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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1921)
SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 23, 1 921 THE OREGON STATESMAN SALEM. OREGON (I j FLARES AND FUCKERS . . ; - Owen Moore and 'The Chicken In the Case." That will he' the comedy combination on view at the' Grand theatre for two das starting next Saturday so Mr. and Mrs. Screen Tan, of you have smiles to smile, prepare to smile I hem U.en. a Goldwyn release, now playing jing next Friday night. They art at the Grand theatre, this new one of the strongest organizations star in the screen firmament has j of this kind o nthe coast carrying laid a:iide the trapping- of socity j their own orchestra and scenery, and appear a3 a simple country : They will open with a high class I River's End" and "Don't Ever Marry." -Go And Get It" Is said to ellipse hid prtrviou efforts. In P.ptty Common's .latent pro-d-.irtion. "For Thos-e We Ixive," "SUP LIBERTY Where The Big Pictures Show A Whirlwind of Drama Reap Its Delight Note the Cast Anita Stewart Ralph Lewis James Morrison Myrtle Stedman Wm. V. Mong plrl. In tins story by Periey foore Sheehan, which was direct ed by Arthur K..-,-on, thre are sufficient thrills to keep the most KOphisfc'euKNl photoplay euthusdast in continuous suspense. Four vaudevilie arts at the Grand theatre next Saturday and .Sunday also a f ve pire' orchestra will he an added attraction. Lou Chaney, who has recently be7! nailed ai the scrt-f-n's great er; haru;ter actor play the rtr-i important supporting roie in uei- duction, '"For Those We Love," a (Johlwyn reh'ae, which comes to the Grand theatre lor tour a.i. bojiiiKun, totlay. The Hyland-Hi-rg StockCompa- riiiv o twenty people nave iieen f-naged to play three days start- OREGOX'S OWN Winifred Byrd America's Wonder Pianist Who cares for the shadows the bright lights throw? One girl in how many? The different drama of a stage star's love. She Had Sown the Wind What was the Whirlwind to be? 1 Screenland News "Honey Spooners ;A Sweet Little Comedy Today ' ' -' - - 24 and excentionallv funny eomedy Which One rthall I Marry." with an entire change of program daiiy. j iices uave towered to .10 cents tor adults and 25 cents for child-; nn, including war tax. The American Comic Opera, ; ' Kobin Hood," is the joint work: of iit'Kinald DeKoven and Harry n. Smith. A work may not pro-; hably become a classic during the , me lime of its authors, and this j : eems to be the case of hodih i Hood " Thpre is no doubt that ! Robin Hood will always be suns, i Jt has the elements of a classic ! Misical drama, gaining recogni ' tion as a classic through the out- i i .-landing positions of that score. 1 1 '!he Bohemian Girl" is made im- mortal by three songs, '"Lucia di i i Lararaermoor" the the sextette; j Lohengrin by "The Wedding j March"; "Icigoltto" by a trip and tenor, "Aida." and so ou through j ! the list. Unquestionably "O Pro- mise Me." the Armourer's Song and "Brown October Ale" from " Robin Hood" will hold the work permanently in the regard of the American theatre-goers and music lovers. The Ralph Dunbar presenta tion, which will appear at the Grand theatre, Monday, October 31st has been acclaimed by the press and public as a worthy, if not superior successor to the drlg opera famous. The principals of tut company are composeu oi ai. exceptional quartette of operatic artists who have just completed a summer's run at the Illinois thea tre Chicago. WRITE ' Samuel Unteruiyer. the brilliant New York lawyer, who is probing the building question, sa.d in ai discussion about honor: , "Business men are honorable,' or they don't get on. Even big business men are honorable. Of course, few business men are as punctilious about a point of hon or, though, as honest John Jones w&s. "Honest John Jones, you know. j once stole on tiptoe, fountain pen ; in hand, into the empty waiting room of his hotel. He stepped stealthily up to an ink-well, ad vanced his fountain pen towards , the ink, then drew back with a 1 start. "No!" he groaned, striking his brow with his palm. No. 1 can-' not fill