THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1923 V SCI ? I True Blue Traveler Is In Sa lem for Short Time After: Thousands of Miles ; ERE FEW HOURS A fleet of "True Blue TraYel eriof which the brand new Oakland! for 1924 are exact coun terparts Is engaged In a, remark- . able tour. I i prom Pontlae these new and fxu Bine cars are being driven orer Various routes extending to tit farthermost joints of the eooatry. ' jf! jj' These cars re thei ' "adrance guard of a: nr motor cat that has been building for (tnore than resents alltof Oakland's wide '.ex perience In exclusive light six manufacture,' reinforced ? with the limitless resources 1 o?..the S great General Motors Corporation. k , : The purpose of these transconti nental tours is to demonstrate to motor car buyers everywhere, not only, the high quality of Oakland construction, but, more important Sim, me remarnoty eincienc ser-1 vice buyers may expect from this new Oakland model, even after months of the hardest service. One of these True Blue travel' ers Is scheduled to arrive at'Vick Bros, sales rooms at 11:30 today, and will remain In. Salem for about two hours. This car has LIBERTY "Trifling; With Honor.' OREGON "The White Rose. GRAND Drifting.' BLIGH . ,' "The Flying Dutchman "The Oregon Trail." and is When a motion picture director able to weave ; a baseball se- been driven many thousands otquecce nt0 production that car- miles, over, all kinds of roads, and It will be Interesting to see how ties a. thrill to one of the greatest stars the game has known, he has well they are standing this dem- achieved. a high, standard of per- onstrating road test. two years a motor car that rep- Jority. In this land of the free yon can do spont as youf please if you don't worry or antagonize the' ma 2i AecMoi Sale Today j 1:30 p.m. ; . " : - 1 : i- - - . . .- . - . - - 3 .;: - . ' ; i 1790 Fairgrounds Road Near Jason Lee Church, near North Summer and Capitol Sta, 'take North Commercial Street Car , Consisting of Range, Heater, Rugs, Furniture, Beds, . Springs, Mattresses, 'Wheelbarrow, Kitchen; Utensils,' Pishes, Garden Hoes, Tools, Etc' j " F. N. Woodry, Auctioneer "Woodry Buys and Sells Furniture." Phone 511 augt I Will Sell at My Farm on Howell Prairie, 42 Miles Southwest of Silverton, on Silverton-Salem Highway, on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1923 Ceginning at 1 o'clock Sharp, the Following Described , old: fi sow, tndpigsjf to -ii tfl: One brown mare; 1 if yrs. 1400 lbs. V .If i pig. One bay mare 14 Tyrrt.!old; - liooibs. j One brown horse. 5 yTS. old, 1250 lbs. . ! . One bay horse, 5 yrs. old, 1300 . (Ttese iorses aref Mdcky tmlltl . C29 " young Jersey-Gaeinsey eow now fresh.' -." - "'TT - Jsrsey cow,- S. yr, old, now "ae young HolBtehi, to freshen In January. 3ner registered ''Poland China t sums of $10? and ' unddFfcashv wer : this inount time will be given for six months on bankable ELVIN-HERR; Owner M. H. HOSTETTLER, i S .Auctioneer One Dtrroc sow? to farrow soonr Seven pigs, 9 weeks old. Fire i shoatsif 601b.veah.' j jr ? Two shoats, ISO lbs.' each. One registered Poland- China '-bdav Vl&TTfcn-v.T Twenty-five' ewes :wita ratal- ', Fifteen head of ' goats. ' 'i'.. FJorty bushes Kinney w&eat.- -Fifty bushels gray : oata.. f5helswsea'soatoj -velck mixed. - I 10 . bushels' cheat : and' wheat: mixed. . - i r T. K RISTEIGEN, .:'ClerlfSs" fectlon. There Is no criticism in he world equaWto that of a man who himself has lived In reality the thing he sees enacted on the screen.'7 ' 1 -- f Yet this vat ' accomplished by Harry Pollard in his direction of Trifling With Honor," the Uni-versal-Jewel photodrama which is now being shown at the Liberty theater. When Mike Donlin, one of the greatest : hitters that ever lifted a bat, walked . out of one of the projection rooms at Uni versal CItyi