Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924, August 21, 1918, Image 3

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    Page Thre.
AGAIN ;
Clara K. Young
Strikes a melodious cord, this time in-
"The Marionettes"
The story is of the trans
formation of the simple
country girl into a Pa
risian Butterfly. It has
been adapted from Pier
re Wolffs famous novel.
Today and Thurs.
J .; j 11
The O.R.E.G.O.N.
And the comedy ii's sure thar'
Fatty Arbuckle in "The Bright Lights"
ft' rn iiimuiiiiiiiiii i'
AT THE FLAYHOUSES TODAY
HEX
Pauline Fredrick
in
"Madame Jealousy"
. aad
Keystone Comedy
OREGON'
Clara Kimball Young
i'l "The Mailoncttea-' ,
VV and
Triangle Comedy
: Increasing Warehouse Facilities.
j. . Morrison boa commenced work
m tie new warehouse which will in
crease fhe warehouse facilities to a
peat extent. When completed Mr. Mor
rison will have storage capacity of near
ly 39,000 tons. He has also begun the
erecting of a warehouse at Couburg.
t Here From Portland.
' Mrs. Lillian Gibaon, formerly of this
city but who la now a traveling sales
lidy for a Portland firm, spent the
IF
week end at the borne of her eister,
Mrs. Artie &oecd.
Go to Newport.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sidwell and Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Sidwell left Saturday
for Newport on a week's vacation.
Leaves for Oregon City.
Vera Senseny left here Suday for
Oregon City, where she will be employed
at the woolen mills until the commenc
ing of school when she will return.
Sprlrgtleld Personals.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Clark left here
Monday for Portland, where they will
enjoy the national convention.
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Stephens, of
Marcola, spent Saturday in town on
.business.
Mrs. S- H. Danford, who has been
quite ill, threatened with appendicitis,
is reported as getting along nicely.
JafcV Salta to flush Kidneys
and neutralise Irritat-
ing acids. . ,':
A Sidney : and Bladder weakness restft
Iron uric add, eays a noted authority.
His kidneys filter this acid from the
Hood sod pass it on to the bladder, where
It often remaina to irritate and inflame,
tsosmg a burning, scalding sensation, or
Httm gup an Irritation at the neck of
lbs bladder, obliging yon to seek relief
two or three times during the night. The
sufferer is in constant dread, the water
passes sometimes with a scalding sensa
tion and ia very profueeagain, there is
difficulty in avoiding it.
Bladder weakness, most folks call It,
because they can't control urination.
While it is extremely annoying and some
times very painful, this is really one of
the most aimple ailments to overcome.
Oct about four ounces of Jad Salts from
your pharmacist and take a tablespoon
hi is a glass of water before breakfast,
emitinne this for two or three days. This
Q1 neutralise the adds in the urine so
It Bo longer ia a source of irritation to
Ike bladder and urinary organs which
tben act normally again.
Jad Salta is inexpensive, harmless and
b made from the acid of grapes and lem
ea jnlce, combined with lithia, and is ueed
by thousands of folks who are subject to
srinary disorders caused by uric add ir
ritation. Jad Salta is splendid for kld
js and causes no bid effects whatever.
Hers you have a pleasant .effervescent
litbia-water drink, which quickly relieves
bladder trouble,
! ' - (Paid adrartiaemenO .
ft
COMPETENT
Arn
CONTINUOUS M
ADMINISTRA- U
HUN.
Of your estate is as- i'3
Ell. J l k
-- .. mvii j iru name
this hsnlr aa
cutor or Trustee.
Individuals Hip. rp.
sign and too often prove J
utterly incompetent, but
our perpetual life and i
expert service insures
wj8e administration. We
will be glad to serve you
In any capacity of trust.
Write or call for our
booklet Wills and Dc
'cent of Property in
Oregon.
' The
First National Bank I
c-ujrene, ore.
.y Member
Federal Reserve f
System.
EUGENE
t Dark
Clara Kimball Young featured in the
S?lect Star Series release 'The Marion
ettes," to be shown here at the Oregon
theater today, stepped into the laundry
of her home recently to interview the
new "wash lady perious to that artist
of the washtub taking up her weekly
duties In the C K. Y. household.
Miss Young was somewhat startled, aa
she felt sure she had met Ifridget before
somewhere somehow at leaat her face
was strangely fn miliar-
"Haven't I seen you before some
where, Bridget? Queried MUs Young
hesitatingly.
"No mum blandly answered that In
dividual "vi have never met before,
mum, but you have seen my pictures,
mum. I am a, movie actress myself,
mum, same aa you, mum I want to
get a job aa actress in your company,
mum, and I am villin to start wit, you
aa your wash-lady, mum."
Miss Young was rather taken aback,
until it dawned upon her that the pre
vious day's mail had brought her a pic
ture of a buxom Irish woman in full
evening gown, full length gloves, shoes
with spats and a large picture hat posed
on the top of a large round head. On
the picture was written "ttridget Ann
Mcdillicudy, Actress."
The wash-lady" was none other.
Needless to say, Bridget Ann McGilli
cudy bad the entire center of the stage
of that laundry for the .-est of her stay
in MUs Young's household.
It is not often that a motion picture
producer can call to his aid (he serv
ices of a qceen and women of the
most exclusive nobility of England. Hut
David Wark Griffith, producer of the
famous "Birtl of a Nation," "Intoler
ance" and "Hearts of the World," Las
succeeded in accomplishing this in "The
Great Love," his first photoplay for
Art craft, which will be tthown at the
Eugene theater neit Thursday, Friday
and Saturday.
