The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, April 08, 1921, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE FOUR
THE DALLES DAILY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 19?1.
Letter fcff
Lucy Jeanne Price
1918, when Hemplng, unable to go has Just returned from London with Kussia's art, which had to be smug
into service, began to play godfather "the script of Shaw's latest play, "Me. gied out of the country witn as much
to some French children whose father
had been killed at the front. He went
to France last yea,r and looked them
up as a godfather should. The rest of
the story has been told.
thuselah." (Remembering some of the lcare and almost as much danger as
NEW YORK, April 8. How the old
pastimes do return! So one has
thought of selling I he Grand Central
Terminal for quite a long time now.
In fact the new one never had been
sold until just the other day. Confi
dence men huvc rather specialized en
Grant's (omb, the Aquarium and the
Brooklyn bridge. The used to be able
than your sight seeing boats that run
out to the Statue of Liberty. Think
of her passing Cape Race in such
weather, 700 tons, with 200 tons of
hides in her hold! The passengers on
From dances to sardines seems like
a sizable step. But the human tem
perament is many sided at Its mildest.
So Esteban Corlez and Miss Peggy-?;
just Peggy, that's all the name shij
appears to have expect to take it
shortly. They have been serving as
premiere dancers at the- Winter Gar
den and now' they have decided to be
married. But Peggy insists that dime
ing is no occupation for a married
couple and in searching for more
things Shaw has said about youth, it
is going to be Interesting to find out
what he will do about the old-age record-holder.
Mr. Langher also secured
the right to produce any of Shaw's
plays 'at the GaTick Theater, as well
as a new play from Arnold Bennett
and St. John Irvine, and arranged with
Nigel Playfair, of Queen's Theater,
Hammersmith and Jacques Copeau,
for the first option on the American
presentation of their plays.
11? nliniit clnriTlK lint VOll
I,.K1., nKnl'nuc nti TTcilnVinVt Willi fPftl.
to take your hat off to those ol""'c v'"1"""'"'"
. . i.. J.. C!m.itali at Iila nnmp rptnpM.
ntinnl ne If nntliinir '3 oiiid.i
We haven't yet been able to get a
glimpse of those much-rumored Rus
sian crown jewels, but New York 13
now having a look at examples of
has followed the movements of the
jewels. Ilia Repin's exhibition .just
opened has a thrill of human interest, I
aside from art criticism, in the actu
al heroism attendant upon Its get
ting here. When Repin died a short
time ago, he handed over as a trust
to some of his most devoted students,
men and women, the task of exhibiting
his work in America. They carried It
out, smuggling the canvasses In loads
of hay and lumber, through Finlnnd
and Esthonia, and then across the
Baltic in small fishing vessels. iHad
there been the slightest suspicion
of what was being done, the smug
glers would have been shot. It took
months to get them to the .Scandana.
vian shore, where they, were collected
and packed nnd started on the' peace
ful part of the journey. Repin was one
of the master artists of the genera
tion. The Best Big Sister
$5.00 Slabs $5.00
Green slabs, $5.00 per cord, f. o.
b. cars. Van Dellen Lumber company.
4tf
The Best Big Sister
Brown's Dufur Stage Time Table
Two round trips daily. Leave Bank
hotel, 9. a. m.'and 4 .p. m. Leave
Dufur 7:30 a. m. and 1 p. m. tf
The Best Big Sister
We're here to give you tne Kind of
service, help and advice that muke9
friends. The Dalles Battery company,
Willard Service.
have go
.lohnnies. going about as it notmng - -
had happened with the lee rail In the bered for some reason the sardines
n .1 .....1 1w. ......tn.-.
to get a fair price for one oi mem i wuiui muni, m
every once in a while. And "Grand , higher than her superstructure." ,
Central Pete," credited by Bartlett's j . j
book of quotations with the author- A iiurnianent shrine will be built for ,
flhlp of "There's a sucker born every thc cin-lBtu de Profundis," the
minute," made a regular profession of CIirVnK 0f Christ's head, cut on a bean
by a Spanish prisoner, 25 years ago,
which has just recently come into the
a ne used 10 eat in his native land. Then
selling the old station. Hut here in
1921, with airplanes flying around
and wireless telephones in practical
two,, two good salesmen disposed of
the new Terminal for $1200 to Geoige
Pantzl, who runs a restaurant right
here on Manhattan Island. He com
plained to the police about it, which
and there the couple decided to im
port these sardines' for a livelihood.
