w I It ! ,.3:.--,::,.-" ..'";;.." ' . ;'"." THE Or.EGON STATESMAN. SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 29. 1927 - .- I - II I 1 M llll !! Mill I II. I III Mllll. 11 II .-I ! mm. -I .. i II IIHIM I I " ml ' II I " " I " Kiss Marie Churchill Will Be A Director of Children's Theater in Portland The following anouncement which appeared In the Oregonian will he of Interest .!n Salem where MJ-a C'hurrhill made her home for a number of year and was a mem ber of the faculty of : the local high school. - Portland will hare a Juvenilia theatrical company thi season to be" known as "The : Children's Playhouse," 'acording to announe tnent of the Portland Conserva tory of Mute which iseponsoring themovement. Mls Marie Churc.i 111 and. Miss Louise Corbln, both talented musicians and both of whom are 'experlened in Juvenile .dramatic work are to have charge of the ."playhouse. ' , The organization will be limit ed", to tome four hundred child ren, between the age of six and eighteen, who will present six plays one every eix weeks, at the Little Theater Jn the Studio Buua ttif. With the sole exception of the directing, the children will do everythi'ng thenjselves, including the histrionic- and - musical work the manning of the- stage and 'properties, and the ushering. - The purpose of the organization will he to Instruct the children In the art of natural self -expression, and to. develop imagination and love of drama' - ijtermanent organ imtlon will be effected September 30, when an already selected group of child ren" will g1veA'a performance of Scraps from' Oz" as their con tribution tQ the formal-open Ingjiof tbe'.Stud.ib butldingAt that tllne : membership blanks. which will previously have been distributed. wH" be taccepted. The price of each membership will be three dollars and. a half, which will entitle the bearer toHry out for the various plays and to take an active pr rt In the, company. This money will ho nsed to' pay expenses. The first regular pre-entat'on -wjll be a't ten a. m. Saturday. No vember 5. The dates for the others .nlso on Saturdays and at ten in ' the .morning, are December 17, -.January 2 S. March 10. April 14, nd May 26. Juvenile theatrical movements of this sort have been in vogue in ' the east for some time, according ,to the organizers, but as far as is known the Portland "company" . will -be the first on the Pacific - Toast, with the sole exception of Pasadena. California, j. 'Miss Churchill Is a graduate of " the University of Oregon where she took special work in dramat ic. She has bee identified wh activities In the interests of child ren for several years and U en sc compUshed mustictan. Mss Corbln h 'graduate of the Unlversitv of Washington. She has' made a study nCdramatio work singing, danc ing, and playing the piano. Mr.jand Mrs. King in Salem f For the Week v f Ma nd"Mrs. E. L. King of I Portland arrived in Salem Monday and will remain for the week of : the fair. ; ; Mr: 'KInr will entertain Friday ,-eveirfng with his annual dinner in honor-of the two boys and two ,lrls who are w'ffners in their cJuhwork. They will also entertain .InformaUv for. a number of Port land people who are visiting in Sa lem during the fair. Guesl from Seattle I Mrs. Oeorge W. Paulson of Se attle, ia the guest of Salem friends this week. i . Miss Hartley Goes to Seattle i? Miss Catherine Hartley left Tu esday for Seattle where she will enroll for her senior year at the University of Washington. Guests at Tully Home Dr. and Mrs. Norman Kendall Tully have as .their guests for sev eral days. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Kerr of Portland. EMINORE -r r - THEATRE Last Times Today , Conway Tearle in "Moulders of Men" TOMORROW AND SATURDAY SNAPPY PEPPY AND ON THE SCREEN lo 8a With Hmlllng Jack Mnlhall Miss Marine Elliott Becomes Bride at Attractive Ceremony Sunday Afternoon Miss Maxine Elliott became the bride of Robert Dickson last Sun day afternoon at the home of her parents of West Miller Street. The bridal couple took their places be fore the fireplace which was bank ed wth autumn flowers. The sing le ring service was read by Rev. Charles C. Ha worth, in the pres ence of a large assemblage of friends from Seattle, Tacoma, and Portland, as well as the cities of the Willamette valley. Mr. Edgar J. Bundy. of Port land, an uncle of the bride sang. He was accompanied by Mrs. Rob ert H. Dann of Corvallis who also played the weddin march. Mrs. Dickson is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. X. D. Elliott. She graduated from Willamette Uni versity in 192 5 and since has been engaged In educational work. Mr. Dickon Is the eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Dickson of Al bany, and Is employed in the post al service department of that city. After a short wedding trip the young couple will be at home to their