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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 12, 1908)
. THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, ' SUNDAY EIORMNG, APRIL 12. J 903 1 J V 6 mm m ft LI i "V- The Story of the Girl Who Saved Her Lift by Playing: Truant DON'T KNOW why I did it" said nine-year-old Helen Marks,"but--" She tausrJ.av.eJ by the realization that she had saved her life by playing truant' from school. ' , , - When the recent horrible fire disaster, at Collinwood; Ohio, plunged that tretty suburb of Cleveland into mourning and shocked the nation, it was announced that every one of the thirty-nine putils in Miss Grace risks third grade room had perished with their teacher. Jsi7$little ones met death that day, the state , snent seemed probable. ; ', But U was incorrect. There was one sur- I t: xtracted 0 ante. Hla adroit it wJ an xamlntion of th bank by bar paranta, who now would ear hot If it bad been 1st, It corroborative evidence. With that M -t... . f.V F.MVr ,1ttl?Un MitrVt cnti Helen bad tbt time-but let Mr ton u neneu: -tvor from Must Ms class-rtleien MarKsn aldn.t WMt 0 n t0 ,ohool tha moming.: Funny, She had Saved her life by playing hOOkey. v f always bat to go to acboot on a warm, sunshiny day School children have played trucnt, per-: na " t0- M since the torment of schooldays wasje- f7$2LEl& fthat money out vised by their elders. They have tone fishing i did it upstair uimt dressed, x thought it would far &ocy ras for yVcsVsrs,, At1- : 'in.i'nnin'ifff ' hiii livrA hall rm remote ' ayar drop out I wantad mora, but mamma wa calllof , ; -KX-''i-i- ' t-K .'' - '' ' ' i Ivt"' -S. , 'I .. end swimming, haxe .ptaHei bM on remote p i tia a tn. o.r M&j" S )lt-: xH&P-'Vf J lots or enjoyed stolen hbeftp in other ways !lb.4got out ttp haf4 to By bandkerchuf. M it wouldn't : SX. ' SL - - Jim Xri ffr' fJy J'M, that appeal to boys and girls, but few-have , , ' v:.v ; : ' J l1MAV'r-- WJ I - "4 ..Ill 'O - 'r,lT - - In this story1 Helen Marks tells, in her joavi youthful way; of the escapade- that kept one victim of the death roll of the Collinwood .' horror. i;:v'::";:Hv,';;'':; ilnr rrotn aa, hum Marn rarpruaa Jlppln up behind him nt throwing br ncK Whlia n w prod din Kraonr tn Tn (in had plkTM truant rrora ooooi. Lrk rcturnln lirr Ithr by i rmt abont nl ulna fn h Iwid. Knt rturnln horn. hr parent auDPOMd that ah had prlh1. la deapalf hr fathar waa arcblnr In U rulna. whan tha lrl crtfd: "Onaaa who I am, aapaT'- Mr. s natch an dar of lira. . CORES of llttla bodlet war lying In tha tatnoorary morgna, about ' which a crowd of baartbrokan parenta clu tared. Tha bunch of amarda at tha , front door partad. X . man, with fao . wan and Unad wltb grtef and crying- aulatly, cam In. "Waa It a boy or glrir. tha aympathttio guardt wfalsparad. -.; 5 ' ') : :'''.--.; "X glrV ba aobbad. "My Helen." , ' C They motioned to th left, wbart lay a long Una of llttla ahapear covered with blanket!,' tarpaullna, abeeta and newapaperaf "Thoaa are tha glrla," tbay aaid. . Down , tha long tin tha Borrowing, man went hla trlef eating bit heart away. -Tha tears earn fatter and blinded him aa he uncovered tha a till, ghaatly forma na by on. He ataggered before ha reached the end. rrhe guard caught and aupported him. "X guaa aha Un't here,- ha moaned. "Maybe-ihey-havtn't-got her out-yet" For aU th rlctlxne bad ' not been racovered from the achoolhous death trap. "look, again," they told him. "Look at th dreaaet; poibly you will find ber that way." ,, H abook bia bead, but atarted at th bead of th Una again anyway. . lie examined a ecore of bodlea, then . tank to bis kneea to pray. At that Juncture ; X little) girl aaueased ber way in. Her face waa dirty, her white apron waa rent and muddy. Before they could atop ber ahe ran allently down to the kneeling figure of the man. Qoick aa a Saah aha put ber band over hi eyea. "flues who It