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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1922)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 27, 1922 3 By MARGUERITE GLEESON t Short cuts in sewing, will be shown by demonstrators at the liome economics booth at the fair this afternoon at 2 o'clock. Miss Lila OKeal will be in charge. Easy ways to make bound button Wholes, quick ways to finish seams and trim frocks and house dress es and other short cuts will be shown by Miss O'Neale who will have a sewing machine there to I work with. Miss O'Neale is heed of the costume design de partment at the college. A demonstration of just how to make a dress form to fit one was given yesterda y j by MUa nartriiHn StHcVlanrl. 'Tl. I monstrations will be given each day during the fair at 2 o'clock. Home nursing will be taken up '' this afternoon too -while Mrs. 1 Prentise of the college will talk on child care Thursday. Mrs. Katherine Haight will be in charge of the home nursing de , monstration. Mrs. Haight teach es this . class . at the college and gives a Red Cross first aid class as well tor which certificates are 't given. ..V ')' r .Tie dying, applied design and Batik, work will be taken up by ' Mrs,; Lulu May Brandt Friday at- ternoon. The things -which are popular in dress, and which, are easily, done will be featured at these demonstrations , bringing to the women -visitors an. tppor? r-- 4 lj sect bites make A V i iiviJLPi i riuLii urn u i 1 1 .- '-. I ifi cools and soothes J w. and gently ;y i '? ' William Wallace Graham '..a:;:.X' ., VIOLIN, -. Soloist and teacher. Nine and a half years' study and ' teaching ,in Europe, twelve in Portland. Pupils holding -responsible positions in many-parts of -United States as teachers and soloists. Beginners accepted; coach ing -in accompanying and ensemble. For appointment caU;Mari6h. HatelM'Salem;:Wedriesday September 6 or any Wednesday or Saturday thereafter. For reference ask any pupil, Matinees or ill i V 3 tunity to find out Just fcow It is done." ! "The Glass of Fashion" will be j-'iven in the auditorium ..Friday tvenng at 8 o'clock. 'Thlawill be given as a fashion show in a ser ies of "reflectioons" the'- parts taken- by 12 models, young col lege women who will come over from Corvallis for the occasion. The first will be that In which "the spirit of the Orient .arrives to influence the autumn mode in color, line and texture" aid will be known as the Shiek. Tho country club scene will feature sports apparel casting its reflec tion upon the glass of fashion.. "Tailor-maids caught by J- the glass of fashion' and afternoon and evening frocks, wraps and ac cessories mirror, their , imago in the glass of fashion will be the closing Bcene. ..College girls from the domestic department at the Oregon Agricultural college will take the parts of the models. Good taste in dress is the main theme of the fashion show which will feature these frocks and gowns, according, to those in harge of the. exhibit. . Local al umnae and former students of the college will assist with .details of the show while all models are students at the college. Miss Helen McFaul, of the domestic art .department Is in general charge. The large exhibit of the Indian school is attracting more than the usual Interest at the -fair. The work which the students ar pri vileged to take at the school; is shown in a number of striking exhibits. Booths do -not. contain the usual exhibits which the pub lic has long: associated with In dian exhibits, at least not that alone. Dainty bedrooms, simply but immaculately kept, correctly set dining tables in charmingly simply decorated dining rooms, tbese are the thngs that attract the visitor's eye. The- work of the students Is nings: Shbwi I 7. i Unanimously Acclaimed a Screen Master piece by those who have seen this . production . rMotiPictur iit-KJ V.J K showji for the most part in the the part of the home it belongs in and not in cases for display alone. The rack in the bedroom holds several lovely house gowns, while the great cupboards of canned fruit and vegetables are in the kitchen. A chart on the wall chops themselves and the other shows the number of quarts of (viands cooked jut right what fruit and vegetables "saved" at i ever Mandy's other faults, her the school. The booth which shows the work of the girls in making childrens clothes including those1 for the baby are interesting when one reflects on the possible ef fect on the future life of these girls in their reservation homes. Mr. Alfred Ackley and Mrs. u-t-lla Simnverman, both of Salem, the