Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, June 03, 1913, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE WEATHER 8
OREGON CITY Fair Tuesday; S
westerly winds. 3
Oregon and Washington Fair $
Tuesday; winds mostly westerly. $
Idaho Fair Tuesday north;
S showers south portion. -.. S
$ EDW. A. BEALS, Forecaster. $
SSs$SJSSJ$ $
VOL. V. No. 128.
ROBERT BURNS SOCIETY PICKS
BEST ESSAYS ON GREAT
SCOTTISH BARD
WINNERS AT YEARLY EXHIBIT NAMED
Manual Training Displays Of Such
Uniform Excellence Judges
' Have Hard Time Select
ing the Best
Inaugurating this year a custom
that it is intended to keep as a per
manent feature of the school year,
the Robert Burns society of this city
offered two prizes for the beBt essay
upon the great Scotch bard whose
name the organization bears. Mon
day members of the society spent the
greater part of the afternoon going
over the competitive essays, and
found them all of such a standard of
excellence that selection of the best
two was extremely difficult. The
committee finally made the awards,
however, and as a result Minnie Pat
erson, of Gladstone, was adjudged to
have submitted the best paper, and
will receive five dollars in gold, and
will have the honor of having her
essay read before the next meeting
of the Burns society.
A second prize, of two dollars and
a half, was awarded to the essay writ
ten by Earl Paddock, of Canemah.
His essay will also be read at the so
ciety's meeting. All the essays sub
mitted showed great care in prepara
tion. Prizes in the school exhibit held in
the gymnasium building on the Bar
clay grounds were also awarded Mon
day. The judges had much difficul
ty in selecting those to whom the
awards should be made, so generally
good were the exhibitions. It was
decided to base the awards upon two
points; first, the greatest amount of
progress shown by the pupils in five
selected exhibits; and secondly, the
best five displays made by any one
pupil.
Under this arrangement prizes
were awarded for manual training
work as follows:
To William Lettenmaier and Wal
ter .Dungey, of the high school, for
manual training, two awards, each
consisting of a high grade saw.
To Aubrey Dillon and Howard Daw
son, of the grade schools, for manual
training, to the first a plane and to
the second a bill for a quantity of
lumber.
In the domestic science division
awards were made to Angeline Dye,
for the best exhibit of sewing from
the high school', a pair of scissors; to
Alene Bennett, for the best 'exhibi
tion of cooking from the high school,
a hand-painted dish. No awards in
domestic science were made in the
grade schools.
The judges in the manual training
awards were E. W. Scott, T. J. Gary,
county superintendent of schools,
and A. O. Freel, principal of the Bar
clay school. The judges in the do
mestic science work were Mrs. L. E.
. Jones, Mrs. George A. Harding and
Mrs. F. A. Olmstead.
12
LEFT FOR
T
Monday night but an even dozen
tickets were left undisposed of for
the Commercial club excursion to
Portland next week, when two boat
loads of local boosters will journey
by river to aid in welcoming Rex Ore
gonus to his realm of the Rose Festi
val. There are in all 280 reserva
tions for the trip, this number being
limited by the capacity of the two
steamers that have been chartered by
the local club for the voyage.
Those who desire to go on this trip,
and who have not yet made reserva
tions, are urged to do so at once, as
E. E. Brodie, secretary of the com
mittee in charge, does not expect the
remaining 12 tickets will last very
long. Reservations have been open
less tban a week, and the speed with
which they have been taken up shows
how great the demand is.
WANTS OREGON METHODS
Requests from the Lehren stalt' fur
Braueri at Berlin, from other parts
of Germany, from England, France
and different parts of the United
States are coming to the Oregon Ag
ricultural college, asking for the
methods of hop analysis and hop dry
ing developed in the chemical labora
tories. Wanted!
Girls and Women
To operate sewing machines
In garment factory.
OREGON CITY WOOLEN MILL
S ACRES
$13pDown
All level and in high state of
cultivation; fine soil; lays 1
miles south of Oregon City on
the Pacific Highway, good side
walks right to the land. Why
pay rent on a house and lot
when you can buy a 5-acre tract '
fer $1,350 where you can raise
all of your living. $130 down
and $10 a month. .
