M PAGE TCI Th OUTGO!! STATESMAN Soltn.' Ortgoa. Sunday Morsln May 7, 1344 Iron Major" At Hollywood With Musical . - ' , 4 . -, " - Quite a man was the late Major Frank . Cavanaugh, w h o m ; Pat O'Brien portrayi In "The Iron Ma jor,?, his newest and all-time-best picture since "Knute Kockne all-American-V .' - v'. : -":. , Everyone agrees that Cavan augh was an outstanding Ameri can,' a hero, a great football coach, and a regular guy. ' ' One of the men who knew him best : was Ernest La Branche, sil- .... V n!Ar1 nAnretonArmn tn i t Vi A aVCIUOUCU ' wr oyyv a - w ; Worcester,.v:'Mass Telegram, j La Branche was brought to Hollywood : to act' as technical 'advisor on the World war I" scenes which form an important sequence in the RKO Radio production.- :". , 11 -. According to La Branche, Cav anaugh enlisted at 41, when he was married . and - the father of six, : which gave him (the nickname of "The Iron Major." Today he has six sons and one daughter serving Uncle Sam. The Cavanaugh strain till holds. "The Iron Major" starts its three-day run on the screen of the Hollywood today. il : Bonnie Baker, Frank Fay, Billy Gilbert, Henry King and his! or : chestra. and Butch and Buddy are all featured in the co-feature "Spotlight Scandals" a musical comedy in its first run here. Late Pathe news, cartoon, and carefully selected short subject presentations : 1-4- V- kill L 'Via Unllonvuul CUIIipiCIC U1C U1U at Mic liuiij muvrvi. Victor Point Man 111 At Home, Is Reported VICTOR POINT Clarence Jones is ill at his I home with in fluenza and complications. J. O. Darby is visiting in cen tral Oregon with his sister, Mrs, J. J. Doerfler at Powell Butte, and his brother, Roy Darby at Ash wood. ; I 1 EVERYONE KNOWS THOSE GRAND SHOWS I 'tcHsyal.b'.liSrH CONTINUOUS SHOWS m ..... SHOVIUiw usut ou !AttMT0T SrVJTJEl EISCKOfFS qftCSu 0 ' ; V l5 "S i 7 $ I if -r ., --.. J - CO Cr.3TflLY s " '4 ocsn. ;nEB llS:Cs A I HSIlt CiraD ' fosV iia &; : Lai! f t !o7S--y J Co-Feature Packed with Fun! nviTiQ 11IEIIR1EST FLLNG! ( vj 7ff't(M' .r-V il?i cim .KEAti . N lw Janina (Dorothy Morris) vainly tries to reject advances of a nasi offi cer (Richard Crane) m Columbia's shockinrly dramatic film, "None Shall Escape, now playing at the Grand theatre. This Is the 'film which forecasts with prophetic realism the' justice to be meted out - to nasi criminals in post-war courts of justice as promised by the Moscow pact. .. " ' s, 1' - . - ,-... McAlpin Stitchers End Glub Season: y McALPIN Tie McAlpin Stitchers club held the last meet ing for the year Thursday at the J. C. Krenz home. Meetings will be resumed i November, when Mrs. Mary Ellen Coffin will en tertain at her home. Roll call, with 'Mother's Day" theme open ed the business meeting in the afternoon, with Mrs. A. N. Doer fler presiding. Members worked on an ambulance robe for the Red Cross. , Visitors were Mrs. Phillip Fischer, Mrs. M. M. Gilmour.'Mrs. O. W. Humphreys, Mrs. Marion Fischer . and Morris, Mrs. Carl Jones and David and Laurel Krenz. Members present were Mrs. Mary Ellen Goffin, Mrs. Al bert Mader, Mrs. Byron McElhan ey, 'Mrs. A. L. Eddy, Mrs. J. M. Doerfler, Mrs.- A. N. Doerfler, DAILY FROM 1 J M.- -' f Mrs. Henry Eriksen, Miss Margar et Doerfler 'Mis? Anna Doerfler and the hostess, Mrs. J. C. Krenz. Scio: Oarage Cliahges Handfe SCIO tfhe Scio garage, one of the early-; plants of its kind in this city, conducted by Merle Cyrus and W. Al Brock for manv vears. was sold; to Melyin Sweet and Joseph Darcy this week and they are in possession. Both Sweet and Darcy. have been employed I for some i t i m e by the . Leonard & Slate highway construction com pany. Cyrus and Brock plan to devote most of their time to farming and have leased the John Brock farm of 1170 acres near Providence. They will . also han die other lands, according to plans. . . &lr. and Mrs. Ernest Cannon of Portland were in Scio this week, having been in Lebanon and - Mil) 1 City on business and pleasure y Albert! Davis was reDorted Im proved at a Salem hospital, where his leg injury of 19 months ago is still under treatment. Fearlieller Rites Held on Wednesday GATES! Graveside funeral service was held May 3 for Wil liam Feaifheller who died April 29 at the Veterans hospital in Portland. 