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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1921)
4 THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 3, 1921 ITIOil. BUM ' REVIVAL HELD lIEAR Construction Is Called Key Log in Business Jam. MATERIALS COST LESS Drop In Price of Labor Also Is Taken as Indication of More Activity in Xear Future. ever held in Douglas county occurred at the home of Mrs. William Voorhia in Looking Glass. All of the guests, with but two exceptions, crossed the plains by ox team into Oregon. The ladies present were: Mrs. J. M. Hartain, 83 years of age, a resident of Brockway and a pioneer of 1851: Mrs. Elva A. Laird, aged 80 years, a resident of Brewster valley and a pioneer of 1852; Mrs. M. A. Longs worth, aged 78 years, a resident of Jefferson and a pioneer of 1852; Mrs. Lucretia Ollivant, aged 74 years, a resident of Olalla, a pioneer of 1852; Mrs. Lucy A. Arnold. 79 years of age, a resident of Looking Glass, who came to Oregon in 1870. and Mrs. J. H. Brown of Looking Glass, who came to Oregon in 1898. The women spent the afternoon re calling the early experiences of Ioug las county and the state of Oregon. They wre served with a fine chicken dinner by the hostess. BOY IS SHOT IN CHASE BT HARDEN COLFAX. (Copyright, 1921. by The Oregonian.) WASHINGTON, D. C, July 2. (Spe cial.) Building construction, key log In the business Jam, appears to labor department officials about to move. Strong currents, great and growing, moving so far under the surface as to be unseen to the casual- observer, gve cause for hope that the lethargy in building ere long. will, be replaced by activity. Material costs are coming down and while they may not have1 reached the bottom, they are now reported far below the peak; labor is deflating and signs are multiplying that the dead lock in many great centers is wear ing itself to a slow finish, and back of both these important facts is the ever-growing need for homes to keep pace with the country's growth in population. Labor department officials have as many agents in the storm centers of building trade troubles as the de partment's somewhat scanty appro priation will permit and these agents have reported back within the last week that the outlook is brighter for a resumption of business on a more general scale than it has been any time this year. . Reports Are Checked. Their reports are checked by re ports to the federal reserve board, which shows that building permits were taken out during May for more than 250.000.000 in new construction throughout the nation. As a whole, this compares favorably with April. Were the rates maintained. It would mean a J3, 000, 000. 000 a year building programme. To catch up with normal the United States needs somewhere between ten and 20 billions of dollars' worth of new buildings. When building construction revives. In the belief of the chamber of com merce of the United States general prosperity will revive. According to the chamber, the construction indus try represents an investment of J77, 000.000.000, or 27 per cent of our na tional wealth; 90 per cent of all iron ore, copper, zinc and lead mined are used in construction; $1,000,000,000 is paid out annually in normal times to . a million workers engaged directly and 11,000,000 women and men derive their living, directly and indirectly, in the industry. Railroads to Benefit. The railroads will greatly increase their revenues and thus be enabled to place orders in other lines, now more or less dormant, and the little leaven will leaven the whole. Chicago, Philadelphia. Cleveland, Pittsburg, New England, suburban New York, New Jersey, Kansas City these and many other large centers of population have been racked by readjustment pains in the building in dustry. Some of these centers have solved their problem, at least tem porarily, and men are back at work; others still are dislocated. It is in the latter class that the chief symp toms of revival are shown. Inevit ably, the department believes, there is coming a day soon when both tides will get together and work, It now costs, according to an au thority in the department, about 90 per cent more to put up a home than it cost in pre-war days. In other words, a modest little home that would have cost $5000 to erect in pre war times, now costs about $9500. Efficiency Declared Lomr. The materials, this authority claims. are about 80 per cent higher than they were and the labor 100 per cent In figuring the labor cost, lowered efficiency was taken into considers tion, for wages are not double the pre-war figures. But in 1920, that same $5000 pre war home would .have cost more than $12,000. A total of $2500 has been xlipped from the peak. Material men iay their products are selling now it virtually no profit and labor de clares that it has gone further back toward normal than material costs. - John H. Donlin, president of the building trades department of the SVmerlcan Federation of