latter recently from the east, wr quietly married at. the parson age of the First Congregational church,- Monday, September 23, at 2f p. m, ' Dr. W. C. Kautnec read ; the marriage service. Mr. and Mrs. Ackley plan to make their home, in Polk coanty. :'' The contention of the Women's Eoard of Miesions of the Pacific with delegates from Arizona, Cali fornia, Nevada, Idaho, Utah and Washington, wil meet at the First Congregational church in Portland this week. Mrs. R. C. Klrkwood of Palo Alto. Cal., Is in charge of the meetings. Mrs. W. H. Phil lips, the president of the Oregon board, delivered 'the address of welcome, and Mrs. H. S. Ranney of San Francisco told of the year'3 work. Three missionaries. Miss Walk er, Miss Rreck, and Miss Cole, will tell of their work in China, Japan and Turkey. Yesterday Mrs. James Lash of Los Angeles presided and the speakers -were Mrs. Edward Lincoln Smith of Seattle, Mrs. William Parker ot Tacoma, Miss Walker of Foo Chow. China. Mrs. F. C. Little of Portland, Mrs. J. T. Richards o Saratoga, Mrs. George" Edwards of Walla Walla. Mrs. Gullck of Tacoma, Miss Cole of Turkey and Miss Tontz of Africa. Last night Mrs. Harold S. Gilbert, the treas urer of the Oregon board, was toastmistres- at a .banquet at the Sunny Side church. A ldele Garrison's New Phase Of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE CHAPTER 1S2 WHAT BETTY KANE OFFER ED M.APGE . Luncheon was a hurried, ab stracted , affair with me, -so an xious was I to get into telephon ng 50c - 25c HOLDING ft' hi 1 1 ie communication with Rita Brown. Mother Graham mast have been strictly "on the job", im mediately before luncheon. for the plates on which the lamb chops were served piping hot, the i cooking is beyond reproach! And j the tray which the girl prepared for Leila was a marvel of dainti ness. j With some sprays ot trailing; arbutus tucked into the snowy napkin which covered it. I hur ried across the lawn to the room where I had left Leila with the admonition to sleep. That she hai obeyed my In junction I saw froci the rested look after I tad knocked and had entered at her low-voked invita tion. She had propped the pil lows behind her, and was gazing out of the window at the pines. With no reference to the trouble which had sent her ilying to me, I set the tray down, and, dipping the end of a towel in some water, brought it to her bedside. . "Now for whit Mother GrahaaJ calls it a 'lick and a promise!" I said gayly. Before she coulrl speak I had quickly bathed and dried her face and hands and wheeled be side her the low table upon which I had set the tray. "You are to obey orders strict ly," I said in a coldly professional tone. "I am golr.'? awav on an er rand, so I cannot stay and see you eat thia, but when T return I want to find an absolutely empty tray. Just push the table away when you have finished, and go to sleep again unies3 you'd like to read.'', Leila IsGiven Order.". I had laid npon. the foot of the bed copies of the latest magazines which I had ctrriel over with the tray. Then I sco-pod and kissed her. Ignoring the trembling of her lips and the entr?aty in her eyes. 1 11 be back in a few hours," I said cheerily. " Be a good girl." I wa out of the door before she could do more than send a half-expostulating, aalf-enireating cry of "Madge, wait:" after me. But I pretended not to hear, and sned down the stairs out of ear shot. I salved my conscience with the reflection that folitude was the one thing the evcited. hyster ical girl needed. She had a heal thy body, and youth's natural re bound of spirits, and so J was sure that when she had eaten her lunh. had dawdled a bit over the magazine, and had drowsed again she would be in the frame of mind In which I wished her to face Rita Brown. . I had taken the precaution to put on a small hat isnd a sweater before crossing- to the big house. Thus equipped, I knew I could get away without mv mothter-in- law's suspcetln? that I was not With Leila. Mrs. Lukens had al ready showed im a path which led through a neighbor's yard to the street beyond and a friend ly short cut which eha often, and which I now took with -thA in surance that even !f Mother Gra ham were outd3or;t .with Junior she wouldn't see me leaving the place. Without betraying Leila's confidence, I could net tell mv mother-in-law about Rita Brown's disclosures, nor the measures I was taking to combat them. The Stage set For Rita. It didn't take m many mln- rt f flit In n n V. ) 1 r ..... icatu DBay r.