a deep-laid and .far-reaching scheme of vengeance wreaked on a dozen men By the son or one man who was ruined financially and killed himself IS years before the play opens. The audience knows that the son Is "Pay master." who has taken his toll of the other men and now is trailing Rango Sherrad, the last of the list Sherrod in turn is reducing to ruin the father of a girl he is in love with and in true melodramatic style "has her in, his power." Then "Paymaster" of adherence to the radical cause, and comes to Rango s house, an estate eilmost everywhere he went he found n " Island on a Florida key, where undisguised evidence of the success of a house party has gathered and which the extremist? agitator. includes everyone concerned In the ... i iury. in re, in pure, unaauueraiea Wilson Declared Hypnotised, theatrlr-alism. nnrfntlv m9t,3rld After commenting tha "Mr: Wilson afterthought to produce effect, the hero outwits the clever villains, ex Deemed to be hypnotized by Mr. Car ranza," he added: "If the American government rriould cease to support Carranza he would not last .30 days. The mer chants and business men of Mexico want law and order, but they cannot hope for such while the bolshevik poses the grafters, saves a lot of pa pers several times, wins the lovely heroine to himself and in the last scene of the last act he saves the girl's father from suicide in an episode of theatrical claptrap that makes the sawmill murder and the grapevine pang Is upheld by the American gov- I leap for life of previous melodramas ernment" I look like a page from "Rollo and His Matthew Warner, a. veteran of the I Little Friends.' civil war", of San Antonio, gave the I Miss Bayne has the congenial role history of the Atascador colony, of the heroine and is charming. Mr. which he founded during the rule of I Bushman plays the resourceful hero Porfirlo Diaz near Tampico. It was a role similar to nearly 400 others in peopled by farmers from Nebraska, which he has achieved distinction on Illinois, Iowa and Texas, he said. His the screen. The role of the villain account included reference to the Sherrod is characteristically drawn murder of A, Burt, and the serious by that always splendid actor, Frank Injury of his father by Mexicans. It I E. Camp. The engagement rounds was on that property that the daugh- I out the week, with a matinee on Sat- ters of Matthew Gourd were attacked I uraay. by Mexicans, who first roped their I The castt father in such a position he might I o Hara. .... ,, Harry English witness their acts. MT McKintion. . Alice Warder. . . . Bveriy Bayne Roma Mistier. ..........Kate-Pier Roetner CurtiH Dean ..James H. Morrison Mrs. Norah Full-er-'Ryan-.... .Grace Peters Mollis Leslie. ...... ...n . .Florence Joyce James Warder. . . . Fritz Adams .Ismiis Frahoff .......Harry Lyons ...Frask K. Camp , . .. Winaor Dapeett but Green had the local army I A stranger.. Gerald Pring Hippodrome. ORE than usual interest centers the appearance of Margaret Fallenius, headliner on the current bill at the Hippodrome, Inasmuch as Miss Fallenius Is a Portland girl. She is the only daughter of Mrs. Edith Fallenius, who is recognized as one of the finest pipe organists on the Pa cific coast and is particularly well known in Portland. For nine years Mrs. Fallenius was organist at the Christian Science church and for 13 years was organist at the Unitarian church and also played at Trinity. She and her daughter Margaret left three years ago for Palo Alto, where Mrs. Fallenius is still active in mu sical circles as organist and. choir director and teacher. Martraret attended private schools In Portland and Miss Markers school in California, specializing In music. She studied with Henry L. Bettman and later went east to take up a stage career. She has appeared in proauc- tions in the east and in vaudeville. In her present offering she is the principal member of "The Cameos." an artistic and thoroughly charming offering. Miss Fallenius plays the violin and has wizard fingers. Her bewitching playing held the audience enraptured. Her biggest and most pre tentious solo Is Hubaya "Hejrekati," which was a signal triumph and a pleasant and memorable event. Miss Fallenius has an excellent singing voice, too, and Is heard with the other members of the Cameo group in songs written especially for them. Further interest attaches to this young Portlander"s work in that she produced the act and is its director and manager. She is arranging to go into the producing end of the theat rical field next year, and will nave a series of acts on the road, directing and staging them herself. The present act embraces a novel Idea and shows the - five girls in snowy white relief against a