The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, February 28, 1925, Image 15

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    , tnTiay Evening. February 28, 1925
EUGENE O.UARD
Fae vivo
-jjfiXWE ELLIOTT, ONETIME JTAR, GOES BACKSTAGE
(patching Debut of her Dream Self, she says: "It is my Hope That I Shall Live
Again m her."
L
s' l-o ...
Yeiterday, today and tomorrow In life of Maxine Elliott. Left, beautiful star In her own youthful
prime; lower center, Miss Elhot today; rijjht, Jean Robertson, Miss Emotts actress niece, upon whom
her hopes are centered
By GENE COI1X
(NEA. Service Writer) "
VEW YORK, Feb. 28. Yesterday
A jt TasMaxine Elliott, greatest
(flee beauty of her day.
Today it is Maxiue KHiott, who
nyi she would meet old age with
matrmily pcare and quiet; who
pleads to bo erased from the picture
until it be time for an obituary no
tice to fliark the fall of the final cur
tain, but who furtively tip-toes back
ftage to play puppet-master to the
ambitions and destinies of those she
lores.
Aud tomorrow? Maxine KHiott
bow herself off stage in the .manner
of the "grand dame" and begs you
to inert her niece, the beautiful .lean
Kobe rt son, 18, of London, who makes
htr stage debut in March.
"It is my hope that I shall live
gain in her," is the dramatic admis
sion of the regal Max' i no, who would
recapture by proxy the curtain culls
of yesteryear.
"Jean is everything. But who am
I, now? She is beauty and freshness
and brilliance. In her little hands
are the most wonderful possibilities.''
She sighs happily, as might a girl
who has long studied herself in a
mirror and found the reflection beau
tiful. The Ktory pieced together from
theatrical talk and the hesitant re
marks of the former star begins with.
Maxine Elliott casually visiting her
own theater here to see "Dancing
Mothers." The role of the young
daughter so interested her that she
appealed in person to Edgar Selwyn,
the producer, that her niece might
have a chance at the part. Quietly
the young girl, daughter of the tal
ented Gertrude Elliott, pupil of Max
ine, was given a rehearsal. The re
ports brought Selwyn himself hurry
ing to London to direct her.
'I came to America to rest," Miss
Elliott relates. "But Jean is ever in
my thoughts, and when I saw that
role, I knew it would just suit her.
But, please. I am out of the pic
ture. I would have quiet; the quiet
of complete retirement. There is
nothing that would induce me again
to enter the limelight. No for me
it will be rest "and quiet. Now, my
niece Jean-p"
There is dramatic contrast in the
stage debuts of Maxine Elliott and
the girl in whom she "would live
again."
Out of the little seacoast town of
Rockland, Me., come Jessie Dermot
for such is the family name of
Maxine Elliott. She was the daugh
ter of Tom Dermot, seafaring man
and captain of a sailing ship that
made its way from New York to
Sun Francisco and Oakland in the
"old days." Often he would visit the
Orient, the south seas and strange
ports and Jessie grew up on the
seas.
But hers was Puritan stock where
the theater was mentioned as utter
evil. And while theatrical ambitions
were growiug, Jessie was placed in
convent. But she didn't stay long.
At about IS she was on Broadway
with ambition, beauty . and a canny
wisdom to aid her.
She knew she was beautiful and
that beauty was a stage door passport-
and she dropped in on the vet
eran producer, E. S. Willard. When
a clerk asked for her name she
quickly invented one: "Maxine El
liott." It sounded "stagey" she
thought and it got her entree.
She got small parts where posing
in lovely clothes was about all that
was needed. Then she learned that
study and work were required if she
were to do anything above "glorify
ing the American girl." She entered
a company with Hose Coghlau and
trained in the west with the veteran
Frawley. Meauwhile her beauty was
attracting international attention.
She soon was world-famous, both as
beauty and actress.
She is 52 now and the stage has
not seen her for many a year. She
still is beautiful and queenly.
But she would step into the back
ground to moke room for the young
beauty of today; she would sit back
quietly and "live again" in the art
of one she loves. a
thtit plies down iialway Bay. Natur
ally, accommodation are not what
they would ho on a big veiseL
Downstairs a big. youug womuii
with tortoise shell glatses is kicking
up a row,
She thinks the accommodntiout are
very bad. She want t know where
the state rooms Hre.
