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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1925)
' '? 1 l, THE ORE GON STATES1IAH. SALni.OnnGON SUNDAY MOBNING, MARCH 2, 1925 BE- PiESEMlE - TO: THE wiio Yd . irrtii Ml : Tfl QE GREAT " "" 1 1 v randon Onera .: ComoanY VIH Open Engagement at Grand Theater With all the old-favorites; such as "Chimes of. Normahdy"i and r i ue tjnocoiaie soiaier" and- some n melodious nejrVbnes tha the J frandon Opera company fwill J come ; to the Grand theater for 3 5 cays starting Thursday, March 2 , liB not often tbat ucn a musical -.j? mixed, with entertainment Is , 4 .red for ftiia is the only .organ t, ia ot-It", kind in the west. a Kjynent critics have pronounced t khe company of splendid Tonne Singers which they have gathered together equal .to . the famous old fetslelani ftin tn&M ' i maj tu eolda aa teB of the eertana lung compUeatloaa skat nniy reeult. 14 ln phyilcUns sow prescribe BALSAM E 4 f au bronchial affecUene. BAIdAMSA pw WftUbto - preparation at ad fjraa a newry discovered plant. Dr. Ban. S. Crabtrea, Aadersoa, Mo, writea: "I naa i awiaalwiy for .ay practice and my taaUly. xt la quick, aura and afa In action like notfclsf alia." Toward the and of tba inflnenta apt iamie a fforernment physician noticed that a tribe t( Indians ia Nevada, by Mie me ' O'U from a native plant were immune mm tba ravagea of InUaanaa. .Be aaed theae aila BHnf his- wkite pat ten ta and than in a hospital oerflowinj wita SERIOUS LUrjB .. TROUBLE STARTS ! Iffil COUGIIB : i win, nti n tfla results swept V, IJ-"T?rki ' lor aoma time ft tu wU i ioe in appiy.toe demand. -i AISAMEA baa now been atandardised - o2.tm uniformly miracnlona reettlta in ,XearTVaya: 1. It sootaei the inflamed I wiembeanea and rrlierei irritation. 8. ft increase accretion of mucosa and per ante easy. expectoration. 3. It atimulatra pores of the akin in throwing off body IHiiaona and 4. It strikes at tba cause, checking germ action Immediately. , f not couniee n with ordinary Dalnm rougn ayrapa mat an only aoothinf ay rap and trouble. do i Unli not o to tha baaa of tbi tba ka outer ovrh remedipf free from eon I tar ait other harmful nareotiea. Pleasant to take and absolutely safe to Rive to children, v e aura yen dot BAL,-SA-f E-A wik tbe Sietnre of tha Indian an the aokaca. daraateed to relieve any congh. ne nat ter fro at want eanta, or your anonay back. ' 1 for Chronic Ootighsj Perry'i Store T j I aWaaaBBwa. aajpsninwai im s--.ay , js .nVmni., ..., tMiMiia. aini!aw.iB1HiPiiMW m?-wm Wfy-jaJ . I r"-. ' -;y-r.- " ; : : v-,. . -;. ;.. : 1 - at 1. m askBBM ar ' i i r r - r I J j T r1"" -m-miOfiouu Artistic Mirrors : 07.95; "Refurnishing" is a wonder-' fut pleasure when you can get artistic polychrome mir- -rors at a price so strikingly -low! ri lit If you do not have a Mirror for your Living Room, tiining Room, Reception Room or Hall rtake advantage of thii SALE offering. .-'',. . , . .' . ITS' NOT TOO LATE TO Bostonlans " which ' hare - become a tradition in America and stood for all that was best la the musi cal line. 'The Brandon Opera ' company have brought to the Pacific coast some of the best - talent in New York. Their singers f- not "only have - the ; voices but the looks which add so much to the roman tic appeal of operatic roles.' -Theo Pennington, prima donna, is beau- tlfal, slender and young - in her glorious voice has to be heard only once to make people go again and again to hear" her. " Harry Pfeil, tenor, could .easily qualify as a matinee idol or a morie herb. Carl ' Bundschu, baritone, Delos Jewkes, basso, Jesse Evans, con tralto, Ed Andrews r and George Oleson, comedians, ate all "artists in their lines. ;The bfg chorus has been trained by Charles Hat felrlgg. v:' ' "' ' -: The repertoire intfwudes" "Chimes of Nbrmahdy,' 'Roblnhod" and "The Chocolate Soldier. "N ; 4 ; mm m stage morion, " .', 'lit " ? " ' Mirrors f -ap f ay ar a a ear an y m wanT - - luff ICE-TElffiY . .: - 1 VT' !CO:nAY:TEARLEt Foyr distinct patterns,' big buffet mirrors, each made lit three dif ferent finishes. Every mirror in the dozen different. All new mouldings In brown, silver and blue. New and Yery attractive. NOTE CAREFULLY Sizes and ' 1 1- f.