Labor, has this to say: "Now is the time to build. It can $e done more expediiently and cheap er now than in the recent pait or in the near future." BRAZIL SENDS STUDENTS Positions at Home Await Two Who AVIio Hare Studied In Oregon. unriuu.N AUIUCULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis, July 2. (Special.) Two Brazilian youths, who have been taking work In forestry and horti culture at the colege for the inter ests of their government, are ready to start home. They have completed a year's work Sezef redo de Melln in forestry, and Joao F. Guedes in hor ticulture, and the former will take an instructor's position in a Brazil school of forestry, while the other will take a place in the Brazil horti cultural experiment station. "Hereafter our government expects to send out 50 young men each year lor tecnincai training in the United states." said one of the southerners. 'We're so well impressed by the col lege an dthe work offered here that w will influenc our government to send a number of them here," was the .promise they made. PORTLAND MAN IS NAMED . Schneider Made Assistant to Benton County Agent. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE. Corvallis. July 2. (Special.) N. Schneider of Portland has been ap pointed assistant county agent for Benton county. Schneider has been a rehabilitation man at the college He has studied agriculture and spe . elalized in marketing. Part of hi tjme will be given to county agen work and the rest to the developmen of co-operative marketing for the Benton, county farm bureau. Authorization was given Schneide 'at the last meeting of the farm bu reau to take necessary steps for the development of a county exchange TRAILIXG CONFESSED BOOT. LEGCEJt IS CAUSE. Hoquiam Prisoner Said by Police to Have Admitted Firing on Lads With Automatic. HOQUIAM, Wash., July 2. (Spe cial.) Trailing a confessed bootleg ger gave several boys excitement last night and ended with Eddie Benson. 17 years old, going to the Hoquiam general hosaital with a bullet wound in the ank" and John Lallas being confined in the city jail on an open charge. Patrolman Robert Wintrip arrowly escaped death while trying to capture Lallas. According to the story told in po- lce headquarters by Lallas. Fred Henrich and Robert Burns, the two atter being boy companions of Ben son, the boys had followed Lallas out the Olympic highway west of the lty. He went into the woods and hortly afterward returned and pened fire on them with an auto matic pistol. One bullet took effect n. Benson s leg. and physicians said .the hospital it had shattered the bone. Following the shooting Lallas, who the police said, admitted going out to the woods to get a gallon of moonshine, started back toward Hoquiam. The police in a car were urrying to the scene on a call sent ny Mrs. Anna Henrich, mother ol Fred Henrich. They passed Lallas without knowing he was the man they were- looking for. Later when they retraced their way, they came upon him in an alley. ut he was walking in such a posi- ion that a girl prevented police the police firing upon him. Making a urn on to the street from the alley. was alleged to have whipped out is pistol and discharged it at the police, the bullet singing by Wintrip's ead. His next shell jammed and the police took him without further resistance. At police headquarters was said to have admitted in the resence of several witnesses that he was after moonshine and had shot t the boys because they had fol lowed him. LOST GOLD MINE SOUGHT ROMAXIIC TRADITIOX OF XORTH AGAIX REVIVED. OREGON PIONEERS FROLIC Ttosoburg Party Guests Veterans of Ox-Team D-ajs. BOSEBURG. Or., July 2. (Special. One of the most unusual parties CAPITAL IMPRESSED BY GENERAL DAWES Force and Fresh Viewpoint Considered Striking. DIRECTOR IS QUIET MAN Expedition Organized at Edmon ton to Hunt River Where Xug gcts Are Big as Walnuts. EDMONTON. Alia.. July 2. An ex pedition is being organized here to search for the lost gold mine of Lost river. The lost mine is one of the romantic traditions of the north. It is believed to be extremely rich. A wandering Indian from the Mac kenzie river country came into Fort St.'' John's several years ago with a gold nugget as big as a walnut. Fort St. John's is a fur post of the Hudson's Bay company, now closing out its rich prairie lands to farm settlers, and is in the northeastern tip of British Co lumbia on the headwaters of the Peace. The Indian could not talk the language of the local tribesman nor of the whites. He indicated by signs that he had found the lump in the dry bed of a stream northwest of the fort. Then he strolled out of the story over the horizon toward his Mackenzie river home. A white trapper who outfitted at Fort St. John's came in months after ward with a quantity of coarse gold. He too had found his treasure in the dry bed of a stream northwest of the fort. But that is all he would divulge. He lived thereafter ""on what the frontier called the fat of the