where he had seen a pre-view of ' the-- pieturer blinked at the sun and said: "That's great. There's a; thrill In it even for an old has-been; like me." Donlin has quit professional baseball, but the- followers of the game. win recall that back in the days between 1905 and:, 1909 he was one of the sensations of the major leagues For years he was the crack outfielder .of 'John Mc Graw's New York: Giants, and his batting average-always topped the .300-mark, whicir lir-those days was not only exceptional but rare. 1 Donlin wrote a-personal letter to CarlTlaemmle; president of the Universal Pictures Corporation en thusiastically, praising? the base ball sequences- and." commending highly the picture as a whole. Rockliffo Fellowes,- one of the best known actors: In the screen world, plays the part of the base ball hero - in - this- production. ; It is interesting to note that Fellowes was one. of? the-, famous college baseball stars of the country dur ing his nndergradnate days. Play ing oposite" Fellowes" is Fritri Rldgeway. one; of the most tal ented actresses on the screen. She is- an artist that never sacrifices realism just for the sake of'look Ing pretty ias do- s?f many of . the temperamental icinama. staEs .' 'mi-u.' . '. . . .. ii teri for the? Collier's Weekly and I western Louisiana, for his" newest picture, ''The Whit Rose,' a- ' United Artists release' coming to night to the Oregon theater, and then went to Miami? Fla., where he finished the picture.- Mr. Grif fiths had- with him Mae Marsh, Carol Dempster, Ivor Novello, Neil Hamilton, Lucille La Verne, Porter Strong and other players. The-White Rose" Is a typical story of the old South,- and " it was , with no little difficulty that the' f producer was! able- to - find scenes suited to It. The South has 'been falrly-;well consumed In the march of -progress and'' for' a time it" looked as if the foremost director would not secure the pas-1 toral backgrounds he sought. The love- of ' the 'people of the Teche country- to preserve and maintain old ; traditions In life and archi tecture was of great benefit to Mr.1 Griffith who found in west enr Louisiana the sort of settings he was in need of.' There are to be found' homes' which have stood unmolested 'by the touch of 'mod ernism for-100 years.-' In many ofvthe hamlets' and' towns along the Bayou Teche and 'where Mr. Griffith covered a range of 80 mile.' only French Is . heard. Lit tle English is spoken- in many of these places.' j h The descendants of . the old. Aca dians who. settled in . the Teche country . when driven out of Nova Scotia by the British in -1755, are keen about continuing in the ways of t thoir, : forefathers" and?, they gained - added " inspiration when Longfellow . : Immortalised . the Teche land by -having Evangeline an; Gabriel pass unseen along that stream j ln St. Martinsville the. people, who are distinctly French, now keep In reverence an oldVf oak, festooned with Spanish moss ; and r covered ; by Camelia blossoms as a relic of the heroine of Longfellow's poem. They even declare that the girl slept beneath this , very . tree when her Jover passed by in! the night. Out of reipect to them. ; Mr. Griffith filmed several eptsodea with.' the oak In the background. .. The opening of the great North west, through the- explorations of the l Oregon Trail captained by Lewis and Clark, forms one.bf the really thrilling episodes. ' in the history of !v the ' United : States". America was young, then and "few dreamed that the new ' territory opened ' through the the daring of the explorers along the Oregon Trail would s some day be worth billions of dollars to the world and particularly to the American flag. .. ' - personals: A soapstono canoe ' has z been BIT FOR BREAKFAST! found In a Santa Barbara mound. made sr tremendous when- first published. impression