LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12. 1917.
PAGE TAVO
ARMY OF MISSING
I
1 hreeoig5
pecials
In Our Men's and Boys Dep't
For Saturday
One Lot of 40 Men's Overcoats values up
to $20 all sizes. Saturday Special . ... . .
One Lot of Boys' Overcoats, sizes 7 to 17,
Values up to $12.00, Saturday Special . .
One Lot of Boys' Knickerbocker Suits, sizes
7 to 15, Values up to $12, Sat. Special . .
$5.00
$2.69
$2.69
HILL'S DEPARTMENT STORE.
SHERRY'S
Madame
SHERRY'S
Bertha Kalich,
foremos
I
; headed girl. That is, we have no
doubt Mr. Leiter thought he was
talking to the red-headed girl, for
j with one hand he was editing and
writing a headline on the story about
I Harry Thaw trying to kill him.se:.",
and with the other he was answering
IN" WHICH THE SUBJECT OF
STITCHERS IS SEWED I I'
BY MARGARET MASON'.
Every Year 3,500 People Dis
appear From the Cily.
VICE IS NOT ONLY GAUSF
From The Buckeye
State
tragedienne or the American stasro, j thu phone anJ at the same time ma,.
appears in a new wuuam rux pnoio
play at the Sherry Theater for the
last time tonight. The picture is "Loe
and Hate."
Madame Kalich plays the part of a
woman whose home life is wrecked by
the intrusion of a man who falls in
love with her. She repels his atten
tions, and in revenge he ruins the hus
band, and finally forces him to seek a
divorce.
After the decree is granted, the
woman, goaded on by the repeated at
tentions of the man who had made
her unhappy, kills him. Then the hus
band realizes that he has been duped,
and takes his wife back to him.
In the cast supporting Madame Ka
lich are Stuart Holmes, famous Fox
heavy, Madeleine Le Nard and Ken
neth Hunter, who has appeared in
former films with the great actress.
James B. Vincent did the directing.
Picked Up By
The Stroller
(Written for the United Press)
(Grandma said she dropped a stitch;
injr out a receipt for a kind old gen- 1 ,lKln t se- t fall
tleman who had just paid a year's sub- ' ve hunted for it everywhere
scription, which is always hailed with And can't find it t all.
delight in The Observer office.
Orandma says she s picked it up;
I didn't see here do it.
I guess old folks are pretty spry
If only we just knew it.
Just then Milton Price, the winged
and efficient little mercury and all
around apprentice in the back office,
came in to stir up the fire, and the i
stove which had shown signs of gen
eral (febility for soma time fell down,
and the office filled up with smoke.
Mr. Leiter finished his receipt, finish
ed his headline on Thaw, and con
tinued talking to the red-headed girl.
One of the boys asked him what to do,
and he looked up a trifle annoyed at
the interruption and said: "Throw her
New York. Jan. 12. For eroodness
sake, if you drop a stitch be sure
to pick it up again, for you will need
.them all. The newest and smartest
suits, frocks and wraps are a mass
cf stitching up one side and down the
other.
Don't for a minute think you can es
cape having a stitch in the side for if
out in, the street." The boys grabbed I you are vcrv enlc vou W1" nave then
her (the stove, not the red-headed ln botn Sldes and ,n front and back as
itirl) and in less time than vou could v eli- lne 01d adage, a stitch m time
say scat, the stove was out in. the save3 nine' must 8 in the discard, for
snow cooling off, and the office waa I who, wants to save nine new when
cleared of smoke. When I irot back 1 1 asnion decrees that to be real!?
looked around for the titian dream. ?mart be simply prodigal
No, I haven't been away or loafing
-on the job.
I have been banqueting, when I'd
rather been cabareting.
Life is full of adventure. You see
it all around you, i. e., if you hava
eyes to see.
...
The Stroller strolled into The Ob-
server office to borrow a copy of the I
Oregonian, proceeding on the theory j
of making one paper do the work of
two, and he saw Mr. Leiter engrossed i
in conversation with a beautiful red-
but she was gone, so I strolled out.
Dog-gone it, I wisht I knew who she
was. I'm afraid to ask the boss, and
any way the chances are he never
asked her name.