-' Mirror Plate size Mirror. Plate tite Mirror Plate size Mirror Plafe size Mirror Plate;size 'fO-7T-TTl!? it HcniD cf Good Furniture Boy Acting for the Mavies Is Not - - By : BEN ALEXANDER' Well, Ive been having the time of my life. I've been to New York, as I think every American should. I walked across. Brooklyn bridge, went to the top of the Wool worth tower and climbed up in' the Statue of Liberty clear to the crown. Gee! that's a wonderful statue. Miss Liberty's nose is four feet longthink of . that and there are 154 steps from her feet to her head. -. I counted . them. ":, But greatest of all -I was in a real snowstorm. Now laugh, you fellows that fta ve . lived in - a . cold climate all your ; life. I suppose you think -a 12-year-old kid that never coasted or was in a snowball fight is a good deal of a freak,-but honestly, until I. went to New-York the only show I'd ever seen was on the mountain tops, where I could n't reach it. , ' : , " So you can imagine what a thrill I had rwhen. mother woke' me -one morning and told me to look but of the. hotel window. The roofs and the streets were all white. You xan bet I ' bought a sled it was my- first-j-and then we drove out Into ' the country, where I found, a. hill and coasted. I had more fun in hose three or four plau in , ? fncairvs . r- JULTUWiW 1 site Framed in Choice Frames All in Beautiful Frames .8 x 16 mches...I... .::i.r..i.95 .12 x 24 mches;........U..v..u,:;..; :2a95 , 12 x 40 inches: ; J.........;.; , 7.95 17 x 45 incWs...:..;...;;...:.. 8.95 . 18 x 42 inches 9.D5 .WINDOWS , ft . PJovic Actor Tells Good. for. Every Boy, and Ben xeiia some 01 me ueasons Why ; .days the show lasted that I'd ever had before in my life. .But I suppose you want to know something about my work in mo tion pictures. I get a raft of let ters Arom kids asking If it's hard to. get into the movies and if I think they ought to try. Well, can tell them this mueh. It's sure hard enough after a fellow once does get. in. Anybody who thinks the posing and "shooting" at the studios is just fun has another VvlnM ; fAmftt9 u Qa MV rlvIrA taw e vwwiug, nv ctuf ivc 101 unless you aren't afraid to work at all hours, and unless you're pretty sure you've got real talent,, you'd better keep out,' . L As to getting - into pictures In the - first place, I suppose . I was lucky. You see, my. mother used to be in films, and , that probably gave me a natural liking for that sort of work. , ' Mother tells me that when I was three years old I used to Imitate folks, and she and dad got the idea I had acting abil ity. J I was in my first picture when I was four. I was cupid in "Each Pearl a Tear,", with Fanny Ward but gee! I wish I could forget that. You know how Cupid is supposed to be dressed, or undressed. Well, I was that way. ; j As : far, as . that's concerned, I never came - nearer balking than when they told me I'd have to wear long curls and Little Lord Fauntle roy clothespin "Pampered Youth." But; when pavid Smith, the Vita graph , director, showed me some photographs from ''Captain Blood" and I saw J. Warren Kerrigan wearing curls, it was all right. I know Mr. Kerrigan, ' and he's a fine man. I like "Pampered Youth" as well as any picture I was ever in. One of my stuhts in it Is a fight with another kid, and I lick him! And I had a lot of fun riding a pony. I borrowed the pony from Hal Roach. The chief reason 'I don't think acting in the movies is suitable for every boy Is that an actor has to stay out of school and misses a lot of sport playing. I wish t could mix up with the fellows more than I do, for I love to swim and play football, and, most of all, tennis. 