She "'lessen" If this were an
American ship there would be pleuty
of state rooms.
N"W if there is one thing the
Irish, who haven't left Ireland, can't
itnud, it is for any lriti m:iu or wo
man who Ims lived in the I n i ted
S:ates for u while to come back aud
brak aud wunk.
This prt!t-uliir woman lived In
Conncmara until several years ag.
Then she moved to the I'm ted
States and now, with a little money
in hank, she has come back to her
native land.
The ciipinin knew all this. So in
a tretitonnu voice:
"Who's i hat raising a row about
state rooms down there? And she.
jiiftt a couple of years ago, making her
first trip barefooted on a turf boat
from Lonnemara:
After that there was a silence be
low you could cut with a knife.
Gloria Kwanson, who recently nn-
uexed to herself a French nobleman
as hushand, is working in France at
film of the story of "Madame Sans
(Jene' the washerwomnn whose hus
band became a great French general
and who herself had a big drag with
Napoleon.
So as to make the players feel
what they are ploying, the director
has usually had an orchestra of six
pieces to piny for them.
But tha other day at the polace of
Fontninebleau the musieiaus failed to
show up.
The scene they were going to shoot
that day was a big soiree in the Gal
lery 1 lenry Second.
It was necessory to have music, so
a neighborhood band of kids was
hired.
They insisted their repertoire was
very limited but were assured it was
quit all right. At the moment when
Napoleon was to march in the band
struck up a funny little air which
meant nothing to the American actors
but Mr. Drain, who was playing Na
opleon, collapsed with laghter. For
the words to the music, literally tran
slated, meant:
"Ah la la, what a mug, what a phiz.
Ah la la, what a mug he has"'
WATTE
CAPTAIN A.E.DINQLE-
C J(t) l4 fr S?fNlAf0'; INC lti'GH' ptStDVCO
V &LtAit9 N.I A. fRVtCt INC.
W7k rW
1 nec
BRADY WILLING TO CLEAN UP
BUT MR. BELASCO HOLDS OUT
New York Authorities Still Mlllllnq Around With Littla Progress
in Crusade for Purifying State
w v rat
r
r1
beautiful actresaes In new Broadway ahows: left,
"Cape Smoke"; rlflht; Mildred MacLeod, In
i Dove" mnmonfaril.v deserted the side-
walk and its walkers for a cafe and
I gambling house in Mexico, the result
: hem? a rip-snorting melodrama
! played with great gusto by Ilolhrook
j Hlinn. Miss Judith Anderson is the
, lovely lily nmong the snares. You
know that because she wears a blue
ribbon while the second cousins of
the "Indies of the evening" wear
badges of red.
Tscknikowsky originated the mu
sic for "Xatja." an operetta with
a royal Russian background. This is
by for the most tuneful play in town.
Further, it is proof that comedy and
music may he combined in higldv
delightful entertainment, unaided by
indecent line of speech or nudity.
The lure of tho stage is the plot
of "Tangletoes" with the somewhat
familiar situation of a Broadway dan
cer returning to her beloved calling
after an unsuccessful attempt at do
If you are coming to New York for
a hit or mirth and melody give eye
and ear to these:
"Lady. Be (Jood," '
Bnot." "Big Hoy."
"Artists and Models,
and Eva."
It "sp .Marie
Nntja," "Kid
"The Follies,"
and "Topsy
Ruth Shepley
Tangletoes."
Sure, th' English Were
Gotting Licked
American Patriotic Film Is Big
Hit in Dublin
II SERVICE PUSH
WASHINGTON, Feb. 2S. Rear
Admiral William S. Sims, retired,
haa vigorously opposed before the
house aircraft committee the creation
of a unified air service as urged by
Brigadier General Mitchell, assistant
army air chief.
The admiral endorsed the building
up of a powerful air force by the
United Stales, however, and declared
the airplane "will piny a predominant
part" in the next war.
Couple- the airplane with the sub
marine, the admiral said, and tin en
emy fleet cannot exist "unless steam
ing a zig-zug course at full speed."
