Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1924)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1924 r - - Thonxanrls Have UssrI 4Thi$ RED BLOOD Food If yon are, weak, sickly, nervous ? i and run-down, what ypu need is not merely stimulating medicines and j s drugs, bat something that will pat '. Tore iron Into your blood totnakeitricnana -i.othtitcancarrTtrirthaiKlhexlUi f 1 o vrtf nrvA nri tnnafl tkt four bad V. i ? Thousands of men and women hare J aniahed erery trace of that weak, tired i it feelin and increased their strensUi. 1 IT7 and endaranc often to jut two I wki' tim by aimplr takinc organic (I n Nuxated Iron. tor Naxated Iron to a wonderfal new t -nbinatinn afomnie iron, like the iron ; 1 your own blood. It iaentirelydifferent I m ordinary iron medicine doaa not iore the teeth or dimturb tbe stomach. Jrthrmore. it iaao biirhlr concentrated 1 1 Lt one daw ii equal to eating- one-half onart of ninarh or a ouart of rreen e- . r ' tHla Talra ICn-ratoH Iran for iust tWO 1 mi v.. :.t.A hn mj I tnncb itrnnrrr and better VOU feel. V Money back if not deliffb aceo. ai "t wr i .pood druffaista. SSI I tort -edi A CJJEAN , SWEEP Coolidge and Dawes were not tbe only victors In the jousts of the week. A telegram from A. H. Craven, received by Mrs. Craven Wednesday, ; disclosed the fact that Mr. Craven's exhibit of Rom neys at- the Portland Livestock Exposition had gathered a whole . armful of laurels. A grand championship ewe, eight first y premiums, two second premiums, six third premiums, five fourths ) and two fifths, -.sum up the totals . : won. Mr, Craven's flock won some 'notable triumphs at the state fair y but with increased competition which prevails at the Livestock t show he was only hopeful of xe- SUltS. -:- ": '"7 " " " '- ! : Which makes his conquests all i 'the more satisfactory.- Monmouth Herald. ' t It's too late to weep about it, but perhaps poor Cain had a' com plex or dual personality or some thing.' -1 ; , OREGON i i Fanscui Story vtl , . 1 i. 1 I i 'Now Playing - I TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11 I Coming: here after One Year in New York and 5 Months . ' . in Chicago " THE BIGGEST 3IUSICAL COMEDY HIT OF THE AGE W? i ill r SxJ- km Cast of New York Favorites and the Smartest Chorus on Tour No other musical attraction in recent ycirs rrcrivctl the same measure of praise from Xew York critics. Allan Dale said: "It Ut tlie bet mublral comedy we have seen in many mooas. Henry Warren tutid: ; "It leave otic with the fragrance of roses and an abiding memory of all that is beauUfuL' 1 i 1 v ' 1 Trices $2.50, $2.00, $1.00,. plus tax Get Seats Early. THIS IS A SHOW EVEUY GIRL SHOULD SEE ! BOX OFFICE SALE STARTS TQMOimOW SALEM SEES MfJY "PLAVS TIIIS Ml High Class ; Pictures and Musical Comedy Amon inr: features usiea Salem will return for one night to the days of the good old mu sical -comedies Tuesday night, Armistice Day, when VThe Ging ham I Girl" c6mea to the Grand theater. f . - ! If the press review from the cities in which the company has already appeared on the coast are any criterion of the quality of the production and the talent of the cast presenting It, then the show must be well up to the standard of the musical productions of six or eight years ago, when this type of theater amusement was at the height of ita perfection. Generally these reviewers ( are pretty reli able, and decidedly Independent, aa some of the fiasco productions which have visited the coast dur ing the past two years have found to their sorrow.? ! . . J. H. Green, dramatic critic of the Tacoma News-Tribune, gives The Gingham Girl" a character istic sendoff. , j . ; "'The Gingham Girl' is one of the few shows coming to to Ta coma that one feels" like recom mending with 'Don't miss it if you want some real enjoyment,'" writes Green. ! i i i "There Isn't a lot of extremely fancy fun about' it the lines are so natural, so 1, homely, anyone could have written them. It de velops of itself through, good pre sentation. There Is pathos as the basis for the comedy that gives it stamina, and the company present ing it is composed of trained peo ple. .There are a few good voices in the musical numbers, the com edy is .excellently sustained thru out, the" dancing is appealing from start to finish, costumes ; are pleasing to both masculine and feminine eyes, and the actors work as hard ' as though they took a personal Interest In the presenta tion of the play." ! "Lovers of clean, sprightly mu sical comedy have waited a long time for 'The Gingham Girl to arrive," writes John W. Kelson in the Seattle Star, - r "But it's here, more than satis fying that taste possessed by most theater goers for clean humor, bright costumes, pathos, dancing, good music and pretty faces "There Is plot enough to. build fjjodma, music enough for for a farce?" an" nirTl "K The UnknownVUniversal Jewel with Virginia Valll as star, opened in the Oregon theater yes terday to capacity