E. P. ELLIOTT & SON
PRIZES AWARDED
111 SCHOOL WORK
137 PASS EXAMS
FOR HIGH SCHOOL
BUT ONE-THIRD OF COUNTY'S
GRADE STUDENTS SUCCESS
FUL IN STATE TEST
154 MORE MAY GET DIPLOMAS LATER
Over 100 Boys and Girls Fail Entirely
to Attain Required Rank in
Studies of Last Gram
. mar Year.
As a result of the May examina
tions, 137 eighth grade pupils in the
county schools have secured diplom
as that will admit them to any high
school in the state, 154 more were
"conditioned," and will have to take
further examination in one or two
studies either in June or in Septem
ber before they can enter the high
school, and 103 failed altogether to
acquire the required grade for ad
vancement from the grade schools.
In all 394 eighth grade pupils took
the test.
That but a third passed clear of
conditions is blamed largely upon the
questions, which were extreme,
though fair. That almost a third
failed altogether to pass is said by
the teachers to be due to the fact
that effort was made in the last year
of the grade schools to teach the chil
dren too much, and too many sub
jects that are not of practical use to
the pupils, and which therefor they
have not studied as hard as they
should. A very large percentage cf
those that were "conditioned" are ex
pected to pass to the high schools up
on second examination.
Eighth grade pupils in the various
districts that will enter high school
next falL as a result of receiving di
plomas this spring, is as follows:
District No. 1: Minnie Spring and
William Miller.
District No. 2: Earl Kunze, Ben
Burkert, Roy Tweedie.
District No. 3: Arm en Gross-en
backer, Earl Paddock, Carnott Spen
cer. District. No. 7: Lloyd Saling, Vel
la Coop, Ruth Ginther.
District No. 15: Erma Blukin, Gen
evieve Jones.
District No. 18: Clarence Rupp.
District No. 20: Bruno Kraxberg-
er.
District No. 22: Glayds Wagner,
Paul Jaeger.
District No. 25: Will Feyser, Rob
ert Elkins, Roberta Elkins.
District No. 29f. Olga Peterson.
District No. 30: Norman Holcomb.
District No. 34:
Ralph Armstrong,
Charles Howell,
Frank Foty, Le-
land Batdorf.
District No. 35: Mabel Marsh,
Earl Shoemaker, Marion Toliver,
Duane Robbins, Elmer Damours,
Leonard Vick.
District No. 41: George Yeomans.
District No. 43: Glenna Andrews,
Gladys MteDowell, Hazel Camp, Pier
son Harney, Opal Camp.
District No. 46: Safra Deatson,
George Hennessey, Lillian TenEyck,
Eva Edwards.
District No. 47: William Jackson,
Claude Roycroft, Lloyd Tomlin, Lil
lian Zapfer, Leona Tomlin, Adam
Worthington, Iva Haines.
District No. 48: Dewey Kruger,
Robert Barnett, George Lannigan,
Lillian Peterson, Catherine Jones.
District No. 49: Olive Bottin, Scott
Otty.
District No. 63: Emma Stachel,
Allen Rutherford.
District No. 64:
Anna Kelly.
District No. 67:
District No. 68:
District No. 76:
Harold Dedman,
George Moser.
Elvy Beebe.
Elva Maser, Har-
ry Melby. .
District No. 77, Mabel Elliott,
Margueritta Kersting, Velma Sylves
ter. District No. 82: John M. Say, An
na Parker.
District No. 85: Ethel Henrici.
District No. 86: Maymie Combs,
Blain? Long, Chester Douglass, Nor
man Saltmarsh, George Nast, Ru
dolph Samue'son, Clarence Carlson,
Bennia Hopwood, George Hewitt, Eu
nice Dedge, Aaron Nast, George
Smith, Harry Rhodes, Agnes Hills,
Sophia Meeks, Veda Brown, Harold
Vinyard, Ralph, Hem.
District No. 89: Earl Gibson, Cora
Harding.
District No. 90: Gwendolyn Evans
Floyd Traften.
. District No. 93: Lydia Klingler,
Wayne Wright,. Helen Reynolds, Har
old Dimick.
District No. 94: Seth Peterson,
Esther Anderson, Willie Bartlemay,
La Verne Burdich.
District No. 99: Henry Brashear.
District No. 103: Ernest Griffiths,
Claude Buckner, Margaret Sadengass-
er, John W ells.