la, papa," ahe aaid. ? With a fierce cry of joy, he apuh around. "My God, Belen," be gasped. Then he fainted. There were thirty-nine pupils in Mis Grace Stake'a third grade room at the LAkeview School, Collinwood. f hlrty-eight answered to roll call on. that fatal Wed' nesday moraluvi Helen Marks, a Fourth avenue, was marked "absent'? , An hour or o later every one of the thirty-eight o dead. With their teacher, they, loat their lives in the frantic-rush to escape the flame that made the flimsy building a charnel house. , NO WHIPPING THIS TIME Helen Marks lives because the was a naughty little girl and played "hookey. ' "Vou won't whip me. will you, papa?" she pleaded us the hapiy father led her through the crowded streets mitHide the temporary morgue eslablUhed in th Lake teliore phopB. . - "Whip yout lieaVers, no," he replied, and kissed her spaln. . ' . Some peopl 'will say that it was premonition of the disaster tha day hold In store that made this nine-"Vt-arold girl rurt away from -the ill-fated school. Helen Marks' rhildltth comprehension very likely cannot com pass "jirunouition,"'. IX wasn't premonition, anyway. "1 5 11st didn't want 'to. go "to school that day," she aavs That's all the explanation she has to offer. While, hf r fallow-pupils were flghilrig to get down the rMrrow stairways to the safety of th open air outside, while Colliqwoud's ptmy little fire- department was tinki ering with iu wheeling, sputtering gasoline-driven en gine, while htr mother f.nd th other were down on tiiiir knH In the mud of the-street outside praying Htilm waa doing some ahopplnfir in Cleveland. , Oblivious of the terrible happening at home, eh Was having the tiin of her life 8h bought teanuts here .ija water -there, roterds,v gum, andy, bananas. In tu afternoon she at high up, in the gallery,, enthralled s a f hpii meilrema hero nwam the river With the ' heroin ami tolled 'he villain again; , , , 'l-cfora Helen lelt- home that-morning she had, ' by-'-" .uimliuub and ttJiaus shakings of her Cist, Iron bank, ' T'i- . . - rattle, and dropped it down the neck of my drtsa Into my walat . "I didn't have any appetite for anything to eat . X kept thinking of that money Inside my dress. 2 waa afraid that It would up and Jingle. Mamma wanted to Vecn -far As. Jre Girl Trusrtrt 'Nothing,' X told know what was the natter with 1 me. her.-; - . .". - '."Mamma can aee from our kitchen window all the way over , to the achool, I had to go atralght that way; I kept away from th other glrla. Maybe they thought It wag' funny. , ,' - J ' J1 waa Bur that mamma wat watching me all the way. I thought I could feel her eye on toy back. Sh wasn't looking, though. -1 waa glad X didn't meet Mis Flake on the way.' X would have bad to go right Into school with ber. ' "When I got to the front door I didn't go In. X went around to tha back. The last bell waa Just ringing. Ther wasnt any en out there; not even any boy a. I , waited around there until I heard the acbolara saying the Lord's Prayer, then X ran across to th car line Uk aixty. ' ; " , . "I had to wait a long time for the car. There waan't any place to hide Just a big open apace end I wa afraid that torn on would ee m and tell on m. X waa going to go out to Euclid Beach and spend the mors Ing. X could get back bom by dinner time, X thought CONSCIENCE ACCUSfeD HER ' "But th ear going that way didn't com. On going toward Cleveland came along first X don't know what possessed me to do It but I climbed on. "I forgot about where I had my money until the con- ' ductor come around. Then X had to stick my hand way down my neck to get it The other people laughed fit to kill, One old man didn't, thought tie kept looking at me kind of stern like. I waa afraid he wa a truant officer. Anyway, I'll bet ha Just knew X waa running) away from aohooL "What did L do downtown? Why, X Just walked around and looked-In the windows, and bought candy and