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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1922)
DAILY EAST OESGOSIAJT, PENDLETON. OREGON, SATUBDAY EVENING, MARCH 18, 1922. PAGE NINE 41,000 Feet of Lumber" in One Tree KNIGHT ! i.. ! lUVOU SIXDAY AXp MONDAY ROOF-TOiN OF MAY YOKK. SEEX IX -liKNT TtEE At a Low New Price of But they are not. The compauy might have been taken to New York; they yould have built a tremendous platform to stage the scenes a hun dred or more but they did neither. Director Howard Hbrgln and the art director and others evolved the plan of locating the set on the roofs of the big studio buildings in Hbll.vwtood. The rooftop of Xew Tork; Wheu Vu " thfin in Rnt r. - wlUr ,Xld's n-w Paramount p-.cture which is to De rn at the Kivoll theatre Sun day, you'll swear they are the rt-al thin. TWELVE PAGES WILLYS- Vte V 4- , ( ft JTtA' T CUT THIS OUT! Bring it to the ARCADE THEATRE Tuesday Night, March 21st, Wednesday Mght, ' March 22nd It will admit one adult or one child free ' -'to the Big Sereal - STANLEY IN AFRICA. Not Good in the Afternoons. ' ' " - Ant Sunday Monday ADULTS 25c f r !;. MARY MILES MINTER ; .. In ,. ' tillie .;'4.-v:VM'' ' the novel "and play, "Tillie, a Mennonite Maid." . v. t - ' ir i .. When this British Columbia fir log was cut up at Kobe, Japan, it yielded 41,000 feet of lumber. It was nine feet in diameter, japan now looks to British Columbia for much ot its lumber. They built up some plaster brick walls. , used the regular skylights, chimney pots, otc, hoisted up ' sun arcs and other lights, erected unru sers'and took the company to the roofs. The effect was perfect and no body knows how many thousand tf dollars were saved by this judicious move. And, you, Mr. and Mrs. Playgoer, will never believe it when you see the picture on the screen. That is, you wouldn't if you hadn't been told by the press agent who Invariably sticks to the truth and nothing- but the truth.' ' Chief Supervisor Frank B. Woods, personally supervised his productions which is adapted by Elmer Kice from tho story by Mann Uage and Iiola Forrester Page. Lila Lee is the lead ing woman. play from the well-known' novel. VTillie. a Mennonite Maid." by Helen H. Martin, and the play by Frank Howo. Jr. Frank Urson directed with supervision by Elmer Harris. Noah Been", villain of . the "Sea Wolf," Dinty." "Call of the North," and a score of other famous plays, is tight-fisted "Jake Gets' while Alan Forrest plays the male lead. : WOODWARD TOLL GATE (Continued from Page T.) ARCADE Sl'XDAY AXD MONDAY SHOULD ONE ALWAYS -HOXOU TUY FATHER?" "Honor Thy Father that the day may be long. . And yet If "thy father" is not worth of honor, if his cruelty revolts you. is it a sin to turn against him and cleave to the man who means happiness? 'This is the problem that faced the heroine In "Tillie," a new Mary Miles Mlntcr Realart starring vehicle which open at the Arcade Theatre for two days beginning Sunday. "And its solu tion forms tho dramatic climax of i story which is said to1 blend in an un usual ' manner the. entertainment ele ments of pathos, drama and humor. ' Alice Eytori adapted the photo. ; "" f ' NEWS WEEKLY '" , " -' , V COMEDY ' iiiliifiay CHILDREN 10c " ' ADULTS 35c LOGES 50c Gensel in concert on the Giant Wurlitzer Sunday afternoon at 2:30 R M. ' : J .. Jesse L LasJttw- ..pf ! i r, v m m , m m ) b- ;mm m , 1 I I irA.UJl'il-) tr-s V . . V Mill .. .. v I 1 1 U tifV ib7'',f ' t his humble studio be- ; I l'.'; fJ-.tJ-M cause he couldn't pay so he ' ""'Uf' "A sV , T-" VK "squatted' in a mansion when !2Siy -,' 'ijy.' '?.7i , he found the folks away. fUoULib.Jsii(ii Then-sh-h-hGlrls!- Cops - t ; r " 'l 1 ' n I) I Vile villainy foiled by love! J '': i Vk I tfi?iialt rSrt'sH" l;8 ' And fun enough to make you sVxl 1 ' rihk ''"Ka'Fl'll ki your landlord! ' '' iy t . ; I?rJf A picture with every laugh-, I' V aj . is "' " wWT- 0ri; I lng convenience known to man! f ' : f-f f V 'fy 9L?3((1 Cast Includca LILA LEE ' 1 tif ) lfcr--- "1 ; ; : . " LITERARY DIGEST ' ' . .- . . AESOP'S FABLES ; Mack Sennett Coraedy "MADE IN THE' IUTCHEN" Ixk4 in Hills. . .' Mr. Woodward lost his life in the hills where so many years of his life were spent. "He was an odd character," ' his granddaughter said in speaking of him, "and he Insisted on living by himself at the homestead and trap ping during a winter ubout a quar ter of a century ego. He made, a trip ' to Elgin for supplies, taking with him a little pack sled to bring back his stores with him. ' "He got to Elgin safely, but he never returned homo. A broken snow shoe was found within a mile and one -half of the house, but the sled and my grandfather never wore found again. Evidently . he was frozen to death." Some Refuse payment. Many- incidents arfout 1 experiences that members of the family had