land, spending his wealth with a lavish hand in the Peace river settlements. When he ran short of gold, he went out Into the woods and came back with pockets bursting with more. Ef forts were made to follow him but he was too cunning for his trackers. He was found frozen to death on the trail one day and took his secret to the grave. The dry river bed is thought to have been once the channel of the Peace. It is known as Lost river though, except after heavy rainB, it never contains water. It is 25 miles northwest of Fort St. John's which is on the eastern watershed of the di vide. Francis Kilkenny Camp Follower of Xcw Official in Invasion of Washington Circles. BY ELIZABETH KING STOKES. (Copyright, 1021, by The Oregonian.) WASHINGTON, D. C. July 2. Washington now has had a week of ex - Brigadier - General Charles C. Dawes in action.' ' The ' new director of the budget has been studied from every side as a new personality at the capital. What impression has he made? "We deliver the goods," was the banner under which he served dur ing the war as chief purchasing agent of the American expeditionary fcrce. Watching him at close range gives one outstanding picture that of force and a fresh viewpoint upon an old problem. Yet the rest of the flash is that of a whirlwind person ality pursued by a camp follower by the name of Francis Kilkenny, who has left his business and come on to see that General Dawes-gets all the help he ought to have in starting the budget bureau. Aide la on Job. Francis Kilkenny was an Irish boy in a Chicago club, so the story goes, when General Dawes took him and showed him how to turn his wit into lucrative business, and from that time on, when Mr. Dawes found him self pressed by responsibilities, the fresh face of Kilkenny appeared sud denly to help him out. So he is around Washington today, and if asked who he is he will reply quickly: "I am General Dawes' rep resentative." General Dawes has come to the capital when it was somewhat slug gish with the dragging of the legis lative programme and in the midst of a heat spell and waked up the city from end to end with his vigor and official zeal. He arrived surrounded by an atmosphere of expectancy and levity because of his previous ex plosions before the house committee investigating war expenditures, when he scored a hit after 23 volumes of testimony had been completed with little public notice. But the attitude of the capital has changed. The di rector of the budget at his desk here is one of the most serious minded of the official family and the cap ital is taking him seriously. Confidence la Won. It is learning more about him. When he came back from the war and engaged in big banking business in Chicago several of the surround ing states deposited their state funds with him. That has considerable significance here now as indication of a kind of confidence he draws. President McKinley selected him as manager of his campaign. Later he acted as controller of the currency. ie Has been mentioned as a candi date for the United States senate, and he comes from Ohio, as well as from Illinois, and is being counted at the capital as one of the new Oh-o trio General Sawyer, Walter Brown and General Dawes. Notwithstanding the uproar with which General Dawes started his budget crusade, the capital has found to its astonishment that he is a quiet man. loose who have been around him this week say that he has been abstemious In the use of profanity regardless of the etate of weather and the difficulties of getting th worK under way. FLAYS DISEASE absence, reassumed the command of the eighth Infantry brigade. Several hundred additional mem bers of the 57th coast artillery regi ment left Camp Lewis today for the four Puget sound coast defense forts, in compliance with recent orders de mobilizing the regiment. The last of the 1069 enlisted men of the regi ment will .leave camp , early next week. Due to the lack of appropriations under the new army bill just passed by congress. 60 civilian employes at Camp Lewis were discharged Thurs day night. The men were working under the direction of the quarter master corps as carpenters, mechan ics, electricians and plumbers. Another result of the bill's passage is the rescinding of the $90 bonus to soldiers who re-enlist. This bonus has been a big factor in obtaining trained soldiers to re-enlist at the expiration of their term of service, but as the army now has almoBt twice as many, men as the new law provides for, re-enlistments will not be encouraged, it is said. NOISE BAIT IN VANCOUVER SALE OF OUTLAWED CRACKERS MAGXET FOR VISITORS. -F AGREEMENT MADE Aland Islands Settlement Is Declared Important. WAR ONCE JUST ESCAPED Soldier Dies From Accident. DALLAS. Or.. July 2. Gali R. Scott, a soldier of the United States army, was buried here Wednesday. He was a native of Gerfield, Wash., where he was born September 3, 1898. His father was Thomas Scott, who was a pipneer resident of Poll county. Young Scott was injured about the head a year ago when his horse fell with him dur ing drill at an army post in Arizona He had been an invalid from the in juries ever since, an ddied at. the army hospital at Camp Lewis. The local post of the American Legion had charge ol the xuneral. Dallas to Vote on Bonds. DALLAS, Or., July 2. A special election will be held here next Wednesday on two city bonding measures, one is for $2a,000 for the extension of water mains for fire pro tection to the shop district of the city and the purchase of additional land at the water intake on Canyon creek. The other is for $18,000 to purchase a site and construct a new septic tank for sewage disposal. Students Go to Newport. