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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1918)
I , 9 THE MORNING OREGOXIAN. ... SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1918. THEATRE . VON . tJ(NDEN OORci K,WK'"Alle LAND 100 Pledged Are Yon? "I have 500,000 reservists in America." THE KAISER. 100 Pledged Are You? , THE. WATEOJS , a .a- v "V. df jfxG '' la., xer a vwrMP.-aufcc-w Lire with Gerard the four trying years, in the Hohenzollern hell of empire grabbing intrigues. See with your own eyes how America was forced into the great war. ' There's 501,000 lamp posts to hang your German reservists to' GERARD. I V . t i S i L J ' vl 33 I 9 E. , s K tmeatre . &O0Acif . . fe. i m Vim 11 i n ii in in whose. ofeoATys- metsffon --. ..j JT TSJSki-.l aE.L &'.i1eK;r :2S3J!f i i i ' ii . in i I im iw i.i i . i L,.t mij .- Vj.': " ""'"WgWH ' n wMi"ii)Lmvmuif- PEES 10 BE FIXED Wilson Announces His. Inten tion Regarding Cotton. AWAITS COMMITTEE REPORT President Informs Southern Sena tors He Will Order GoTernment Control and Distribution I. of Staple. '" WASHINGTON. Sept. 20. President Wilson will fix the price of cotton. placing the last of the principal com modules necessary in the prosecution of the war under Governmental regula tlon. despite strong pressure from the In addition to determining the price, the -Government will take over control of the distribution of this year's crop. The decision of the President, an nounced at a conference this week with Senators and Representatives from the cotton states, became known today. Plans to carry out the decision are aid to be under way. The principal factor in the action of the President is understood- to have been the shortage in the present crop estimated at between 4,000,000 and ,000.000 bales. The price to be named by the Presl dent or the means of controlling: dis tribution have not been decided upon. Before fixing prices was first men . tioned. cotton sold at 3S cents a pound. Secretary Huston, it is said, has recom mended that 25 cents would be fair. Southern producers deny this would be a fair price and declare that because of the increased cost of production a fig- tire above 30 cents should be named. In determining; a plan for controlling; cotton distribution it is understood the President is endeavoring; to work out a method of co-operation with the British and French governments. B0TSF0RD JOINS COLORS Advertising Agency Head Leaves for Fort McDowell, Cal. W. K. Botsford, of the Botsford-Tyler-Constantine Advertising Agency, of this city, has received orders to re port at Fort McDowell. Angel Island. CaU for military service, and left for that camp yesterday. Mr. Botsford came to Portland from Kansas City 10 years ago. and has been identified with advertising work In this city ever since his arrival. With his brother. David Botsford, be founded the original Botsford agency. BANK LOOTED AT CHICAGO Employes locked in Room; Robbers Get Cash and Bonds. CHICAGO. Sept. 20. Locking cashier, assistant and stenographer In a room, robbers today looted the Argo State Bank. Sixty-third street and Archer avenue, of 120.000 in cash and between 30,000 and 140.000 in Liberty bonds. Portland Woman Chosen. SALEM. Or.. Sept. 20. (Special.) Mrs. Susie Page, of Portland, has been selected to have charge of the domes tie science work at the Girls' Indus trial School and has arrived here to take up her duties. It is expected that the Fall work of the school will be started during the week: lollowlng the fctate Fair, 'If " -ri """t -" k . 4-Jt - ' i f -; A v: ' - r- - iM t -. r M - 4 , s ax k " :" ' i W - K --- 1 Virginia Harbrooke, a Belgian girl of gentle birth caught In the horrible vor tex of the war and a victim of soma of its most terrible atrocities. The production is replete with stir ring incidents and things which ap peal mightily to patriotism. Columbia. " , "The Source," a picturizatfon of the popular Clarence Budington Kelland serial, with Wallace Reid as its . star, opens this morning at the Columbia Theater. With it will be shown "Brit ain's Bulwarks" and Paramount Picto- graphs. "The Source" is a tale of the woods and the regeneration of a man of posi tion .and education who 'sinks to tne level of a tramp. How. a girl of the woods furnishes the Incentive for his rise in the world, and the manner in which the ex-tramp assumes control of the destinies of a district in the power of Germans of Industry-destroying mis sions. Is shown in this Paramount of fering. , Globe. "Joan the Woman," the splendid Cecil B. DeMille photoplay spectacle starring Geraldine Farrar, famous operatic prima donna, opens an engagement this morning at the Globe Theater. This super-production is a striking picturization of the life of the famous Maid of Orleans, the peasant girl who saved France, and because of its asso ciations it becomes of timely interest to the people of America, The spec tacular and the romantic, as well as the-historical, are blended together in a production which boasts of such player-figures as Wallace R,eid, Tully Mar shall. Hobart Bosworth and Raymond Hatton. the late John