"If a fleot comes up against ours
with airplane carriers and can com
innnd the air, I don't see how wo cnu
win." he added, "if there is anything
I know about in the navy it is gun
fire, and after making nil calculations
it Is a piece of good luck if an anti
aircraft gunner hits an airplane.
"You'll fire the guns, of course,
and the noise will relieve the ten
sion." In opposing a unified air service.
Admiral Sims snid that the navy
needed naval officers familiar with
navy tactics, operating its aircraft.
"The air force from the shore out."
he said, "must bo commanded by the
navy, and I think with the submarine
and aircraft properly developed, not
necessarily excessively, we csn pro
tect ourselves from an enemy coming
ncross the sea."
Asked for his opinion of the re
rent report of the special navy
hoard, which held that the battleship
remains the first line of defense, the
admiral replied:
"I wasn't much lmprsed with the
report. The day after It was issued,
the secretnry of war Issued a state
ment heartily approving it, but. the
opinion of n secretary on a highly
technical matter like this doesn't
amount to much.
"The findings of the board are just
what a lot of people thought they
would be."
ALDEX DRAKE, formerly a sail-' 'Kver ibing peim possible!
or, grown soft and flabby through a felt so certain of---'
life of idle eap( ships aboard the; Drake bad gmie below fr a mo
clipper OroiKes na "hr.y," under the nicnt. Mary lnia.nl Stevens' striintie.
command of choky loiiKhter in (lie dark: his bund
JAKE STEVENS, whose enmity lie j gripped lr and squeezed it a it la
incurs beennsp of a mutual love for I on (he rail; and he spoke close to her
MARY MANNING, daughter of the : ear:
owner, who is a passenger. At l'apei "Mary girl, jou'vp been having
Town. SteviMis is superseded as cap- dreams nsaitvl Nothing's going to
tain by Prnke, whose lawyers have happen to ymt. If it does, cry out.
purchased th Orontes during its1
cruise. In his upw role of master,,
Drake becomes cold and dignified in!
the presence of Mary. Stevens, now
chief mate, finds time to follow his
suit. One night the speeding ship
runs into a heavy gale. A man is
swept overboard. Tony and 'Erb.
two members of the crew, are heard
exchanging profane threats.
(Continued)
"Man overboard" 'she screamed.
She ran to the nearest lifebuoy, east
it loose, and flung it astern, finding
Drake at her aide surprisingly, lie
had seen the man fall. Hn was man
enough to risk his ship by bringing
her around to the sea. Rut in that
instant the gale struck down with
ull its belated fury, and the big clip
pot Jay over until hor rails were
buried deep under thundering tons
of water that swept away forever all
chance of tho unlucky sailor astern.
"Better go below, iMaryl" DrakeJ
unmeti in ner ear. xie ran nit to
help the helmsman; but she did not
go. She gripped tho rail and gazed
enthused at the grandeur of the
storm.
Men struggled aft to haul the main
yards square.
They hauled sullenly, but haul they
must. As they trooped on to the
poop to pass storm gaskets around
the spanker and gafflopsait. they
muttered about the man who was
gonV.
"Who wuz it?"
"Young Bawston! Bloody shyme!"
"Gawd bli'me! Murdered, V wos!"
bleated 'Erb Oats. "This Old Man
wouldn't stop fer nobody! Not pore
sailors, any'ow! I bet 'e M 'eave to
fer that bloody Judy, though!"
"Argli! I kecck you face in, if you
no shut up!" snarled Tony at "Erb's
side. Mary heard 'Erb cry out in
terror as they merged in the black
ness oft. She shuddered violently.
Always something to strengthen that
ominous feeling of impending dis
aster. The men finished their work, nnd
(lie watch below was dismissed. 'Erb
loudly and fearfully demanded of the
mate that he be permitted to change
his quarters.
"That Tony sez VII corpse me,
strike me dead!" cried 'Erb.
"Then corpse him first, you poor
rat!" growled Jake Stevens in utter
disgust with the man. 'Erb went
into the swirling blackness of the
mnindeck sobbing.
"Don't you want to go below.