my fountain pen with the hotel's ink it would not he hon : orable." into rractice. So nothing much came of their work as an Inven tor's backers Insist on a prompt deliver- of the goods. "An! inventor cannot treat his backers as Whistler, the painter, treated; his sitters. One of Whist ler's sitters, you know, was in a greati hurry to have her portrait painted. Finally she paid: " 'Now, Mr. Whistler, you've ; been at work on this portrait of! mine for a very long time; when j will it he finished and delivered?' ; " 'Perhaps never," replied Mr. 1 Whistler, calmly. At The Oregon Theatre Next Sunday The Inwnid Kffects of humors are worse than the outward. They endanejer the . whole system. Hood's! Sarsaparilla eradicates all humorif. cures all their Inward and outward elleets. It is th great alternative and tonic, whose merit has been everywhere es tablished. Adv. XOT AX ARTIST. Edouard Beiin, the inventor of photography by wire, said at a dinner in New York: "Of course, the transmission of photographs by wire was thought out before my time, but my pre decessors, though their theories were all right, could not put them TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR 8AtE el, 5J. -VICTROI.A. TABLE MOD Phone 1725-W. "The Old Nest" :3 real and touching and almost incredibly without an atom of false senti ment, I have seen it four lime and cried each time; Alice Duer Miller il.lDDF.XS I.lXOl.FXM VARXISH for all printed linoleum and eonitolfum. Max O. Buren, 179 X. Commercial. COMING! Frida7-Sat.-Sunday HYLAND BERG STOCK CO. 20 -4 People , 20 and ' Own Orchestra Change of Show Daily A Family Show, At family Prices GRAND Theatre The Big Sunday Show Christopher and Walton t I In A Close Shave" The Happy Hobo Will J. Evans Successor to the lite Nat. M. WilU of the New Votk Hippodrome Carmel Myers in a human picture of a girl's great heart "Cheated Love" Tflesday-4l,Go And Get It" The open door to the life that the revellers know : MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY r, Grand Theatre Friday, Nov. 11, 8:15 p. ; Mail Orders received now m. It is estimated that fifty mil lion people have read "Lavender and Old Lace," Myrtle Reed's charming novel which the Renco Film Company has made into a picture for Hodkinson release, li has been a "best seller" over a very long period or years because is clean, sweet and, above all. human. And all those qualities re retained in the production which yill be shown at the Oregon Friday and Saturday. P.EATTIFI'T. WAI.Ij TIXT AXD FLAT I I ! pini..ll! T1.,'ZA X?JT' I Theatre ffim feTJVXrirDrin - -J W A WALLPAPERMANY .'ATTKRXtt AT Sj'fmnrf , n half Off. Max O, Buren, 179 X. Com' I. ' L . mm ' mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm , i - , . ' . . -' 11 11 1 mmrnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmma?mmmmm!!m!m ; Hi 4 PRICES: Orchestra first 3 rows... $1.50 Orchestra last 6 rows. ...$2.00 Dress Circle first 3 rows $2.00 Dress Circle last 4 rows $1.50 Balcony: Entire 5 rows $2.0S Gallery Unreserved. $1.00 Add 10 war tax Address letters, checks GRAND THEATRE See It From The Start First Show Today 2 p. m. then 45 : 457 : 30 and 9 : 1 5 p. m. Brinjr Old Folks They'll, . Enjoy It Christopher & Walton, a laugh able set of comedy ideas forming a skit called. "A Close Shave." A Wop barber and barberette oppo sition brings about funny compli cations. Dialect puns, comic talk, some singing and plenty of fum Special scene adds atmos phere to the very amusing skit tie. On the vaudeville bill at the Bligh today. 