fclends at 632 Walnut Street in Albany. Ladies' Aid of Lutheran Church WiU Meet The Ladies' Aid and Missionary Society of the American Lutheran Church will meet Fr'day afternoon at two thirty o'clock n the par lore of the First Presbyterian Church Mrs. R. C. Arpke is chairman of the committee In charge of the meeting. "India" will be the sub ject for mission study All who are interested are in- v'ted to attend. Home From Ten Day Visit In Medford After vislfng for the past ten days with her daughter, Mrs Oeorge Prey, in Medford. Mrs. W F. Drager has returned to her home In Salem. Miss Applegate Will Have Charge of D. A. R. Booth Today Miss Lillian Applegate will be in charge today of the booth which the members of Chemeketa Chap ter. Daughters of the American Revolution, are maintaining at the State Fair this year. The booth is located in the educational build ing and Daughters from all parts of the state are registering and being entertained there. Mrs. Isaac Lee Patterson has asked a group of chapter members to asa'at her tomorrow and Mrs James G. Heltzel will have charge on the closing day of the fair. Miss Fleener Complimented With Dinner Party Mrs. Damon Fleener entertain ed Tuesday evening with a dinner party complimenting her daughter Miss Lilyan Fleener. on the occa sion of her sixteenth birthday an niversary. Covers were placed at the din ing table, centered with yellow ta pers and a bowl of marigolds and mad len hair fern, for the honor guest, Miss Fleener, Miss Eliza beth Clement. Miss Claud's Bp tin. Miss Frances Laws, Miss Ev elyn Cummings. Miss Grace Day Miss Merle Thatcher. Miss Edith Clement. M-tes Wilda Fleener, and Miss Lou Glne Brietake After the dinner the group en- toyed a line party at the Elsinore theater. Salevi Young Men Pledged at Corvallis The following yonng men from balem have been pledged to fra ternltle? at Oregon Agricultural Vouege: . . Robert Drager, Phi PsI: Al Al len. Sigma-Nu; Homer Richards, Phi Gamma Delta; Leslie John Sigma Phi Kappa Epsilon; Henry Clement. Sigma Phi Epsilon: Jack Spong and Jesse Cook, Tau Delta; and Hugh Adams. Alpha Epsilon. THE BIG ELKS SPECIAL Srafiir and Dorothy Mackatll. On Leaving Today for Portland Mr. and Mrs. Charles Q. Robert son and their little son. Char lea, Jr., who have been guests of Mr. Robertson's parents. Dr. and Mrs. C. H. Robertson, this wek, art leaving today for their home 4n Portland. Attending the Fair in Salem Mrs. William Mullen ds a guest of Mrs. George Waters for several days this week while In attend ance at the Fair. Mr. find Mrs. Cox at Home on Twenty-Third Street Mr. and Mrs. Chester M. Cox have recently sold their home on Falrmount Hill and are now at home nt 34.r. South Twenty-Third Street. Dr. Warner Studying in in the East Dr. Estella Ford Warner has gone to Rochester, -Minnesota where she will take special work In the Mayo Brother's clinics for several weeks'. Later she will attend the con vention of the American Medical Association In New York City. She will also stop in Tennessee. Chica go. St. Louis, and San Francisco before returning to her work In Salem about the first of Novem ber. Dinner Gtiests of Mr. and Mrs. McKenzie Mr. and Mrs. T. S. MacKenzie will have as tho'r dinner guests this evening. Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Luke of Portland. Mr. Wet Jen Visiting in Tacoma Albert Richard Wetjen left early in the week for Tacoma where he Is the guest of James Stevens, the well-known writer of short stories. Mr. Wetjen will re turn Saturday. Miss Buckner in Corvallis Miss Ruth Buckner has gone to CorvalMs where she will attend the Oreeon Agricultural College this winter. Return From California After vlsit'ng for ten clays with their son, Kenneth Paige, in San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. David Pugh and their daughter. Virgin ia, returned recently to Salem. Yomig People Will Organize League The young people of the Amer ican Lutheran Church will meet in the church parlor of the First Presbyterian Church Friday at evening at eight o lock in order to organize a Lurheran League. entertainment for the social hour will be furnished by members or the league at Vancouver. Wash ington. Miss Marguerite Denritz and Miss Dorthy Rogenore will be nostesses. All young peop'e of the church are urged to be present. FLOOD WATERS RAGE NOGALES. Arizona, Sept. 28. (AP) The Herald received re ports today that at least 1.000 mud homes of peons In the valley of Rio Pannco, state of Vera Cruz, have been swept away by floods. Several deaths are attri buted to the rampant waters of the river. CLATSKAXIE WORKER KILLED CLATSKANIE, Ore., Sept. 28 (AP)-ClaudeV Gard, 41. was killed today in a shingle mill in Mayger when a beam fell, striking him on the head. SEBBGKl ll THEATRE STARTS TODAY with clive Bpook George Bancroft aooi ;:us"Tt"st i u(M Evelyn Bpent " Lapry