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis, July 2. (Special.) Nearly 60 persons were in the party of summer-session students who went on the annual excursion to Newport starting 'riaay attcrnoon. Dean M. Elwood Smith, director of the summer session, placed Miss May Workinger of the school of vocational education in charge of the excursionists. She has a schedule of events that will fill up every minute of the thre,e days at Citizens From "Closed" Towns In vde Washington City to Cele brate Independence Day. VANCOUVER, ' Wash., July 2. (Special.) Scores of automobile and hiking parties left the city this after noon and evening for a three days' stay in the mountains. Others are going to the- beaches. Firecrackers are being sold in the city and county any many boys and girls from 'closed towns," including Portland, are- expected here to swell the rowds ounaay ana Aionaay. A big old-fashioned celebration will be held here Monday with parades in- which soldiers , from Vancouver barracks will take part. Major Dela- plane will be grand marshal of the day. There will be a baseball game, athletic events, dancing, fireworks, speaking and concerts by a band. The city is in gala dress for the big gest celebration of the year, which will be held this time under the auspices of the American Legion. The cfjmmittee is advertising tire- crackers and noise as part of the programme, which follows: Parade at 10:30 A. M. Monday wun many prizes; band concerts at 7 P. M. Sunday and morning and afternoon Monday; street dancing around the city park. There will be sports for the youngsters at the city park witn prizes for every event Monday. A track and field meet will be held In Vancouver barracks between the American Legion and soldiers now in the service. There will be special events open for soldiers at 1:30 P.M. Just after the track events there will be a baseball game at the post. Rufus Holman will be the orator of the day Monday morning in the city park. DRY SWIMMING STUDIED Summer Co-Eds at Corvallis late Lessons Gymnasium. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE. oC'rvallis, July 2. (Special.) Summer co-eds in Cauthorn hall are learning to swim without going near the water, according to reports of scissor kicks, flutter kicks and crawl strokes being tried by tall ones, small ones, and all. The piano stool ana a soft mattress, for use in case one capsizes, a girl explained, are the only "props" needed, and several have become proficient at the game, xney will later try the swimming pool. Rules of checking in and out. sec ond nature to regular term women students,' it is said, are sometimes for gotten by summer session students. Three girls went to the moviea signed "out, returned at the pre scribed time, but forgot to sign "in They were awakened at 1:30 o'clock in the morning, by an anxious precep tress, who asked them to remember in the future to check in. GEXERAL LACDS CA.MPAIGX TO ROUT TUBERCULOSIS. I Progress of Plague in Philippine Islands Threatens Future of People, Says AVarrlor. MANILA, P. I., July 1. Indorsement by Major-General Leonard Wood of the proposed womens convention to discuss means of stamping out tuber culosis in the Philippine islands was received today In a letter to the sec retary of the Anti-Tuberculosis so ciety. The convention will be com posed of delegates from every prov- ui Liie ruispiaes. The disease is so widespread and its progress so insidious. General w ooa sam. tnat its eradication can be accomplished only through fullest co-operation or the pirblic. "You have undertaken a enlendid worK, ne said, "tne successful out come or wnich means much to the Philippines. Your plan for control and eventual eradication of tubercu losis is worthy of strong support from every society." General Wood, with Camero Forbes, former governor general of the islands, is visiting the provinces on a mission of inauiry for President iaraing. SALVATION ARMY RETIRES WAR WORK AT CAJIP LEWIS X'OW CLOSED IXCIDEXT. , The sun gives 800,000 times more light than the moon. i Government Takes Over Famous Red Shield Inn for Use of Military Officers. TACOMA. Wash.. July 2. (Special.) ' The Red Shield inn, which for the last two years has been operated by the Salvation army at Greene