&nes little shop door again. Sho was frank ly glad to see me. but rave no hint of the surprise which must have been hers at my swift re turn, i suspected that the little shop did not, have the patronage it deserved, for this was the sec ond time In one day I had found it deserted. suss isane. ; said, poing di rectly to the point, "f find that it 4a muocan.H r . . . . - ..vooai j M,r IDp i0 nave a strictly private and perhaps a bit unpleasant interview with joung woman whom, for reasons connected with a relative. I can not take to my own cottage. I wondered if you could not rent me- room for perhaps an hour, probably for a much Phorter time than that?" She looked at me Rteadilv for a minute. I saw that h Vnn gray eyes were wefzhinir mo aJL bating the propriety of granting my request. Evident! what h. ' " oonsiiea nr. lOr tha nart satisfied minute she said heartily: "I cannot rent you a ronm tint I will gladly givg yon the use ,uu0.B9r fie throw open old fashioned: folding- door to a typi cal "parlor" of the late Victorian period velvet furniture, "tidies," "shell- work" anJ all the other atrocities. "This belongs to?e people of the house." sh- said, "but they wy just now. and they al ways let me us3 It when I have an overflow of people at tea which seldom happens. I am sor ry to say. You are perfectly wel come to R. You may order tea ir you wish for yourself and your friend, but it ion't necessary!'' I think it win be quite neces- ry, i smiled at her I expect qnlte a stormy intervie w tnouch not a noisy one, and I think a cup of tea would be most fortify ing. .ow. may phone?" a use your tele- She indicated the tne on the wall and I Went to It H. hrlnirl-.. k... i. i,.:.j ryi n .... t - i . "a ,ls lOr CQ COmine -tin iwii Iirowil. J U T1 " (To be continued) earj the Classing ArJs. M OVIE LEAVING THE LIBERTY TONIGHT HAROLDLLOYD iri that, Sensational Success 'GRANDMA'S BOY" LIBERTY "Grandma's Boy" with Har old Lloyd. Last time today. BLiIGH Bill Hart in "O'Malley of the Mounted." OREGON. Guy Bates Post in "The Mas- querader." GRAND George Walsh and Miriam Cooper in "Serenade.' Lierty Theatre Offerh Big Stuff For Fair Week Although the Liberty theatre was not successful in . booking Harold Lloyd In "Grandma's Boy" for all of fair week, the manage ment tried their, best to get a full weeks booking on it but the longest booking that could be se cured was four days, therefore the sensational ' comedy will close it's .engagement tonight. Sunday a continuous show was given and the house was jammed from 2 o'clock until 11 p. m. On Mon day many hundreds were turned away;, the theatre Was packed with people. Everybody, says it is the biggest movie hit that has ever played in Salem; 'it i s the best laugh show that has ever bee nscreeoed; simply a case of laugh, tor '5$ minutes and the fin ish is absolutely a roar. A, very fine bunch of short reel subjects Is offered on -the same .bijl and tninow is fne tark'or t,he town Those -who n'ave' seen it say that it is worth many hours of stand ing up to see it. Wednesday "will be the last showing and it is one pcture that you Can't afford to misc. The Liberty has another fine program to follow yie, Lloyd pic ture. Charles Jones will open Thursday in" "Trooper O'Neil", a big feature based on lire in the North. On the same bill will be another feature that has created quite a furore in Salem. "The Leather Pushers". Round 5 will be shown Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Although Friday and Saturday of every other week are the days that "The Leather Push ers" Is shown at the Liberty, the management was successful in getting the booking moved up one day and the cleverest two reel ngnt picture ever shown, will open with the big Jones feature. One or two other reels will also do oirered and Round 5 of "The Leather Pushers" is one of the best. Eaeh round is separate and distinct and" although It is a sort of a serial, it. is not like the bunk serais" where it leads up to the climax, and then "Come nexi week" is flashed on the screen. In "The Leather Pushers" the real fight takes place in eveVy round and it Is one of the biggest hits ever ehOwn on a motion pic- of ftin"e Salem. Harold Lloyd in , !'Grandma' Boy," his new, pretentious rive- part comedy showing at LIBERTY plays the part of the country boy who was afraid. While there Is plainly a serious vein, throughout the story, it Is nevertheless pure comedy, full of the famous brand of Lloyd ian humor, and also con taining thrills, suspense and rap- la-iire action "Grandma's Boy" lives in Blos som Bend, one of those slo towns where the Tuesday morning express arrives Wednesday after noon If Monday's train gets ou or me