Mary?" Drake asked' her, suddenly
appearing nil dripping and breathless
at her side. He had worked as hard
ns any man.
"I wouldn't leave the deck for
worlds!" she cried, nnd clung to the
rail ns to a life preserver.
Presently out of the g'oom forward
on uproar burst. Tho mnte heard It.
Mary heard it and looked apprehen
sively nt him. Their eyes met, nnd
each seemed to say:
" !Erb's done it !"
Stevens dashed down the ladder nnd
fought his way forward. The out
cry was terrific. It rose above the
shriek of the wind and the cataclys
mic nhlses of the battling ship. S-oon
it stopped. Stevens returned to the
poop, nnd there was n grim rjmile
on his storm lashed fare.
"The devil's got into this ship!" he
said. "All hands have gone crusty. "
"It It ??" Mary asked, not daring
to give her fear a name.
"Old Chips, that quiet old dog.
chucked out the I oetor from their
room for being dirty!" chuckled
Stevens. "Might have picked a bet
ter time. Doctor says he'll sharpen
up a cleaver nnd go back. Hell!"
"He might, too!" cried Mary.
With the fieklenevs f the Indian
Ocean, the gaie passed and left the
xv : v
U ,,..1''
Iffl
Tho Mate Rolled Away on tha
Flood
big ship swinging lazily through glas
sy seas under brazen skies.
The Doctor shifted his worldly ef
fects into the galley, afraid for his
life. Chips had put the fear of the
Lord Into the dirty cook, and the
cook believed the lurid threat of the
adze which Chips bad hurled at him.
The Doctor spent much time work
ing over the cutting nnd chopping
edges of a great Freuch poultry
knife, bigger than anything Ike Sniut
ly hod. And to the galley came
'Erb, seeking comfort and protec
tion from the last one in the ship to
afford it.
"We kin VI p each other. Doctor,"
argued 'Erb. "I give yuh iny word
no Dago's goin' to hopcu by tripes
an tromple on 'em!'
"Did Tony say 'e'd do that?" de
manded the Doctor.
'"E did-. Wot's more, e said 'e'd
come arter you, next," said the craf
ty 'Erb.
"Let 'em all come!" shattered the
Doctor, bending over his steel. "Fust
come- fust served! Cfiips sez he'll
skin me wiv n spolieshnve. You slop
'ere, m'son. We'll show 'em,"
The Orontes wallowed north he
fore the faintest, of nirs. Every dizzy
dip she took into the swells ahead.
was followed by n drenching, stendy
downpour of brino from back ropes
and chain hobstays like nothing so
much as n tropica I rain squall. Rain
squalls thrashed at heri too.
The very air was heavy, though
blue as Mary's eyes. The sea had a
glassy glare, like the ye of a dead
fish. Her book woh the silliest thing
over printed, she suddenly discov
ered. Drake suddenly appeared in the
doorway and she slipped her hand
under his arm, aud stepped out on
deck again with him.
"Oh, Alden, I'm so glad you've
come up," she whispered. "Every
thing spems so-so Oh, funny!" she
said with a little stumbling rush of
words. lie pnlted her hand on his
mi uud smilvd down at her. I
"It's the heavy weather, .Mary," he!
said. "I th.uk all hamU will feel!
belter when whatever is coming hax
been nnd gone." I
"1 know. Alden. I know. Rut I j
have never Mt ipiite th same over
powering air of something about to I
happen. I have made several voy-j
ages before, and never Oh!" '
"Hush!" he suoiheil her. A terrific'
dm hail burM out from some piint j
lieoi by on the muiml.-rk ; and it did
not seem human. Ih- Ird her to the I
bucket rail, Konhmg her with quiet '
assman.-es. Th.-y irod together at j
the rod.. The kneeling men, sent
lered nil across the wi.le ,-pnr-e ,.f
plan i deck, bad stopped nrk an I re- ,
ntainetl in grotesque nltttud.-i listen-1
ing l.i Ihe Iiij that came from th I
hen coops. Here fl man held his
slimed holystone halfway i. bis j
HlumhlT while he turned tip hi shirt ;
sleeve, liver there a man h:ol both i
hands hearing heavily upon his stone.!
his bn.-k ar.-hed, his fn.-o upturned1
varamly. Young Mr. Adonis t.aucd
on Ih point of hurling a bucketful)
of water along the planks. Ait ap I
prentice who bad been working in n
corner under the fiferail with a small
holystone called a prayerbook, and
had been helping the toil by singing.