coral pink satin background, quite as cam eos come to life. They wear white satin colonial effect costumes and powdered wigs. The charming so prano voice of Beatrice Bradner adds interest. For the second half of the act the girls change to colorful attire, with the exception of Miss Fallenius, who is so busy playing her violin that she retains her picturesque white satin and frills. No jazz is Introduced, but certain melodious popular airs are brought out in song and by Miss Fallenius' violin in the last act, which takes on the pictorial qualities of a Corot painting, with a beautiful for est background. Miss Fallenius is the niece of Mrs William Thrift' Pangle and a niece also of Mrs. Kate Schulze. the latter of whom is well known hero and who now lives in Palo Alto. During her brief stay in Portland Miss Fallenius will be the recipient of social, at tentions and will remalnover Sunday as a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Pangle. Others on the Hippodrome bill in- T unrgnsn t i.'i ir.i. i-; .. . -i 1 1 Harry K. McKee " V, C' ,,.,T . i... ? T IHN, PERSHING TO DINE ADiflSSION OF FAIR SEX IS AL LOWED BY CITA3IBER. Original Plans to Seat Only Men ATe Revised Banquet Will Be on Sunday Xight. Women have won two big victories witnm a few days In Oregon, first in me legislature when suffrage was ratified, and agairi yesterday when the Portland Chamber of Commerce capitulated and eald It would, permit the fair sex to sit at banquet with General John J. Pershing at 6 o'clock Sunday night. "We simply had to yield to the in sistent demands of the women," eald P. Hetherton. assistant secretary and member of the Pershing committee. -and permit them to attend the ban quet. At first it was decided by the committee to limit banquet seats to men. Within the past few days, how ever, there had been so many expres sions of disappointment over this rul ing that It has been decided to with draw it so the women may attend thi feature of the general's visit to Portland, after all." Many registrations for the banquet were booked at the Chamber of Com merce yesterday and Mr. Hetherton said last night that only a few remain. The banquet will be given promptly at 6 o'clock Sunday night at the Chamber of Commerce and those at tending will receive tickets entiUing them to places on the platform at the public auditorium that night when General Pershing will deliver his ad dress. General Pershing will reach the union depot at 12:S0 Sunday noon over the Union Pacific. During the afternoon ' he will speak to service men only, at his own request, in the armory. No civilians, either men or women, will be permitted at thi meeting, on account of lack of room, General Pershing will have head quarters at the Multnomah hotel while in the city. At 8:15 o'clock Sunday night the general will speak in the public audi torium, the doors of which will be open to the public at 5:30 o'clock. There will be no reserved seats In the main body of the auditorium, the committee having decided to make of it a first-come, first-served affair. On the platform will be reserved seats for members of the general's staff and representatives of various civic and military organizations, in addi tion to those who attend the Cham ber of commerce banquet. There will be no elaborate parade but a guard of honor such as will befit the rank of General Pershing has been arranged and all due mill tary honors will be paid the general street, after a brief illness. He was 1 a native of Cedar county, Iowa, where . ha was born Anrll 26. 1854. and was ' educated in the public schools of that state and at Cornell college. Mount Vernon. He migrated to Oregon in 187S, locating in Jackson county. where he was married to Miss Annie Tice in 1879. In the late '90s he went north in I the Klondike rush, going over the White Pass route with the early movement to Skagway, and later re turned to the Puget sound region and engaged In contracting. He suffered I a stroke of paralysis soon after com ing back from Alaska, from the ef fects of which he never fully recov ered. He is survived by his widow, two daughters. Miss Kdna L. Willits of Seattle and Mrs. Docla. V. Pindell of Portland, and one grandson. Three brothers J. Q. Willits, principal of 1 the school at Hugo. Josephine coun ty: Will W., a stockgrower in Jack son county, and Perry of Aledo. I1L, and one sister, Mrs. bsmerewo Hitch cock, living in Montana also sur vlve. Judge L. F. Willits. whom death occurred November 1 at jiiamau Falls, was a brother. Funeral arrangements win be an nounced later. Carrama Aid Reds Cited. It was in August of 1919, he said, that Carranza upheld the militant radicals in Tobasco. A Mr. Green, who. the witness said, was a