5 But when I'm not at the studio I've got to be with my tutor. I'm studying French, algebra and mechanical drawing this year. I like algebra best. But movies are a iot better than stage work. I was on the stage for a while. I was Penrod in Mr. Tarklngton's play, so I know some thing about the late hours a per son has to keep. When I'm work- Prices Listed PROFIT - ol the Life Alexander. Boy Movie Actor, Ins, in the movies I can generally get lo bed early; ; But I love to go to the theater. I!ye.. seen The5 Bat" three tinua an .''The Catx and the Canary" twice. They're the kind of plays like best creepy, mystertsus things. I've got a typewriter, and I've started to write a mystery story myuelf.4 It took me a long time to decide what form to give the villain, but I've about made up my mind to make him an ape. I . love books, and mother and dad and I do a lot of reading to gether. " O. Henry is my favorite author. Some folks think hid stor ies are too grown-up for a boy of my- age, but that's all wrong. There's nothing in them a fellow can't undersUnd, and it's a mis take to keep on reading kid stories i always. I think I'll be a director! when I grovv up, though mother, ex TH-cta me to.be an actor. Bot any- hox, she and dad say l'va got 10 go to college f;t.- , I know Baby Pegy, an 1 1 think she's awfullv sweet. And Jackie Coogan is a tegular, fellow.- I get a. lot of mtsh -notes -t suppose ev erybody oa the screen, d&es. Mo6t .of them are from.littl girls who cay they've seen me in pictures and would-like to meet -me. This is 'ery kind of them, and there am noma 1'ti liiro'wArw murn tr lrnrvr . but well,' a man can't mis work and love. B BflTTLE FOR HISTOBIC TREE . . Sheridan's Ride, the dog teams racing to the Yukon with anti-toxin to battle the grim destroyer, were heroic events but no more so than the battle of Oregon club women to : save the . historic oak on the. old Salem-Champoeg road. It wag a great spreading king of trees when the Champoeg line-up took place in 1841 and the Oregon country went under the American flag. Ella Finney convinced every one she would not rest peacefully in her grave it that tree was felled fay order of the state highway commission. Oregon women back ed her, appeal to save the grand old oak. A new law was trium phantly lobbied through the legis lature giving the highway , com mission: and county courts power to -save beautiful monarchs of the forest along the state market highways. Under this act : the state can acquire beautiful clumps of trees or even little groves which were God's first temples according to Old - Man Thanatopsls, and where according to the Greeks, nymphs, fauns and dryads romped in decollettte. A special commit tee of the State Federation of Women's Clabs, composed of Mrs. Elliott and Mrs. Church hill of the se , - 4. aaaSBW - may be long deferred by a gland extract ; " Old age comes early to count less people because poisons form in. the intestines. They affect the complexion, the hair, the . eyes. They may cause high blood pres sure., ju-;' -:,,'V'r: ' " - The poisons come from germs. The bite is intended to check those germs But a torpid liver makes bile so scant that those germs may multiply by millions. ' v - Now We Use Ox Gall . Now we use ox gall to stimu late the liver, as drugs can never do. - ; ... :.-t : The. liver is a gland. . . We treat it "j with ' secretion from a like gland.- ; Seme of the greatest of helps in modern medicine come from gland, products, ; ypu. know. T Now in poison-laden' blood we give ox gall. : We try to force the liver to ; supply Its quart of bile per day. To countless people this means" new results which are often very -quick and amazing. v . ? -Try This ew.IIelp ; , :." if ultitudes of people suffer from Inactive-Uver . It majr mean con stipation,, saliow-'complexion, dull eyes pimples, etc. i It may mean heart or kidney trouble- due to - pofson. - ,Or high blood pressure or premature age. '-hAU who , suffer - from torpid liver ; should ."learn I what ox, gall .does.;--They -owe '-thati to them selves. -. Even -one day will often bring" surprising help. And you may find this Just what you heed. But get genuine ox gall. It ccmes In - tablets ' called Dioxol. Each tablet contains ten drops. Remember that name--DioxoL Get-a box at your drug, store. Then watch what, liver secretion does .for the!: liver, gUqd. Your whole Ufa may be changed in this way. ,,,-,. Caariatea: An. vena nol aatisfied with ' results from ne first box of Dioxol may retnrit the ecnptr box te the makers and receive kla monar back. Adr.;; v ' nmoiiKsvreii s pilw HW Ol 3ft 0, "V.I Ir-.