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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1917)
.3 -. " . THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY, JANUARY 1. 1917. 1 T 4 A;-. A . - - HB ; Tuesday ' Afttrnoon - club rill resume It meetings after ' fl.- tBa holiday vacation tomorrow. . wiien jars, nuium uitwuui") 16 lEaat Couch street, will entertain with a luncheon at It o'clock Instead of 12:39 aa announced previously. A full attendance is desired, - - x - yoUUeal Study safn The "Om an' a Tolltiesl Study league will' hold Its regular meeting tomorrow : after noon t :S0 in room - a of Central , library. Eleanor Baldwin will apeak on "Money."- At-l; the study cIcki of the league will meet with Harry Moor of Beed college as the princi pal speaker. The subjects wilt' be the ; labor movement. . K Coaateaa of Mothers at Corvalli--On Wednesday's prorara of the Horn Makers congress, 'which begins -Tues-day . of . thla week. The , Parent Teacher association will ,bsrve a large part. Among- the speakers are Mrs. George McMath, of Portland., president of the Oregon Congress of Mothers and , Parent-Teacher associations, and Mrs. J . Aristene, relte. ex-president of tne Congress of Mothers, is to be another .speaker. The Home Makers' meetings are to be held in room t, Home Econo mies building. r Woman'a Vnlon To Meet- The regu lar monthly Portland Women's Union " wilt bo held at 6:10 Flanders street, at 1:30 Tuesday instead of today. ; Oirla. po Charity Wosk. The Mu , Etta Kapa girls met Wednes day at the hom of Marjorle Davles for the purpose of discussing further means for the. continuation of their work. The appreciation shown by the families that wero helped greatly erv cou raged . the members, After the business meeting, Christmas gifts were distributed im4 refreshments ' were : served. Those present were: Misses Helen Adams, Helen Bitner, Naomi Bryan, Constance Crosfleld, Marjorle Davles, Corinne Hutchinson, 3-orett Isacksan, Kdith Karlson. Re- AMUSEMENTS BiKKtt-Siitb, Broslwy and Morrison Drm- ' ?1- ll.- S: ' bi.. S:: 7" UnOADWAY Broadway f Sttrk. Photo. ply. "Tbe WiiBfr" (Merroi, retiinn.i :.", Emily ''gtewBsi- AW1 attrartluoa: Oone . ' Tlete KliiUPt lit electrical apeclaal. 11 a. ; ' m. to tl a- . . . . i Ct)l,lfMBIA Hlxth bItv Waaolnston and ' i. l fltark. Photoplays: Term of Many1 Iaee). 'ji'featarlog tiara Williams. Omaedy, Mboot. l-'i-ing - His. AM Out" iLKO). 11 a. in. to 11 . m.' f .'fcl'KVKNTU 8T11KKT I'LAVnOUB R Photo ' Uramafic apeitacle. 'lBtolranf, artffltb. ' j. with 30 piec ,j inphuni orabeatra. 2:10 p. m. I .; p. m. ' ; HKIUIU i OrphMttf. UJPPOUROME Broa.lwty at Yarablll. Vu1- ..Till failure, rotlKP musical ottAr, "rhe i rrMhman." Pholo.,x: Third plsrde of ' s ib g"t aerial, "X'sarl of, tb Armj." TffliAou rTolKCT rk .-. Mmloal romedj. wvCatight Wit iflajioods." p. m. ewa 'OtitKms., 'w IIAJK8XIC Waahlngtoa at Park. Photoplara: ',Tb Island of IMalre" l"ot), feattiriDg , Oeorge Walsh. Comedy. Ore Journsl ? 's ;.Pahe pictured news weekly. It .a. m. w 't P- m. '.: ORPUEUM Broadway at Taytor. Tande ; .will. Feature: Mnrlel Worth, premier ; "r danrer, and Clayton White In playlet, "Peg- . ' gy.' Oreheatra, 2 p. m. sad p. sa. Cur- .' S tain. S:n p. ni SiSO p. to. ? P.NTAOli Broad y at Aldof. VaodeTille. jRlhel iWMtealdo, In musical comedy, "Ail " tAJN'ird-" tenth eplaoda of "Laas ot Lnmber "TH,mi I ) , featuring Helen Holmes, 2:H0. 7. i. , ' . . i rEOPLl6aPrk at AMer. Photoplay. "Snow ' -k White." featuring Marguerite Clark. Black - . IMaaMhd eomedy. 11 s. au to 11 p. au , STAR -Waahlngtoa at Park. Photoplays: . "Amu and the Woman" '(Patbe Gold . Rooster). Comedy. "Charlea Chaplin la the f rjunk" tMutual-Cbapun.j ii a. m. u it gTRAlirPar1t at 8trt. Tandeville featoi. ' ; "Ht Pilgrm Ulrls." Photoplay: "Polly I : 'y Put the , Kettle On" !tedfatbr, ftattir- -. i 1ng Dooglaa (JerarJ, and first episode of The i'urpla Mask," team ring Ortce Canard I'"ART ML'HKUM Klfth and Taylor. ana eraacisi ro, a p. m. w a u lours 9 ,t S week days i 2 to 5 Xandiyi. 