1 Mr. Fearhelle'r lived in Gates for several years but the last two years he had lived in Idaho FallsJ Emma Jobst Fearheller; one son, Edward, and relatives in Iowa California! and Idaho. Burial; was in the Fairview cemetery; near Gates. He was 49 years old and a world war veteran. THC UTTlC HOUSC WITH TMC K HITS Continuous from 1 P. M. How Playing! Two Top Hits! jf. S SMITH I Charles COBURN y ! EDKUKD GOULDIHG H Co-Featare! i 1 liumohrev f i - Bog-art "Ths 4- n 'i Ilallera ' I Falcca' Mary Astor Sidney Greens treet Tut XOUSC ThT H.Tt )ILT' Continuous from 1 P. JUL Ilow Showing! A Howl of Hilarity! Co-Feature! The Blocked ' tTrair ilt. I TCa TYLER r--' tZ3 STEELE K & H ? W: !!';''' Al Canity "' Jf-- Big Musical -Starts Toddy At Cavitoh, The stars are all here! ' The gals are all here! : The songs are all here! The laughs are. all here! . Where? Why, to "The Gang's All Here,", the bHUiant new technicol or musical triumph which starts today at the Capitol theatre. Noted for its sensational musi cal entertainments, '"20th, Century- bx has put everything in this new romance-song-comedy fiesta, and the result is a hit that future screen musicals will be measured by. toiarrea - in va -proaucuon are Alice '.Fjsfyej Carmen - Miranda, ' ra dio's man with "the 64 question, PhilBak'ef and the king of swing, Benny Goodman and his' famous Orchestra. Backing up this galaxy are many of the screen's most pop ular favorites. The story has been ingeniously ; fashioned " to provide each and every one of these play ers opportunities ' to appear at his peak." ', . f ;;: ; - J - -r-.M Alice Faye, singer in the famous club New Yorker, meets James El lison, a soldier spending his last night of leave. ; Pretending he has no friends in New York, Ellison wins Alice's sympathy , and they do the town" with Alice promis ing to meet him at the station the next day to say "good-bye." Ellison's wealthy father, Eugene allette, and Erward Everett Hor ton and Charlotte Greenwood, par ents of Ellison's fiancee, Sheila Ryan, throw a big farewell party for him,' but lie breaks away to meet Alice. " s Shipped overseas, Ellison con trives to keep both girls interested. When news comes that he is re turning home, his father . deter mines to give him a royal welcome, and hires the ientire club New Yorker cast, including Carmen Mi. randa and Phil Baker,' to put on a show at which admission will be by war bond purchase only." Re hearsing the show, Alice and Shei la, each unaware that the other is in love with Ellison, become fast friends. ' I Ellison's return brings every thing to a climax a climax that is at once hilarious, tuneful, roman tip and eye-filling. All ends well, but only after a series of riotous incidents, spectacular m u s i c a numbers, and a special Phil Baker Take-It-Or-Leave-It" program. Junior iWomen Elect Officers ... . , - . -'. WOODBURN I Evelyn Paul son was elected president of , the Junior ; Woman's club; ELeanore Woolley, fir s t vice-president; lone Schooler, second vice-presi dent; lone Renny secretary; Lil lian MacGonegal, treasurer; Ver- na Heer and Agnes Maricle, di rectors. The election was held Wednesday T V ; Delegates to the third district convention at St. Helens, May 28 will be Agnes - Maricle and Zoa Lowthian. IoneiRenn will repre sent the club in the Music week program. '; r ;' .-t The program was in charge o: Miss Zoa Lowthian, who gave talk on the "lure of French Can ada." The hostess, Lillian Mac Gonegal served refreshments, i. The club, which has been spon soring the Camp Fire Girls, voted a scnoiarsnip lor tne summer camp. "Vy'-J " i '-. A picnic, is planned for May 19 installation . of ithe new officers will .be held May 31. The senior Woman's club members and the Camp Fire Girls; are invited." Cannery !Orders New; Machinery SILVERTON " Approximate- ly $20,000 worth of new machin ery has been awaited at the ordered and Royal Canning company, plant In . Silverton. This was formerly known as the Sil verton Canning; company. ' In , the meantime the. other machinery , is being- relined and repaired and clean-up work is being done. Beans will be the first item canned " and approximately the same sized pack as put up last year, will be put up by the new owners, according to Percy PaL freyman,; cannery manager here. Mrs. Lucfle Verbeck has been re tained as office manager at the cannery. i . " Tents at CapitoU Grounds IfAOEcrTJO: Tv.