District No. 105: Fred Jimper,
John Logsdon, Walter Larson, Mer-
ritt Wilson, Wilbur Ross, Audry
Tour.
District No. 106: Cathleen Judge,
Clarence Krause.
District No. 108: George Jicks
Grace Denney, Nettie Woodle, Dor
othy Miller, Glayds . Townsend,
Joseph Demoy, George Matthews,
Paul Frazier, Mary Barr, Sam Barr,
Dora Currin.
District No. 115: Dale Olds, Louis
Rottger, Lura Leete,
District No. 120:
District No. 121;.
District- No. 306:
District No. 309:
District No. 312:
le Lien.
Lela Traylor.
Albert Schmid.'
Edith Fleming.
Eugene Taylor.
SPORTING EVENTS TUESDAY
American League championship
flag day at Boston.
Opening of annual shooting tourna
ment of Maryland State Sportsmen's
association at Baltimore.
Opening of annual spring race meet
ing of the Montreal Jockey Club,
Montreal.
Annual bench show of Ladies' Ken
nel Association of. America, Mineola,
U I.
WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1866.
OREGON CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JUNE 3,
Movement of Troops to Pacific Stations
Arouses Interest Because of Jap Situation.
' W " ; Sit
Sf-''-;X f ' - 'J if
V v .
Photo by American Press Association. '
AltiiougU the United States is strengthening its garrisons in and alou the i'acitic, goveniia?ia oiticiais ridiculed
th. theory Unit the movement of troopr has any connection with the Japanese situation. There was no fear of trou
b t with Japan at reseiu, they said. The same sentiment was expressed by high Japanese officials, according to ca
blegrams In this Illustration are shown urtiilm, men from the recruiting station at Fort Slocum, N. Y., on a tug
en roiiie to Jersey City. N. J., where they bouniod a train for San Fruncisco. They were sent to bring the Hawaiian
garrisons up to the required strength, war department oSicials si?ld ' .
ALBEE IS LEADER
IN PORTLAND GO
PORTLAND, Ore., June 3 Re
turns in the Portland election at 2:15
this morning showed that H. R. Al
bee will be the next mayor of Port
land under the commission form of
povernment. At that time indications
were that he would win by 6,000 pop
ularity. With Albee having more
votes than all the other mayoralty
candidates together, Rushlight was
running second, but so far behind
that there was no chance of a change
in results. State Senator Dan Kella-
her was running third, and McKenna,
who ran as a democrat, was fourth on
the list.
Late returns indicated that the
commissioners would be Will Daly,
W. L. Brewster, Robert Dieck and
Ra'.ph Clyde. Daly and Clyde hava
served in the council. Dieck is a
municipal engineer of excellent stand
ing, and has seen service for the gov
ernment in the Phillipines. Incident-
ly he has also been consulting engin
eer for Oregon City in much of Its
improvement work.
About 45,000 citizens cast a vote in
the election. Nearly half of these
votes were cast by women, who par
ticipated in a city election for the
first time in Portland's history.
No count had been taken on the
various measures on the ballot up
to an early hour in the morning, all
clerks being kept busy with the maze
ot tirst, second ana tneird choice tor
candidates.
Y
Leading merchants of the city are
laying plans. for a great Fourth of
July celebration to be held here that
will be both unique and appropriate
for the day. As the council has is
sued an edict that there shall be no
"small boy noise" this year, and has
placed the official taboo on the finger-destroying
fire-cracker, public
spirited citizens are planning to sub
stitute instead a "real old time 4th"
and .the idea is being enthusiastically
received all down the line.
While plans are still in an em
broyonic state, it is the aim of the
promoters of the scheme to have a
celebration that will in every way be
a credit and a drawing card for the
town. There will be special races
and turn-ohts of the different fiT3
companies, and valuable prizes will
be offered for this feature, which has
already been determined upon. Aside i
from this it is likely that there will :
be water sports, motorcycle races, j
possibly an automobile race, and j
sports in which young and old may i
participate.
