The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, November 12, 1922, Section One, Page 10, Image 10

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    10 -
THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 12, 1922
IMG IS SCENE
. OF BIG DBSEMflBCE
.Yamhill County Celebrates
. Armistice Anniversary.
MEMORIAL IS DEDICATED
.Thousands of Persons Take Part
iit Formal Opening of Fine
20,000 Community House.
NEWBERG. Or., Nov. 11. (Spe
cial.) With Btreets decorated, all
stores closed and thousands of per
sona in the city from all over the
county, Newberg celebrated Armis
tice day and the dedication of a new
$20,000 Amerioan Legion community
memorial building. The celebration
was county-wide, as the building
partly was financed through a dona
tion from the county court and the
fact that the names of all sotdiera
cf the world war who made the su
preme sacrifice are preserved on
marble tablets on the front of the
iiuilding.
farade Opens Celebration.
A" parade in which Grand Army
of the Republic veterans, ex-service
men of the world war and mothers
of those who did not return, headed
ly the band, was the opening event
of the day.
Following this came the dedica
tion services in the big auditorium.
The auditorium was packed to the
doors and many could not obtain
entrance. Seated on the platform
were State Legion Commander Wil
bur of Hood River, Albert Lough
ridge of Salem, State Patriotic In
structor of the Grand Army of the
Republic Walter L. Tooze Jr. of Mc
Minnville, Post Commander Frank
Swart, Chairman of the Day J. S
Rankin, State Chaplain Frank
James of the legion and about a
dozen war mothers.
, Commander Wilbur Orator.
Rev. Frank James pronounced the
(avocation, following which State
Commander Wilbur made the dedi
cation address. Other addresses were
made by Mr. Loughridge and Mr.
Tooze.
Following the programme a din
ner -was served in the banquet rooms
cf the new building by Civic Im
provement club, Legion auxiliary
find Woman's Relief corps.
At 2:30 P. M. a football game be
tween the legion and the Newberg
fire department was played. This
la an annual event and drew a large
crowd. The game was played on
the Pacific college field.
A musical programme at the au
Bitorium of the new building at
7:30 and a dedication ball at 9:30
Closed the day's events.
MEDFORD CELEBRATES DAY
Jackson County Joins in Great
Armistice Demonstration.
' MEDFORD, Or., Nov. 11. (Spe
cial.) Clear weather and sunshine
today greeted the big Armistice day
celebration in Medford under the
auspices of the local American Le
gion post, in -which all Jackson
county joined and -which attracted
many thousands of persons.
The main event was the big parade
at 1 P. M, in which the American
Legion men, the women's auxiliary,
the Grand Army of the Republic, the
AVomen's Relief corps and the Span-ish-,American
war veterans marched,
interspersed with patriotic floats,
fraternal bodies, the Medford high
schpol and similar organizations to
the music of several bands and fol
lowed by the automobiles of citi
zens generally, corporations and
other business concerns.
Immediately following the parade
came the annual Rogue river foot
ball, championship game between the
teams of Medford high and Ashland
high, with record-breaking attend
ance. Then at 7:30 came the biff
boxing exhibition of the legion at
the natatorium, and the day's events
wound up with the American Le
gion ball at the county fair grounds
pavilion near here tonight.
MOX.UOUTH CELEBRATES DAY
Legionnaires of Independence
Join in Armistice Programme.
MONMOUTH, Or., Nov. 11. tSpe
ciai) A spirited observance of
Armistice day was held here. The
American Legion post of Indepen
dence, the Grand Army of the Re
public and all auxiliary organiza
tions gathered in the chapel of the
Oregon State normal at 10 o'clock,
after a parade, for a patriotic pro
gramme. Chaplain William S. Gil
bert of Astoria delivered the chief
address of the day.
At the close of these exercises all
ex-soldiers and the women were
euests of the citizens of Monmouth
at a dinner In the domestic science
quarters of the normal.
In the afternoon the legionnaires
joined their comrades of Polk county
at Dallas, where j parade and a
football game took place, followed
at night by a dinner and dance.
NEWPORT CELEBRATES DAY
Veterans and Civic Organizations
Appear in Review.
NEWPORT, Or., Nov. 11. (Spe
cial.) Armistice day was celebrated
gaily in Newport. AH business
houses closed from noon until 5
P. M. A large street parade was
led by the 3d company, coast artil
lery band. Civil war veterans, the
Spanish war veterans, the 3d com
pany, the Newport chamber of com
merce, the Woman's Relief corps
and 300 school children participated.
A patriotic programme was held.