-ntmninirrrs POODLES II AN NEF0RD If BDT Hall! Hall! The Gana's All Here!" ics are acclalminr tOth Century-Fox's umph, the musical that has everything and everybody and Is due . to open today at the Capitol theatre. Starred are Alice Faye, Carmen Miranda, Phil Baker, radio's man Goodman and his famous orchestra. . t v. 1, Fredrio March and Alexis Smith, the great American writer, Mark ner Bros. "The Adventures of Mark Twain," which is now showing at Warners Elsinore. : PowerfidNaPumtmeM 1 Drama Opens at Every one of us is waiting not Only to see our loved ones and just punishment which will who instigated its horrors and scarred face of a continent. I ? Columbia's powerfully dramatic film "None Shall Escape,' which opens today at the Grand, takes this news by the forelock and foreshadows the facts of things to come. - Here, in the most pro phetic picture of bur time, is Bow the. nan crimes will be avenged. This! moving -drama" sho ws the whole horrible tragedy of nazi brutality-fa n d demands punish ment. Every phase of it is shock ingly true, so terribly frank that it sears the screen 'with, its life shattering story. " It! shows the nazi swine who killed his own brother: the one who; let his own mother die in a nazi concentration camp; the Ratzi who; pillaged and brutalized 'his own people; how lash by lash they pillaged .their way across a conting ent;! and then, how step by step theyl are forced to "relive ' their crimes - dreadful act by dreadful act in a court bf justice in a. little village oh the German-Polish bor der, i ' - : t- , , " Played byji cast of. brilliant ac tors j and actresses,' !'Nonel Shall Escape" comes to the. screen with an impact no one will ever forget. Marsha, Hunt as Maria Pacier kowski, a village school-teacher, who lis one of the chief victims of nazi domination, gives a ' heart stopping performance of sheer ar tistry. ;i WhUe Henry Travers,' as Father Varecki,- the: village p'riest, ou idoes his usual 'sympathetic characterization with a perform ance which stamps him as one of the greatest players of this type of role the screen has ever seen. Still on the sympathetic side of the story is Richard Hale as Rabbi Le vin. In his performance, Hale un derstandingly projects a compos ite portrait of all the sufferings of the Jewish race. . 4 - Completing the program, is- "Slightly Dangerous," " a Musical comedy 'starring Leon "Errol and Anne Rooney. - ..- J'i CiiniSTIAUSEN CTwCUO !:C?3S v Till GREAT ESCALAMTES &yAlL BOND' AT MILLER'S I SEE THE CIRCUS FREE! - J Reserved Seats on , Sale Circus .Day at Red Cross Pharmacy after It a. m. And that's just how preview crit brilliant new technicolor trt- with the 164 question, ana Benny .4- V v -) with their screen; daughter, portray Twain, and his wife LI vy In War . ". j i T' Grand Today tensely for the news of war's end, :9- i come home, but for the retribution be meted out to the vicious men perpetrated its sadism across the !. ' ' i School Society Social JNetS;14 Oak Point School; society made $14.50 from sale of baskets at the basket social in the; school house Friday night. Plans were made for the graduation exercises May 25 when nine will graduate. The annual school picnic .will be held on the" school, grounds May 2$. I is' - IH0IIT.1AI1 OF ilLlEniCffll FOOTDAU! Tho thrUI of Frank , timo out a with the ; c i iron gioryl V- ' ; 1 And! tut f v. portrayal of Mark Twain, Fredric March found : it necessary . to steal a feW days in which to become re- acquainted ' with a chap . named Fredric March. For 12 weeks he saw very little of the March fellow, even in the mirror. He lost track of his per sonal interests, got behind in his reading v and lebrrespondencer and became sadly out of touch with his affairs. t'' H r ; u' X J. Ordinarily", March 'does' not sub scribe to the theory that an actor must Uve a character to bring, him to the sCTeeh convmcinglyrHo has an idea there's ' an . art called act ing which makes that unnecessary. i He. however, found 7 the late Samuel Clemens a most possessiye exception Jo the usual run of char acters. ' From tne tune ne startea "The Adventures of Mark Twain," there were only sleeping hours left for the real-life Fredric March. . 