F. Carroll, for many years publisher of the Evening Telegram, has been awarded the croix de guerre. Confirmation of the awarding of this medal for bravery to Major Mitchell has come from indirect sources to Mrs. Mitchell, at present living with her mother, Mrs. John F. Carroll, at 576 East Fifteenth street North. The Major was wounded, presumably while on his dangerous mission, and has since been a patient in a Paris Red Cross hospital. TODAY'S FILM FEATURES. . Majestic Constance Talmadge, "Up the Road With Sallie." Liberty Norma Talmadge, "Her Only Way": Fatty Arbuckle, "The Cook." Columbia Wallace : Held, "The Source." Sunset "My Four Tears in Ger many." . Star "The Unbeliever." Peoples Margarita Fisher. "Im possible Susan"; "The Sinking of the Lusitania." Globe Geraldine Farrar, "Joan the Woman." Circle Charles Ray, "The Son of His Father." Majestic- ' CONSTANCE TALMADGE week will I . be celebrated at - the Majestic v ' Theater, commencing today. Miss Talmadge, vivacious star of so many ttractive comedy-dramas, will be seen in two pictures, "Up th-j Road With Sallie," opening today, and "The Shut tle." following It on Wednesday. Uo the Road With Sallie" is said to be the most delightful picture Miss Talmadge has ever made. A kidnaped aunt, two supposed burglars and a big. surprise with a romantic touch are some of the features of the Select production. The latest installment of the Allied Nations Official Wan Review. Pathe News of world ' events, " and a clever cosnedy are other features to be shown. Peoples. .- Margarita Fisher, Oregon girl, who has achieved fame in motion pictures. will be seen today at the Peoples Theater in her latest photoplay hit. Impossible Susan." Another feature and one of unusual interest is Windsor McCay's "The Sinking of -the Lusi tania." a remarkable pen picture .of the great sea horror of the war. It is said to be the first animated serious cartoon ever shown, and was drawn from the word-picture of Augustus F. Beach, war correspondent, who was one of the first to interview survivors of the Lusitania. Miss Fisher is never more at home than when portraying the wild young girl of the woods, unfettered by con ventional ideas or conventional clothes, and It's Just such a role she has in Impossible Susan," - She davelopa into the ultra-modern maid, but proves Just as fascinating to the men who are using her for psychological experiment Sunset. "My' Foun . Years in Germany," the highly 'patriotic production based on ey-Ambassador Gerard's story, which created a .sensation in hundreds of newspapers In the United States, will be' shown, commencing today, at the Sunset Theater. ....... Gerard's expose of German trickery forms one of the most illuminating chapters in the political history of the world war. Throughout his story of the events which led up to the open ing -of the war, and those following, leading up to the entrance of the United States into the great conflict, are interspersed patriotic bits which arouse tremendous enthusiasm. ' Star, "The Unbeliever," the magnificent U. 'S. Marine photoplay, comes to the Star Theater today. With the maneuvers of the Marines as a background, "The Unbeliever." based qni the novel, "The Throe Things." has to do, among other things, with the love story of Philip Landicutt, late of Long Island's exclusive colony, and now a private in the Marines, and SPOKANE APPLES ARE SOLD Growers Receive Approximately $1.50 Per Box for Year's Product. SPOKANE. Wash!, Sept. 20. (Spe cial.) One of the largest apple sales ever made in the Spokane Valley was announced today by Edward - Pierce,) president of the Spokane Valley Grow ers' Union. Under a contract Just closed, the entire crop to be handled by the union this year, approximately 150 cars, is sold to a company of Eastern fruit dealers for tl0,000. This is an average of nearly $1.50 for each box of apples that the orchardists of the valley districts will bring to their co-operative packing and selling organizations. MITCHELL WINS WAR CROSS Portland Officer Is Decorated for Bravery In France. . , For bravery exhibited in swimming a river and cutting barbed wire entan glements so American and French forces might advance upon the enemy. Major Manton C. Mitchell. on-in-law of OPENS TODAY Buy More Bonds ADMISSION 20c CHILDREN 10c Electric Irons 10-Yesr Guarantee ' ' 3 .50 Tungsten Lamps, 10 to 40-Watt 27j' Mazda Lamps, 10 to 40-Watt .30$ Double Sockets (for Lamp and Electric Iron) Sl.Ou Dry Cell Batteries .40 EVINRUDE MOTOR CO. Evinrude Motors and Electrical Supplies 211 Morrison, Near First St. Open Saturday Night Till 10 V t i -1 IS A' " - h. - : , '1 L ' .- r -- , 1 1 I, ii,.i,.ifi - 'Based Upon "The Three Things" by Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews 100 American, "The Unbeliever," throughout its seven action-packed, thrill-filled parts, tells a story that; for sheer breath-taking, interest-carrying suspense, can only be compared with the big drama now being staged "Over There."' You'll live, hate and fight with the story as it unfolds. It'll make you proud of our boys and confident in the principles Old Glory stands- for.