peanuts and thing and watched the people. Be fore X knew It It waa noon. I taw it on a big clock on a post out tn front of a store. "X didn't know what to do then. X knew that I'd get a whipping when X got home, and probably papa would send me to feed without any supper. Then X thought' that I might Just aa well stay away all day. I'd get the whipping anyway; I could eat Just enough before X got on th car to last m over aupper. iyeflu 1 got aome aoui Gee, but those stool were high. "So I stayed. restaurant oughnuts and eoffe la a. xne man behind th counter wouldn't take my money; I had te stand In Una and pay a man away up in front "I walked around for a little while, when X met a ltttl girl who naked tn if X was going to th show. X told bar no. Then X changed my mind and aaid yea. We went together. We went away up, oh, ever so high. It waa great only there waa a mas betide ua who chewed tobacco and spit on th floor. 1 "I never saw anything like that play. It wat grand. They did lota of tha grandest things. ' A man swam a big river with a girl with the prettiest yellow hair, and got her away from the bad manand oh, Juat lots of thing. I cried one when b eeld be waa going to kill br th bad man, I mean. ; "It waa nearly dark whn X got out I waa getting afraid. I waa all alone, too, for somehow X had lost tha other girl coming down the stair. But X Just ran to where I knew, the Collinwood car passed. X got on the first one that came' . "People were all talking about a ilre somewhere. Lota of people bad been killed., A newsboy got on tha car. Everybody bought hi papers. X had a penny left and bought one, too. 1 ' ' ; "On the front page It told' about a big Are in the North, Collinwood' , school. I didn't think anything of that Our achool ' was the Lakeview School Then X started to read the names of the children' who were burned. Down w the middle of it waa my name, Helen Marks, It had my addreat, ag and everything. News papers always, get things wrong,, I've heard papa Bay. ' "Well, aayway,-X Juat got Beared to death. I knew that papa and mamma would be almost eraay. That old car wa awfully slow. It seemed to atop at every block. Every time It stopped mora, people got on. They were all talking about the fire. "When we finally got there everybody got off at tha Lake Shore shops. X met a girl I knew, and ah told me that papa waa tn th shed whr they had all tha dead children looking for me. I was supposed to b dead too, you know. "I ran right In. Som men tried to atop m, but X went anyway. There Waa papa, kneeling down there. I-just ran up to him and played bllndman's buff with, him. Gee, but h waa glad to aee me, "I didn't get whipped, after all. Mamma and papa mad me deep with thm that night They hugged and kissed me for most of the night In the morning papa gave me a dollar; he says mamma la to take m in to a play every week now. But X ain't going to run away from achool any more. , , . -. "X guess that's ell." :- J ', v ' ' for Monic P ' aVv ' H W F ROM Parig c&QCfl th" announcement that , Oranler, Coauelln,.Mounet-SuJly, 1 Bargy and Gultry. five of tha greatest dramatist f France : -on. them the beat aotors of Franoe, nay, of th have been engaged .to write playg lor mov- Barah Bernhardt acting for the camera! Coquelln v potlng for a dumb show! ; Would you believe itt i .dmond .Rostand, Alfred Capua, .Henri, Laredan ? But explain fthe manufacturera, v the demand i for ana juaunce XJCuxi-MfyXi ' U Lovers of ; the drama are;; asking i t Will ; the theater pasa away t ; Will the: drama of the future be produced, not on a stage; but on A white canvas? Already the cinematograph as a popular amuse ment has become, world-wide and famous. ' ; this; amutemenl is so great that they they can afford to pay big money and they , are paying large sums to thes atars. : ; v ' ,s They declare, further, that the moving picture ia the coming amusement of the , future; that