12 Hours by Pay . , ; " ; 'From six to six as the clock flies the 'daylight !. circuit, he was, not only required 'to , look like Mark' Twain but to "talk and ; think like him.- Two, often three hours in the Warner Bros, makeup depart ment each morning erased the last vestiges of Fredric March from his appearance, j Eight, frequently rune and sometimes ten, hours of reliv- ng Twai n's experiences and speaking in jTwain's voice, crowd ed March out of his thoughts. . In . view of the fact that he ap pears in .419 of the picture's 439 scenes and didn't have a day off while it was in production, this would have been monopolistic enough. But Twain even moved in on his home life. . When her husband started the characterization, Mrs. March sud denly discovered Twain. She bought a complete set of his works and read all of his biographies, When March came home in the evening he found the frau chuck ling over the witty writings of the man he'd been playing all - day. When the two children, Pene lope and Tony got into the collec tion and began asking him to read "Tom Sawyer," "Huckleberry Finn" and lj"The Prince and the Pauper" to them, March gave up the ' ghost of his own identity. There was nothing left for him but to be a full-time Mark Twain for "the duration." Colorado Woman Conies to Gates 4 GATES Mrs. Ray Salchen berger came last week for an in definite visit; with her - parents, Mr. and Mrs.; Arthur Blackburn. She expects to be joined by her husband in! a few days and they will make their home in this vicin ity. They have resided at Grand Junction, Colo., for the past year. Mrs. Sara Knapp entertained a few small friends at her home Thursday afternoon on the occa sion of the j tenth birthday of Jier son, MiltonilThe guests were Ken neth, ' Frances and Dorene Cram, and Sandra and Milton Knapp. , i : Doers Open 1:4S i ; Continuous - pocked, figging caroor Covanugh, who took to ao "over tho top" boys he's fed to arkf. mh sum VAHSiaORYAII UON AMES lUSSai WAOC BRUCE BJWAROS MCHAKT MAKTIN MmJ by aoiEfT miowsn.J VMM MMN M 't'l'v; WMPJ ;jt' V WW Fredric March Loses Identity In Ttvain Role Whni'rhf finished his '.movie i I " III -L .'I VV wrm u mnunnixu i :-: . sooBtr - Greenwood FU Gives Scholarship A To 4,H Clubs "OAK POINT Greenwood lo cal, Farmers Union, had its regu lar . meeting Tuesday, in Green wood, school house. . Mrs. Hugh Rogers acted as secretary. New members :: taken in were Peter Hansen and Mr.-and Mrs.' Floyd Garrison. ; The, local ' union will give a scholarship to 1. 4-H club member, r to. the club J summer school 5 at- Coryallis. ' The club member: will be selected by the teacher and," club ' leader, in . co operation with .-the county .agent.' . I Mrs."" Joe Rogers,' sr4 gave a re port on "the county meeting at Mt; Pisgah, ' and R. W. " Hogg gave a talk on 'postwar measures.' - Pear Crop Hily ' Growers Report HAYES VILLE The pear crop In this district looks very poor. In some orchards,- the. cherries ap pear" good, .but it Is still a little early to make a definite forecast. Onions,'." parsnips, ' beets and spinach grown for seed 'are in splendid conditoin. '. The j farmers have no ' spare time these j days. The drying, wind makes jit neces sary to keep cultivating and disc ing to retain as much moisture in the ground as possible, j , . FREDRIC MARCH -ALEXIS SMITH DONALD CRISP aian hau. C. AUtKV SMITH JOHN CAHMMNC Ml Km KNOT tAMAf ! . WMTtHAMOei.JOraiSTMOU)S ttct4 bf IIVINO HAFftt tf4met4 bf JESSE L IASKV .' i OMIT 3 More Days ! CONTINUOUS PREMIERE . . INSaOWMNTI . 1 Limited Advanced Prices During This Engagement Continuous Shows Daily j,- Front 11 AM. Conttnuoua From 1 ML STARTS TODAY EUGENE PAUETTt ruin rm fttmiwoaa EOWAXO EVEKETT MOHTOH ' TONY DE MARCO . -tj-y . Co-Feature cimkespot THRILLS! Share idventure with . the air heroes who -blast the sea tones open for canvoyst 'rr DitUibuttd byRKO RAOiOl ' And Serial, Capt. America Iftll SI I - , - I 1 I . in ..