I never
either.
did borrow that paper
Law
Little Girl Rescues Doe But
Won't Let Her Keep it
Ashland, Wis., Jan. 12. (By United
ress) After rescuing a doe fawn
in a river near here and taming it so
it would follow whereever she went,
little Henntta Bnnkman, 5, was or
dered to turn the roe over to stalo
game warden because the Wisconsin
law prohibits the keeping of deer in
with stitches,
"Stitch, stitch" began "The Song of
the Shirt", but now it is the beginning
and the end also of every swagger
article of wearing appartl. Of course
i'. is the French who have stitched us
up in this mad fashion and they have
decreed that the stitching must be
done either in bright and varicolored
contrasting hues or in a tone darker
I than the material on which the stitch
es are taken.
Wide bands of stitching run around
the bottoms of skirts, checker board
designs of stitching run criss cross
on a blouse, stitching running around
sleeves and up and down 'em and
stitching running up and down a skirt
in stripes or running around it is the
thing. No matter which way you tun.
doe u now on exhibit at the "state ! yOU run '?t0 es omnipresent SticcN
game farm at Whitewater, Wis.
ritta cried what difference did
make to the state law.
J tt : f
Hen- i auniriiciB in une running. oirar.E1?
that i t0 say however, every stitch is not a
i uniting Hutcn oy no means. ,n'
We are doing
our best to give
you first quality
work
in our
3
specialized departments.
LAUNDRY
DRY CLEANING
CARPET RENOVATING
STANDARD LAUNDRY
COMPANY
La Grande, Ore. Geo. Gilbert, Mgr.
ffiwaui
deed for there is the back stitch that
has come very much to the front.
Feather stitching is being let dow i
e.sy but on light and fluffy effc-tj
is sometimes used; and as for ci'
stitching you will find it very nic
Pussywillow taffetas.
Briar stitching always is up to :.?
scratch and in spite of its name y,u 11
never look seedy in seed stitch. Th5.-e
isn't a shadow of doubt but that the
shadow stitch is not to be put in lne
'hade by any other stitch and the
chain stitch is sure to link you close
ly to the mode.
The French knot stitch is knotty
but nice and the darning stitch is al
ways well worn. The loop stitch is
used in the best circles and there are
r.o flics on the cobweb -titch. You come
across the cross stitch across lots of
Houses and the cable stitch is natur
, ully the very last word in stitches.
The outline stitch is right in line
, v ith all the best stitches and lots of
the girls have fastened their fancy
o'. the buttonhole stitch. Nor docs
f.ishion lay down on the job when
il comes to the couching stitch, so you
see the long and short stitch of it is
that any stitch at all is good,
j Plain stitching of course is really
the most swager on the tailored suits
; and wraps and straight bands, cross
bars and zigzags of the stitchirg and
sweeping curves are the favored de
I signs. No other trimming is used
j with the stitching save a few buttons
and a touch of fur. Since it would
seem stress is to be laid on the stitch
ii.g as a trimming for the rest of' the
v inter and spring the seamstress is a
very busy person indeed these days.
Poth she and the surgeon are ndepts
at taking stitches and they both stitch
you and trim you at the very same
time.
Plain Wenderluet and Ditiatiif.ction
With Hem Conditions Responsible
For Many an Unannounced Depar
ture Some Return, and Many Are
Lost Forever.
Swallowed up In the mazes of the
perplexing tangle that comprises that
greatest of labyrinths, New York city,
are thousands upon thousands of men
and women and boys and girls wbo
have been torn from the family hearth
or have fled of their own volition,
yearned for by mourning parents,
sought for by keen eyed policemen, but
ever on the list of missing persons.
Through the sordid disclosures of
white slave inquiries one of the main
avenues of disappearance the steep
downward path leading to lowest deg
radation has been divulged. But im
morality alone is nut the explanation
of the disappearance of more than
3,"iOO New Yorkers Biuiuallv.
Only a short time a so his "friends
made it known that Clifford Payton.
eighteen-year-old student mid heir to
a vast estate, had dlsa; :;i(.trMl a month
previously from Xorthrastle. X. Y.