nothing too good can to scoured. And so they have engaged th baat talan t. In the United States, according lb CAP the newt that th leading dramaUats of France of the .world have been engaged to writ moving-picture play a. It is annoutfeed that the leading parts In ' these playa will be taken .by Earth. Bernhardt Bartot, . Re jane, Jeanne crominent manufacturer of dims, three of the best known humor u playwright In New, York write playa tor the camera,' Their namee are ' not Used : for advertising purposes. to a'. t "But." continual , the movlni-nlctura man. "tha dar la very near when we shall compete with one an other because of -th author of our playa. Th time 1 not far off when we ahall bid for th best talent to writ our, plays and the best known actor and ac-t tresses td appear In them." , t ' ,vThe idea of writing playa for the moving" picture t occurred to M. Henri Lavedan, the famoua author of the "Marqule d Irlola." HI suggestion wa qulokly , " taken up by the cinematograph v manufacturer, and ; Lavedan wa engaged to write a historical drama, ' , - No aooner did other dramatist laarn of thia than they , professed : tlrelr wiilingnes to write plays, ? and . they " were Quickly engaged. -"" dmond ' iiottand has ; been commissioned to writ three fairy drama! M. . Alfred Caput will write, a play depicting the financial life of Pari. - " t In these playa, of course, as in all moving-pictured dramas, what la required j action. .Emotions express ed on the stage in words, for the cinematograph must 1 be : translated Into movement and expression. While appearing before the oamera th actors usually enter Into conversation la order to give verisimilitude to ' th . show. Otherwise, the movement would nataralljj be strained. -:'Jy'"- , v Rehearsala for th moving picture ar"conduct4 just a rehearsal for th stage. There mutt be tpon- -tanelty, for the camera' record U, unerring. - Employment by the French manufacturer! of well . known aotors la certainly an, Innovation in th pro- ductlon of these dumb ahow. L Bargy, one of the ' ; most vital of actora, will take the leading part in M. Lavedan' play. -' , . A series of short acenet representing phaaea of . Parisian life will constitute the play to be produced by M. Caput. Mile, ffiva Lavalllere, of the Varieties, and De Feraudy, of the Francait, will take th lead ing rolt.-, It 1 tald the supporting actor are te . get 1 40 for each rehearsal and $200 for the final per formance.' The leading parts, of courte, Will draw -larger and, It it said, extremely large sums. Capua, it will be remembered, I the author of "La Velne" and "La Chatelaine,'' the ; leading successe , ot, tw J successive apasont .ln Paris, For several year he was the idol of the French, la popularity matching Roe- . tand. - ' is ' ' , ; Xtostandl Think of th author of "Cyrano de Ber- ' gerao the most popular play at period In Russia,' ; "- Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Servia, the united States t and the Countries of southern . Europe writing play -for moving-picture production. Possibly th "Divine Sarah" v and .Coauelin will be engaged to ' take ; th leading parts, . -' v Writing a play for a moving-picture production la , simple to the expert The recipe; la lots of actiqn, ex pression of emotion by pantomime, sensational esca-: 1 padea, hair-breadth escapes humorous situations A, mere outline of the play i written, divided into " soenes. .When rehearsing the actora fill in their parts -with oonversatlont. Occasionally the author will write 1 the dialogue, although thia it not the usual method. '1 The average length of Hhe play aa written 1 600 j WOfflSe' ' ' ' "' '' v " -'"'V-- if-' .' . J:-V- '-'-'.-.,;.- " v - " ; In the United States molt of the movlngptcturel manufacturers employ men to writ their aubjeots. Many are purohased from outside contributors, and v from $5 to 50 is faid for a play or good suggestion.