The weather was clear and balmy
and the day was a big one for this
community. Newport defeated To
ledo high school, 25 to 12, in a foot
ba:l game.
of Theodore Roosevelt, dedicated
yesterday, to the city of Portland
were adopted at a meeting- of the
board of directors of the Portland
Press club Friday. The resolutions
called attention to the fact that
the statue enriches the city and it
will be a continual reminder to fu
ture generations that it pays to be
honorable, loyal and devoted to one's
country.
BIG PARADE HELD IX SALEM
Adjutant-General White Talks at
Celebration.
SALEM, Or., Nov. 11. (Special.)
A parade of local patriotic and fra
ternal organizations and aooroDri-
ate ceremonies in the state armory
featured the Armistice day obser
vance here. Mayor George Halver-
son acted as marshal of the day,
assisted by members of the Grand
Army of the Republic.
The programme included an ad
dress by George A. White, adjutant
general; singing of America, ltd by
Dr. H. C. Epley; invocation by Rev.
W. C. Kantnerj selections by Salem
Apollo club; reading by Miss Martha
Mallory, and vocal numbers by Mrs.
Hallie Parish Hir.ges.
The. parade included the local
patriotic organizations, Elks, Cher
rians, Sunday schools, Willamette
university students, Chemawa band,
Doy scouts and Salvation Army.
Prediction that America may have
to face another great struggle that
will even more seriously threaten
our existence than the crisis of 1917
was made today by Brigadier-General
George A. White, adjutant-general
of the state! who was the prin
cipal speaker at the big public cele
bration of Armistice day given un
der the auspices of Salem post of
the American Legion.
After recalling vividly the call in
the night that sounded over Oregon
when we went suddenly into tfle war
against Germany, and recounting
the black months of privation and
service of all Americans, General
White said that the sun of peace
may again be obscured and urged it
as the duty of every American to
help keep alive the national spirit
that pulled us through before.
"Our prayer is that it may never
come," said General White, "but who
that reads history and keeps abreast
of world events can fail to sense an
omen that may one day threaten our
very existence as a people, may
threaten the whole white race, even
Christianity itself. .
"God enlighten those provincial
Americans who are wholly dead to
this ominous possibility. It may
not come in our time.. It may never
come. It may be upon "us in a. few
years or even less."
Preceding the public exercises,
which were attended by over 3000
people,, a parade was held through
the streets of Salem. Mayor George
E. Halvorsen, wearer of the croix
de guerre, was grand marshal of the
parade, which included in the col
umn the Grand" Army, Spanish war
veterans, the world war veterans,
Elks and other civic organizations.
ST. IIELEXS CELEBRATES
Programme Is Staged Older
. Auspices of American Legion. .
ST. HELENS, Or., Nov. .11. (Spe
cial.) Armistice day was fittingly
observed in St. Helens, Columbia
post, No. 42, having charge of .the
programme and Arrangements. A
salute was fired at sunrise and at
11 o'clock a presidential salute was
fired. Not having cannons, the
legion had Jack McKie, expert
powder man, fire dynamite salutes
After a street concert by the St.
Helens band, patriotic exercises
were held at 10:30 o'clock. In the
afternoon there were races and
sports and a football game between
Washington high school and St
Helens. A dance was given at night
by the legion and the woman's
auxiliary. . -
Aberdeen Suspends Business.
ABERDEEN, Wash.. Nov. 11.
(Special.) All Aberdeen storps and
mills were closed today in observ
ance of Armistice day. No formal
programme of celebration was ar
ranged and the only public event
of the day was the dance in the new
armory tonight under the auspices
of the American Legion, Armistice
day programmes were given in all
the schools yesterday.
ALL-DAY PROGRAMME HELD
Bishop Remington Delivers Pen
dleton Address.
PENDLETON, Or., Nov. 11. (Spe
cial.) Pendleton celebrated the
signing of the armistice in an all
day programme today, staged by
the commercial association and
aided by the American Legion. A
big parade opened the ceremonies,
followed by a patriotic programme,
a football game in the afternoon
and a community dance in honor of
ex-service men in the evening. "
Bishop William P. Remington,
newly elected to the Episcopal dio
cese, of eastern Oregon, delivered
the address of the day in a forceful
way, pointing out the lessons of the
war. Bishop Remington served
overseas as a chaplain in the army
while his wife served as a canteen
worker. His installation as bishop
of eastern Oregon will take place
here November 19. "Constructive
Americanism" was the theme of the
speaker, who took his vast audience
back with him to the time of the
war and told them that the motto
of "win the peace" was more im
portant than that of "win the war."
ROSEBTJRG CELEBRATES DAY
Armistice Programme Is Declared
Best Ever Held.
ROSEBURG, Or., Nov. 11. (Spe
cial.) Roseburg today held the
most successful Armistice day cele
bration in the history of the city.
The programme was presented under
the auspices of the local post of
the American legion and opened
with a parade at 10 o'clock this
morning.