houses. The picture-play is the screen version of the novel "K." by Mary Roberta Rinehart, and the cast and the di rector are to be congratulated for the sympathy show the original, both as regards characterization and fidelity to the story. Miss Valli'a work reminds one or her work in "The Signal Tow er," also a Universal, although in that she was the wife and moth er, while in the present vehicle she is a young: woman.. But in both instances ; the surroundings are simple and the characters are of that appealing, . human sort that fit Miss Valll so well. The "name part of the story, "K," i3 portrayed by Percy Mar mont. He is the one who deserts a great career to bury his identity in a small town; where he falls in. love with Sidney much to' the grief of ;one of her youthful ador ers, rwhb is made to realize that the attractions of the mature man have eclipsed In her affections his bouquets and the boxes of candy of his hated rival, also a youth. . iThis puppy love Is made the in strument on which , to hang the comedy of the' picture, and also much of the j tragedy. Maurice Ryan takes the part of the youth whose mentality is unhinged by 2j Boy! Get In Line! reason of his disappointment and who brings a dramatic denoue ment on which is basedj the, finish of the story. Francis iFeeney Is the other youth. ' An unusually fine and well-balanced cast has been assembled for "The Old Fool." the Hodkinson picture now playing at the Liberty theater.' r James Barrows, the veteran ac tor, who has the title role was the original Squire In the stage play "Way Down East," and will be remembered for his screen char acterizations in "The Untamed," "Down Home," When Dawn Came" and "The Pride of Palo mar." '"' Lloyd Hughes who plays the part of Johnny Steele, the only one of the Steele household who loves the old man, and takes care of him, is a great favorite with picturegoers. He has played In such well-known films as "The False Road," "Below the Sur face," "Homespun Folks," "Beau Bevel" and "Dangerous Hours." As a result of his splendid work in "The Old Fool" he has Just signed a contract with the Fa mous Player-Lasky Corporation. Charming, golden-haired Betty Francisco has the feminine lead. Betty's popularity has; grown enormously lately. Some of the more lucent pictures in which she appears are "Midsummer Mad ness." "Other Men's Daughters" and "Flaming Youth." . Probably no comedienne Is bet ter known than Louise Fazenda. She began as the pig-tailed hero ine of Keystone comedies,' but has lately graduated fro mher "make up." Among the bigger features, she has appeared in "The Spoil ers" and "The Gold Diggers." It is said that she will soon be starred. Si' - i EdCie 5tnsrston, a clever New York comedian as he appears in the 1 musical comedy hit, "The Gingham Girl." ! What is considered the most novel comedy role yet brought to the screen by the popular Douglas MacLean Is that of Dudley Alns- worth in his newest production, "The Yankee Consul." This latest of MacLean's merriest comedies comes to the Oregon Tuesday. ... Just when life palls on the rich and indolent young New Yorker he enters into a wager with one of his . club cronies that he can work steadily for one BOlid month and ; begins his grind when the unexpected happens. A pretty girl crosses his vision and she not only seems in great peril but he seems .to take quick cognizance of the fact that he is the very nian to become her cham pion. Then again he is found to be. far at seal on the very same boat with the young woman and finds himself in a pretty pickle BOX OFFICE HALE STAI1TH TOMORROW Beauty A Gleamy Mass of Hair 35c "Danderine" does Wonders for Any Girl's Hair Girls! Try this! . When combing and dressing your hair, just moist en your hair-brush with a little Danderine" and brush it tnrougn four hair. The effect Is startling! You can do your hair up Immedi ately and it will appear twice as thick and heavy a mass of gleamy hair, sparkling with life and possessing, that incomparable softness, freshness ana luxuriance. While beautifying the hair "Dan derine'' is also toning and stimu lating each single hair to grow thick, long and strong. Hair stops failing out and dandruff disap pears. Get a bottle of "Danderine" at any drug or toiletcounter and just see how healthy and youthful your hair appears after this de lightful, refreshing dressing. Adv. No funds with him but possessed of the credentials and passage of tbe consul to a post In South America. The thought struck him that If he could impersonate the Yankee Consul all would end well. He is shocked to hear that there is a warrant for his arrest in .the states. , ; He assumes the role and the plot thickens. One exciting thing after another happens. The com edy aspect takes on the propor tions of a laughquake and Mac- Lean takes advantage of each scene to work up the biggest kind of a comedy result. Tt fa nnr nfton that a motion picture company traveling to 'ioca- lionxperiences