Incidentally, if the local plan goes
through, there will be no dearth of
celebrations on the nation s birthday, j cf toe three meets they entered. In
The Willamette Pulp & Paper com- j dividually some of the boys did ex
pany has leased Canemah park for' ceptionally well, and won signal hon-
the day, and will give a picnic for its!
employees there. This in itself will ;
be replete with features, and will be'
a big drawing card. Aside from this!
there is to be a great "get-together"
picnic and celebration at Gladstone
park; and with a possible celebration'
upon the completion of the first di-
vision of the Clackamas Southern
5?n -iM
AMERICA'S MOST NOTED
WOMAN AS SHE- IS TODAY
cervmcHT tmompom. ntw ro.
Helen K-aller, the world-famous
blind girl. She was also born deaf
and dumb, but has triumphed over
these seemingly insurmountable dif
ficulties. Mark Twain classed her
with Napoleon as one of "the most in
teresting characters of the Nine
teenth century. .
SCHOOL ATHLETES
E
Th-3 athletic season for the Oregon
City high school has been wound up,
and students are now busy with the
ordeal of final examinations. Through
out the year, however , local school
athletes have ranked pretty well, es
pecially when it is considered that
they had no training grounds upon
which sufficient practice could be
held. However, with members of the
school board and the Live Wires of
the Commercial club seeking a way
to provide a training and play field
for next year, ths young men and
women think that next year they will
establish a still better record.
Four football games were played
by thi school team during the last
year, and of these but one was lost.
j There is every indication that there
will "be a good team in the field in
i the fall, and an even better season is
; expected.
In baseball the local nine played
five- regular games, won three and
tied another, losing but one.
The girls ranked as well as the
boys, for in basketball eight games
were played, and but two lost,
I The track team farad the poorest
of the lot, gaining no victory in any
ors in special events, but the points
scored by the team as a whole were
but few.
In the county meet, held last week
at Gladstone park, the local high
school team won tie county cup for
the third sucessive year, and this in
a way made up for their failures with
teams from outside the county.
Ft'-- fX ' ' - f 1
1913.
$75 IN GOLD
OFFERED
The Morning Enterprise today pre
sents its readers and friends the Re
fund Bargain feature and offers them
seventy-five dollars in gold coin to
patronize the progressive stores ad
vertising, in the feature.
The plan is the result of much
work on the part of the Contest Man
ager, who has had several proposi
tions under consideration but select
ed this plan which he believes is the
most liberal one to the many shop
pers who use this paper exclusively
as a medium for finding exceptional
purchasing opportunities.
All that is required of anyone to do
in entering the Bargain Feature Con
test is to clip one of the nomination
coupons which will appear daily in
the paper for the first three weeks
of the contest. When this coupon is
neatly clipped and properly filled
out it will entitle the contestant en
tering the race to 1000 votes.
After having been nominated it is
an easy matter to secure additional
votes. You merely have to call for
a cash check or receipt when asking
purchases at any of the stores adver
tising on the Bargain Page. These
slips or checks must be brought to
this office where five votes wi-1 be
issued for every five cents shown on
the sales checks.
INFERNAL MACHINE" IS
IN REALTY BUT A BABY
NEW YORK, June 2 A well dress
ed man stopped into the entrance hall
of the Babies' Hospital m Lexington
avenue, the other morning, placed a
box upon the table and departed has
tily, leaving all the nursas, attend
ants and clerks in a state of extreme
nervousness from fear that the box
might contain an infernal machine
rpady to axplode at any moment. A
call for help was sent to the nearest
police station and in a short time a
detective arrived at the hospital.
He was shown the suspicious bo
and bFavely began to examine it. He
opened the lid with extreme caution,
which everybody held his or her
breath, but there was , no explosion.
Inside of the box there was some
thing wrapped in- a small, woolen
blanket and wlKm the wrapping was
removed the detective found a little
baby boy, perhaps two hours old and
very much alive. The baby was sent
to B'jllavuo hospital in an ambulance.
MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT
IS PLANNED BY REBEKAHS
The Rebakahs, of Gladstone, are to
give a concernt this evening in Glad
stone hall. An excellent program has
been arranged and among the solo
ists will be Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Burte,
Miss Kathleen Harrison, Mrs. A.
Matheson, A. M. Proppe, of Portland,
and H.' A, Swafford, who will give a
whistling solo.
