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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1921)
1W' 4 a ncr ncirr DAILY EA3? OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON. SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 10, 1021. ' FOURTEEN FACE3 m. XJIX-' !!? '-gfl?-ti!!..tt-'-t -' -L. .'J . J-Li . UifZTl t Today ' " f,' Children, 5c Adults, 20c -. ". Regular Pastime Programs will be shown at the Arcade Theater in the future. TODAY ' MUTT & JEFF AL JENNINGS IN BOTH BARRELS JACK PERRIN IN EOND OF BLOOD I IUYOM THKATItB TODAY NOVFL F.XDIN'ti FOIt TIJK OLD XEST" well. I think of you and love you." Or, above nil, no home and see her. then this picture would give more real Joy than any other picture ever made." Ktinert Hughes, the most human writer for the screen, has written an unusual ending for "The Old Nest," a Reginald Rirker production for Ooldwvn of one or his stories, which will be shown at the Hivoli Theatre commencing today. Svs Sir. ;iiis:iC3 at the end of this appealing photoplay: "This has not been much of a picture for plot or action or mystery", out If it should per suade you cither to remember your mother piously. If she is deud, or,. If she lives, to send her a Ions love-letter or even a telegram saying "I am DR. LYNN K. BLAKESLEE Chronlo and Nervous Diseases an Dlneasea of Women. X-Ray ElectrW Therapeutics. Temple Bldg. Room 11 Phone 41 AI.TA SI X DAY AX D MONDAY ARTIST WAS DOI UTINU THOMAS As an lllustrntor who. , refuses to draw pictures for what she calls a perfectly absurd Rtory, Wanda Hiiw- ley Hives a delightful Impersonation In her current release. "A Kiss In Time." The tory which Incurs her contempt, deals with a rapid-fire woo ing which takes ploce in one day. When the author of the story learns that the illustrator has called his plot Impossible, he nets himself the task of convincing her that such a thing could happen by making It happen to her! Of course, he succeeds In winning his wager with himself and the girl to boot. T. Hoy Iiarnes handles this role with great skill. Walter Hiers also appears In the supporting; cast. "A Kls In Time" opens Sunday as the Alta Theatre. . V V I "jjSo?"! .si r . ; " i 1 I Florence Avery Rice ' Dramatic Sopi'ano Pupil of F. X. Arena Voice Placement Master Diction Studio Phone 408 Perkins Ave. 791-W AGO, SO IT ISO. I'D I.OXnox. Sept. 10 (t. N. s.- .v. y MART ALDEN in "THE OLD NEST fidverfreded by REGINALD EARKEf IUVOU TODAY Only a few weeks back the Association of Dunclng Masters pronouncod an edict against the shimmy. Now three hundred professors of dancing, In solemn conclave, have decided that the dance, artistically danced and tastefully subdued, la as proper In every sense of the word as the fox trot, the one stop, or the tango. The professors say the shimmy and similar dances are of ancient origin, the shimmy having been "shaken" at the Court of Henri Quatre. Wl w nofia ; agotis 31-2 ......... . .i ..... . 195.00 3 14 .............. ... - ...J175.00 3 . ;..;.;.C..,..wik66 Now is the Time to Buy. Sturgis & Storie GRAND OPENING II ET3 IF Jl uuuu ODAY Ai ADULTS 55c CHILDREN ...,25c LODGES SEATS ...... 75c NO RESERVED SEATS HENRI G. LEBEL ON THE GIANT WURLITZER. The mother whose children no longer seemed to want her A Remarkable Cast in "THE OLD NEST" Mary Alden Dwight Crittenden Cullen Landis Helen Chadwick Richard Tucker Louise Lovely Molly Malone Nick Cogley Lucille Ricksen Johnny Jones Buddy Messenger J. Park Jones Theodore Von Eltz Fanny Stockbridge Roland Rushton Lefty Flynn Robert De Vilbiss Marshall Ricksen Q UDDENLY they have all grown up and left her the ba O bies she used to tuck in bed at night. The old home is empty and silent. All have forgotten her. Her birthdays pass unnoticed. Each child has embarked on a drama of his own. Loves, ambi tions, temptations carry them away. There are moments of laughter and comedy, romance, adventure, tragedy. The story of their lives sweeps you along. Your Hfe your home your mother as they might have been or as they are. t4The Old Nest" will awaken deep in your heart memories of the mother to whom you ran with your childish troubles. Never before has the screen touched with such beauty and dra matic force a subject which finds an echo in the lives of every one of us. One of the most heart-gripping dramatic stories ever narrated. Two Great Writers and "THE OLD NEST" "One of the greatest of all stories because its theme is the greatest ot.all themes-r Life, and Life Now, here, yours, mine. All bitter and sweet, and sad and glad, and majestic and petty, and divine and pitiful! A film story of life!" Dr. Frank Crane "The Old Nest" is real and touching and almost incred ibly without an atom of false sentiment. I have seen it four times and cried each time. Alice Duer Miller i . i 58? Rupert Hughes' TO.; :tS: fmK . 0 DIRECTED BY ' V' WllliMW. I fc:. a-mM, &wk) . . " ' COMEDY SCENIC . ' . . I