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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1921)
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 12. 1921. PAGE THIRTEEN"- MOTION PICTURE NEWS Cut Out This Ad This Advertisement Presented at the Ticket Window of 1UVOII TODAY r FAMOl'S PI. AY MKKS SPlXT U'l I..YR 1I1.M SIXTXEf PAGES H "j 1 M ; I i j -.Ski ! y n i rw Price $100 to $730 Trice $23.00 to $300.00 O ! if5 If mi oil POLL $5.00 pec DURING AIR DAYS Any Phonograph in Our Store Up to $125 for 0 Cash an t A Month -Just think of this offer, less than 19c at Oay Your Choice of Brunswicks, Victrolas, Cheneys and Sonoras Complete Stock of Victor and Brunswick Records Economy Drug Phone 711 Pendleton, Oregon Co m IU ins S, if , J ? 5 JU III I ;; h Price $100 to $100 j0mm.- - 1. 'iji'"""'!! tin! 1 Price $23.01) to $1000 "The Heart of Maryland,'- nn elabo rate film version of the famous stage Play of the same name by Davit! lielas eo, will be shown at the Rivoli thea ter today. The screen version, on account of ; the greater scope of the film field, will 1 surpass the stage versui in many re I spwts and e.tial it In all others. Cath erine Culvert, the Vitstgraph star. ! heads an all-star cast in the role of j I Maryland Calvert. In her notable I company are Crane Wilbur as leading j man, Felix Krembs. William H'nlMer, !.lr., Pen lvon, Bernard Siegel, Henry , Hallam, Warner Uichmond, Marguer ;' Ite Sanchez and hundred!) of minor ! character.. The picture has heen nearly six months in the making. It has the ad vantage over the stage production of showing thrilling scenes in the great struggle between the North nnd the South that only could be reproduced on the screen. The entire company went south In order to get the proper scenery and "atmosphere for back ground and whs fortunate enough to enlist the sympathy and therefore the help of real southerners. The picture has been nuule on a tre- j mendous scale, and no expense or time was spared to make the locals and cos tumes exactly as fhey were during the Civil War, even to the extent of restor ing dilapidated buildings and getting old Confederate uniforms and cos tumes out of cedar chests. THE . Arcade Theatre nun hy ciiArtu:s r. iWGirrcs (International News Service Staff Correspondent.) LOS ANGELES, Oct. 12. Person identified with the activities of Spirit ualists In Southern California are au thority for the claim that following long efforts and a considerable ex pense motion pictures of materilized spirits have been produced here for the first time. According to the R.ev. Inez Wag ner, pastor of the People's Spiritualist Church of I.os Angeles; Mrs. Minnie Sayres, pastor of the Rpivitiiulist Church of Hevelation of Los Angeles; H. Heading, and Professor I). D. Heese, n psychological" Investigator, tho motion pictures wera successfully mado at the home'of J. B. Johnson, a Ix)s Angeles medium of forty years' experience. , Minister's Statement In a statement concerning the films the Hev. Inez Wagner said; "Motion plcturo films of material ized spirits were made after seven months of the hardest kind of work and eleven separate tests ut the home of Mr. Johnson. The photography was done by operators of a film concern located In Pasadena, "The films were produced! In a room of ordinary size In .daylight. Mr. Johnson, the medium, was seated out side of a cabinet. The room was care fully sealed on all sides, and after each one of the tests the seals were care fully examined to see that they re mained unbroken. "There" were about sixty spirits mn terilallzed In the films. These includ ed spirits of men, women und children. Besides Europeans and Americans, there was a spirit of a Hindu and those of a few American Indians. The visualized forms were shown In the films In most cases as rising upward from tho floor. Spirits Recognized "The motion pictures were shown In the People's Spiritualist Church and the Spiritualist Church of Revelation, and a number of Imh Angeles persolns recognized the figures shown on the screen as those In some Instances of friends or rclutlves who have passed on. "Among the spirits materilized was that of a Miss Miller, a nurse, who formerly resided In Ixis Angeles and who died abroad during the war. There was also a soldier lad from Lon don, "who It appears, had been nursed at one time by Miss Miller. "Tho spirits gave In audible voices tho time and place they passed away, and these were recorded by the pho tographers and flashed on the screen. In so fur as was possible a careful checking was made of the actual time of the deaths of the people who these materialized spirits professed to be, and they 'were found to correspond with the claims of the voices beyond the veil. "The films arc being copied and one set of them will he sent to the London Physic Society, especially for the per sual of Sir Oliver Lodge and other Hrltlsh Intellectual leaders interested In materializations.' Tuesday, October 11th or ; Wednesday, October 12th Together with war tax, lc for children, 2c for adults, will admit any man, woman or child FREE, to see r . Miracles of the Jungle ART ACORD in the WHITE HORSEMAN COMEDY "GOLFING" TTT. l o Jkivom Tuesday, October AManon's slight l n BM.PH SUH&AK. OFPter REGINALD DE KCVENiS ATTECPlKG- t 1 Superb Production. lCi.: 1- TV-! t Tf i t liiimnati-c principal xruscs TIa&nificent Sin6inA Ensemkle vjperaHc Orchestra ROBIN IS HOOD PRICES $1.10 $2.20 $2.78 I E WASHINOTOJJ, Oct. 12. (t. N. H.) One of three men Willlum Hoyce Thompson, Dr. David Jayno Hill und K. Lorlng Dresel who are today be ing considered by President Harding for appointment as ambassador to Germany is expected to tako over his post in lierlin by December I. Naming of the ambassador will mean the first fulfillment of the di plomatic post in Derlln since 1917, when Jam.'S W. Gerard was recalled. Colonel Thompson is a New York hanker and millionaire, and he was chairman of the Republican finance jommittee during the last campaign. 1'olitlcal le'iders are urging the presi lent to appoint him In recognition of his political service. Dr. Hill, a former Ambassador to Germany, and ' Dresel, the present American commissioner to llerlin, however, are very much In the run ning, due to their experience. Rivoif Today Children, 10c; AdulU, 35c; loget, 40cj Tax Included HALTl Stop a moment and consider what a treat is in store for you in the way of a motion picture. CATHERINE CALVERT And An AU-Star Cast in the Tom Terrisi Production "1 ur wuir A screen adaptation of the famous DAVID BELASCO stage play which is regarded as a photo-play classic- a film that will live for years, , x IMJMlTSh KARL GENSEL, Concert Organist COMEDY "DEAD LANGUAGE" j