In this photoplay, Queen Alexandra
and many titled ladies art 'seen engaged
at their various duties in hospitals and
on their estates some scrubbing, some
mopping floors, otters ineaged in at
tending convalescent soldiers while
others do mental work, but which they
do not deem degrading, because it ia
Pauline Frederick
in .
"Madame Jealousy"
By GEORGE V. HOBART.
A unique theme grippingly presented.
Chester Conklin
in
"Soaked and Scorched."
Adds spice to the program
Today and Thursday
eREX
life
m rear i
nrrvasarv for them to do their bit in
order that the cause of world democracy
may triumph.
This is a remarkable photoplay and
the manager is preparing to handle rec
ord-breaking crowds at the premier of
"The Cret Love" at his playhouse. ,
rhone S. E. Stevens for piano tuning.
Try a Kugene Si.reial for a rood cigar.
State Fair. Salem, Oregon, Septenibel
23-2(4. Splendid exhibits, excellent; music,
high class entertainment and a suprri
racing card. For particulars write A. II
Lea, Secretary, Salem, Oregon.
Mon-Wed-Fri-aT.l
Peace.
The United States did not enter Into
this war unadvisedly, hastily, under'
stress of heat or passion. We took the'
step calmly, soberly, reluctantly, with a j
full sense of the awful responsibilities
involved, the sacrifices demanded, the !
magnitude of the task. j
Ircident Wilson did not advise In his
war message, nor did congress act in '
declaring a state of war between the
United States and Germany without
giving the most solemn consideration to
what the action meant. They knew it
meant the death of thouands of brave
Americans; they knew it meant buffer
ing and wounds and the disabling for life
of hundreds of thousands of our young
men. They counted to the fuU the hu-
man cost and the material cost.
Kvery development since has justified
and proved the wisdom and the impera
tive necessity of America's participa
tion. Every German success and every
German failure have shown how neces
sary to our own welfare and peace, how
neceasary to the safety and peace of the
world the defeat of Germany is. Every
foot of ground Germany has been forced
to give up, every foot of land she bss
seized, have demonstrated the impera
tive necessity of defeating that sinister,
intolerable thing called Germanism.
Germanism is 3,000 miles away. It
must never come any nearer. Let this j
war result in anything but the defeat)
of Germany, let her emerge with her :
power unbroken and her kultur still ;
dominant, and it is but a question of!
time nntil we alone will be fighting Ger- j
many instead of warring againat her
with our allies on our side.
Lincoln said that this country could i
not exist half slave and half free. All i
Americans now recognise that truth. ,
Events of last few years have shown ;
clearly that this world can not exist :
half free and half autocratic half
free people loving liberty and justice and ,
peace and half an autocracy seeking to;
dominate the world, caring nothing for j
liberty or justice and nothing for ho- j
manity and civilisation where they Inter-j
fere with its ambition. j
There is no peace for America ex-1
cept a just pnace, a peace that means '
a world fit for free people to live in. !
German idenls, German purposes, and
German practices are the antithesea of
American. The beliefs we love sndi
honor and uphold are contemptible to!
them; the objects for which they will to
death million of their own men and mil-
lions of their enemy are abhorrent to our ,
ideas of right snd justice: their metn- j
ods and practices in warfare are an
abomination and horror to us. j
The American who now advocates or,
wishes for peace, except a Just pesce. ,
is either woefully misguided or a traitor
to America's future snd America's past, j
to nil things American the things
which hsve made our country great and
free, which hundreds of thonsands of
Americans have died to maintain, and
f.r which Americana now are dying In;
France. I
There can be no peace with honor or i
ifetv to ourselves or to posterity, ex- i
cept a just peace, and there can and will
be no other peace. Work for peace ac
complishes n thing but the hampering of
our effort, the delay of the real peace,
and a greater toll of death of Amerlca'a
fighting men. Onr duty ie to war for
. Inst and righteous peace; to work or
speak for any otberpaeto treason.
ft
With the same cast as "THE BIRTH OF A NATION" and "THE HEARTS OF THE WORLD."
resents
Cast Includes:
Lillian Gish
George Fawcett
Robert Harron
George Siegmann
Cast Includes:
Henry Walthall
Maxfield Stanley
Rosemary Theby
Gloria Hope
It's D. W. Griffith's latest and considered by critics, who have
seen it at pre-release viewings, to be his greatest picture.
D. V. Griffith spent eighteen months on the war fields of
France securing scenes of a magnitude hitherto unknown in pic
tures, and another six months in California completing the
story.
The result is a photodrama so stupendous that words are in
adequate of description, and a story as sweet as a lover's first
kiss, as intimate as a doughboy's letter to his sweetheart, as won
derful as the sunrise on the sea, as beautiful as a baby's laugh.
The actual battle scenes were taken in front line trenches,
under the auspices of the English and French governments.
frIIRABILE DiCTU
The Cast Also Includes:
Queen Alexandria, The Princess of Monaca, The Countess of Massereno.
Lady John Lavery, The Countess of Droghda.
Lady Diana Manners, Daughter of the Duke of Rutland, known as the
most famous beauty in England. ''
Miss Elizabeth Asquitb, daughter of the former prime minister of England.
THREE BIG DAYS
Thursday, Friday
and Saturday
August 22, 23. and 24
Mgemie TDneatire
10-Piece Symphony Orchestra
ADMISSION
Matinee 25c
Evening. Lower Floor 50c
Balcony 25c ;'-.
Children lOe
TO OUR PATRONS
I have viewed this picture, as I have "Hearts of the World", both r beyond, any pw? ef description, Ypo simply must sea them, they are
worth alir.sst er.y s,-.?-.-:f!n a &t r, ........ A, , MeDOKALD, .
This pJotHTe'la poon to be efawn In forUaM, gpattlo and. Pan FfsnaiHPQ.