La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959, January 31, 1917, Image 2

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    WEDNESDAY, JAN LJAUV ill, 1;JI7.
PAGE TWO
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER
SHERRY'S
DRIED FRUITS
SHERRY'S
First Shipment of
Spring Stetson Hats
Is here for your inspection. The serviceable
kind, that hold their shape and always look well.
HAPPY HEADS ARE THOSE THAT WEAR
OUR HATS.
Copyriitht
a. a. jc,
New Spring Caps
In light and dark colors, checks, stripes yes,
every color imaginable. All new styles. Now
is the time to get your spring cap 50c to $1.50
i
The Price of Silence."
Y Torrential rain, driven by bitterly
P;eoltl winds, drove the young folks to
1. shelter. They could not endure the
j. combat longer; their horse refused to
J face the elements. Happily a wayside
r ! tavern loomed up before them but
! there was only one room available.
The youth and ihe girl he loved were
thus forced to share the warmth of
the fiendly fire to dry their clothes
registered as man and wife on the
landlord's demands. In the night
lightning struck the hotel and killed
the youth. To the country doctor who
1 1
rushed to the scene, the girl con- j i
fessed that the dead man was not her
husband, and sympathetically, the doc
tor helped her in the emergency.
Years later, when the girl had mar
ried, and was happy in the love of her
husband and an only daughter, just in
her "teens," the doctor visited the J
Sherry's To.I.iy
HILL'S DEPARTMENT STORE
Quality and Service
.V
? I husband, an old college classmate, and
T . recognized the wife. The doctor, in
love with the daughter, demanded as
!
x 4. 4, 4. 4, 4. 4, 4. 4. "
Gone Where?
To 1316 Adams
Just Next Door
To Old Location
OXNER'S PAINT STORE
4-
4-
ARCADE
But her biggest sacrifice, the one
which nearly deceives her lover, is in
winning over the count to herself,
causing her sister to haughtily reject
him. The count loses out all around.
Finally things come to a head. The
. family orders Bessie before their
Five-Keel Kay Bee-Triangle Society court of judgment and accuses her of
"HOME"
Drama Reviewed by
Craves in Motography.
"Home" is one of the finest produc
tionH that ever filled a motion pic
l" K snobbishness, wild behavior, intoler
ance, etc. Whereupon, the girl, her
anger fully aroused, flays them one
and all for their hyprocisy and ex
plains her motives. Then she dashes
ture audience with enthusiasm. It is from the house and attempts to run
un enormously clever satire on the fa- away. But her lover captures her and
miliar tactics of the nouveau riehe carries her by force back to the houso.
American. The pointed veracity of They arrive just as the startled mem
the picture, although of necessity lies of the family aie humbly ac
slightly exaggerated, should bring the knowledging the truth of Bessie's
habitual snobs in the audience to a statements. A touchipg scene ensues
sharp realization of their own ridicu- and Bessie makes up with her lover
lous vanity. The entire picture con- shortly after.
fers a pleasure on the spectator which l addition to this great Ince drama
is not born of mere elementary emo- the program for Wednesday and
tion, but of the subtler appeal which Thursday will be filled out by the Five
delves deep into the mysteries of hu- Musical Hewitts. They have a finely
man nature. The author's keen per- balanced instrumental act. Brass,
eeption of human leanings is as mani-1 string or reed, it doesn't seem to make
fest. as the fact that he has created ,IMy difference, whatever any one of
from this perception an intensely hu- the Hewitts' plays, it rs well done. All
man, entertaining story
too. is not without its comical side
NEW SPRING SKIRTS
ARE WITHOUT FLARE!
! ii
I '
- III
is ft- mn,
Choice Italian Prunes, per lb. ...'.... 12 l-2c
Choice California Apricots, per lb 20c
Choice Seedless Raisins, per lb 18c
Choice California Peaches, per lb 15c
Choice Black Figs, per lb - -15c
Choice "White Figs, per lb 15c
Choice Petite Prunes, per lb 10c
Choice Sultana Raisins per lb 12 l-2c
EATING AND COOKING APPLES
Per Box 60c, 85c
Oranges, per case, any size $3.70
Harris Grocery
PHONE MAIN 70 FARMERSPHONE B. 192
408 North Fir Street, Cross Track
"The Price of Silence" based on W.
Carey Wonderly's magazine story, to
be exhibited at the Sherry theater the
last time tonight with Dorothy Phil
lips leading an excellent company of
Bluebird photoplays, headed by Lon
("haney, Jack Mulhalt and Frank
Whitson.
WEAL F.STATF. MEN TO CKL'ISK
WF.ST INDIES
Travel Follows Trade.
Mr. F. G. Morss, local agent for the
i American Express Company, u jus;
: in receipt of the attached frjm his
.company's travel bureau which may !c
i interesting as a news item, in vour
; valuable Journal,
the price of his silence, that the moth- j -
er should give her child to him in mar- C. F. Laughlin, Vice-presi:leiit of
Wage. At school the daughter had I the National As-ociation of Beal Es-
fallen in love with a boy of her own
age, whom the mother believed to be
the baby boy who had been born to
her in due course, following the dread
stroke of lightning.
