j.TVT-'S tr " r.pT v rT?ri "' y '""'I TVa ' '"I"- OtvrO t. -idld FOXJltTESJf FAGlJ ' " ' DAILY EAST OREQONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 2, 1920. TAGS EIGHT gj-l. J-.1. i JliLJUJ' .tl'.'l J !' I.JU' ' IIMMIMIIIIIIIItllttttMf""' " llllllllllHlllllllllllilllilHlt AT THE THEATRES Sunday - Mpn. ALTA. TODAY Children 15c Adults 55c 8 f AliTAlW 8i;lAV AMI MONDAY MAI llK K TOOIM A It ' MAhTKlt OK MOTION rHTl'RK MKIiOnnAMA - Just an prominent nut horn tend to bmniM Identified with certain styles of writing, o tne leaders In the field of motion 'picture producing are pe- dallau In definite type of screen dram, Maurice Tourneur Is an lllus t ration. He la the matter of film melodrama. His pictures are inevit ably parked with exciting action. Moreover, Tourneur picture have "atmosphere." Thin was never more clearly demonstrated than In 'The White Circle" hi latest picture, which Will be shown at the Arcade Thea tre next Sunday and Monday. If you have read Stevenson" "The Pavilion on the IJnks," from which the photo play waa adapted, you know that the story depends for Its effect largely upon tha air of brooding mystery and violence thnt Stevenson waa able to convey In his wrttlnir. Mr. Tourneur has translated this to the screen, and tha thrilling story of love and art ven ture on tha lonely Scottish sand dunes Uvea vlvadly In pictures. Tha cast of "The White Circle" in cludes Spottlswoode Aitken, Wesley Harry. Janice Wilson, and Jack Gll- lert. ltv.ro. It Is a Paramount Artcraft plc- AtTA SI XDAV AX1 MONDAY FRIKMtl.-KKS AMIDST to ltlI.; IKM'SR CATS Did yon ever leave your home town eomewhere In America to seek your fortune with. the mllllrm nf lh m. jtropolu? Then, when you arrived there, did you have a hard time to obtain employment of any kind and on more than one occasion did you have to ask your landlady to .wait a few weeks for the room rent? And did you suffer lonesomeness the kind that gnaws at the heart and causes In somnia and melancholia? If you are one of the thousands who have had such experiences you will doubtless find much interest in the. picture version tif "89 Hast," " the Rachel CYothera play In which Con stance Hinney is appearing; thia week at the Alta Theatre. Miss Crnthers has got at the heart of the experience which an ambitious girl has upon com ing to New York, without money and friends, seeking without success em ployment that Is to her liking, and fin ally having to doVork which she con siders much beneath her. Miss Croth cr's heroine, however, comes out of her THOMAS H INCE presents nOUGLAS k IacLEAN JJORIS MAY slaSe let's Be Fashionable jigammoiutflrtaxiftCiitfun experiences all the purer and stronger as well as wiser. Constance Einney was Ideally cast for the heroine, Penelope Penn, be cause she herself won success in New York without "pull" and by sheer grit and forca of personality. ARCADE Sunday - Monday Adults, 35c j CpammounJprTcmft Qklure Children, 10c If" f-1 l . i I H aresnts fti "1Mb White Cir . The fateful mark of an unknown vengeance! Friends and bitter foes at bay in a lonely house on a moor. Wrong and jealousy, youth and love and the mystery-thrill of a brave adventure. With the shriek of storm, the roar of flames, the crash of waves on a dangerous coast! A Soul-Stlrriiur Fllmlzation of "The Pavilion on the TJnkH," Hie World" Famous Itotnaiioe by Robert Louis Stevenson. ft A Vl! " . COMEDr ART SHORTVS LONG SUIT BULL MOOSE DRIFT TO OR HAS EFFECT ON OREGON OUTCOME Stand Taken by Distinguished Leaders Who Followed Roosevelt in 1912 Regarded as Significant Move. BY WARD A. IRVINE ' PpHTUAND, Oct S. The appeal of 15 Progressives of national reputa tion for the followers of Roosevelt to revere the Great American's memory by voting for Cos and progress will be the signal for a countrywide drift of Progressives and independent voters to the Cox-Roosevelt standard. Cox leaders in Portland believe. The Na tionally-known Progressives who Wed nesday declared for Cox are : Harold 1a Xckes, Illinois member of the Pro gressive national committee in 1912 and supporter of Hughes in 1916; Mcthew Hale of Massachusetts, chair man of the Progressive national com mittee in 1918; Francis J. Heney, Progressive candidate for United States Senator from California in 191 S; John M. Parker, of Louisiana, vice-presidential nominee in 1916 of the Pro gressive who nominated Roosevelt to head the ticket; Judge Ben B. Lindsay of Denver: Ellis IX Saulsbury, chair man of the Indiana state committee; Roscoe fertich, former secretary of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League; HV