Instrumental music will be furnish
ed by Marion Money, Anna McMill
an and Mildred Hall, and reading will
be given by Rev. R. L. Dunn, Stanley
Williams and Mrs. Ada Jolly.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Marriage licenses have been issued
by County Clerk Mtilvey to the fol
lowing: Delia Ross and Robert
Knauf, of Portland; Edna C. Califf
and George E. Simmons,J of Oregon
City; Anna Petersen and Martin Slot
enberg, of Clackamas; Fanny Greiner
and Joseph Marx, of Portland; Lucile
Rickatiaugh and Alfred Kelmsen, of
Oregon City. .
"
!1
H 1
3-
s
mmmmm
M0T0RB0AT RACE
TO SHOW SPEED
OREGON WOLF II. AND VAMOOSE
' TO TRY CONCLUSIONS HERE
DURING ROSE SHOW
EVENT WILL BE FOR CHAMPIONSHIP
Fastest Craft on Coast to Spurt Over
Course In Full View of City
Following Gala Parade
of Vessels
Next Saturday Oregon City will
see one of the most exciting motor
boat races ever run in western wa
ters a return match between the
wonderful "Vamoose" and the form
er ' Oregon champion, "Oregon Wolf
II." Thse two boats raced during
the recent run of the Portland Motor
boat club to Wilsonville, and the Wolf
lost the laurels of that test. Her
owner, however, believes that since
then he has tuned his engines up con
siderably, and thinks that at the local
rose show races the results may be
different.
The committee in charge of the wa
ter sports for rose show day has been
working all this week to bring about
a match between these two speed
wonders, and Monday night definite
word was received that the former
champion and the new " claimant
would be entered in a special race.
The Vamoose has already left Rain
ier, her home port, and is being towed
at easy stages to Oregon City. She
will arrive about the middle of the
week, and several days will be spent
in trying her out.
The Vamoose is a hydroplane of
the most advanced type, and when
running at top speed has little more
than her stern and powerful propel
lors under water. The boat is said
to be most spectacular when in ac
tion, and it is expected that a huge
crowd will be on hand to see the boat
skim at railroad train speed over the
waters of the upper river. The race
will be held over a special course,
the start being made from off the city
dock at the foot of Eleventh street,
running thence up-stream and around
a bouy located below the lower en
trance to the locks, thence back to
another bouy below the old sawmill.
and back again over the course, the!
fmish . being off . the judges' boat
which will be anchored behind the
Busch building.
The race between the two speed
craft will be but a feature of the wa
ter sports in connection with the an
nual rose show. It will be held
in connection with a visit of the Port
land Motorboat club, and will be one
of three races. The other two have
not bean definitely fixed as yet, but
will probably be between boats of
the 20-foot and pleasure-craft class.
There will be a parade of decorated
motorboats at half past three in the
afternoon over the racing course. It
is expected that this will take about
half and hour, and that the races will
be started at four, promptly. Local
motorboats will act as police craft,
and will patrol the course during the
racing, so that the speed marvels will
not be interferred with by spectators.
During the racing no small boats will
be allowed to cross the course, both
as a convenience to the racing ves
sels and as a move of safety to the
spectators.
TO SAVE FAMILY
Because he thought it better to
dash a gate to pieces instead of tak
ing the risk of dashing his family to
pieces, the young son of Ernest El
liott ran his father's automobile in
to part of a fence on the Mulino road
late Sunday afternoon, and so prob
ably saved the life of his mother and
sister. The man whose gate was
shattered, failed to appreciate the
gravity of the case at first, however,
and until he learned the particulars
was much incensed at the young man
for damaging his property.
Young Elliott, according to reports,
had be-sn out with his mother and
sister for a short automobile trip, and
when coming down a steep grade on
the Mulino road, stiddely realized
that his car was out of control. The
machine, a new-Buick, failed to re
spond to the brakes, Mr. Elliott says,
and neither could be get the gears to
mesh so that he could stay the pro
gress of the runaway car by stalling
his engine. Thus confronted with
eminent danger of serious injury, he
steered the machine into a gate by
the side of the road.
The resulting crash threw his sister
out of the car ,but she was not ser
iously hurt. Mrs. Elliott, however,
was struck by flying pieces of paling,
and was painfully hurt. The young
man at the wheel was also seriously
jarred and shocked. Relief was soon
given members of the party, and
Monday all were reported to be rest
ing comfortably and doing well.
ASYLUM TO HAVE PAPER-
TRENTON, N. J., June 2. Dr. B.
