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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1920)
"FIGS EIGHT DAILY EAST OREQ0HIA5, PE5SDLETCN, OSEOOKf, THURSDAY 1SVJB1HNG, DKCilMBKR 2.. 1920. " TWELVE PACES AILTA TODAY Children. 10c Adults, 35c 'HRC ABE ; TODAY i. ' 1 1 t 1'f lit A Ol.IVR THOMAS HAS I-'IXK DRAMATIC ltOl.1 v f , MK..-f.i t;VA'';' - 01ITB THOMAS in "FOOTLIGHTS AND SHADOWS fcy Bradley King -Direction John W. Noble Scen&noR. CeciLSmith ! With his own key he admitted himself fo her apartment and .though a stranger she announced him as a relative. Then the complications began. PATHE NEWS H """'llillilliiiiiMillitilliilliiiliilUUilUUI'UUUIIIIUIUIiUllllllluuillill PASTIME TODAY . Children Sc Adults 20c HarryT. Morey IN "The Flaming Clue" A Story of Love, Adventure, Mystery, Thrills COMEDY HANK MANN V. THE BASHFUL BLACKSMITH riU .. , uUli.huaiuiatluillliliUUHllmlHIIIIMIHUUlUIIWUiiiiliWrHIIMlliHlliliuiiiiiiniiuiiiiiiiiiiuiiHiiiiiiiuuiuiiiiHi! Bl The New PAIGE 99 66 SPORT MODEL IS HERE. 7 Two and fifty miles an hour in 75 yards. Easy Terms on 2nd Hand Cars. . . ' 0. L HOLDMAN AUTO CO. "Footlights and i-shadows," Olive Thomas' newest Selr.nick Picture, sets a new mark of achievement for both the star apd producer.' For Miss Thomas la offers opportunities lor emotional and dramatic acting great- j er than any of her previous photoplays j and for the producer It presents possl-1 hllitles In the line of elaborate stag-1 njt and artistic effects that-very Iw., f any, screen attractions have brought ; forth. The element of mystery and bus- i pease is well developed in tins new play, which 1eal -with the strange ad ventures of Gloria Pawn, a beautiful actress 'Who Is the tar in the "Mid ¬ night Revue." Her stranire expert- enres heKin when, In the middle of the nlRht, a man admits himself to her apartment with his own key. He then j then collapses with brain fever, and Gloria, to avoid scandal, Riiounoeg him as a distant relative. Then follows a series of complication -which make the solution of the plot of the most in tcase interest. John W. Noble directed the picture and apparently gave much thought to the details. Other fawires, which in clude a strong supporting cast, go to make it a picture of rare excellence. PASTTMR TOIAY IT.AYF.RS SIIOIVX BY FIJ IX 'T1TE FILMING XVE" Kow well do yau know movlnir pic ture players? In "The Flaming Clue," which will he nhown at the rastime theatre today,-- several of the actors are introduced iy their feet. You see feet hurrying along the ground or over bridges. Other scenes are photo- i srraphed In the dark, with a blase of a lime kiln. Again I be spectator sees the light of a flash lamp worming its way along the corridor of an under ground passage. -. ! tl is a tory of mystery and one that will enable the movie fan to test his Ability at identifying hi favorite play ers by a part of the anatomy. Harry T. Morey has the role of a detective in search of a band of counterfeiters who have a plant forty feet below the sur-1 face of the ground surrounding a lime kiln. Mr. Morey makes an excellent detective. He Is of the type that be-1 come successful in thl profession, a ; man -willing to fight his way to sue-1 cess and face danger without a quiver, j Van Rensselaer Dey, athonof many j detective stories, and -who through ; many years of association with the po-1 lice is able to give stories a touch of ! realism. , AltCADE TODAY Announcement of the divorce of Mary pickford, the divorce and remar riage of Alice Joyce, troubles between Charlie Chaplin and his bride, Mildred Harris Chaplin, recollections of the di vorce of Douglas Fairbanks, and other stories of matrimonial difficulties nf fecflng the stars of filmdrom, haj again started the discussion as to why actors and actresses do not make suc cessful life mates. The conclusion us ually is that it Is the fault of the In dividuals, that the lives they live make people jof the speaking and screen stage lax regarding matrimonial obli gations. Matt Moore, one of the four Moore brothers who have won for them- i selves an enviable place on the screen, j offers the theory that rather than lax ness it is top high idealism that causes i the failures of marriages among the ! actors and actresses of the screen. While Matt Moore has never married lie has been in a good position to ob serve the things which lead to separa tion for all of his three brothers whfl have been married to screen stars and (ach one of them is once more a bach elor due to the divorce courts. Owen Moore was the husband of Mary Pick-i ford, Tom Moore wa the husband of i Alice Joyce and Joe Moore was the husband of Grace Canard. "Don't Ever Marry" His Advice Matt Moore advanced his theory in discussing the latest production in whieh he appears under the direction of Marshall Keilan, "Don't Ever Marry," which will be the attraction at the Arcade theatre, beginning today and naturally the talk turned to the unsuccessful marriages of his brothers. "i may sound queer," said Mr. Moore 'but I really haven't aword f censure for any one of my brothers or any one of my ex-sisters-in-law. That they could not continue to be happy is the fault of the profession and not due to any individual short comings. Act resses and actors have married outside the profession and have become ideal husbands and wives. In the profes sion, however, the chances for happi ness are small, for the simple reason that the attraction usually conies through the acting of the Individual and therefore it is a false attraction. i FIRE ON STEAMER IS EXTIfffiUISHED AT SEA NEW ORLEANS, Doc. t-fX. P.) Fire onithe American steamer Culno was extinguished yesterday Just after the vessel arot into the smith-west n;LtM of the Biouth of the Mississippi river, a wireless stated. AVaa Afire In fiulf NEW ORLKANK, Dee. 2. (IT. P.) The American steamship Calno, bound for Liverpool from Port Arthur, Texas, with a cargo of cotton, is afire in the Gulf of AI-Kico, a wlreleso to the naval station here said. The wireless asked that tugs be sent to meet the ship, which is headed full speed for the mouth of the Mississippi river. mum CHILDREN 10c ADULTS 35c A whole, horrible, sorrowful week commencing tomorrow iviarsn eua " ir. n Director of "Thjs River's End," "Daddy Long Legs," "In Old Kentucky," and fclher, famous success es, presents the second picture from his own studios , - A Matrimonial Mirthquake i t " : entitled ' ' " ' , (fi) FM 9 "If r i ' - - . - T71 i From E(kar Franklin ;s lliunoroii.s Storv.- . Adapted to the Screen by Marion Fairfax. ( , Photographed by Henry Cronjager and David Kesson. Lighting effects by Howard Ewing. Tech : nical Director, Ben Carre. ' Oh, it is a hor-ri-ble tale, it'll make your face all turn pale. A feller loves a gal an' she loves he but her dad won't have him in the familee. So the fe let an' the gal they git right smart an' her pa kicks the feller in you know the part an anoth er gal an feller gits all mixed in an' another female with a reputashun black as sin. . .Oh, it is a horrible tale, a horrible tale is it. Prospective Brides and Bridegrooms especially urged to see this one. Right this way Miss er, I mean Mrs." 1 XIX TF7 i Wesley Freckles" Barry as the bellhop, Marjorie Daw as the bride and Matt Moore as' the groom with a brilliant caet of. supporting players. ' , ' ' BRAY PICTOGRAPH. . . ' , - - i 722 (Cottonwood St. . f f W; do repairing. rhone 46