'free art- '.ernoons or Tuesday, -likuraaay, srtaay, oai--urdajr aad Huuda. J'm'- Ttmtaililnv V.ttrft nt War. AR'8 effect on three lives lives that had been bound by ties of friendship and lova in time of " peace furnishes the theme for the Triangle photoplay, "Three of Many," ;- which forma the major portion ot the i -New Yeafa bill at the Columbia. ; ; Tha play. I & study Of ths affect of war as a brutalising force. There-are J principal characters, two men and A girl Paul, sn Italian; Kmil, an Aua l ' trlan, and Nina, an Italian. All "are friends In New York prior to the be- ginning of the conflict. Emil and Paul ' are called back to their natlce lands to : fight and the girl goes to Italy as a .nurse. , In m little village on the Italian frontier ths girl finds her Italian sol- dier lover and notices that he la changed ana hardened by his eipeM 'i encea, Left behind when the Italians evacuate the place she is found by the - Austrian EmlL War, too. has brutal ; Ised him to the extent that ha tries to ft- ? Gitb ) f At the Theatres The Housewife's Resolution: "With iht betlnnine of Nineteen Seventeen, 1 im foint to turn over a new leaf In my housework patlng Day will simply be t memory for I've discov ered a way to eliminate its drudgeries. . - I Will Let - j - 4 - v Be My Baker! 'v; "After fivinf thitr defidoui csk and tttcUri k V trill, to the complete turprise and delight of the itn- Jily and after vlsltinf their spotless daylight factory it - 6th and B. DavU street I've concluded it will be a " very satisfactory, solution if the problem. You'll Hke Klado for Yea Right in Pertland by the Tru-Blu -1 ri -, ai t: jo o gina Keil. Mildred Le Compte, Arena MacPherson, Mildred Martyn and Bettina Ktisbaum. Annette Uardinger. an out of town visitor, also attended the meeting... take advantage power. her being She soften hJm by cleverly remind ing htm of nhe old days in New York. The Italian returns and finds them to gether in the room of an inn. The Austrian is made prisoner and Pa putting Ule telr. former friendship, would have him shot. The girl's In fluence is magnetic, however, and she restores the old comradeship between the. three. In the end the Italian helps the Austrian escape. "Three of Many" Is well ehaclod. with Cla.ru Williams as the girl, and the staging and photography are ex cellent. It' lacks the punch which one has become acustOmetf to finding in the present day photodrama, however. A scenic showing views of Kyuschu, Japan, and an Kl-Ko comedy, ' Show ing HIS Art Out," complete the bill. War Time Film. "Arms and the Woman," at the Star, is one of the best of the war-time films. Maty Nash, the entrancing act rasa, takes the roie ot a demure Aus trian girl in America who .marries a wealthy steel manufacturer, only to find that the source Of her wealth u identical with the source of her coun trymen's, destruction munitions. The denouement is acted with remarkable kill, in which the factory unaccount ably burna, and the husband and wife are seen safely across an impending breach. Sowever, vying equally with the fea fllm of the show is Charlie Chap lin in "The Rink." Peals of laughter testified yesterday that Chaplin is not a "has-been" yet. His ludicrous an tics played havoc with the staid de eorim of respectable old ladies and gentlemen in the audience. Some say hat he doles out his old stuff in a dif ferent arrangement, but all admit that he can get away with it. "He is good," they say. Marguerite Clark at Her Best, Marguerite Clark, the petite, modest lass Of the screen, is in "Snow White" at the People's and shows her apt skill in portraying parts that demand ver satility and consistency. The Grimm fairy tale especially appeals to chit dren; but, judging from the size Of the crowds yesterday, grown-ups are Just as charmed with the story. Dwarfs, witches and gnomes and mysterious rites play Important parts, and the experlencea of Snow White with her lover, Florlmond, elicit de lighted approbation. The Jealous aueen. in her dreadful fury, is there. and the poisoned apple end the magio corao. etc, r Crelghton Hale plays the hero. Sur reptitious disappearances and awe-in spiring ceremonies, besides ths trans formations of beings to ether forms, show the remarkable cleverness of ths cinematography in depicting fairy fates. -' .V- .