As soon as they have saved enough
money to start, they are going to get
a marriage license, leave the dancing
floor, and cable for sardines, all on
the same day.
possession of .Mrs. H. Willis McFad-1
den of New York. The carving has j
aroused tremendous Interost here, not
only because of its unusual origin i,
. mill ilin mvsterv of its creator, but be
cause of Its actual beauty and artistic ! now puunsner or me Aiuomouve
A subsidy for export students! That
is the idea of E. E. Schwartzkopf,
who has been for many years connect
ed with the automobile industry and
was pretty brave of him. all things ,)0r)octon Mrs. McFadden is planning j Exporter. Mr. Schwartzkopf has writ
considered.
"Why doesn't she brush the pow
der off her eyelashes?" The words
amo musingly in a perfectly cleai'
voice, from a gentle-looking girl next
to me in the subway. She was gazing
at the woman opposite us and It was
a half-minute before she realized that
she had spoken out loud. The much-bc-powderod
woman, who had, sure
enough., left a coating of it on her
lashes, grasped tho, situation lit the
same time. She grew almost apoplec
tic as she glared at the gentle-looking
girl, while tho girl herself got
whlto and then crimson and sat as
far back of my hat and furs as pos
slide. "Oh, 1 didn't moan to say thnt:
1 didn't know I was talking out loud!"
she murmured over and over, appar
ently to mo. At tho next station she
"hurried off tho train.
the erection of n .small builufng auout
twelve by twenty i'eot, In the style of
the old Spanish temples, where the
tiny carving may be suspended within
a circular case of magnifying glass,
so that it may be viewed from every
angle.
Greater New York always takes a
'sympathetic, If sometimes slightly pat
ronizing Interest in the affairs of up
per Now Jersey, Insisting upon consid
ering everything from iNew Bruns
wick up, as "suburban." Consequent
ly, now that It has lost tho edge from
its excitement over knowing whether
'or not Dorothy Miller would marry
; somebody for $1000, It is getting
wrought up over tho Trenton ghost.
Some months ago, John Koch killed
himself in Trenton. And lately he-has
'been seen. It is said on good author
. ity, prowling about, interrupting the
j affairs' of pooplo who had no part
Murgnlo (Minora, who made consld- whatever In any suicide. The climax
orablo of a hit as Sylvia 'Fair in "The came when a man hurled a lamp at
'Famous Mrs. Fair," when (hat play the walking ghost tho other night and
was first produced by Henry Mlllur failed to makb any Impression, except
nnd Hlancho' Hates, will appear not on tho ompty wall beyond. Now York
ten a letter to J. Walter Drake, chair
man of the foreign trade committee
of the National Automobile Chamber
of Commerce, asking the chamber
to provide $40,000 a year to send 40
young men taken from the conuncr
ciaf schools of the country to differ
ent parts of' tho globe, each man to
be placed with some large automobile
dealer under the supervision of the
American consul. Each mantis to re
ceive $1000 a year and to remain
abroad for three years to learn the lo
c'al automobile trades, the language,
and to get the "atmosphere." "The
German government worked out a slm
liar plan years ago," Mr. Schwartz
kopf told me the other day, "and it
'helped materially In building up that
cauntry's foreign trad. I am going
out to the foreign trade convention '.n
Cleveland in May and niaybe I can
get them interested in the plan there.'1
autumn in Eugene O'Neill's now play,
"Straw," under the nmnngomont of
loorgo C. Tyler. O'Nolll has achieved
an enthusiastic following and one of
vory good slzo, In those past two sea.
sons, and in spilo of tho fact that a
groat many people still find him too
"gloomy," his public will undoubtedly
continue to Increase. Miss Gilnioro Is
a daughter of Frank Gllmnro, secre
tary of (ho Actors' Equity association.
City seanco followers' are making up
little parties to spend tho evenings in
Trenton at spots favorable to first
hand demonstrations. Tho ghost not
only walks'but talks.
This is the, war ronianco of a man
who didn't go to war. Like so many
of iNow York's drnmatlc romances its
action took place at Ellis Island.