park. Camp Lewis, for the benefit of of ficers and enlisted men and their families, formally was turned over to the war department Friday, in accordance with previously announced plans. The Inn will be maintained by the army as officers' quarters, with Major William M. Inglis, 69th infan try, in charge. Major-General Charles H. Muir, who has been commanding the ninth corps area, with headquarters at San Francisco, for the last two months, arrived In Tacoma Friday afternoon. and went immediately to Camp Lewis, where he reassumed command of the camp and-the fourth division. Brigadier-General R. M. Blatchford. who has been acting as camp and division commander during General Muir's AIR BASE CHANGE PLAN Forester Says Humptulips Would Be Better Than Camp Lewis. HOQUIAM, Wash., July 2. (Spe cial.) Efficiency in airplane forest patrol would be increased if the base were changed from Camp Lewis to Humtulips field, according to W. J. Peath of the forestry service. In statement to the Hoquiam Commercial club yesterday. Efficiency would be trebled as far as the Quinault reservation is con cerrted, he stated, and would be im proved for all the Olympic district Taking observations from Finley lookout is unsatisfactory, he ex plained, and under the present sys tem the plans can make only one trip a day over the area. Six trips a day could be made out of Hump- tulips, he said. Barbecue Planned Thursday Night BANKS, Or., July 2. (Special.) At a meeting of the Banks commer cial club held Thursday night it was practically decided to hold a barbe cue on the high school grounds here some time this fall, probably about October 15. A committee of three was appointed to confer with the board of directors of the hog and dairy show and make arrangements for the affairs to be held pointly. Reckless Autoist Gets Limit. HOQUIAM, Wash., July 2. (Spe cial.) Judge Smith yesterday gave Henning Hedberg the limit for reck less driving as the reeult of his tele scoping a roadster parked on River side avenue Thursday night. The maximum under city ordinances is $100 and costs and 30 days. He started serving his sentence imme diately. Woman Dies Under Treatment. SAN FRANCISCO. July 2. Mrs. Mariana Solaehi 23, died in a phy sician's office here today while tak ing a Bteam and electrical treatment. An investigation was started imme diately by county officials to deter mine whether her death was due pos sibly to electrocution of asphyxia tion. Arbitration by League of Nations Is Great Achievement, Says George Barnes. BY GEORGE N. BARNES. (Copyright. 1021, by The Oregonian.) LANDON, July 2. (Special by Wire less.) Events of great moment have gathered so thick and fast upon us during the last few days that the settlement of the dispute between Sweden and Finland may attract less attention than its importance war rants. I wish here to put it on rec ord as vindicating reason, in con tradistinction to force, in the regu lation of international affairs. When Finland separated from Rus sia, Sweden claimed the Aland is lands, situated just a short distance from the entrance to the Stockholm archipelago and which for three cen turies had been under Finnish juris diction. For two centuries, however. Finland was a part of the Swedish state and for the last century, up to 11)17, she had administered the islands on behalf of Russia. World War Jut Kucaprd, The Aland islands almost threw Sweden into the world war on the side of Germany. It was claimed that Russia, in violation of treaties, had fortified the islands to such an ex tent that they were a menace to Sweden. German propagandists in Stockholm used this pretext to in flame Swedish opinion against Rus sia and against the allies and at one time in the spring 1916 the question as to whether or not Sweden should cast her lot with Germany and plunge into tne maelstrom of war depended upon a vote in the riksdag. Sanity triumphed and Sweden remained neutral. The question of the allocation of the islands and their administration in the future was last year referred to the council of the league of na tions. That body decided in favor of Finland. This was a decided blow to Swedish aspirations, the claim be ing that the islands should naturally rorm a Dase for the defense of Stockholm. Award Is Accepted. But Mr. Brantlng, the Swedish pre mier, has accepted the award on be half of his country and it has been promulgated. The settlement of the Aland island controversy and the acceptance of the award by Sweden mark a notable achievement on the part of the league oi nations. In S'lesia there is another small brignt spot discernible on the in ternational horizon. General agree ments have been reached for the withdrawal of both German and Po lish forces to the right side of th pieDiscne line so that conditions are improved for sttlement of disput ed territory. This settlement must be made at the next meeting of th ailied supreme council and fortunate ly that meeting is to be attended by the American