way! Harold Lloyd is Grandma's Boy", and his grand ma is Mrs. Anna Townsend dear old woman 79 years old. Mil area Davis is the Boy's sweet heart. The theme of "Grandma's Boy tilt nf & moSon Uul. nn,...! t t " ....... F- - ton-!'3; f:lf confidence and the power. of mird, over matter as no philosopher,, of. religious px wien GOSSIP tific school has ever been able to o. Lloyd is the boy, who, all his life, has been gripped by fear. One day, after his weakness has been driven very forcibly home to him, and he is filled with shame, his little old-fashioned grand mother tells him a marvelous Etory of how his grandfather, who had distinguished himself in the Civil War. overcame his coward ice with the aid of a charm given him by a gypsy. Grandma gives the Boy "the charm, and what he does then is too good to tell. Suffice to say that the boy finds that courage is a matter of uelf-confidence, and he comes out on top. The finale is presented in a manner that will leave the au dience laughing hysterically long after "The End" is flashed on the screen. A real. detective story with a Canadian Northwestern Mounted Policeman as the hero, portrayed by Wm. S. Hart, is "O'Malley of the Mounted," his Paramount's picture, which will be shown at the BLIGH , theatre today. Mr. Hart wrote the story and Lambert Hillyer directed and adapted it for the screen. There is a mystery of real thrill the search for a murderer in the wilds of the western country. Like bloodhound, Hart follows his man he is after and the latter saves him from death at the hands of bandits. . . .sJ r-van Burrows ontaine, tne beautiful dancer who plays the part of the vampire in "Women Men Love", was for two reasons the sensation of Florenze Zieg- feld's Midnight Frolic. Miss Fon aine' lorseok tnfe footlights to become the bride of Harry Payne Whitney's eldest son. A cowboy "Muscateers"! Three companions of the range hard riding, sure-snooting, silent and devilishly ever-present. - At the sign of trouble there they sit in the saddles, dissolving into view like phantoms from the mists! Companions in arms, ready at a rrfoment's notice for a fight or irolic, defenders of unprotected womanhood; champions of love and the nemesis of evildoers. It s a question who'll get the heartiest laugh out of this p;c ture, the audience or '-Douglas Fairbanks. The picture is not burlesque or a travesty of Fair banks incomparable "The Three Musketeers," but makes lively use of a similar idea on the Western Range and has as much of the reckless bravado and daring plant ed in an atmosphere more fami liar to the American screen pa tron. That ia what you will see in "The Three Buckaroos." a story and production by Fred.. J. Bal- shofer, which is to be given its initial ahowing at the BLIGH theatre on Friday and Saturday, Wornout actors in Outworn Melodramas, Bad Acting in Bad Plays. Everything that Character izes the Cheap Road Company is Burlesqued in "The Trouper." Ford Sterling to play a prominent Marshall Neiland has signed part in "The Strangers Banquet", with Hobart Bosworth. The screen needs a fat com edian, so Fatty Karr is going to try and become a second Fatty Aruuciie. ine magazines say that he has done good comedy parts in "Human Hearts" and "Omar The Tentmaker" bo he may have the goods. We shall wait and see. It takes more than fat ness to make a good comedian. Hughie Mack and a good many ethers have found that out. Theda Bara is coming back to the screen in some big produc tion. The company that has her under coutracC promise big things! for the balance ot 1922 and next year, so it la a certainty j that no expense will be spared In the fam ous vampires-coming feature. Buster Keaton is noted for his quick wit. The other day a friend of his was complaining to Bus ter that a fine pair of patent leather shoes that he had pur chased a few weeks before had cracked all over. Buster spoke up and said: "Oh that's because the patent has expired. Richard Dix is said to have re ceived a tempting offer to go in to vaudeville but he thinks that he will stay with the films. His role in "The Christian" is said to be a big success. After playing an old rube In "The Old Homestead", Theodore Roberts took off the old overalls and switched .to monocles and pirate's boots to play the part of a semi-piratical trader in Thomas Meighan's "The Man Who Saw Tomorrow." I AT THE LIBRARY NEW BOOKS "Fourteen Thousand Miles Through the Air." the story of the first air flight from London to Australia, told by Sir Ross N. Smith. . "Construction ot Radiophone and Telegraph Receivers for Be ginners," by M. B. Sleeper. "Chronicles of Chlcora Wood." sketches of her early life in South Carolina, descriptive of the so- caal conditions since 1850. by Elizabeth W. Alliston Pringle. "Land Drainage, y W. L. rowers and T. A. If. Teeter. "Pirate s jHope," by Francis Lynde.. . , "Small Souls," by Louis Coup erua.? ,.