ncs its DAIL? EAST 0RE00NIAN, FENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 0, 1021. FOURTEEN PAGES . . . . ALTA "Today OilMrra 10c A.li.lt 35c 4U i. S,ltl.k 1 -rex !.., i Eugene O'Brien IX MOMY IS LIFE Y. OIITII LIVING Itn (.oorgc Weston' 'Tlif Open IXior," rc, ,y MiUHnu in Tltr Satnnlay Kveiiina; IViot." A Miff of jinir nriglibor ami mine. Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle i uin: srvnw ami (illil. i.ovi; fat m x? sir.i; thim;: ask (I'ATTV) VKIUIKI.K R (Fatty At buckle smashes tho olJ saying that "nobody loves n f.it man," in his miv Faramount starr ing vehicle, "The Traveling Sales man." which comes to the Arcade Theatre Sunday. In this picture, which is adapted fr. m .Times Forbes' noted i!ay. the i famous ci)!!iiJ,;in is thp central figure 1 of love romance ami weds the girl in (he story, after ho hail saved her prop 1 erty fr m the schemes of the unscrup ; ulcus villains. 1 It is interesting to note that in "The Hound-Up" the f.rst I'aramount pie tare in which (ho comedian starred, he 1 Played the part of the fat sheriff. In mat picture, the object of his affection J tefiise .1 ' to lake his love-making ser ' h.oslv (out Kattv ends the nirtnre with . the statement: "Oh. what's the use? Nobody loves a fat man,' Hetty Ross Clark is the girl in the new picture and Frank Holland. Wil ton Taylor. Lucille Ward, Jim Hluok wcll, Kk'hard Wayne and other favor ites are also In the cast. Joseph lien jhrey handled the megaphone and Karl Brown was the cameraman. IVWTIMK M X 1AY M MOXIVW THE BUTCHER BOY SUN. MON. Chtldren, 5c Adults, 20c Arcade Today Children, 10c Adult., 35c Vhm a wan cf faa woods tovej-li ';, ff 2 Youth, beauty, love! t And rapturous music, Mealing away ail ' thought of tomorrow. But tomorrow . came, Elsie FEFgllSON 1 . .fce-e- 'SI it ufJf- It How could she Uive bis Victor Uaoul i magnificent brute, but nevertheless an untutored son of the (Meat north woods, as silent and as furious as the storm lashed trees iu whoe shelter he mado his home? Yvonne Fontaine, daunhter of the fur exporter and the senior partner of Victor, returned from Paris with this n her mind. She had studied nt the 'kst continental schools and was a urixe to which the Rallants of three continents aspired. He realized thi'" when he came into St. Itrnace to see her. With a strange fury he rushed out into the night with murder in his heart. He returned an hour later to finu Fontaine near death. Someone attacked Fontaine and Victor's mighty fists were streaked with blood. Was he guilty? Then why did the Rirl go alone into the forest to head off the posse that pursued him and why did she risk her life to save him? Those questions are to be answered here Sunday when "The Magnificent Unite' is show n with Frank Mayo in the role of Victor Kaoul. The production is a Universal screen offering. It was written by Malcolm Stuart fioylan. Hubert Thornhy di reeled it in thp north woods and ni I'niversal City. An excellent cast sup j ports MfO. THE ADOPTED SON. CotJGrt UT3 UNCLE ! I NEED $500,000,000 ) UP ON BALTIC CQASI Staff i . V ) Al.TA SI XHAY M MONDAY WTIUAM D.TAYLORS PRODUCTION Sacred and Profane Love" CtQammounlQidure ' 4? 1te, - t j w 1 COMEDY MEET MY HUSBAND ..13 WAXDA IIWYI.KY HI KASI S IX ( I.HX COMI'DY HIT K situation that has occurred to thousands of married couples is un folded in "The Hoo That Jazz Rnilt," the new Kealart picture which opens at the Alta Theatre Sunday. This com edy treats of domestic discord in I Clever, entertaining: manner that car ries unusual appeal and accomplishes the showman's desire of ('sending 'em away with a laugh." We see a young couple starting out on their married life, poor, hustling, and thoroughly happv. The wife is a splendid little home-maker and a real help-mate. Then the husband gets a fine position with a huge salary, and then move from their modes! suburban bungaJow to a luxurious city apart ment. The husband lavishes money upon his wife. Insists on servants, and asks only that the wife shall live up to his new position. The result of her en forced idleness and his petting is that in a few years the wife has grown in dolent, stout, dull and quite unattrac tive. The husband begins to awake to the fact that his wife is no longer ihs ideal. f ALTA a SUNDAY MONDAY Children, 10c Adults, 35c 7 P A" r 'J