"1 loly, holv, holy !" peered out
throtich a tangle of rope gear with
his mouth open on the last. "Holy!"
And still the niup's genr gave forth
its own tremendous thunder.
"What is it. Mr. Stevens?" Drake
called impatiently.
"That's what I'm goin to see!"
snapped Joke. He stalked towards;
tho hen coop, scowling blackly. And !
tho poultry squawked ami fought, the
feathers flew, and the men wondered.
"Some'at ain't right aboard this
bloody ship!" muttered one.
Tho ship started one of her heavy
rolling spells ns Jake Stevens reach
ed the hen coop nnd knelt to peer in
side. Tho chickens seemed to go
mnd. A man on his knees tumbled
over nnd capsized o bucket of water
over his next neighbor, who cursed
him and beat him over the head with
his holystone. The wuter slopped
from Mr. Adams' bucket, and filled
his senbonts. He cursed, too. And
nt the moment when Mr. Stevens
raked out from the hen coop a half-
shredded rat its big as a ship's cat,
which hail invaded, the coop for e-gs
and met a Waterloo of beaks, n
smooth, shining, harmless looking
swell rolled up from nowhere and
toppled over tho topgallant rail t
starboard.
In a second the mafndeek wne
flood'-d, aud men, buckets, scrubbers,
anil stoii"s were hurled pell-mell
across to port, all to crash together
in one Urniwoil. strangled heap as the
ship rolle.l. Mr. Stevens hung on to
the luirs of the coop to preserve hi
footing. The sea lifted the coop,
Ihe lathings burst ; the mate roiled
away on the flood with the door of
Ihe coop in his hands: and in a mo
input the glassy swell to leeward
ere dotted with high riding, sipiawk
i Mir, doomed fowls thut roe and fell
and Happed w ings nnd paged with
open hef.k in a new found liherty
that meant a watery death.
"Dmninit! What did you do that
for, ou rltimsy fool!" shouted Drnk
nt Steven. Nothing in th world
could hiie more concisely expressed
the strain undor 'which even the enp
tain lived jut then, Mary started In
alarm, taring up at I 'rake's whitu
face. He li.tr) seemed so human, so
plrnsmtly different to her n moment
ago. She bad warmed to him: had
nestled to him; had begun to expert
that b meant to thaw out of hn
duty ice. Now she shuddered aznin,
and glanced swiftly nt the mnte, fear
fill, shivery.
(To be continued) '
Medicine :euc"o1
tt rid your system of Catarrh or Deaf
ness caused by Catarrh.
Sole by druggists for cwr 40 ytstrs
F.I. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio
Valley Printing Co.
Ovor U. 5. Nnt'l. Bank.
WEDDING AND BUSINESS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMERCIAL AND SOCIAL
PRINTING
FOR QUICK SERVICE CALL 470
Hit :-i . !. : - .;- ' :.! ..I : . il.'-i't.. .
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V. 'i'.'lr '!, :! i
HAVE YOU EVER
seen a Magic
Rug soar above
the city bearing a
Thief and a Prin
cess? Have you ever
seen a white horse
with wings fly thru
the clouds?
BELL THEATRE
Springfield
Sunday, March 1st.
Time Requirement
Is Struck out of
Harbors Measure
"iag eoiie.v
" rwvji
I uniforms of brilliant red in order that
it mov not be confused with the police
play jury which hn adopted
! form of blue with brass buttons.
color could be more apropriatP than
scarlet for the theater as it is imw
conducted.
nni
No
,M York, Feb. ls. The off-
comedy ,,f Hill Hradv. Al
Dive l..i: ...,
,1Tr FnnKht. the' editor of the
Hit 'M nn'' I'roseeutor
1 "fl efl5.Il(- i,,., f,t,ep iirotind
Mk M,H. :..." 1..
u (f.,. t Mirns in nnoo -
kt ""'' f-rre on ,;,, ,,,, is h.M-p,lt rr ,ilf ,r
nk'n it ,.,,. . u . .i ' r" "( "'"I" Sm"." 1' ""!