And just recently u Ilanimaii heir nor
rowly escaped Leitii kidnaped by plot-
ters who sought a ransuiu. Charlie
Ross was stolen and never sent Uiek.
Dopithy Arnold seemingly jut evap- 1
orated. She was never found. Alma
Meyers stirred the community for a
week and then turned up safe and
sound as a servant g'.i. She had fled
because of parental severity and be
cause she had been pestered by a too
attentive townsman.
50,000 Women Amiual.'v Lost In U. S.
But these are only instances, men
tioned because of conspicuous position
iu the public prints. They comprise
less than a drop in the bucket, for did
not former Police Commissioner Bin
ham of New York city at one time say
'50,000 young women and girls are lost
In the United States every year. They
simply drop out of existence?" And
so they do. Aud so do almost as many
men and boys.
Of the 3.50O persons who disappear
annually from their homesJn New
York city about 2,700 return of their
own volition or because of the work
of public agencies. The other S00, It
would seem, are snuffed out Just as a
candle flame.
"Somebody Missing."
At police ueadquarters a telephone
tieu tinkles, homebody missing. Notes
are Jotted down. A detective Is sum
moned. The search Is on. It happens
every day, sometimes every few hours.
Au alarm is sent to all precincts and
to other cities.
An artist disappeared a decade ago.
His father died, then his mother. His
friends- mourned him and the career
that might have been. Ue showed up
recently, a prosperous westera busi
ness man. He had sensed that a paint
er's life was not for him, so he van
ished rather than disappoint tfte
dreams his parents had conjured.
At the Bowery mission a few weeks
ago was a bedraggled wretch. He
had leen a strong man, but whisky
had proved stronger. His was a down
ward path, and he was speeding fast
along that trail when picked up by the
mission. They tnnght hlra to flight
again. It was uphill straggling, but
he finally won back his self control.
He was sent back to his wife after
six years of absence.
No Return.
Enforced white slavery is a big fac
tor. Frequently, however, the girl who
Is ashamed or afraid to return home
will choose a life on the streets volun
tarily, and that move Invariably blasts
whatever chnui.e there may have been
of her eventual return to her parents.
The runaway boy usually comes
back. Perhaps the lure of the world
proves less alluring after a few days
of wet streets and hungering stomach
and hard hoard bedding. Willi the
runaway man the situation is differ
ent lie Is impelled hy commission of
crime or marital trouble, as a rule.
men attacks or aphakia are held to
account fur many disappearances.
The railroad is a factor. It helps
benr away the disgruntled boy from
the dismal flat and sooty chimneys
and horrid congestion. Hoys want to
live life, and that's the way they start
out to do it.
With men drink frequently Impels
the wanderlust. They co from one
spree into another and w':en rhey
finally sober up are too feeble ami
ashanii- and afraid to return to their
families. So they Just become part ot
the 3..V
NEW CROPS
YELLOW AND WHITE
Pure Silver
CORN MEAL
PER SACK 45c
Harris Grocery
PHONE MAIN 70 FARMERS PHONE B. 192
408 North Fir Street, Cross Track
ARC A DE
THE SOI L OF Kl'RA-SAX"
Sessue Hayakawa in Lasky-Paramount
i'fering Kevitwed by Thomas
C. Kennedy.
"The Soul of Kuia-San" which will
lie shown at th Arcada theater today
and tomorrow, is an excellent vehicle
for Sessue Hayakawa. But the real
purpose of this story by Chailes Ser
ver does not stop at opportunities to
the featured actor, for it also present
ed the producer with occasions to af-
j tests lied to him to save her lover.
At first Toyo is bent upon killing
Graham, but then he determines that
his revenge must be truer to its term
'than that. His opportunity comes
' when Graham marries a beautiful girl.
Toyo after planning carefully ar
ranges the moment when he will be
' revenged. But the outcome is- Bat
what he expected, for hio attack upon
the American girl is interrupted by
! Graham and then the girl's conduct
' avatker..; him to the f-ct that ag she
lied to save her lover from harm, so
I too did Kura-San lie to save him,
iToyo, from the guilt of murder.