IT- fli v" H t ' ' ' V ' . V . . r " v 9 . . -.' ; v - ' . ' ' . . :.'; fc. "' N" i : 'Z HOXOLl'LF, Hawaii, Aug. 6. (I. -V. S.l Complete abandonment of the famous Kalaupapa Settlement, Island of Molokai aa a leprosarium may be effected within the next few years in view of the remarkable results that ire being obtained from the use of a new chaulmoogra oil specific, created he Tr Arthur T. Tenn iiroi.lf.nt tj he University of Hawaij, in the treat ment of leprosy. No more patients are being sent to the Kalaupapa Settlement because of i the success of the specific, all new leases being treated at the Kalihi Hos ipital, Honolulu, from which patients I are often released as cured in less than ja year. It ha been estimated that within two yca from 85 to 75 per cent of the patients at Kalaupapa will have been released as cured. As a number of patients will undoubtedly not desire to leave Molokai, they .may be allowed to take up homesteads i there. I If present plans materialize, the 450 or 5o0 newspapermen from forty ! countries w ho are corning to Honolu lu in October to attend the sessions of the I'ress Congress of the AVoi Id. will be taken on a tour of inspection of the seltlementand given an opportunity to see what a really modern and effi cient Institution it is. So Impressed were members of the X'rM Hawaiian legislature with the settlement that they granted substantial additional appropriations for It and increased the allowance to and gave other con cessions to the patlciLls. Instead of being Tlownhearted, as they once were, when hoie for relief soemed unthinkable, the Kalaupapa patients have taken a new lease on life and have f he utmost faith In the new specific, looking forward to the I day when they will be cured and al I lowed to return to their homes. WHEW, AIN'T IT HOT. r.r nkwtox c. fahku i nf ernaiional Xew s Service ' Correspondent.) LUXDOX, Aug. 6. Comic opera states have sprung up along the Hal tic shores, tho result of the partition ing of the old Russian Kmpire, accord Ing to a special correspondent of tho London Observer. Each of the three baby nations Ksthonia. Lativiu and. Lithuania is twelllng with national pride. Having gained recognition from several big powers they are putting on all the uirs of big nations, much after the manner of some Central American republics. All three are spending large sums of money developing "national" operas, because France supports one. Jewel ler designers have been called in to de sign decorations for various military orders suddenly springing up. Barely a dozen trains are operated daily in the three states, over n few hundred miles of track, yet each of the new-horn nations has its ivan way Minister." with scores of subordi nates. All three have Cabinets mod eled along the lines of those adminis tering the. affairs of the biggest Eu ropean powers, with hosts of function aries. Kvery other person traveling the railwaysNis a "diplomat." Kven the "White Russian" Government, repre senting Russian refugees scattered all over Europe, has its staff of diplo mats, press bureaus and employes of all sorts. Their expenses are paid by contributions from wealthy adherents of the former Csar, who escaped the Folsheviks, and by the issue of innu merable varieties of postage stamps. None of these stamps would carry a letter or postcard a mile in any coHn try in the world, but they are highly sought after by stamp collectors, hence the governmental revenue. One specimen alone is now quoted at five dollars apiece by London stamp col lectors. An American business man travel ing the IJaltic nations must suffer end less inconveniem esfrom customs and I Rssport officials at every frontier. .t so with the "diplomats." Equip ped with papers from the Lithuanian. Latvian, Esthnnian, or White Russian C.overnment, they pass customs of ficials without any question, and it is generally understood that much of the smuggling- along the Baltic oes on in this manner. Arcade Sun. and Mon CHILDREN 10c A.i-.;: ADULTS 35c, 1 m SOVIET OFFICIAL SAYS it-6 ' r --rf- - VtjVX'v;; - " Qictury ' f'.j JESSE C LASXY P-ESINTS 1 1 "OSCOS (FATTY) 'i 3V ARKANOCMCNT WITH JOSEPH M. SCHCWCK) ' :icV4 PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE AMERICAN LEGION SELECTS STATUE TO COMMEMORATE DEATHS IN CENTRALIA RIOTS AMERICUS, (Ja., Aug., C The Am erican Legion has found tho bit of sculpture which its national memorial committee declares accomplishes its fcoim of bloody Armistice lay fighting between heroes of the World War and I. AV W. A large replica of the origi nal will be placed In a prominent pub- highest aim. Within a short time this; lie place at Centi alia. Smaller statues work of a Georgia artist will be stand- of the work of art are being w idely ins at Centralia, Wash., which was the distributed. The sculptor Is I-:. M. Vliiticsney, of Americas, who produced the model af ter two years work;' . . 