-. p Biccuit Co. BV VELL A . . . . . .. if rt Above Mrs. Edward R. Root, who Will give table talk at tfce Co terie meeting Wednesday. Below Mrs, Colista M. Dowllng, who will discuss the aft Of the) Pacific coast at the same meet ing. The film is one of the Famous Play ers' best. Paramount Plctographs and Black Diamond comedy round out the program. Thriller the Offering. Depicted in an unusual way and re plete with thrilling incidents is "The Island of Desire,:' the attraction which Opened the New Year week at the Ma jestic. George Walah is the central figure, giving this star exceptional op portunities to show his aquatic pow ers. Opposite him is Anna Luthe, the titlan-halred girl of the films. The story is woven around a ourious expedition to a pearl lagoon, in un charted seas, in search of a lost treas ure. The crew is composed of a news paper reporter, a murderer and rum fiend. As suggested by the personnel of the group, trouble arises from the very moment of departure. When they finally arrive at the island they find only a girl, Leila, who has been ship wrecked with her father. At the sight of the pearls, which the girl Innocently shows to the strangers, a combination is effected against Leila. The re porter refuses to aid the other two ot the crew in robbing the girl. A strug gle follows and with the help of the elements, such as a Jungle hurricane and a volcanic eruption, the hero and the heroine are victorious to live happily ever after. The supporting cast is excellent. A Vitagr&ph comedy furnishes laughs galore while the Pathe Weekly as usual "sees all and knows ail." Mirth and Melodious Music. Mirth, melody and novelty mark the Lyric Musical stock company's offer ing this week. It is a farce entitled "Caught With the Goods, and, better than motW musical farces, has a real plot. It 'seals with a series of do mcstlo troubles that concern especially one Abie COften (played by Al-Franks) who, in the absence of his wife end mother-in-law, decides to have a little night' out Where the lights shift brightest, Tha farce opens next morn lng, when the hours of retribution come, and Abie's punishment comes. Hte chickens come home to roost in earnest, and in trying xo explain and appease the family .tryant in the per son of mother-in-law, he gels deepr and deeper into trouble until it looks as if he never will clear himself. All the company appear to advantage and a lot of catchy song numbers are in troduced that score heavily. Tomor row night the. vaudeville tryoula will be given between shows and Friday the chorus girts contest. An extra added attraction this week which made J a hit is "The Cliffs.- a sensational electrical act iron u wa raaouee exposition, v ii .v Spectacle Intolerance" Opens. 'Intolerance, :- W. -D. Griffith's spectacle, opened a two weeks' engage ftient at the Eleventh street playhouse today. The phdtodfamsi U staged with the same elaborateness aa Mr. Grif fith's -Birth of aNatlon, and It is accompanied by a JO piece orchestra. "inteUranee. in - the opinion ot eastern critics, far surpasses Mr, Grif fith's former maststrieci-- In "Intolerance" Mr. Griffith had traced the universal theme through various periods of the world's history, ancient, tecred. medieval and modern times being - tjtiiieen. The scenes of the 'four distinct' stories follow one another in rapid succession.' There ts no, attempt at historical sequence, but the events, are shown as bey might Hash aeross the mind In