1 vvsr II " GRAN THEATRE j RALPH DUNBAR'S PRESENTATION OF . t i Reginald De Koven's Comic Opera Masterpiece; Splendid cast of characters superb chorus magnificent j production orchestra of symphony players I est m "One of the best pictures Anita Stewart ever starred in", is the enthusiastic statement of Louis B Mayer in referring to that pop ular star's latest First National release, "Sowing the Wind." which will be the feature at the Liberty theater today. In view of the fact that it is commonly conceded that Miss Stewart ha-j starred in some of the best Pho toplays of the times, this enthus iasm no doubt indicates some thing interesting. "Habit," the big feature photo play which will be seen at the l iberty theater next Thursday. Friday and Saturday, has two costly features which lift it be yond the ken of the ordinarily produced drama, even on the lav ish scale of production practised today. The first is a railroad wreck 1 which two locomotives are seen meeting in headlong collision Next instant they and the trains they pull are scrapped. The second js the most expen sive display of furs and furbelows ever screened. NIGHTS: Lower Floor $2.00 Balcony $2.00 & $1.50 Gallery $1.00 City and Out-of-town Mail Orders Now Dunbar believes in before-the-war Prices Seat j Sale Opens Next Saturday 10 .m. How to Secure Tickets by Mail: Address letters, make cheeks, postoffice money orders p&yable to, Grand Theatre. Add 10 percent war tax to price ticket desired. Include self addressed stamped envelope to help safe return. 1 THE DATE: MONDAY, October 31sU Four Days . Starting Today Rx Ingram's production 01 "The Four Horsemen of the Apoc alypse." made tor the Metro, i announced by the Liberty theater beginning soon. This will be the first showing here of ths screen vers on of Vicente Blasco lbanez's novel that has been acc'aimed in New York. Chicago, Boston. Pitts burgh, Detroit and Los Angelas as marking a new enoch in the development of motion pictures. At its New York opening people raid $10 a s?at Critics pnid the p cture had definitely established the sevreen not only as fjpable of rivalling the stage at its best but of surpassing it in its grip upon the emotions. RUPERT HUGHES' DRAMA OF HOME "THE OLD N Mary Alden, as the Mother Dwight Crittenden as the Father Helene Chadwick and 18 others. Never before has the screen touched with such beauty and dra- v raatic force a subject which finds an echo in the lives of every one of us. One of the most heart-gripping dramatic stories ever narrated. v All If- ' II .': & I i in i mnii. j llliIW.u.Mj.'ljkljjJ)lJBJi JjyAj..MM)Jllall,JlJ.,JlJiljL'-U t UJI mm: Evenings 50c and 10c 1 ,.. tt-iPiTW-T 'Willi in j r Among the exciting moments in "Stranger Than Fiction. " Ka therlne McDonald's latest release through Assoc ated First National Pictures, Inc., and which will be shown at , the Liberty theater. commencing1 next Sunday, U a battle in the ar, in which one ot the contestants, with his para chute strapped to his back, leaps from the burning machine and 8 rescued by another airplane. it is probable that this stunt has never before been seen on thp screen "and it will probably be some time before it is duplicated. Larry Semon in his latest firth provoker "The Fall Guy," will be on the same program w th "Hab it" at the Liberty next Thursday. Friday and Saturday. Every Thursday is Movie Par gain day at th-? Bligh theater and it has proven to be a big hit, es pecially with the folks that can not afford to dig up the regular admiss on prices. t A terriffic boiler exolos'on which wrecks a theater and throws hundr?ds into a wild. Ftamneding panic is iuct one of the punchy wallops in "t'he-t-d Tyv-o " the Universal photoplay which is to be shown at the BUrh theater on today. Carmel Myer? Is tire star. TT COMIf SON Vaudeville and Other Attractions Today '( - .1 BET FOR! THOSE IN WE By- PERLEY POORE SHEEHAN D: rtcte i In In the cast of "Go And net It" which has its first local showtnz at the Bligh on Tuesday and Wed nesday, will be seen Agnes Ayres, Wesley Barry and Pat O'Malley "Go And Get If marks the third independent production of Mar shall Neilan's under his history mak'ng contract with Associated First National Pictures His two A r eik mmmmctimlimmmmmmismmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm1(m i i j I - .- --h i .' LOVE ARTHUR. ROSSON d A human story of a girl who fights and faces dis grace for the happiness of those she loved. Storv abounds in homely episodes and intimate glimpsed of small town life It is endowed with a power to make audiences live through every dramatic scene GRAND THEATRE a-l Ui if - fcrni..T ... i. m. . mm mJI former successes have beea "The 5? -t.'' ..-.?. 4. T r- i