1 " Th" f gat e Is that of u hefmeted in fantryman In Iie-ioy' 't-uiirfHiient- -and with a rifle with bayonet fixed In hl hand. In t'oe other liund he holds aloft n band grenade. He i ripping through wire rntaiiglemeiits. From his neck hanits his gas mask ready for use The s'rain nnd excitement of the Ad vance are shown vividly In tho drawn f:'c ::n.i open mouth. WASH1XUTOX, Aug. 6. (I. X. S ) The suae department has received a coiiimuni.'auon trcm soviet foreign Minister Tchitcherin. denying report' of widespread riots and revolts throughout Russia. He stated while the famine in rrriiny parts of Russia is unions, the .Moscow government has the situation well In hand. Cooking up a Good Time for Everybody That's what Wanda Hawlty and a splendid cast of rlttyen are doinyr t the Alta theater. "THE HOUSE THAT JAZZ BUILT" i having a liouse-warming. Wanda Hawley presides, and the way he trows fat and thin again before your very cyt in a scream ! And wait till you we what happens up at the mountain cror but w e're not shouting it frn the housetop rven from the housetop of "THE HOUSE THAT JAZZ BUILT." INTERNATIONAL ntWi. XXSARM - - -1 IN rr" 7 &'L' C ' U. S. HAITI RULE IS UNDER ATTACK WASH1XCTOX, Aug. 6 It". 1'.) Oswald Villard. a publisher and Hor ace Knowies, former minister to Santo Domingo, charge that Haitian occupa tion by the American troops is a "blot on the navy" appeared before tho special senate committee Investi gating the American occupation of Haiti and San Domingo. Villard and Knowies charge there was no Haitian trouble before the United States went In, but afterwards the American troops committed inexcusable mur ders. Naval officers have been called to defend their administration. Font ciih.dkkx iH KNi:n NKW YORK, Aug. . (V. P.) Four children were burned to death when a fire swept a tenement house Two other persons were fatally burn ed, and five sustained lesser Injuries. POPUI.AM OR CINrilATIONt'' TrTiliJr? A Pr saratlen. cf COMPCtiVD COPAIBA -nd CUS.E15 AT YOUR OPUGG1ST LADIES When Irregular or supPren-'cd iihi Triumph I'llls. Safe and dependa ib In all proper eases. Not sold at llni;t Stores. !) not experiment with for "Keller' and particulars, It'n free. Address: National Medical Institute, iithfjis; save disappointment. Write Milwaukee, Win. 'AtaslBaauttfidCbrviijncric It is Changing Buying Habits The Paige 6-66 model is a truly nreat motor err b?caue it rrprescnts 3 frrcat economic achievement. It means maxi rnum motoring qualities at minimum cost. Tt means sane, sensible investment value instead of cxtrav agance. Tnerciore it has changed, and will continue to change, buying habits In the fine car ficlJ of America. You have but to look about you fcr the evidence. The boulevards tell the story. For more than. 25 of our total sates have replaced cars costing from enc to three thousand dollars mpre than the Paige. In short, the line car buyer ha grown weary of paying excess fare." lie now cuts his investment in half and ,r've the undisputsd champion of road and track, 1 h;:ik ic over. , rAicc-otriToiT r.'orcin. car co.. dhtkcit. Mkh&n linttacturr of Motor Cart ami llxtor Tru.it 0. E. II0J,1)MAN AUTO CO. Phone 4G DR. LYNN K. B LAKES LEE I'hrouie anI Nerviioa I ilstttiaen iintf Disease, of Women. X-Hay Electrif Therapeutic. Temple Bidg. Room it Then Hi KEW rrJCZS OF rAIGE CAR3 ftfrn Car riitit. 44 s rm. lourlnt . Illit' tnnl. I..44, .-rn. Rnilw . It 't Ardmoif. ti.44. 4-. Spnrl Cr . Ijkwood. . 7-Paim. (i.urhi j , JS'S Larchmont II, 4Mi. 5-Pneit. , 2",S bartons, 3-Pim. Kud,ir . iiis Chffd Car ; renpfl. 4-44. 4-Pa.nAr . . Kd4H. -44. ( PuhiiIO . . . . J" .mie,fc.w, ft.Panftr , t'r St inn. 7-PieaHM . . . W.t4 I InmntiK-. -., 7- n4r . . 0M All Pritet I . a. . factory. Tx.?tra