Semon aQummount qktuie Don't say you didn't see "Underworld." It's1 the best picture shown in Salem in a year. ADDED ATTRACTION. nARRY In His Latest Comedy Feature Entitled - "SATURDAY AFTERNOON". S I D O L I H T S OP" TMO STAG Elsinore Theater "Smile, Brother. Smile." a First National picture at the Elsinore on Friday and Saturday, Is described by those who have seen it as an unusual photoplay. Unusual in the sense that it treats of a phase of human endeavor that doesn't often win its way to the screen. The commercial traveler has not often been accorded the position of importance to which he is en titled in the field of business. Consider that every article you consume, practically, first reached the counters of the stores via the medium of the traveling salesman. Your foodstuffs package goods and bulk; your clothing, your toi let articles, your books, your fur niture all were sold to the mer chant by a salesman "on the road. He has a finger in almost every pie you eat so to speak. That's why he deserves consid eration, and he gets it in "Smile, Brother. Smile," which Charles R. Rogers produced for First Nation al Pictures and In which Jack Mul hall and . Dorothy Mackaill have the featured leading roles. Jack Is a commercial traveler, lately graduated from the ranks, and he makes good by his own de termination and ability with the Invaluable assistance of the tele phone girl, played by the charm ing Dorothy Mackaill. Oregon Theater The totally different picture is here at last!" This is the interesting message received by the dramatic critic of the Statesman from a friend in Hollywood who saw "Underworld previewed at Paramount's studio. "Underworkl," he writes fur ther, "is about the most amazing screen play I have seen in years. It is a powerfully absorbing story of crime and violence literally tak en from the life of a great city. "Gangsters with machine guns policemen in a terrifying battle to preserve order bobbed-haired bandits in silks exciting night life resorts where the habitues of i rookdom gather murderers' row in a concrete and steel jail all of these are flashed on the screen in a way that makes one imagine himself in the real environment TODAY LAURA La PLANTE IN ! "Beware of Widows" NEWS COMEDY WILL TURN SALEM UPSIDE DOWN . i IB 'Ruli" Weed is'the uncrowned king of the underworld a towering terror of a man 'Feathers" is his girl "Rolys Royce" clever handsome 4 "Buck" Mulligan is a rival gang -monarch what color , what action never, never be fore anything like it ! Stark real men and women flesh and blood people livings-loving fierce prim-, itive dangerous ! I1GD0SJ CPJEEN from which Ben HechU wrote the story. "To tell you the plot would nnii the climax for vou when you see the picture. It is to be run at the Oregon Theater starting today. At any rate you'll discover a moral in it, I know, despite the sensa tional manner of presentation. And it s the oia story mat you can i get away with It.' Crime offers a short life and a violent aeatn. i "You will find much to admire I in the performances given by the featured players George Ban croft, Evelyn Brent, Clive Brook and Larry Semon. They are splen did. I might also say, that Josef Von Sternberg has done a remark able piece of direction for Para mount, as you will agree once ou've seen the film." "Just as the great plains sup plied a tremendous . background, representative of the whole west ern region of the United States In the story of 49." says Schulberg. "just so The City in 'Underworld is no certain city but ie typical of all huge metropolitan centers .-hra rn ester life is prevalent as a constant menace to society. T)i ppthine turmoil and in- of metroDolitan life - v .7 - has been pictured on a sweeping ia npvpr before attempted, re vealing every phase of city life from the highest to tne lowest strata, showing how inevitably the lives of the most ruthless gangster and the most respected raemoer ol treason why (1 of many) SAFETY Lubrication scien tifically correct. No "break down," no hard carfxm. .The modern oil for modern motor s of society affect one another. "Ben Hecht .has given us a vir tually perfect etory for the screen based on' hla personal experiences as a metropolitan newspaper man. We deem 'Underworld' to be one of our greatest productions." The Oregon will also offer Har ry 3Langdon in his latest comedy, "Saturday Afternoon." FLOOD RELIEF I'RtJED j SEATLE, Sept. 2S. AP) j The Investment Bankers Associa-j Hon of America today urged thj federal government to end perma- . nently "the Mississippi flood: menace. Not alone comfort but luxury! Fine equipment makes stage travel as pleasant as it is convenient. OREGON STAGES cars. See It Now Oregon Theatre C Standard 03 Service Scatioaa, Comft Lub . ricatioa Specialirts, I I 'WttmtadoUMC mm lives up to its excttingtitlsf -- A SWAIB OIL. COMPANY J7Lin??II