descend- I Colonel Drake ant nf in American, had declared I woaam Little i.in.nif rmirnnr. He anerted I Ransro Sherrad. . ...... Uv.. ... -----T" . I Craddonk. i,reen was not ine cuuitu ui i-vj ule. end retained his power until the ap- Garvin ...Myron . Paulson nearance 6f a ' federal force, com- I wymaster. and Bob Millard, Mitchell and Mitch ell,, H. B. Llazeed and company, and the photoplay is William Desmond In "The Prince and Betty." - manded by General Bertanl, who, after listening to the complaints of merchants and landowners who al leged reprisals by Green, overpow ered the local army. "Green's troops were called the reds' and the "bolshevlki by the peo- nle in that state." said the witness. "tt seems Bertanl made a mistake in disarming these troops," he added, "because Carranza called him to ac count for it and brought him to Mex ico City, lectured him and restored Green to power with an army to sup port him against the will of the peo ple. Ever since that time, nowever, Tobasco has had two governors, one the people want and) one that Car ranza wants. Dramatic Testimony Given. Dramatic accounts of their expe rlences were given by Mrs. Mary Wrieht. Mrs. James A. WilllB and (The portee would like t know Ti1name ' in that vicinity. Shingle Mill Projected. TILLAMOOK, Or.. Jan. 15. (Spe cial.) The Watt Shingle company, which was recently organized, will erect its shingle mill on Garibaldi beach, there being considerable cedar Fair Violinist and Pianist Delight at Auditorium. Mina Estelle Gray Demonstrates Ability mm Start Mischa Lhevinne Is Talented. BY JOSEPH MACQUEEN. DARK-HAIRED and dark-eyed, with a speaking voice like a sil ver bell. Miss Estelle Gray, American violinist and quite a slip of a pretty girl, was charming last night on the stage of the public auditorium when she, a violinist, and Mischa Lhevinne, pianist, appeared in recital that was more like a friendly musicale in a Mrs. Joseph C. Bailey: the husband of I private home than a formal musical Mrn. Willis disanneared while trying I affair in public. to get her out of the country. It is I in private lire tnis lair young no assumed by her that he is dead. The husband of Mra Wright died as a re sult of hardships. Mrs. Wright told the committee how she and her daugh ters hid for weeks in a canebreak Iinist is Mrs. Mischa Lhevinne and she is much in love with the Lhe vinne baby, aged 5 months. Here is one of Miss Gray's spoken messages that made her audience like to escane the revolutionists, described I her -thnir nffnrn to dins to their farm at I "We play only music that we our So,, T.nia Pntnal ni) finally their I selves love. This is the first time I flight to the United States when word j have ever played in this city. We love reached them that the state depart ment had advised Americans to leave Mexico. The testimony of Mrs. Bailey and Mrs. Willis was of their failure to save their farms and their escape Into tke United States. FATHER-IN-LAW OFFENDS it, Mr. Lhevinne and L although as yet we have no intimate friends here. Do you know why I love this Port land of yours and why I consider it the most important city in all my life? Five years ago I met Mr. Lhevinne ! here. He told me he loved me and I told him I loved him. Then we were married. Mr. Lhevinne before long will tJlay you a cradle song, a lullaby I It's about a baby that came to make us happy five months ago a haby Gertrude ). Arnold Says. Husband I that had at first dark eyes and no hair. He s sucn a treasure bucu . a Dislikes Her Parent, Mother-in-law Joltes to the con trary notwithstanding. It was the father-in-law of William R. Arnold who won disfavor with the young man, according to the divorce com plaint of Gertrude M. Arnold filed in the circuit court yesterday. She as serts that while they were living at 1036 East Sixteenth street her hus band hit her father. A celebration last New Tear's eve was broken up when Arnold slapped lils wife, according to Mra Arnold's Complaint. Frank Burnett's penchant for mak ing love to other young women, both in and out of ths presence of his wife, is alleged by Iva Burnett as a divorce cause. Divorce suits also were filed yes terday by Charles S. Orand against Cora Orami, and Angelina Scafida Sal ralamachia against John Saltalama chia. KIDDIE'S CROUP dear little fellow.' Miss Gray made berself a personal guide to all the music played by de scribing it Detorenand. sne spone in a far-reaching, sweetly-toned voice of charm. In her playing of the widely different pieces "Humoresque" of Leonard and the "Danse Macabre (Saint-Saens) Miss Gray soon dem onstrated that she isa violin star of high excellence, with a tone of spun gold and a technique that dazzles. She also won