All of the leading patriotic and
fraternal orders of the city were
.represented by decorated floats, and
the American legion had several
hundreds ex-service men in line.
The veterans from the Oregon Sol
diers' home had a place near the
head of the procession, special con
veyance being provided for them.
Judge Jacob Kanzler of Portland
was the speaker at the patriotic
meeting in the morning. A' free
banquet for all ex-service men was
given at noon, and in the afternoon
fully 3000 witnessed a programme
of street stunts. This was followed
by a football game, in which Rose
burg defeated Grants Pass by a
score of 12 to 0. A dance sponsored
by the legion completed the pro
gramme. N
HOOD RIVER IS THROXGED
3500 Motorists Attend Celebra
tions; Big Parade Held.
HOOD RIVER, Or., Nov. 11.
(Special.) An unprecedented crowd
thronged this city today in celebra
tion of Armistice day. It was esti
mated that 3500 motorists from
Dufur, The Dalles, Wasco, Mosier
and Cascade Locks, and Stevenson,
Underwood, White Salmon and Gold
endale. Wash., were here. Follow
ing a military parade a formal pro
gramme was held at the Rialto the
ater. Participants in the parade includ
ed uniformed members of the legion
posts of Hood River, The Dalles and
Dufur, under whose joint auspices
the celebration was staged. Com
pany C, 186th regiment, Oregon na
tional guard, the local Grand Army
post, Dufur and Hood River fire de
partments were in line. An auto
mobile carried three gold star moth
ers of the county Mrs, J. K. Carson,
Mrs. Albert Krieg and Mrs. J. O.
Eastman.
Lawrence T. Harris, associate jus
tice of the Oregon supreme court,
was chief speaker of the day. He
appealed to the American Legion,
whose members he characterized as
holding the - destiny of the nation,
to be the keepers of the compass of
the ship of American civic con
science. Francis C. Galloway of The Dalles
post, who was introduced by Com
mander F. H. Bell of the local post,
was chairman of the meeting.
North Bend Observes Day.
NORTH BEND, Or., Nov. 11.
(Special.) The North Bend Ameri
can Legion post celebrated Armis
tice day here with the assistance of
other towns in the county. A foot
ball game was held followed by a
Legion dinner, at 6. A parade, a
band and other attractions held the
crowd until late tonight. This
evening the dance at the Legion
hall wag attended by a la-gc crowd.
-Astoria Observes Day.
ASTORIA, Or., Nov. 11. (Spe
cial.) Astoria observed Armistice
day by a general cessation of busi
ness. There was no parade, but
during the morning patriotic serv
ices were held under the auspice
of Clatsop post. American Legion.
Hood River Burglars Foiled.'
HOOD RIVER, Or., Nov. 11.
(Special.) Burglars were apparent
ly interrupted last night while en
gaged in blowing the safe of Ben
nett Bros., automobile dealers. They
had applied soap and nitroglycerine.
The safe occupies the front of a
showroom and was in full light of a
street lamp. The yeggmen forced
a cash register, looting it of about
?15 in silver.
it WftMfe
Morrison St.,' Corner Fourth
Press Club Thanks Dr. Coe.
Resolutions expressing apprecia
tion of the generosity of Dr. Henry
Waldo Coe in presenting the statue
if?
Commencing Tomorrow Morning, 9 o'Clock
.'as'
EXTRA
SPECIAL
OUR LARGE SECOND FLOOR
ECONOMY DEPT.
OFFERS THESE WONDERFUL VALUES
SSS53i Jj) .00 H
II 1000 Pairs LZIi 1000 Pairs II
Women's high-grade Shoes, Oxfords, Pumps and Slippers.
Short lines. Notallizes. This lot comprises all leathers;
all styles of heels. Astounding values at this low price.
All on Display
Tables
Hundreds
of Pairs
$.85
Come ! Look
Them Over
Hundreds
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Women's black, brown and white Pumps and Oxfords.
High, low and medium heels some Baby Louis heels. In
this lot are most all sizes and widths. -
' See Fourth
Street Windows
A Choice
Selection
Special
Display
600 Pairs
Black, brown, gray and colored leathers in Pumps, Oxfords
and Shoes. The styles and values here mentioned are
worth double the price.
SECOND FLOOR
TAKE ELEVATOR-
IL
Morrison St., Corner Fourth
6. A H. preen atamps for cash.
Holman Fuel Co., coal and wood.
Broadway 6353: E60-21. Adv.
NO ARTIST WINS WITHOUT
STUDY, SAYS PRIMA DONNA
Actor, No Matter How Gifted, Must Take to Art and Learn to Use
His Gift, Says Marie Rich.
BY LEONE CASS BAER.
WHEN Marie Rich was 15 years
old she decided that the nice,
polite and utterly respectable
profession of teaching, which had
been selected for her by her par
ents, was not the line of earnest en.
deavor she wanted to pursue.