ambassador to Great Britain, Colonel Harvey. Greeks Spurn Mediation. Meantime the Greeks have spurned the proffered mediation of the al lies and are preparing another of' lensive in Asia minor wnere tne un fortunate Christian minority are in a perilous plight, their fate depend ing upon Greek success. Can the United States come to their aid? Can President Harding do any thing to back up his words of last October to American citizens of Greek deseent? Here at home, the move of the pre mier, Mr. Lloyd George, for a. con ference on the Irish question, with no conditions attached to the invita tions sent to the Ulstermen and Sinn Feiners marked a definite and im portant advance on the part of the government. If the various- obstacles which have arisen should prove too great to be overcome and the move ends in fail ure the situation will be serious the dread alternative in the back ground. Grace Period Enu July 12. The date f'xed for the first meet ing of the Dublin parliament passed last Tuesday. The last period of grace expires July 12. At that time the provisions for a southern Irish parliament lapse and a crown colony or some kind of military rule may supervene. The moment is one pregnant with possibilities. The door to better un derstanding has been opened. The settlement of the Irish problem would do much for civilization and the peace of the world. It is a con summation devoutedly wished by sensible and sympathetic men end women everywhere. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to express our sincere gratitude to our many friends of Mc Minnville and Portland and the Ameri can Legion and Ladies' Auxiliary, Mc Minnville Lodge, B. P. O. E. ; to Swift & Co. and employes for their kindness and sympathy and the beautiful flo ral offerings at the time of the loss of our beloved husband, son, grandson and brother. - MRS. J. E. POOLE. MR AND MRS. WM. POOLE. MR. ELMER POOLE. MR. AND MRS. S. H. MARIS. Woman Dies in Bath Tub. SAN FRANCISCO. July 2. The body of Mrs. Esther A. Campbell, 77, a widow, was found today in a bath tub filled with water at her home here. According to Mrs. Campbell's daughter, the woman had been ill for several years, and despondency is believed 'to have caused her to take her own life. Evans Case Continued. Hearing in the case of Bobby Evans, boxing promoter, charged jointly with Bert Hughes with the theft of a diamond ring from Mrs. Adele Culp, was continued by Mu nicipal Judge Rossman yesterday until July 8, at the request of coun sel for the defendants. Evans is at liberty under bonds. Adv. CARD OF THANKS. To our neighbors and friends who showed us great kindness and sym pathy at the sad death of our dear husband and father we extend our appreciation and thanks; also for the beautiful floral tributes. "Inasmuch as ye did it unto the least, ye did it unto me." EMILV L. BOWMAN.. R.H.BOWMAN. MR. AND MRS. CHAS. TOOZE. Adv. HOLLIS BOWMAN. The Chinese tael. now used for reckoning financial transactions, is not a coin, but a measured slab of silver. Just What You Need I This "handy tool will repair har ness, shoes, suit cases, awnings. carpets, grain bags, auto tops. etc. ORDER BT MAIL 79c BROWN MERCANTILE CO. 171 First, Near Yamhill WEEK 1ST ROUND: 2ND ROUND: 3RD ROUND: 4TH ROUND: Just a kid, a mill-hand, fighting to make good. Still the kid, fighting now between love for his in valid mother and love for the girl. Again the kid taunted as "Scrap-Iron" and "Yel low" fighting the fastest ring battle you've ever seen and just for his mother's sake. A-a-a-ah ! That's the finest punch of all ! KEATES' CONCERT on oir v,nno wi hlitzkr organ. Today's concert is given under the auspices of the American Legion, and is in competition for tfie Keates $500.00 Prize Contest. Other Attractive Numbers Included in the De Luxe Presentations. yf7Jf March and Evening Star from "Tann- sTl &&illHwr hauser Wagner . - flit ill JL& Berceuse from "Jocelyn" Goddard f rSSs 40- iA ilY T9b Patriotic Selections Fea- l V. iSi. E turins Sons f 1917 : JxK. ,KJL5V Hi Ktr trretes Hungarian Fantasia.. A-i ?JS T""l A V V'-f j2fis Tobani fr rvrx -i l3MWA Overture, ''Martha''.. f vlW-isfT mmmk Flotow ?lJff 1 j & hi-ii-rirn-mil -r minhiin n nrr MiwiitiiniwrnMiMiii n inn mgrn-mmit inn i u n - M HI uirecuon q Jensen and yon Herbert? Ml -. ifi , , rv - ft) u ErZyZh3 CECIL TEAGUE at the Worlllwr and In concert today at 130 P. H. FROUR1MXE Father of Victory Ganne The Rosary Nevin Mile. Modiste Victor Herbert Echoes of '17 Arrd. by C. X. One of the Season's Finest Offerings With the Most Beautiful Snow Scenes Ever Filmed From the "Red Book" story by Katherine Newlin Burt, star ring Russel Simpson, famous for his work in "Godless Men," and Cullen Landis, of Rex Beach's "Girl From Outside." The story of a pretty show girl stranded in the great north and blinded by the snow of a lonely cabin cupped in the hol low of distant hills and of a fight against the primitive de sires of two men of the wilderness.