D. Evans, medical director of the
Morris Plains State Hospital for the
Insane, has conceived of an original
plan which, he believes, will be of
great benefit to many of his patients.
He proposes to establish a weekly
newspaper at the asylum, which is to
be written, set in type, and printed
by patients under the supervision of
the attendants. Dr. -Evans will li-
rect the policy of the paper and will
write the editorials. He also plans
to put other patients in the asylum to
work at making brooms, weaving,
bookbinding, raffia work, etc.
your home paper.
Boost your home town by reading
S .j JSS3$S$S
8 "
8
CLACKAMAS COUNTY 3
8 FAIR
& CAN BY, OR.
SEPT. 24, 25, 26, 27.
..
$
Per Week, Ten Cents.
260-FOOT DEPTH
GIVES Ni
DRILLING AT MOUNT PLEASANT
ABANDONED UNTIL COUN
CIL HEARS REPORT
COMMITTEE MEMBERS DISAPPOINTED
Heavy Flow at 65-foot Level Gave
Hopes of Adequate Supply
Canby Wells May Be
Utilized
Efforts of the special water com
mittee to discover a flow of clear and
pure water as a source for the muni
cipal supply received a sad blow Mon
day, when the drilling outfit that has
been busy for the past several weeks
on the Ladd tract, near Mt. Pleasant,
reached a depth of 260 feet without
striking an adequate yield. The re
sults are particularly disappointing
to Chairman Tooze and the other
members of the committee, as the
earlier outlook at the spot was most
favorable, a flow of 75 gallons a min
uate having been struck after some
65 feet of drilling had been completed.
Since passing the 65-foot-mark, sev
eral small subterranean streams were
encountered, but none that gave a
sufficient volume of water. Drilling
was continued, however, until the 250
foot level was reached. This was
the original limit set by the special
water committee; but as no adequate
supply was reached at that depth,
the diamond-point was set to work
again, and ten more feet were bored.
No water being reached at that depth
operaions were suspnded, and the
special committee that has the work
in charge will report to the council
Monday night, when it will be decid
ed whether or not further drilling is
to be tried in the same locality.
The site of the test well was select
ed by Robert Dieck, consulting engi
neer for the city in considerable im
provement work. Mr. Dieck was of
the opinion that water ought to be
found at this point, but either his
computations were incorrect, or else
sufficient depth has not been reached
by the drill. In order to experiment
at this point the city obtained an op
tion from the Ladds to the property.
with the understanding that Oreeon
City could purchase the tract at rea-
sonable terms should water be found.
Several other locations were set forth
in Mr. Dieck's report as being likely
to lie over water, but property own
ers who controlled these other spots
placed an unreasonably high valua
tion upon their land.
While the test well was being
driven M. J. Lee and associates, of
Canby, offered the city water from
wells that his organization controls
near the neighboring 'town. Mr. Lee
said his associates were willing to,
pipe the water to the reservoir site in
Oregon City, and in return wanted 50
per cent of the local water revenues.
Tha offer, made to the council, was
"1L1 VJ tl tauic pcuuuig CAJJCIIUICU-
tation at the Ladd tract. With- tha
apparent failure of the Mt. Pleasant
location as a source, it is likely that
negotiations will be re-opened with
Mr. Lee, but it is said unofficially
that he will have to materially re
duce his terms before his offer is ac
cepted. The matter will be brought before
the council formally on Wednesday
night. I drilling on the Ladd tract is
not resumed, it is possible that the
council will decide to condemn one
f . 1 . 1 IVI-
ui me uLu-er possiuie sources oi sup
ply, and so utilize it for the city at a
less cost than the present owners ask.
The need for a better water supply
than the present one is urgently felt,
and it is not believed that action on
the matter will be delayed much
longer.
The O. A. C. sophomores have
adopted a financial system which is
calculated to prevent monetary diffi
culties the rest of their college course
Enterprise classified ads pay.
Another Big
42-Piece
Dinner Set
will be given to the
most handsome per
son in the Theatre
at 8 o'clock
Tonight
An Entire Change of Pictures
'MYSTERY OF THE STOLEN
JEWELS"
"THE OUTLAW"
'IN GOOD O LD SUMMER
TIME"
"LOVE IN THE GHETTO"
"THE ORPHAN"
At The
WATER
warn