The dramatic situations
are pre
fect forceful drama and great pictor- isented with great conviction and force
ial beauty. "Th3 Soul of Kura-San" while the pictorial and love scenes laid
is a drama turning about a Japanese in Japan have distinct charm. The
artist's determination for revengo op- direction and production of the picture
on the American who betrayed and are cf a very high quality. The photo
caused Kura-San to take her own lif . I graphy is of course excellent. Director
There is continuous interest here. Al- j Le Saint is to be complimented on
so there is real punch. 'many points, not the least of them be-
Though most of its action take; i-g the force put into the scenes of
place in the Flowery Kingdom and ; Kura-San's d-aath from a self-inflicted
there is equal use of interior and ex- wound. In this there is drama with-
I
AT ARCADE TODAY AND TOMORROW
V,"?'!'f'T .5LSStf.E--HAYAr5A.WA i F
i'fiJTtPk' i hi J I '.ThE 50UL'0F rURA'5AN'H
Sessue Hayakawa and .Myrtle Stedman in "The Soul of Kura-San.'
terior settings, here is a picture ! out its horribleness
which, produced in California, fairly
breathes out thj atmosphere of 01 i !
Nippon. In vain did the severr.l re
viewers present at the trade showing '
in New York look for some alien ,
touch, a touch of the west in this patch ,
of the east holdingthe screen.
The story of "The Soul of Kura-
i ban is not unfamiliar. The picture 1
opons in Japan and shows the true; j
love which binds Kura-San and tlv;
impecunious Toyo, an artist. The fa
ther of Kura-San forbids this match,
he wishes his daughter to marry a
wealthy merchant. Toyo comes to
America to enter business with his
Myrle Stedman appears in the role
of Anne Willoughby and she pleases.
Tsurji Aoki is splendid as Kura-San.
A number of Japanese actors and ac
tresses of ability appear in the picture.
neauty. Not Love.
Susan Hicks, though u't a pronounc
ed man hater, tock little Interest In
the nms.uliiie porti'ui of humanity.
She often boasted that she i:ev, r wast
ed her time reading the sti.rirs women,
are supposed b, enjoy. on day, how.
" wnt discovered with a
lar magazine In her hand
"Why. Susan, you are reading n I,e
storyr exclaimed her sister in amaze
ment, as she glanced at the iiiitra.
tlon.
"I'm not," replied Susan
married."
Prefers Chamberlain's.
"In the course of a conversation
with Chamberlain Medicine Co.'s rep
resentative today, we had occasion to
discuss in a general-way the merits of
their different preparations. At his
suggestion I take pleasure in express
ing my estimation of Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy. I have a family rf
prosperous uncle. His letters to Kura- i niiuren ana nave used this rem
San are intercepted by her father and ' . y , m my home for years. I consider
one of them is substituted for a note ! l the only cou?h remedy on the mar
supposedly written by Tovo and te'l- j kel; af Lhave triei ry all kinds."
ing Kura-San that he has married his O 1 C' Ro39' Publisher Hamilton
rich cousin. i .ounty Republican-News, Syracuse,
After the death of his uncle Toyo
returns to Japan. But Kura-San
pppu-
"Th
ey re
Notice to Creditors.
Notice is hereby given to all con
cerned that letters of administration
have been issued by the County Court
of Lnion County, Oregon, upon the
estate of Sallie A. T. Palmer, de
ceased, and all persons having claims
against her estate
i ff f jed to present the same with proper
Japan. Through the painting Kura- ,'1 r?t 7. T""?!' n" a,im'"i.3
San posed for. Toyo locates the artist 5; To ice
and on finding that his name is Gra- j Dated at La Grande, Oregon this
ham is filled with hatred toward the "nd d'"y of December, A. D 1916
memory of Kura-San, whom he pro- JOSEPH PALMER.
1 Dec. 22-29-Jan. 5-12-19-26.
to know only sorrow through his re
turn. Kura-San has bee.i letrayed by
an American artist named Herbe-t
Graham. She commits suicide and in
her dying condition tells Toyo that the
man was an American named Herbert
- T- 1 ...
iiy. iu)o nurries to America on
learning that the betrayer has