-a v I k la I .4 al t i , k J It t JJ.a l T . jr. Salem Woman's club and . Mrs. Mae Ristelgen , of the Silverton Women's club, are in charge of an educational campaign to preserve the natural beauty, of Oregon by preserving . the trees, shrubs and wild . flowers; along the highways as a great asset of civic beauty. The battle for the Marion county historic-oak was not won .before the committee was heard at the state highway department. , Three engineers arose on their hind feet and declared the tree could not be saved. : It stood in the middle of the highway. The road v would have to be - changed for a mile, etc. . Mrs., Ristelgen smiled sweetly and .said the Fed eration. - committee- - thought it could be done. The ..state could put a white rail around it and Ella Find ley - could plant some flowers there. , Mrs. Ristelgen smiled sweetly and the chief high way engineer jumped up and said if the women all over the state were going to bet busy about this tree he -supposed : the highway commission would have to find some way to save the tree. It had stood there when Oregon did not have even mud roads and was not even on the map of the world. That is the spirit that is going i to save Oregon's greatest natural asset, the stored beauty of great trees and natural flowering shrub bery the only remaining Red wood grove in Curry county, the giant cedars and spruces of the coast, and the waving cottonwoods and Lombardy poplars planted by the pioneers and settlers along the stage lines and rbadhouses In the sage brush plains of eastern and southern Oregon. LONDON, March 19 London's famous Covent Garden theater, officially known as the Royal opera house, has come at last un- si GAS, IIIDI6ES1II Chew a few Pleasant Tablets Stomach Feels Fine! Instant stomach relief! Harm less! The moment "Pape's Dia popsin" reaches the stomach all distress from acid stomach or in digestion ends. Immediate reliei from . flatulence, gases, heartburn, palpitation, fullness or stomach ; pressure. w Correct your digestion for a fe cents. Millions keep it handy. Druggists recommend it. Adv. BLIGH Today BUZHNGTOIfS RUBE BAUD 1925 Norelty Gua!ano& Marguerite "Musical OdlitiesM Charlotte & Otto Cline Bits of Wits and lilts'! ; Betty Donr. With the Telvet Voice" ; King J.Sauls An Artistic Kovelty; Feature Pictures a . .Comedy. And Webfoot Weekly MON. tUfeS. "Little jbHhfiY JONES" - 3..-""" -4-. i ' Based on George M. Cohan's Dramatic Co-Musical Cdrrttosi- iiOn, .. .... A tomatice .of the turf trammed with a thousand stirring situations """" ? " built In 1858, is to be taken over by a syndicate which gives dances every night In tho week at popular prices. This will be the first time that the theater has been used as a dance hall, although many pub lic dances have been held there in former times. The dancing sea son will end late In the spring. It is announced, in time for what is to . be known as an international season of opera. ' '. . ' vThe Royal opera house, which became popularly known as Cov ent Garden theater because of its location near the famous market Bring Us Your Eggs Saturday We Pay 23 Cents f Spot Cash Danion Grocery Co. 899 N. Commercial .Phone 1263 Love and Adventure on the High Seas!' ) "A Peach! A Starring - ANNA Q. NILSSON RAYMOND HATTON TODAY MONDAY A MAR. 26 - - AT 8:30 ' :: BRANDON BR)lrHERS Announce ; Triumphant Return -Engagement ; v ' '. - - of , . - The Best Light Opera Company In America V : He : eira Some Great Cast of. Fifty Theo. Pennington Harry Pfeil, r Carl Bundschu, Ed. i Andrews, Chester, Bright, Jeanne Rae, Geo. Olsen, .Jessie Evans and Others"" . : . ' THURSDAY, Chimes of ' f ' FRIDAY, MAIICH 2l .' f "Robin Hood" SATURDAY, MARCH 23 ' . "The Chccciate Soldier" "Pifl wni r " ""- fy - r . Mail Orders - Now - DON'T 1 place,' has had varied experience!!, having been used .for opera, drama, circus, '.ballet, pantomime, '; revue, and films. During the, jrar it . served as. a storehouse ,for , furni ture, from other .buildings takenr OTer by the government-for, office purposes. . , j ' '. ."' Kimball Piano $95 This la a fine practice piano. We will take it back any -time on. a new one.. Terms 16 a month. '- . . , Geo. C. Will, 432 State Great Picture F 27 - 2r ail Orders Now 1 j - . . .. . - , . . . mmGmw 6 Voices That Aitpeared Before MARCH 26 Normandy 99 - .TZZC1.S , ' Lower Floor, ,8- rows Bi e o a y. fl.es Last 2 r-wt Balcony (1.19 Gallery 75c (I & c 1 n d inj war tax.) titLLAY ... , 1 .