- . "... . "Later Life," by Louis Oouper- us. "Twilight of the Souls," by Louis Couperus.. The abotve are three of the four titles which make up the series ot Books of Small Souls by the most prominent writer of fiction of Holland today. "One Man in His Time." hy Ellen Glasgow. "How Much Shall J GiTe" view ot the whole subject of charr ity, especially interesting for Its analysis of the motives : ot givers, written by Lilian Brandt. , - "Pastels and 'Silhouettes." poems iby Mabel Holmes Parsons. "Collected Poems," by Rupert Brooke.' "Reading from the Apocrypha,' by E. H. Blakeney. "It Is to Laugh," a book of games and stunts, by Edna Gels ter, the author, of "Ice Breakers." Boys Books "Connie Morgan in the Fur Country," a story of trapping In the northwest, by James B. Jlen dryx. "Spell of the Shank Kamby," by Dennis H. StovaU. "Bob's Hill Trails," by Charles Pierce Barton. LIVESLEY NEWS LIVESLEY, Or., Sept. 23. The Livesley hop yard finished picking this week. Carpenter brothers are harvest Ing and drying their prune crop They are also drying prunes from several neighboring orrhards. ' Alice Zielke who had an oper ation for appendicitis recently is getting stron; again. Nolan Phillips and family started for California Wednesday morning. Clifford Johnston i3 spending- a few weeks with his crother Louis Johnston. Louis Johnston has secured env ployment at the paper mill in Sa lem. Rev. Earl Mr A bee and his wife and small son"arrived at the par- Special - - STANDARD 30x3 V 30x3 y. Fabric Cord All Factory Firsts Cords. Jsize. 30x3 $10.75 30x32 $15.75 32x3i2 $19.25 31x4 18.50 32x4 $18.95 33x4 $22.50 34x4 $23.50 32x4 $24.00 33x4 $24.00 34x4'3 $26.50 35x412 34.50 33x5 35.85 35x5 59.65 36x6 We Carry Various Standard Makes Maicoiti Commercial & Court Sts-; Established 1917 sonage last Saturday. "Rev. Jfc Abee will be pastor here in ?Ite of Rev. E. G. Ran ton who has been sent to Grtehaai. Or. C. D. Query has a large and fine crop of prunes thJ year. He Is having them dried at Carpenter brothers drier. Mrs. S. L. - Suprrler who has spent the summer wilh her sitter. jMrs. A. Coolidge started for Ok lahoma Tuesday. William Meier is busy putting in his fall erop3. Water for Locomotives Is Wanted by Company The United Railways eomrwnr of Portland has filed with the state engineering department an application for authority to ap propriate water from one o-. named creek, from Fall creek and Nehalent river for locomotive supply at points in Columbia and Washington county at a cost ot ' about 910,000. , By the city of Forest Grove,;'5 covering the appropriation of four v second feet from Gates creek, a'' tributary of Tuakn rircr for municipal . water supply .for' the city of Forest Grove, in Washing-" ton county.. j. - , . 1 ri By Charles W. Smith of BaqV don, covering . the appropriation . of water , from Cut creek and v south branch bf Cut creek; for mining purposes, and for power development in Coos . coanty. ( By the Winona Mineral Springs company of Oak Ridra. corerint the appropriation of water, from Salt, creek for. development of ' 1 i i horsepower la Xane county v for" lighting and power purposes. " By Max Arp of JCngene. cover- itg ike appropriation of watef from. a spring creek tributary to Willamette river tor domestic nisply, 'and tot irrigation pur-' poses in Lane, county.. t . ,- " By Cy P. Sonnlchson,. of. Hood River, covering, the approprlailonw of water , f ro Jnorerfldir ; from the city spring for irrteB.tlenvot 'one acre in "flood River -county. v; r-: By John piamanit ' Of . Iaiftr4 covering the apprpprlation ot wa- ter, from Bine Canyon creek end from ,Pewder river,, for, irriga tion of 24 acres in Baker county. ; By George MUsholl nd Rich- ard Kelly of Boardman, cohering the appropriation of water from: Columbia river for; domestic use in Morrow county, ,. t,,v. By W. K, Roberts of Portland, covering the Appropriation of wa ttr f rom, an iunnanied spring creek for . fish pond purposes in MnU? nomehcouBty . -.v At The SZletn oblen mm neuxaJgic, sciatic and' rhcamaticl pains, headache, bi&i$i t and all. other aches are .quickly; re- lieved by -v . , w.M:M:wii? Contain no dangerous habit forming drugs. Wh don't yotl try them? . . i - ' - Ask your druggist . I Week GUARANTEE $ 7.50 10.75 Tire Co. r! x Salem,, Oregon m4