For three weeks D. W. Griffith filmed strftlhgryuainvastoyal scenes along ' the Bayou5 Teche. in C. C, Condit, Forest Grove,? Is a business visitor- In. the city; - Arthur riant and Bradshaw were Portland ' business visitors Thursday. ' 'l ' ' " ' I A. C. Bohrnstedt' was out of the fcity on business yesterday. Harold Welder,' formerly of KV- bany but now of Portland was in Salem Thursday -I Ftank Donrey came- up from i P6rtland-yesterday. Judge- Wallace - McCamant - was 1 here- yesterday from Portland.; -Joe Keller, who was state pa role officer under the Withyeombe Portland yesterday, administration; was here- from Senator JJay: H. Upton, presi dent of - the state senate, . was in the city, yesterday Senator - Up ton has moved his ' offices from iPrlneville torBend. ' John Smith of Aumsville was in Salem yesterday,: j . William Daft of Woodburn was In Salem on business Thursday."' Ws Smith of Turner was in Sa lem' yesterday bn-buBiness. . I Sylvia Jones of Gervais was in Salem on road .business yesterday. - Tony: Van Handle of Sublimity came to Salem Wednesday- on busi ness. ; Russell Moffitt, clerk, in the bpera House pharmacy. Is ill at bis home' with tonsilitls. I Arthur Plant and' J. Bradshaw, landscape artists, were in Port land yesterday. Harry Levy returned from Port land' yesterday. : 't: ; -i What ia history? ' rt; One philosopher defined ' If as "the 'unfolding of human actions in; the light of newer wisdom and experiences .. History la the 'background and keynote of "The Oregon Trail," a Unlrersal chapter play- starring Arf Acbr.; which wHVsattwat tie Bligh theatre In lSVch'apters be ginning4 with' the fiVs'tone; today; Histpryf 'presents ;strhnger.istor ies than ? iover ? ,1 or , migaxines, which1 irf but another angleijaatlvaJ old ' saving : "Truth; -Is strange than fiction." . Romance is the Ivery breathf ilte.te WOTJ0 most vivid chapters or nistory. Harvesting, yanr walnuts? . Frn thing, to have on your curU or in ; your, back yard ; the trees- that throw into your lap the kinas of the j nuts. .. . y It Is . getting' so that , when- out siders refer to Salem aa the nut city, they' do not ' necessarily re fer to- the large- family out at the end of Center street, under the care of Dr. Steiner. Salem is grow ing' to be a great walnut orchard. surrounded by still greater walnut orchards. . Pnt one thing down as certain There is ; going to be no departure nt' the Oregon penitentiary; from the program' to ' make the institution- Belf 'supporting.4 The line Is plainly: marked out, and It tet go lag to be followed, day by ; day Thev first; thing' is to et a roof over the big : brick warehouse, at the earliest possible time, and. the next thing is to get the flax mach inery at work- turnings out the marketable products for which or ders are piling up. Then all the other things In that line will fol low in their order. , - V- V ' Former " Vice1 President Marsh all ' says ; that he remembers the time when a- book was considered a luxury. Now he-has lived to see the- day - when a. book- rarely es capes being & nuisance. It is reported that In Ceylov the fishes walk. ? Boy page the Anji- Saloon League. v v v . But few women aspire to seats in congress;, They prefer to- re main ' as "speaker f the house. Jim . Lucey. the Northampton shoemaker who "made President Coolidge"r is sticking to his last. Wise Jim. ' Confirming, the report " that our forefathers on the Paoi flc Coast were af cleanly lotr v i ; S S Miss Maude Adams, at the age of 51, will devote herself to mo tion pictures ' for " the ' children whose papas and mammas were children when they, made a stage Idol of her. Like Peter Pann, she has never grownup. i .- ' ' Officers. Announced By Silverton PT A SILVERTON, Or,, Oct. .11.