an effort to parallel the life of the different ages. "Intolerance shows that through all the ages the e&tne passions, the same joys and the same sorrows have ob tained,: "'and Mr.; Griffith -symbolises them by.th cradle. endlefclv rorfrfw-. sv-7T-a , . . III f fl 111 c-xw lit . Vii ' , ' I 111 . ' II vV'l f -1 5? J I I ' P I C- AV" r laid in an American city, and shows the efforts of so-called reformers to stifle personal liberty. The story of the sacred time is laid in Judea, show ing episodes from the life of the Naxa rene. in' the medieval story is shown ths massacre of the Huguenots. The ancient time portrayed la la the bey day of Babylon, and afterward In the days of its destruction by Cyrus and ths Parsiana. - v PUjrerg Show New Abilities. " That stirring romance of the big. brave weat, "The Great Divider which opened its week's run at the Baker theatre Sunday, opens up new vistas for the talents of the Alcazar players, who blend art and power delicately to make this play one of the notable suc cesses of their stock season. Albert McOovern and Ruth Gates make realistic the roles of Stephen Ghent and Ruth Jordan, central fig' ures in, the drama. The one looming big in the first act for his primal passions and cave man instincts grows even bigger in the following scenes, under the spell of the girl's influence; while the other, reared in Puritanical environments, is seen to nurture, in spite of himself, an admiration edging into unconscious love for the hulking miner who had come to ravish and lived on to-cherish. Charles Compton as Philip .Jordan, the girl's brother, and Eleanor 'Parker as Polly, his sprightly wife, add earnestness and spioe to the onrushing forces of the main plot. The other parts are equally well cast. Scenic effects in the second act are sublime, showing a view of the back bone, of the Rockies touched by the setting sun. . Another Pleasing Bill. Seldom does vaudeville present an act more pleasing than the dancing of Muriel Worth, headliner at the Or1 pheum for the New Years bill which opened yesterday. Miss Worth's danc ing is exquisite," she has beauty and youth and a winning personality. With her are associated a young violinist of promise and a harpist as accom- panist.- The setting of the act and M Us Worth's costumes are in keeping with 'the act. Sharing honors with Miss Worth is the skit, "Peggy," a playlet, which was awarded the Lambs' club silver cup as the best of the year. It was appro priate -as a holiday offering, and caused many a movement of hand to eye. Clayton White as Dave, a sage carpenter, is a clever actor. Al Shayne, the Singing beauty, would ordinarily head a show, and sent last night's audience home, in high good humor with his comedy and singing. Joe Morris and Flossie Campbell were excellent in their skit, "The Avi-ate-her," though the latter part did not keep up the standard of the first, rionair, Ward and Karron. in "Are You Lonesome?" and Krnle Potts and com pany and Mario and Duffy in acrobatic stunts, with an interesting- travel weekly and good music, made ' up an excellent holiday bill. Plot That Is Different.' "The Wager," at the Broadway, has a "different" kind of plot. Is full of suspense, and contains aome good cli maxes. Emily Stevens, versatile ac trens that she Is, brings out her capa bilities of facial expression better than in any other of her plays. Her quickly changing moods in the play are vividly revealed on her face. ' As "Diamond Daisy she is intro duced to tha audience, and as having the record of never being caught with the goods, although engaged quite deeply in the art of appropriating. un purchased Jewelry. 3 A wager of $10,000 is made by a jeweler to a boastful competitor, that the latter will be robbed of Jewelry of the amount of the wager. The police commissioner enters into the plot, and illllllllllHHIlllllP 1 i . 