There werq moro characters In It than
a ronianco really needs, but t hoy aro
Throo or four tlmos a year there i" 1111 important; Aaron Ilomplng, husky
comes to Now York proof Hint .ho
roiuaiu'o and heroism, him not com
pletely died out of "shipping by sea "
That U when tho lllllo freighter from
Iceland, the "lUigorfoss," comes into
harlior, 11 arrived tho other day on
ouo of Its trips, having come through
some of the worst woathor of the
year. It had taken them 19 days from
itoykjavlk, whore It usually takes 12
or 14, which gives sonio Idea of what
the woathor was. An officer of a big
liner at tho next plor shook his head
as ho looked, at tho Lagerfoss. "That
little cockleshell Isn't much larger
South Dakota farmer, plowing his waj
through crowds and official rod la!o
with equal de(ormin:,.tl',n: Mine, vi,
torlno Augagneur, of Villeneuve,
h'runce, her two children, Gabriel, 14,
and Slmone, nine; and a cousin of tho
children, Mnrcello, 15. As soon as they
get to Claremont, S. D., Mine. Augag-
'nour will boconio Mrs,' Hemplng, and
tho young Augagneurs will become
young lloniplugs. The only reason for
delaying tho wedding and adoption Is
that tho South Dakotan doesn't think
i ll m Vow York This Is Ho U
Chapter of the story that begun In
:Gold ,flsh are supposed to be rather,
effete and to be found in more or less
decorative horne. But some of them
got sidetracked. At the far end of Lex
ington Avenue subway platform, over
at Atlantic avenue, there is a little
dark hutch outside of which hangs
(ho various colored signal lantern13,
to bo hung forth as occasion requires.
Inside tho hutch is a quiet serious
appearing man who spends his whole
day writing down train numbers, or
something of the sort, and who looks
as though he had no other interest
m tTTTs passing life. You wouldn't sus
pect him of even ever having petted
a cat. But back of his desk, in the
dark room In tho dark subway tun
nel, is a largo glass tank of murky
water, under a green-hooded light.
And in the tank aro swimming gold
fish. They aren't very shiny ones, but
they do mighty well under the cir
cumstances. About twice an hour the
pessimistic-looking- man gets up and
surveys thorn gravely and goes back
o his figures.
Whatever Bernard Shaw- thinks
about us and our country or says
ho does wo are going to keep on
having his dramas. Lawrence Lungher,
one of tho Thoater Guild directors,
a,-
1 S I
INSURE YOUR
f HAPPINESS WITH A
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
Iascd (dunty Vxk
MEMBER
f EDERAL RESERVI
SYSTEM.
W
7i Forethought in carrying Happi
ness Insurance m the form or a
SAVINGS ACCOUNT with the WAS
CO COUNTY BANK will banish the fear-
thought of anxiety.
4( b Interest Paid on Savings Accounts
MUTTOH
SPECIALS
At the Taylor Stores
I 4
WHOLE SHOULDER, pound , I2V2C
HIND QUARTER, pound 1 , 18c
SHOULDER CHOPS, pound 15c
LEG OF MUTTON, pound - - -- 20c
FRESH COUNTRY CREAM
For the convenience of customers, we shall continue to handle
Brune's Country Cream
Taylor's City Market
and
People's Market
twm 1
A "Sale" is Not a Sale unless the Price is Lower than Ours Investigate
09
3
00
Newt Different!
Up-to- the-Minute
Coats and Suits
Direct from Fashion's Center
Most Popular Styles for Spring Wear.
Finest Qualities Beautifully Made Low
est Prices.
More and More each season ladies are
looking to this store for the best and high
est grades of Ready to Wear Garments.
They know that nowhere else will they find
equal styles and qualities.
Our own New York buyers men inter
ested directly in this Company and this
company only are daily seeing to it that
this store is supplied with the best to be
had at the lowest prices.
Beautiful New Coats at $9.90 to $74.75
Exquisite New Suits at $22.50 to $74.75
Exclusive Styles Always
(9
3
o
S3
C3
(5
BUYING
MOST
WE BUY FO
LESS
SELLING
MOST
WE .SELL FOR
LESS
We Never Ue Comparative Price They're Misleading and ff ten. Untrue
J