P. Holman, Progressive National Com mitteeman from Missouri; Antoinette Funk of Chicago; Kdwin M. Lee, chair man of the Indiana State Republican Committee in 1910 and the Progres sive Committee In 1912; A. W. And ridge, delegate from Ohio to the Pro gressive conventions of 1912 and 1916; George c. Rublee of New Hampshire, W. H. Nichols, Progressive National Committeemen from Vermont, and Charles W. Reynolds of Covington, Kentucky. - "Undoubtedly the action of the dis tinguished Progressives of National reputation in coming out for Cox and Roosevelt will stimulate the already noticeable drift of Progressives from Harding to the Progressive nominees" Is the statement of a prominent Port land progressive who desired his r.me withheld. "The effect will be felt not only in Oregon, but throughout the country. The prominence of these leaders will ' crystalize progressive thought and create a leadership to carry an Increased following of Pro gressives into the Cox-Roosevelt sup port. Already a large number of Progressives, particularly in Multnom ah county have quietly declared for Cox and Roosevelt. They say that Cox Is the only nominee they can sup port and vote In accordance, with their progressive Ideals." . The appeal sent out by the Progres sive leaders stated: '"Today the inde pendent voter is the hope of our nation and the protector of civilization. Let those who revere the memory of Roosevelt remember particularly that In the time when a democratic ad ministration under Wilson was adopt ing and writing Into the law the domestic policies of Theodore Roose velt. Senator Harding and combating those policies as revolutionary and socialistic, denouncing the author as Children, 15c ' Adults, 55c Iarcaede i TODAY I Adults . .'..31c Children .. 9c jj .... lc 5 TED.-?, c-d-5r-ev-ft Sunday Monday I Tax Ac Tax $ Total ...35c Total ...10c f Zane Grey's TRIUMPHANT NOVEL I "The Last of The Duanes . Children, 5c AdulU, 20c Harry Carey IN WITH William Farnum ill w ' 5 "The Square Shooter" A typical Harry Carey picture, with gunmen, dance hall, girls and all that went to make up the West in early days. Universal Comedy ; t.I ' A little supper after the sHowl That was the manager's invitation to Penlope, minister's daughter,' ' new to ; the ' chorus. The manager, vulgar and insinuating, wished to "get better acquaint- ' ed." Penlope thought the invitation was purely by way of business, so she gladly accepted. Though suppers with this man ordinarily spelt Ruin, Penlope . wasn't . harmed! Her very innocence aaved her. The manager, too, developed human and decent qualities. DID reflect over h!s invitation ; DID finally recall it; - DID say to Penlope: "You'd better go straig.it home after the show."- So Penlope, believing that press of business induced him to change his mind, ' tripped safely home to "39 East."- You'll adore CONSTANCE BINNEY as Penlope. PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE INTERNATIONAL NEWS .i i TS'lXUIHia-'t f i(ri t-rtj 1 11 VAUDEVILLE STANLEY OVERTON Novelty Cartoonist , GOODHUE & OLIVER ' Singing, Dancing and Banjo . : r4MMMIH MMM MM'" mMMt HMIMHj nrn iarnn Rurt ..' - . . it ia .. M,riit(. o n .1 nmirrHAlva dutv to energetically and enthusiastically sup port Governor James M. Cot." That the appeal has Impressed Ore- nwtmMtvM 1. unnuestloned. The announcement for Cox of the promin ent Bull Moosers waa a lavorue lopit In Portland. laat nlglit. 104 EXTH1 GOIiF TOURNEY NEW ypRK, Oct. 1, (A. P.)- Miss Alexa Stirling of Atlanta, title holder, will meet Mrs. C. FV Fox, of Huntington Valley, In tha medal round of 18 holes Monday at Cleveland In the national women's golf champion ship tournament, according to pairings announced last night. There are 101 entrants. ' ' . ' ! prince shyly Accepted tham. ' IPr'noo Aeoepta Present 'SYDNEY, Autralla, Oct. 1. (A. P.) Six hundred Sydney shop girls gave the Prince of Wales' pair of paja mas when he waa here recently. The pajamas were . made In the shop where the' girls are employed. The NORTH DAKOTA AND YA KENTUCKY INCREASE -' IN CENSUS FIGURES PORTLANb. Oct. 1. (A. P.) Stale populations announced by the census bureau today Include; ' ' ...' Kentucky, .4U.oU, Increase 12, lOg or B.S per cent. . . . : North Dakota,. 45,7I, lnoreaae ll.l 74 or 11.9'per cent. 1 ff'fV I: ! ' ATTENTION! On account of the acts which play the Alta Sunday not being able to arrive before -5 P. M., the first show with vaudeville will be at 6:30 P. M. Pictures only will be shown . in the afternoon starting at 2 P. M. : Admission, Afternoon 35c and 10c, Admission, Nights. . . 55c and 15c ;; '."j