1 " " . s the ridiculous scene where Daisy en tices tne eoastrui jeweier m iw house is only one - of ths laughable methods that she - takes to w in her percentage of the wager. Oenevleve Fischer and eight girls give an electrical spectacle entitled mriAi Dm... Biu... Th dancinc and light effects are. splendid but ths singing could be oispenaea who, Fun film and a Travelaugb of Hy Mayer round out the program. -a rrfsr- w., Stfand Bill Excellent, with four vaudeville acts and a Red Feather feature photodrama. "Polly Fut the Kettle on,- tne botuw m an lntereatmar entertainment , for the first week of the new year. The Grace sisters. Titian-nairea dancers and singers, are the headlln era, playing a return engagement that reveals new costumes and new songs. "Other People's Money is a comeuy sketch presented hy the Eiebert-Lind-ly company. ' Mademoiselle Amenta walks the slack wire, introducing several novel ties, and the Five Pilgrim Girls close the bill with a tabloid symphony con cert, i i The first part of the widely adver tised Universal serial, "Ths Purple Mask." is to be dded to the program today, r j . Noted Organist at Colombia. Clarence Eddy, noted American or ganist, will appear in recital here to morrow night at the Columbia theatre. Sixth street, near Washington. The re cital will begin at S:S0 o'clock. Mr. Eddy has the distinction of having dedicated nearly all of the larger pipe orsana In the United States. Organ lsts recognise him as the dean of the profession. PERSONAL MENTION Are New Year's Visitors. W. II. Melchoir. superintendent for the Chicago. Milwaukee & Puget sound company at port Angelas, Wash., is at the Multnomah with Mrs. Melchoir. aa a H. W. Ruth ot KuiskoKwln, Alaska, is a guest at the Portland. J. K. Edgar Is a Eugene visitor at the Carlton. John 8. Robinson is registered at the Washington from The Dalles. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Rawson of St. Helens are at the Nortonla. T. Evans and E. Williams are Salem arrivals at the Perkins. John Mitchell, Pendleton real estate man, is at the Multnomah. K. T. Hal torn of Tillamook Is a guest at the Oregon. Frank C. Bramwall, Grants Pass sugar refiner, is at the imperial. H. W. Ball is registered at the Cor nelius from Fossil. F. II. Reese Is s, Lakevlew visitor at the Washington. Owen A. Johnson of Marshfield Is at the Nortonla. Mr. and Mrs. John Date of Billings, Mont., are guests at ths Multnomah. A. D. Backley and family of Palmer are at the Carlton. II. R. Swan of Pendleton la at the Perkins. Mr. and Mrs. II. P. Mlchelbook of Fossil are guests at the Cornelius. Herman Wise, postmaster at As toria, is a guest at the Imperial. Clayton H White. Orpbeum head liner, is at the Portland. Mr. and ' Mrs. W. E. Thompson of Palmer are at the Washington. A. R. Thompson is registered at the Oregon from Enterprise. John IX McGowan is an Ilwaco visi tor at the Imperial. J. W. Knight is registered at the Perkins from Gervais. C W. Morgan of Cordova, Alaska, is at the Multnomah. Muriel Worth, who appears on ths Free Prescriptions for tKe Poor ANY ORGANIZATIONS solicit, The. Owl Drug Co., advertising in tKe form of space in programs, the dona tion of prizes, pr the purchase o tickets. So numerous are requests of this sort that universal compliance with them is out of the question. To discriniinate in favor of some against others is equally impdssible. K The policy of The CM Drug Co. is to keep under its control its own donations to the public good, and as a part of that policy, we fill doctors prescriptions for theworthy poor entirely without charge. In order that this free service may he confined only to those who are deserving of assistance, we ask that applications for free prescriptions - be accompanied by the written request of a licensed physician OTi fiirgeon in this caty Wsshiaftea m : Stores in tie cxho By TeUa Winner. ; i - v. A JOKE ON THE MICE I know, a woman who. dislikes very much to kill or have killed any living creature, and when the mice found their way intq- her