Conies a message that the mother's j
old nurse is dying, and the death-bed
confession is made that a switch in
children had transpired when the child
of the storm had died, and the boy at
boarding school had been substituted
by the nurse to keep the revenue flow
ing in from the hapless mother. When
I the doctor is killed in an automobile
accident, and the daughter has eloped
and married the youth of her choice,
thp "woman with a nast" lives bliss-
Ifullv the remainder of her life, with
the secret safe in he own keeping.
This is an outline of the plot of
tate Boards, Announces tWit arrange
ments have been completed with the
American Express Tra'-el lepar:.n.eni
for the use of one of the Unite 1 Fruit
Company's ilner? to make a twenty
four day cruise to the West Indies,
leaving New oYrk January 27 a.id vis-
iling enroute Cuba, Jamn'.o.i, Panama
end other points niado famous by the
oi'.rly Spanish "Sub division'' exports.
This voyage marks ine first nig un
dertaking of its ki-i l of the Heal Es
tate Boards as a whole, and :s an ech.
cf the travel unrest i; iw prevailing
("roughout the couin-.;'
It is the opinion i travel experts
that the American ;n.!-;- with nil
kinds of money .jd nowhere to go
has not fretted so mu.'h at staying at
home since the days of the Civil War.
With the pathway to Europe block
ed and the San Francisco Exposition
a thing of the past, the trend of tra
vel is towards South America, the
West Indies and the Orient.
"Travel is following traJe", said
Ralph 7. Towle of th Amcrkai Ex
piess company "just as trad 3 follows
the flag. Our travel department re
flects the activities of our foreign
shipping organization wherj taey
send freight travelers follow."
"Already we have booked a large
conducted party to Japan, and ou- se
and cruise to Panama and th Weit
irdies, scheduled for early March, pro
mises to be entirely inadequate for
the thousands of Americans wTio are
groping for some place to go."
OLD PAPERS For sale at The Ob
server office, 25 cents a bundle.
Sell It By The
Want Ad Route
The Observer's little want ads
do the work. It is surprising how
many people turn to them every
day and fiow'quickly they meet the
eye and bring buyer and seller to
gether. Look over your premises and see
what you have to sell. A want ad
describing it will hit the mark ani'
turn something you do not need in
to cash.
AT THE ARCADE THEATER WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
The sports skirt pictured is of cot-
n;0 f .i . i urn cuniuroy. i ne uouuie nem ana
!, " "f th.': nrvsp"HT Cl,,.,,ma WCre th.6 bell are decidedly smart.
very highly of this family of musi
cians. The following is taken from
the Seattle Daily Times:
The Musjeal Hewitts offer an elab
orate number in the new vaudeville
program which opened yesterday at
Since new telegraph cables to Cey
lon have been opened, messages have
been transmitted from London within
half an hour.
The author's (C. (lardner Sullivan)
subtitles stimulate the element of sa
tirical humor. This photoplay will be
shown at the Arcade today and to
morrow. Bessie l'arrii'cale's portrayal of
Ucssie vt lieaum is a splenilui example thl, l,,i,.P Hipp. They
of her supreme ability as an actress. v:iety f instruments
She is easily the picture's mainstay of
fascination. Charles Kay and Louise
lilaum also have big parts which they 1
both play with sincerity and convic-J
tion. Other members of a cast which
is exceptional for individual effort are
Clara Williams, Agnes Herring, Tbos.
S. (iuise and Joseph Dowling. Direc
tion, photography and artistic effect
are in keeping with the picture's
standard.
Bessie Wheati.ii returns from Eur
ope to find that the Midden ai'ipiisi
tion of wealth has not left one mem
ber of her family normal. Hrr moth
er and sister are insufferable snobs,
the laU'r's only activity being to cap
ture a count who stands ready with
his title. Her brother is a drunkard
and a hopelessly foolish young man,
his worst offense being a ditcrminn
ntion to many a woman of the com
monest sort. Bessie's father has de
veloped a rock-liound cynic, spending
most of his time at the club and pre
senting the picture of boredom while
at home.
After surveying the situation, l'.es-j
sit decides it is time for the ivscue (
work to begin. She resolves upon a i
grim determination, to put off her I
own sweet, natural ways ami assume
the combined faults of her family,
thus to hold up the mirror to them.
She succeeds in outdoing each member
of the family in his own peculiarity.
Bessie stay her brother from marry
ing the common woman of his infatu
ation by adopting that woman's ways.
The combination of two different
kinds of stripes in one costume, in this
case in the blouse and skirt, is an
arrangement which will be neither un
usual nor extreme this spring.
A well-known explorer is authority
play a great. for the fact that lions are generally
and make a
left-handed." They usually
with the left forepnw.
strike
Surely the Eastern Oregon man
who has agreed to pay $ 1 .50 for 1917
wheat is convinced that the war
won't be over bv next harvest.
I I
AT THE ARCADE THEATER TODAY AND TOMORROW
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BESSIE BARQISCALE. LOUISE GLAUM AND CHARLES RAY IN "HOME,
LATEST TRIANGLE PLAY. -
i THE MISICAL HEWITTS
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