the sensation of zones on the way. ' During the making of "The Code of the WHI dernes3." which is being shown at the Grand theater, the company laced three sorts of weather on the way to location. The company. including 1 Alice Calhoun, John Bowers, Alan Hale, Kitty Brad bury and Otis 'Harlan, left the studio during a rain storm which traveled with them during their drive through the southern part of the state. Then as they mount ed. El Cajon Pass,' through the mountains that separated them from the Mojave Desert, the com pany experienced three changes The rain at the loot of the pass changed to hail as they climbed On the summit the hail changed to snow and they. drove through a heavy fall. Soon-, they , were at work on the famous Mojave Des ert facing an Intense heat that made them wish they could re turn to either' one, of the three zones through which they passed Movement to Make Music Factor m Children's Lives FORT WORTH, Texas, Nov. 8 (AP) Believing that the children of today make the' musicians or the audiences - of tomorrow, the Federation of Music Clubs, coop erating with the Lyceum and Chautauqua associations, will form music clubs among the Jun tor workers to make music a per manent factor in the lives of chil dren. - A elan has been . nerfected whereby Chautauqua junior work ers, in conjunction with the state and national organizations of the music clubs, will organize perma nent groups at the Chautauquas- and assemblies to federate through the effort of the national officers and chairmen, Mrs.' John F. Ly ons, president, has announced. "We believe this plan will make for a great impetus in our junior department," Mrs. Lyons said. , "Our musicians and audiences of the future are the children of today. Training the child in the way It should go musically will help materially to solve many of the ; problems confronting the American musician in this gen eratlon." ' $500,000 FIRE STOCKTON SPRINGS, Maine, Nov. 8.- All three of the big for warding docks of the Bangor and Aroostock . railroad terminuses here together with several large warehouses and. other buildings and a four-masted schooner were destroyed by fire today with loss estimated at 1500,000. 'There are. numerous strong and silent men 'In America, and alf of I Vv, i. A, SLAINBYTfllBE TO LAY SPIRITS Canadian Indian Boy Dies as Result of Barbaric Superstition WRANGELL, Alaska, Oct. 15 (AP) Killing and torturing members of the tribe having failed to drive away evil spirits that were causing hunger and disease, an Indian In the Llard district hang ed a dog daily until he had put to death his whole sled team. : This was one of the tales that trickled through to Wrangell by means of gold . prospectors after a party of. Canadian Royal Mount ed Police passed through here re cently bound for Vancouver, B. C, with five Indians accused of torturing to death Mocassin, a lad of 17. The boy was said to have been buried while he still breathed. " : ; - , , : Legends that the Indians of the ' wtlds of British Columbia and southern Yakon ; commonly tor tured and slew fellow tribesmen for being friends and companions of injurious spirits have long been common , among prospectors. 5 Five months ago Frank Bass, factor for the Hudson's Bay com pany at Fort Llard, Yukon Terri tory, reported to Canadian author ities that Big Aleck, a Cree In dian living ? on the ' Mackenzie river, had told him that nomad Indians from the Nelson river, in British, Columbia, i had murdered a boy accused of witchcraft. The crime was placed at 40 miles south of Fort Llard. . j ! Superintendent Knight of the. Royal Police, ' stationed at Van couver, pent a patrol to Investl gate. , The Llard district was reached after ' traveling- hundreds of miles on foot with pack dogs and navigating . the swift lower Llard river , by canoe. -Big 'Aleck, when found, repudiated the sto ry. The party of three policemen, commanded by Inspector T. V. Sandys-Wunsch, camped near the suspected Indians. .., . , Patiently studying the territory, the investigators came on a hole In -which they found the body of a boy with his hands tied behind him. ' After that confessions from the Indians came easily. These were to the effect that Edy, a squaw, had suspended ' Mocassin head downward from a sapling to drive away evil , spirits, after Big Aleck had dreamed that the lad was a snrrarflr 1. virl, T.Tirv found MocJJQyation of tfte ylail;ietrpextX a-e-irl. .Lucy, found. MOC iwnjug mere ana Deggeaf that he be cut down. Lucy said that the lad was alive when put into the hole, but other Indians asserted that he was killed first by hitting him on the head with a roek. .... ! The police arrested Edy, her three brothers. Dan, Jimmy and Oem, and Big Aleck, and took them to Fort Llard. At a hearing Wlio nro vmi Ainn " J " around with a grouch? at nome or nave you music, tne greatest entertain er the world has ever known? PEP UP, GET A PIANO, or if there is no one to play it, get