kitchen by way. of the cooling closet, ft was a problem Just what to do. There were traps, to b sure, but she saw in fancy the misery of the bright-eyed, satin-coated little creatures, whe were simply, fol lowing the law of nature In seeking food, and she could not bring herself to set a trap. She moved things about dally in the closet, but the little silver torments grew so bold that they ceine 6ven while she was looking, and, as she fancied, winked their bright eyes at. her while ahs scolded -them foe their depredations. Finally she tried an original plan. She spread a news paper over the lower sheff of the closet and between its leaves she placed pep per, strong and black. So. when the little beasties began to knew through to the upper world of good fare, they would get a mouthful of pepper and possibly take the hint. This was, In lact, what happened, as she discovered by the half-gnawed hole in the paper next day, and the fact that no more mice put in an appearance. How soon they will forget the lesson cannot at present be guessed, but she feels safe in the assurance that there are rtiore newspapers and moreblack pepper to use when necessary. r DELICIOUS SOUP Tak 3 "i . s w e t pop pers, 2 onions and mince "fine,. Add 1 teaspoonful of butter and simmer on the stove (do not burn It) for about 10 minutes, then add 2 cups ot tomatoes and 1 quart of water, salt and pepper to taste and a little sugar. This makes a delicious soup without the use cf meat You can add a little carrot and celery, but it is fine without them. STEAMED RICE & SALMON A way to use salmon a little different from the usual recipe Is as follows: Line a bread pan, slightly buttered, with warm steamed rice. Fill the cen ter With cold boiled salmon, flaked and seasoned with salt, pepper and a slight grating of nutmeg. Cover with rice and steam one hour. Run on a hot platter for serving and pour around egg sauce one-third cup butter, three tablespoons flour, 1 cups hotwater, three-quarters teaspoon salt, pne eighth teaspoon pepper, beaten yolks of two eggs and one teaspoon lemon Juice. Melt one-half cup butter, add flour with seasonings and pour on gradually hot -water. Boil five min utes and add remaining batter in small pieces. BETTER THAN. THE NAVY Not a war item, this, but a domes ticated hint. The Sucessful House keeper has discovered that Kentucky Wonder beans are far better for Bos ton baked than are ths common nary beaha Oh. don' t you knew how to Orpheum bill this week. Is at the Portland with her mother. Avery Ankeny is a Pendleton visiter at the Cornelius. . Frank O. Wolf of White Salmon, Wash., has taken apartments for the winter at, the Multnomah. L. J. Phebus and G. J. Donovan are f at fceWwayrf.-?S Principal Cities Pacific Com . r ' C s: iTT : - - j ' : ' . n- -I. : . J 1 : cook "Bos ton baked beans T Soak them ever night. Place them in the small kettle - of the tireless cooker, season them twita saltapsprika and a. whisk ox onion, piece a piece ox saui jwr a: tableepoonf ul ? of New Orleans, mo lasses; ana add a naix-ieaspooMui baaing ..sooa. auow tne xetiie ox oaana tv ainmtr An thiiQaiiM M1 tha tWO flfeless "rocks" are beating. Place In . . tne nreiess ana aiiow to remain su da yand serve for dinner. The success ful .housekeeper who ' has discovered tkkVimwriArii n- Wn f tiV v Wanders ever the old-time navy beans calls her newiy-evoived dish -Tne jbius am the" Gray" Boston and Kentucky united, you see!' WHAT DAME FASHION WEARS RidineTboots should always r . . be high. . Flat furs are embroidered effect ively. Eggplant purple is a beautiful ahada .Very pretty sports hats -are of cbq nilla, FOR BABY'S COMFORT Stretch baby's woolen stofckings over catsup bottles: also sleeves of baby's shirts; bang on line. The weight of bottles stretches the body of ths shirt. fw tape on dresses, nighties and skirts 'instead of buttons or safety pins. , - Put a pinch of salt in a bottle of hot-water for oolie. Scour rubber nitples, with salt. To core a child of stuttering teach him to sing. . ' . ' TOMORROW'S MEETINGS. , U , M. TUESDAY AFTERNOON CLUB V with Mrs. William Cava naught if! East Couh street. 