out as an interpreter of popular music, especially In play ing a lightning arrangement of "Yan kee Doodle." Mr. Lhevinne is a young piano star of marked talent, with a geniu3 for portraying soft, poetic effects and as suddenly changing to furious, roaring tornadoes. He won warm applause in playing the "Ocean" and "Revolution ary" etudes and a "Nocturne" of Chopin. Mr. Lhevinne's own music shows rugged, solid imagination and much tonal beauty. There were many recalls. The au dience ought to have been larger to have heard this intimate musical treat. tbe completion of the government's shipbuilding programme was stored. STOLEN TAG USE CHARGED Alleged Speeder Faces Trial on License Transfer Com plaint. Arrested originally on a charge of speeding, R. E. Gorex. who lives at 495 East Tenth street north and who Is the proprietor of a garage in Van couver, Wash., will face an additional charge of violating the state auto mobile law by using a Washington license tag taken from another ma chine, according to an announcement made by Police Lieutenant Frank Ervin last night. He will have a hearing next Wednes day in municipal court and in the meantime is out on $100 bail. Gorex was caught speeding on Union avenue on January 12, according to Lieutenant Ervin, and was at that time driving a car with a Washington license. Charges were Immediately filed and the license was traced to W. S. Thompson, a real estate dealer in Vancouver. Mr. Thompson kept his machine in the garage belonging to Gorex and the latter Is declared to have removed the tag for use on his own machine. SHIS TO M ROOMS i RESIDENTS "WILL BE REQUEST ED TO OPES IIO.MES. 18-CENT SUGAR ALLOWED Retail Price of Cane Product Isl Fixed by Food Official. Announcement was made yesterday I by W. K. Newell, federal food ad ministrator for Oregon, that the price of 18 cents per pound, retail, for cane sugar will be permitted at this time. owing to the prevailing high rate wholesale. The trade has been noti fied to this effect, he said. . Mr. Newell also made public a de cision of himself and of United States District Attorney Humphreys that dealers will not be allowed to compel patrons to accept at the higher fig ure cane sugar of a certain quantity in order to obtain beet sugar at the 13-cent rate. Patrons should Insist I upon getting beet sugar. Bald Mr. Newell, if that is what they want, and any attempt to "work off" cane sugar will be dealt with, he declared. ii! I I'' !! Downtown Hotels to Accommodate Between 7500 and 10,000 VJsllors in June. BRITISH FACE NEW WAR (Continued From First Page.) MUST BE CHECKED BIG COAST FRAUD CHARGED enormous amount of baggage were taken, the statement says. "Street fighting started in Rostov-on-Don January 9 and lasted the whole day," the soviet communication continues. "The town was cleared on the tenth and the enemy driven back beyond Bataisk Glrlo and Aksaishal. A revolutionary committee has been formed at Rostov." The virtual abolition of the death penalty againstnon-bolshevikl in so viet Russia is announced in a wireless dispatch from Moscow today. GENEVA, Jaju 15. Enver Pasha, former Turkish minister of war, who was recently elected king of Kurdis tan, has started a bolshevik revolu tion In Turkestan, Afghanistan and Baluchistan, according to a telegram from Baku. Enver is said to have many followers and is directing his energies against British prestige in southwestern Asia, the ultimate aim being India. Large sums of money, it Is reported, have been furnished him by the soviet government In Moscow. WASHINGTON, Jan. 15. General revival of war In Europe If Poland is unable to withstand the Russian bolshevik armies Is not "improbable," General BliBS, who was a member of the American peace delegation, today told the house ways and means com mittee. With arrangements already made for housing the bands and patrols of 37 Shrine temples in the hotels of Portland, an organization of members of Al Kader temple will begin can vass of the city this morning to re serve rooms in private homes. It is claimed that the hotels of the down town district have absorbed approxi mately 7500 Shriners, with 98 per cent of them members of the uniformed bodies who will furnish the show. The committee classes clubs and schoolhouses with the hotels, as many of them already have been booked for all the single Iron beds that can be placed In their large rooms. Before J. P. Jaeger, chairman, gets through placing the uniformed bodies, he expects to have .more than 10,000 brilliantly-clad Shriners In the hotel district, where they can be quickly and readily assembled. Besides all these men In hotels. Chairman Jaeger is now advised of seven complete trains, some of them in two or more