- ( Special- to .The- Statesman,)- The-Parent-Teaeher association of. Silverton has given out its ; offi cers and standing committees for the coming ' year. This aseocia tlon is one ' of the most tnflden- tial educational . organizations at Silverton The object of the or- ganltatlQnj Jstitfl: hrlnrin:i:isf relation the school and the home. - It -assists with the social enter tainment of the high school t u denta &nd through the local: thea ter managers it aometlmea puts on a motion (picture show; : . . , . The officers and standing com--, mittees for the coming year. are:. , President, Mrs. R. E. Kieingsorge; vice president, Mrs. H. B. , Lath am: secretary. Mrs ' B.' -1 Stine: treasurer, Mrs J. A.- -: Campbell; membership' committees: Mrs. George Henrlkson.-Mrs.- F. Habbs, Mrs. Helen Wrlghtman; Mrs. C. A.' Hartley; press committee; -Mrs'. ' John Hoblitt, Mrs. E. B. Kotteck;, motion pictures.Mrs. IL , B. Lath am;. Mrs. E. Banks; , program, Mrs. E. Booth Miss Ami Ken dall,, Mrs. Lewis; map v 'as. Mrs. Hf Simms,' Mr. John lidi r: child welfare,-' Mrs. A; Jant;- l(a. Grace -Pallner,' Mrs: M.1 C. WocJard The association hnects the first Friday of each" month' ' $32:50 Better-Styles -Better Values fir I: (' 5 "FLYIWG Dutchman"' t : . " OREGON -m w r . ' in f I II I1 I i f- I V I r1 : . "f- rt itftbe lafid wHcro it Is Su mer-tiriieia thfeWintsr-tisia; , 1 Arrange tjow td.'rspeiirl tra" " winter; or aporticm of it; f l under the clear bhi skies oitheGoldeii Stcte. ; Land pt otrtdoors all winter, J .yoa.xhay indulge in your favorite recreation, be it hik . ing, golfing,, riding,; bathing fishing'or any other pastimcur Ask agent fora copyfof "California" leaflet andr for? anyy information you-rrnay wish regarding:, fares; trais serviceetc orwrita to lJraNM:SCC5T . . Amft fiwiu Traffickte Portland, Oregon SBE;.E ' "l.S TOR E , J 1 Lien Arxny and Work Coeds Arrr O. Di Shirts Breeches, Stag Coats and Blankets ; ; .C Special Sale L . ! ' ii. Ca Arny Underwear and Wool Socks Trench Shoes; s. Z , .a g a if rt'-T wl tThs Y . 7.V mn save yotf ffioneyv on shoes of all kinds. . Noticev aaf liLoeation.-"-:-: 303 St4te Street ! . HIttFOrr fii SON: A7e want-yotirrtradi-TConie in-and; see n. "t 1918 Chevrolet Touring . . 1 New top and newwhcels. . .$i5fj.o6 l L ' 1920 Chevrolet Tburingr Had the best of care and a snap buy. 1925 Ford Touring - .,..$400.00 Almost new, Cord 1 tires, lot of extras. Drive It yourself before you buy, . ,t 191$ Ford Tourinff Good Uresv body and top (XT K. j 1917 Ford Roadster $ 95.00 .$ 65.00 Sure it will run, two new tires. N. 34D CpnonercialSt . i w v r L STARTS TONIGHT WALLACE BEERY PRISGILLA DEAN MATT MOORE WM. V. MONG ' mI,. -? ml sw- - i Bar-ar n (mm k y Colorf ul ' Drama SMUGGLERS Plots 'A. Native i Uprising' Adven ture and Romance in OLD SHANGHAI Special Music by Grand Theatre Orchestra Featuring. MARIMBA" SOLO' i "FALLING' : By Mark Renne . PATHE NEWS FELIX COMEDY, . r-. , presents The latest ' production by the great' master producer 9000 feet filled , with, emotion , " ' ' V : - - A beub. a GirlWha C6a!diz f Stop Lcuing ! : W- STARTS FRIDAY" EVE. -.' Oontinaons Shows SATURDAY; AND J SUNDAY': ' Last Times Monday Night A SPKCIA1 SCORE " of u Wonderful Msl, Played by C1IAS. W. HAUXEY JIU - o' the ' AVurlitrer 1 ! t - The Love Story of a Boy and a Girl Alert and stinging witK tKe.bigh pounding; pulse .of real life. A story as big as a woman's love and her fall." Jt makes you forget forget yourself and the world. You forget the theatre and the screenforget the pictured play You live the story. . - j . f . era.- -- hi ---v ... r-: T .,L. st The; Glorification i of or Woman 's Eternal Love TV TllEATuL- BASE SERIES . ., S "- - . . - ... . scSdax, !( STENGEL won for the Giants Wednesday with a home run in the ninth. ' 1 ' .''- .' '.:;- - . -r - -j - ' " '. x '-. .! SHUDRUE win the same way. in the picture. :" TRIFIEJG WITH )1 SEE IT Today