in collecting toll were related .byvMIss Itouanzoln, . "A great many people . resented having to pay tolls," she suld 'Some : of them thought that the company had no right to charge tolls, even as county courts since have held that opinion. There was a rule which mado it possible to collect three times the original fee from dodger i who jgot past the gate without making the legal payment, and many times these dodgers were followed to Elgin where collckloi. was made. v , "Bulla were many times threaten ed but nono were ver brought. ' One Incident which I have heard my mother tell many; times had to do with a fire which swept over the UIuo ' Mountains 38 years ago. A freighter with a ' big tank full of kerosene stopped at the ranch for the night. He left his wagon near the house. ' One wheel on the wagon was broken down. During the night the firs swept down tho hillside. There was some lively work to get .that wagon ttway from the house out into it lie open. Both the wagon and ibulldings were saved." - The length of the toll road proper is 25 miles. Miss Itouanzoln says. All but about three miles of the road is I in Union county. Two or three miles jof road which Join the toll road pro. por on this side is rough, and some persons have complained to the road company, but the company has noth ing t0 do with It. v . , D. J. Woodward, father of Mrs Kouunzoin of Milton, carao to Ore gon in 1869 with his parents who had lived in Iowa. . The road is usually open for five months of the year: June, July, Au gust, September and October.. (Seventeen hundred and forty-one persons are reported to have met their deaths by automobiles and trucks in the state of New York during tho past year. '. . " . The Russian Soviet is reported as having purchased for cash' a large supply of pnei'.matlo and solid tires from a French manufacturer. y AUTO DEALERS FIND. , NEW USE FOR STEEP S. MAIN STREET HILL To the pedestrian who must furniBh his own power for tra vel, the hill on HoJth Main Hi et may sometimes got into lie category of things unpopu- lar. but there are many uses to which it is put during tho course of the year, During one of the longest winters which this section of the West has ever known, the hill has been covered with Ice and snow for many weeks and the kids have secured great en- joyment from the sport of coast lng. . ' ' - ' Now that the balmy days of spring have come, still another use has been found for' that hill. The grade is comparatively steep, but it Is paved all the day up, and auto dealers who want to test the climbing qualities of new cars simply put them up South Main street. The car has to show Its qualities In going to the top, and not much time is required. . , And It's lots of fun to .coast down! This car of refinement and quality is now within the means of those who have considered such a car heyend their hopes It combines, in addition to the advantages of other fine cars, all of the advantages of the Knight type sleeve-valve motor. This Willys-Knight motor actually improves grows more powerful with use a quality which distin guishes it from all other motors. V' It requires no adjustments. It is' more flexible and it always oper ates quietly. It is more powerful than any other motor of equal size, and because of this, tbi Willys -Knight car cor. sumes less gasoline than any other car of equal power and weight These important advantages added to the beauty, economy, rr-ad comfort and extraordinary long life of the Willys-Knight car explain the enthusiasm of more than 50,000 owners. Touring reduced $1 50; now $1 375. Roadster reduced $1 25 s now $1 350 Coupe reduced $320; now $1875. Sedan reduced $300; now $2095 ... Toledo- The Willys-Knight Motor Improves With Use DR. S. L. KENNARD Distributor Opposite Hotel Pendleton.." New, Lowered Prices 03 1 on al I S 5 and 75 haynes cars' Effective January 1, 1922 Haynes 55 Six-Cylinder Models 121-inch wheel base 55 five -passenger Touring......... ; $1595 r 55 two -passenger Roadster 1645 55 five -passenger Sedan ........ 2595 " 55 three - passenger Coupelet....' 2295 Haynes 75 Six-Cylinder Models 132-inch wheel base 75 seven -passenger Touring .V;,..V.$2395 75 four-passenger, four-door Touristeri....... 2395 75 two-passenger Special Speedster 2595 75 five-passenger Brougham .....i ..... , 3095 75 seven -passenger Sedan .3395.. 75 seven -passenger Suburban- ;M 3395 Standard Haynes 75 Six-Cylinder Models 132-inch wheel base ' 75 seven-passenger Touring $2295 75 four-passenger, four-door Tourister 2295 75 two-passenger Special Speedster . 2495 75 five-passenger Brougham 2995 f 75 seven-passenger Sedan 3295 75 seven-passenger Suburban 3295 , ; All prices quottd art I o. b. factory ... HAYNES SALES AND SERVICE CO. MOTOR INN GARAGE 722 Cottonwood St. . Phone 868 Pendleton, Oregon , .1 ;..'.)