sections, that will be parked by the railroads so that their passengers can live aboard the cars. All California temples, that from Lu Lu of Philadelphia, Medina of Chicago, Boise, Butte, Helena and Fargo are in tne list. The railroads report that Portland will be flooded with visitors and Mr. Jaeger Is getting ready now to help the hotel men of the city provide shelter. Two hundred Shriners will start this morning to get the rooms. They will call at Portland homes to explain the urgency of the housing problem and to list the rooms. They will ask at least one room from every borne In the city. The canvass is to be completed by February 15, and the cards will be re checked so that the committee can begin assigning visitors to quarters by March la. MANILA INVITATIONS OUT Portland People Are Asked to At tend Victory Carnival. An invitation was received yester day by Mayor Baker from Albert Mars Easthagen. secretary of the Philippine Carnival association, ask ing the Portland executive to attend the big victory carnival that will be held in Manila from January 31 to February 8. Mayor Baker, in answer expressed his regret that he would be unable to attend the celebration, but stated that he would call the attention of the people otPortland to the festivities in order that any tourists might attend. A general Invitation to all visitors has been extended by the carnival committee who hope to make this year's celebration the .biggest that they have staged. YOUTH HELD FOR CHECKS Carl Ii. Angercr Is Accused1 of Pass ing Bogus Paper. Carl L. Angeror, 2-year-old stu dent, was well on the way to auto mobile ownership, according to the police, when ne was arrested at Fifth and Alder streets yesterday Dy inspec tors Collins. Gordon and Wright, and charged with obtaining money under false pretenses. Angerer was said to have purchased a watch from B. Petigrow with a bad I suit filed this week In the circuit check for $20.45 and then gave the I court, he has issued a statement deny- Take an evening at home with the EUP.HONA Inner-Player aloneor with, the family or with company that wants to sing or dance. Euphona Inner-Pianos are the most moderately priced of quality players. You can easily prove this point by comparisons. Sit down and play the instrument you are investigating yourself. If it is right you can play, and play well, the first time. The pleasure that the Euphona Inner-Player affords to the weary man cannot be measured in dollars and cents. You may have your own time in which to pay if your terms are at all within reason. PLAYERS 1 music y MORRISON ST. AT BROADWAY nHgB Altera MASON AND HAMUN PIAN0S- TALKINC MACHINES RECORDS Hi. OTMEft SAN PRANCI8CO. OAKLAND, PltESNO. SAM DICOO SAM JOSE, SACRAMENTO. LOS ANGELES IIL J watch to the Oregon Motor Car com pany as a deposit on an $1800 auto mobile. The detectives say that he passed another bad check for $16.60 and at tempted to pass bad checks at 16 other business houses of the city, tl ing this. The company concerned was the Safety Signal company, a concern of which he has no knowl edge. Slant Ileld as Peeping Tom." Joe Qulgley. 2S years old. was ar- ASTORIA VOTES PROGRESS GHsan streets, where Inspectors La- sane ana escnuipius ana rairoimaa Playsrounds, Civic Center and Auditorium Promised. ASTORIA, Or.. Jan. 15. (Special.) By en overwhelming vote the peo- IFalr found him hiding behind a green house. The police were looking for a "peeping Toin" who had climbed a ladder and peeked Into the apart ments of Miss M. Classen, SO King street, when they found Qulgley. The script Ion of the peeper. He was locked up pending investigation of his antecedents. pie of Astoria at a special election to- 1 prisoner is said to answer the de- day adopted two amendments to the city charter. One creates a civic cen ter commission and authorizes expen diture of $250,000 in establishing playgrounds and a civic center and the erection of an auditorium. The other amendment authorizes a $500,000 bond) issue to carry out rec lamation work along the city water front. YOUNG ELOPERS SOUGHT Bridegroom and Witness Implicat ed' in Perjury Charges. News of the apprehension of Frank Cabler, who eloped from Hillsdale last Tuesday with Ida Land, 16. re ceived a marriage license under al leged false representations, and was married by Circuit Judge Taiwell. is expected early this morning by the office of Sheriff Hurlburt- The young couple had been traced to Mosler. Or., yesterday, where the young man has a sister, and Sheriff Levi Chrisman of The Dalles left for Mosler late yester day. No trace has yet been found of K. W. Culllson, witness at the marriage license counter, who Is sought on a perjury charge. He swore that be knew the