1:10 P. M. Study class of WOMAN'S POLITICAL BTIJDX LEAGUE In . ' room Q. Central library. Followed by regular league meeting. 3 P. M. VERNON PARENT TEACHER association. Subject. "High Cost of Living," speaker. Miss Pauline Pease. t P. M, Auxiliary of WOMAN'S DI VISION FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT BUREAU, at Central library. S P. M, EMERSON 8TUDY, CIRCLE at Metaphysical library corner Main street and Bread way. P. M. MONTESSQRI ASSOCIATION with Mrs. O. P. Miller, 0S East Ankeny street. 8 P. M. FREE GYM CLASSES for women of HAWTHORNE DISTRICT at Washington, high school. A TASK To be honest, to be kind, to earn a little and to spend little lees. to make upon the whole a family happier for his presence to re nounce when that shall be neces sary and not be embittered, to keep a few friends but these with- out capitulation, above all on the same grim condition, to keep friends with himself, here, is a task for all that a man has of fortitude fed delicacy. Robert Louis Ster- ensonv among ths SeattJe arrivals at the Nor tonla. ' A. F. Pal metier Is an Zone arrival at ths Perkins. 1 Al Shayne, Orpheura player, is at the Multnomah. Edlefsen wishes Happy' New Year. from Americarisf Purchase Lafayette's Chateau ' -.," ' V .Hi-, New' York.! Jan. - l.tL N.' .'S.) - Throua-h the efforts of Mrs, . William Astor Cbanler and John Moffatt. tha birthplaoe of . Marquis deJjatayette lias been purchased, by Americans,- It v is announced today. The - historic 1 chateau is to be restored and-math- - tamed as a museum. The purchase was made under the auspices' of the French Hero's Zand. The Msrquis da Lafay- . ette was, born September , 17JJ. in the castle of Chavagnac, ' department" of. Saute Loire. - ' , A Happy ; ' New Year is 1m po'sslhls tu anyone who suffers with u headache or eys.aohe. - Start 1917 with your eyes 100 efficient. ."u D ay t on classes are guaranteed to do the work. ' . TxorrsAjrDS or , jurzmzjrozs. nrrn akb wabhiwotow sTsszTt ot-tes swrrtAirD tio.. nm rroba. Weigh lie CRESCENT: BAKING powDiSR ; 7 SswWefffhed in the omv wilt not be found wsnt inj. When you . pay only as cents per pound for the best of bakinf v powders .you save on every cake, on every DISCUtt. At All Grocers 25c per lb Crescent Manafacturing Co ' Seattle, Wash. AMUSEMENTS NextThurs. .srzciAX. ykias. MATINEES SAT, ceo. T. rtofcift ExcxLUirr cast - itvyuootts raoDucnojt. raicssi KveittBss -tToor. S3: Bateear. YJ JO: tent rows. , tf)i fle rosrs. 7ei lbt rows, M. usMerv , rsserved, tse, Admissloa, bOe. ; -. Satsrdar Matlne rieor. alMir. five rows, lMO fear rows, 'tie; is r.ar Sde. Qaner, reaerred. eoev , ' : , ; BAKER'S- ALWATf A SHOW 09 QOAJUTX - Xeaarat . att Veek atatiaees w4aedr. - SatorSay The Msfalfteeat Wasteim PraaM- TME GREAT DIVIDE ; As flared ay Oeaty Mluas. ' wsaeerfal asserieas lsf ef tse AruMsa IxssxL . - . tTvealBM tSo, see. 7t. Sahnaar VsMaee Bee, SO. Tasaasy a last eaa Wt aaattaee aaajLa steToaly. 'vt?M' a '.. i e aLlswiai T TODAY KVllfX - -- WOalH ClATTOaf' W2UTX fteaair, Ward sa TarrMtf Xsrris and Caibpb.ll) EraU V.tta 0. KarU ad Vuttfi Trav.l WeeUri Ossuai t OtaaesWa. - -:. - AL (HAIVX. , - pANTAGES ii MATINEE DAILY 2t30 The astliaa, l' stoical eesaedy JQt Witt Seb Barmos, Ardelis Ciesvss. sn4 a Blf - Cast, locltxiinf tee retttt el 6lrls. i eOTHXk BIO ACTS. " Sates aad reervee w ptioa '-, f Curtala :. 1 Sad . I X n I " Maiatesl Stock Li KIL; 4 Stark UatinAs 'aJHr i-M. -lOe. NlsbtS sestlaneaa BtarUsf 7, lse, CM. tkw VMk eeetser bg CAUGHT WITHTHE GOODS A ft the latest ssne sdoeaasee. 1 Clevaf ebonie effeets. Kttt artdod attraction. TUB Ctirvs. . Ssesdsy TaiUUTS. rridajr- Cboraa . Oregoiv Journal ; Paihts NtnviJWcelily Newsv nictures el - northwset OB r OPEJ1S today ; 1 . . Ii