a . ? . . , PLAYER PIANO You can afford it if you just snake up your mind to. You can afford a few dollars a month, can't you? If you feel you can't afford a new instrument, then why not 1 BUB CHEST COLDS M'M JIOP PAIliS Pain and' congestion Is gone. Quickly? Yes, Almost Instant re lief from -chest colds, sore throat. backache, , lumbago follows "a gentle Tub bing with St. Jacobs on. ; Rub this soothing, penetrating oil right on your chest and like magic relief comes. St. Jacobs Oil , Is a harmless liniment which quickly breaks chest colds, soothes the inflammation of sore throat and breaks up the con gestion that causes pain. It never disappoints and does not burn the skin. ' - ;,- Get a S5 cent bottle of St. Jac obs Oil at any drug store. It has been recommended for 65 years. Adv. there the Inspector, a magistrate, decided that the prisoners should go to Vancouver for trial. i The three , policemen brought the prisoners out to Wrangell, traveling 1,000 miles on foot and by canoe. No police had been in the Liard district sinee 1892, siLEMiFJiineii Haid "Visible Record System Is Now, Being Made and 1 Futoh the Market : Organization by ' the stockhold ers of the Haid company was per fected in Salem a few days ago, following the filing of articles of incorporation with the state 1 cor poration commissioner. The Haid company' will manufacture Haid's Visible . Record System, perfected and invented by Herbert Haid, a certified public accountant and office efficiency expert of many years experience and for the past five years up to a few weeks ago, credit manager for the H. L. Stiff Furniture company of Salem. '. The Haid system was recently exhibited at the Oregon state fair in the standard equipment booth of the Burroughs Adding machine and National Cash Register com panies and brought forth consi derable comment from,, many in terested parties as a complete In- cara inaex or recora. A unique and important feature of the Haid system In one! of their cabinets is the display of ,250 visible names at a glance and by the simple leafing over of the tray another 250 visible names. The indivi dual cards may be removed and inserted by the simplest effort, and allowance for expansion Is unlimited and facilitated by the i in A MM USEFUL n Tlie Time is Here ; " ; ........ io Get That : NO thorn tn TmirraP uiw vit Tvnii4,o. uj jfuu No place to go No amusement ' a slightly used one? You Can Trade in Your Old Piano on a New One. new system. ' Those who have viewed the operation of the Ha Id system have all pronounced it the last word in a visible record sys tem. - ' ' Actively In JBusinoss ... ; The Haid company is capitaliz ed at $30,000 fully paid up, and the following officers were elected at the Salem meeting: . Herbert Haid, president, Portland; C. K. Knicerbocker, secretary and treas urer,- McMinnville; R. A. Qulsen berry, vice president, Los Angeles, Calif.; A. C. Sample, : vice presi dent, Akron Ohio; F. M4 Litwlller, vice presiden, Kansas City, Mo.; W. B. Dovfd, vice president, Port land, Ore.; G. A. Hlltibrant, vice president, Salem.- Directors elec ted were Herbert Haid, C. K Knicerbocker, W. B. Dovid and G. A. Hlltibrant. , ; ' ' The company Is now" actively engaged in the manufacture of the Haid Visible Record System at its factory In East Portland, where is ateo located the. home office. Establishment of an eastern .fac tory after the first of the year is being projected. . Irish Consider the Auto An Evidence, of Wealth DUBLIN, Oct. 21. (AP) -The BLIOH THEfl Sunday CROWLAND Romance of the" Corn . Field" HAL KING 'Australian Nut Sundae" DAISY & ARNOLD Class and-At,tistry" THOSE 3 BOYS ?ep, ; Harmony and Jaza Mcdonald legett "That Harmony Pair T3 1 fl-l' . !if t' ' U i BH.IJ.3i' 1 iiKryA tfl ,i ; y?4fe'.'ltr .K t3U v a ....... r. .. t la wa of - Ireland iprovjde-. t t-'rt : a a pauper seeks support by. the state,. he must apply, in tte ' - met where he was born. Ttlj 1 3 lead recently to paupers, wlio have lived for years In the Frca State, applying for admission to Ulster workhouses. v "! . The authorities pf sEnnisk;i' -f In northern Ireland, recently -wc. a called upon to consider the' casa of a woman pSoper ,wh6VaLie'to them from Sllgo claiming tb.l 3 a native of Ennisklllen. Eke - i: re fused admission, principal; be cause she drove up, to the work house jn a motor car. This was taken as evidence of .means, the applicant was ordered to re turn" to Sllgo. ; ; Stormy Weather Brings Small Boat Back H err, a TACOMA, Wash., Nov. 8 (AP) Stormy weather in the Pacific ocean off the Washington coast was too much for . the Idle Hour,. 21-foot power, boat thatset out a few weeks ago for Honolulu via California. The vessel owned and piloted by Carl Rathfon, ve3 forced to put back here after b; tling the bad weather for several weeks. '" : Only 1 fx lit: MILTON SILLS In SKIN- DEEP" , Buster ICcatcn . , . In Ths Pals Fcc2n Ycu Can Do Better at STIFF'S A. V get fit r Lthcm are married . t