girl, that she lived In this county and was of legal ace, it is reported. The charge brought against Cabler by Roy Land, father of the girl, is subordination of perjury. League to Be Discussed. An open forum discussion of the league of nations will be held at For esters' hall, 129 Fourth street, tomor row night, at 8 o'clock, by the ship yard workers', laborers and plaster ers' unions. Among the speakers will be Milton A. Miller, collector of inter nal revenue for the Portland district. S. A II. Green Holman Fuel Co. -Adv. srarnpa for easH. Main 6J. t60-ai. BARRRLS AND KEGS. 3i Haw thorne. Western Cooperitire Co. Adv. BENJAMIN WILLITS DIES Native of Cedar County, la., .Res ident of Oregon Since 18 76. Benjamin Rush Willits. a resident of Portland since 1898 and of Oregon since 1876, died yesterday afternoon at the family home, 1072 Fast Alder Tliree TXoDbertea Reported. Three robberies were reported to the police last night. I. R. Williams. 508 Fast Fifty-fourth street, said he had lost a watch and chain, a ring, a suit of clothes, and a pair of shoes. Inspectors Coleman and Collins inves tigated. Mrs. H. F. Miller, 706 Ever ett street, reported the loss of seven rings, $3 in cash, and a kodak. A. H. Mcintosh, 539 Leo street, reported the loss of a watch and (100 worth of war savings stamps. Semaphore Company Not Involved. Because persons have been repeat edly calling the Semaphore Safety Signal company and asking K. I) Birkhols. the manager, whether his is 1 the company involved in a damage (Continued From First Pajre.) Dr. King's New Discovery Will of ,ar8re fuds in -Pacific coast ship- m, . -it nM.' ., I building came as a complete surprise JJO lnat Very ining, .baSliy yesterday to shipping board officials and Quickly. kOITT say, "Poor little youngster- I wish I knew what to do for you!" Just give a little Dr. King's Jew Discovery as directed and the croupy-cough won't linger. A cold Is not to be fooled with. Get after it at once. Loosen the congestion, the phlegm-stuffiness and the throat Horture. A family remedy for colds, coughs, errippe and kindred attacks. Fifty years a friend to cold-sufferers. Fifty years of mgnest quality, euc and $1.20 a bottle all druggists. Adv. Bowels on Schedule Time the bile flowing freely, the ferment- lne body poisons eliminated. Dr. King's New Life Pills make the bow els function regularly and keep the system cleansed of gaseous impuri ties. 25c & bottle, all druggists, Adv. here. L. J. Wentworth. district man ager of wood ship construction; J."W. Hall, assistant district manager, and F. B. Pape, assistant manager of steel ship construction, all expressed aston ishment at the announcement. A congressional party, investigat ing government shipbuilding on the coast, passed through Portland two months ago, but spent only two days in this city. It was rumored at the time that the congressional invest! gators had stopped their investigation on Puget sound for the reason that testifying before them would exempt shipbuilders from being required to appear before a grand Jury. The con gressmen were reported at this time to be contemplating a grand jury in vestigation for several Puget sound shipbuilders. The congressional investigation In Portland was confined to an inspec tion of the supply and sales division concentration warehouse at St. Johns, Where surplus material left over oa Over and Bowels Eight Always Feel Fine There's one right way to spee&y tone op the live and keep tne Dowels regular. Garter's little liver Pills never fail. Millions will testify that there is nothing eo stood for bil iousness, indigestion, headache or sal low, pimply (Ida Purely vegetable. Small Pul Small Dose Small Price DR. CARTER'S IRON PILLS, Nature's great nerve and blood tonic for Anemia, Rheumatism, KervonsnesSc Sleeplessness and Female Weakness. StMi ml w altgrt atijx1 W1!"?""" iiiuiim wiii wipiiim ., i . i- 'i nil m i.i .i NOW K CLOSED CARTER'S IVCR PILLS If..:? BEAUTY COMFORT ART MUSIC TO REOPEN SHORTLY AS PORTLAND'S MAGNIFICENT NEW THEATER OPERATED V"IJEH THE DIRECT! OX OV JEXSEX t VOX HERBERG I WATCH FOR THE OPENING WATCH FOR THE OPENING STARTS TOMORROW i'-h"gf0g Cecil B DeMiIle' uftjll MALE iptayg FEMALE I 7?J--'Jf From J. M. Barrie's Play, I Sfj ',The Admirable Crichton" g SJ An exquisitely beautiful and H I a sBr!r a highly dramatic offering. B E R Ijy El j " A notable cast, including Thomas Meighan, j 1 Gloria Swanson, Lila Lee, Thodore Roberts, h I Bebe Daniels, Raymond Hatton and others. Eg COLUMBIA ORCHESTRA y. C. Knowles, Director j Special score and enlarged for this picture. j j LAST TIMES TODAY j Florence Reed in The Woman Under Oath Orchestra Matinee, 2 to 4 daily. I IvsssaSMsssaaBHBasBjBsaBSHBKMBBBaasHasssa