"Mother had set her heart on my
going through all the schools and
universities and colleges in the
world," said the petite blonde prima
donna at the Lyric the same Lyric,
tinder Keating and Flood manage
ment, that hatched out Frances
White. Marjorie Rambeau, Ruane
Daly, Olga Stack Priscilla Knowles
and a. dozen more who have made
good. "Mother had visions of me
going to . school and absorbing
knowledge all my life, until I was
a nice old person with enough stored
in my head to round out my exist
ence as a teacher. So I was put In
school at a convent in Chicago at
an early age, 10 years to be exact,
and to please mother-i studied hard.
"But my father had different
ideas. Not that he wanted me to be
a dumbbell, but he did want me to
pick out my own career. So at va
cation time and at the convent I
studied singing and I loved it pas
sionately. My father is Frank Rich,
a producer of tabloid comedies in
Chicago, and naturally I saw a great
1
3farie Rich, prima donna, with
Lyric Musical Comedy company,
at Baker theater.
deal of the theater. By the time I
was 12 all ideas of being anything
other than an actress had cone out
of my head and when I was 15 my I
mother became resigned to the Idea
that she might have a Mrs. Leslie
Carter in her home, but never a
Minerva, of wisdom. So, under
dad's tuition and guidance, I began
my" career and it has led me far."
Dance Art Picked I p.
Miss Rich might have added that
it had led her afar in a few years,
for the summers are not many since
she was 15. She picked up dancing,
just as Frances White did, just as
half the excellent dancers of the
stage have done, getting an idea for
a step from this person and an idea
from that person and making up a
few of her own until she can dance
with the best of them. Wftenever
the grind of rehearsals isn't too
heavy the ambitious Miss Rich goes
right along with her vocal lessons.
She appeared here on two occasions
with Kolb and Dill, playing the lead
with May Clow in both plays. She
has been in vaudeville too, and was
Ir picture work for one summer.
Miss Rich believes emphatically
that the art of acting is a gift.
"Actors are born, not made," she
asserts. "Of course any actor, no
matter how gifted, must take to
that art as a trade and a profession
He must learn to use his gift of
acting just as a singer must learn
how to use her voice and how not
to use it. just as a writer, gifted
with imagination, must learn how
to express that imagination in good
English, and with individual style.
A young actor must study and per
fect himself under a competent di
rector in a stock company That is
the best school in the world.' How
to walk on thft stage, how to con
duct oneself in a scene when not
taking a part, what to do with your
hands and feet, all these are not
born along with the gift and must
be learned from a director or from
sitting at the feet of great players."
Voubk Actress Happy.
Miss Rich is very happy in her
engagement at the Lyric. "I believe
with the late Charles Frohman that
if you give play-goers a good show,
with good players, a theater will
be well patronized," she said. "We
have a fine company here and our
productions are up to date, original
and smart. The company is like a
big family and we all take a per
sonal interest in the success of each
other."
Miss Rich says she hopes that the
women of this great western coun
try, and especially the northwest,
aren't going to let a group of silly,
effeminate men in Paris, France,
dictate .to us the length of our
skirts. -
"Naturally on the stage I've gotten
used to regarding legs only as a
matter of course, and the short skirt
doesn't mean a thing to look at,"
she said. "But I do think short
skirts are sensible and sanitary and
health promoting, besides giving a
woman more grace and freedom in
locomotion. I will positively think
my western sisters are crazy if I see
them hopping or slithering along In
long skirts," said Marie Rich.
Town Modern, ltoof Thatched.
In the thatched-roof homes of
Tacloban, on the little Philippine
island of Layte, the electrical idea
shines brightly every night, for
most of these homes are electrically
lighted, and the town, with a popu
lation of 12,000, has its electric light
and power plant with three 22Y2
kilowatt generators. The streets
are bright at night.
Read The Oregnnlan classified ad.
. I Morrison St., Cor. Fourth
"Hanan"
SHOES
for
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"In the M
idst of the Season"
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Commencing' Tomorrow Morning at 9 o'Clock
the reason
Many Shoes
of
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1 1 and 2-strap
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Reg. $3.75 Values
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' OUT-OF-TOWN ORDERS
PROMPTLY FILLED
SUBJECT TO RETURN
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Nothing reserved this sale includes
men's, women's and children's shoes,
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75
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1400 Women's Shoes,
Oxfords and Pumps
950 Pairs Men's Shoes
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800 Pairs Ladies' Coloni
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750 Pairs Men's Heavy
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10
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Oxfords and Pumps
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300 Pairs "HANAN"
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450 Pairs Men's new
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- 3
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Shoes and Oxfords
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600 Pairs "HANAN"
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A MORRISON ST. COR. FOURTH