'; l ,r T '? 'nlll", ''""' ' i' n"'1 "'"
h. B , '. ,,'"!'"" J'".-': ,'" i H .pokMi in Knctoh. Tli-rO't
'""I. , V " " '""l '"k' ' ; rfmty rr.. n III- "thor ham)
II-.,... ' , l.l . I'1"''-" " rlT1.l .Irinkin- "f .,ir ,U!,.
J w.tl. i ... ...... Afriran rnniM'lioi. rnlloil rM'
I, " '""k"";n T.- .iiillimmiro j.h s f.kr ".-
"!lwn i i v, ' , . - . jli.m on a fliaiii'in.l rnmli ami Ihrillins
1 .T.mr, ... n n ir Wlirn nix-ii-i.
It is (lirilline linkum. r'vpaiiiiir Jmni-'
Iti-nnip a. a viry plpning nrtur nml
Until Sln-i.'.v n.t f.i iilraxinf.
:
I., jt ""'"imi- t'rnarnitor Han-!
Hm) 'r:'"-' fl'"' mothiiis on
rsTi ' l'r"'",''"l' nnrt l'oliro
..riciiiir.".. .
,' lin- iraffir n.p snl fly
li. t"'y Jury to iI. I.tiihii"
''"'"'" y "f varioin
h, ' York W..H.I pi.1
..... . " ' " l
l I
'llun.f of Sam!" I a .'lean lav.
Tlmt i'i ii-.-!' li.nil'l ii"' l n-M
nkntn.t it hut it .h trivial ami jiit-oii-
.Mii.'T)lial ami h' O.li.1 "traiKl.t fnr tltr
ntnrflinu. It t llir .tory of a Jniint
C.ll.-iiiHIl vim fnM in I....' Willi
U. I'll. i.,!!.!,,,!!.. I .Illlian.'K' STl. Hl"l '"H'l H ' '
"Till .1.. .. "' I" , - .. .. ...I ; .I....I...
h'n.i. , . "s" 11 ni' fnt nii'l tin'
Hy mii.tox lllo.F:I
I.NK.V .Sprvire Writrr)
J (iXlio.N, Keh. l's.-.Mv, in .vi
J j-rara fr.n.i now, if the Irish Free
Statu is n bin miri.p.s mill lrrlnml be
ruiiiPB ri. Ii. Iiiipny aud proiiirruna.
iiiiiylit.- tlir ppniili. tin-it! will imve a
il'lfi'ii'in fiTluig towniil Iho i:ni!li..h.
I util llnni
'J li m'l'np i in a l.y: m.iwe Ihuisc
in hiilil.n. 'i'lii. pirtnrc b'-ing i.iown ii.
an Aim'i'iriin i.itritir film l'lit itiK
(he Kli-nuitlp tlip fniitukrH of onr rouii
try hml in ptnlili.li our iii(piri.ilf-n'i.
Fij(liitii)i ia .hfiwn the fir.l xkir-ini-li
at t i.ii.-orl anil LoxinKton ami
thn rMl 1'iittlp at Hunker Hill.
Anil p.pij- (imp in I lie film Hip un
irmiiiil inii.ii. allot ilonn the rpil
..... i... I r......UP ..t i! . I.-:.
aii, ihrrc na. a irpiiini.lou, jpII ,.f r"'n
jiri.lnti ii ami approval from Hip en- i , , , T. n i
Aiiorney ixpcncu
,:?;,":t,i::,.:;,r a", t::;1 During stokes Trial
i"h arp now pretty good fiieuds. i f 1
It forg-.t th.it the whole thing was j 'HH'AWO. Feb. US. () Dsd orp
mn ly a lutim-hbow. Kor thene patri- j Shapiro, legal associnle of Samuel
our I nil'liniles. the whole Ih.ng u g I nd ruiver of New York, was mini
vry real, vrry exciting ami very I manly expelled by Judge W. N. tiem
delightful. i niill from the toiler's courtroom dur-
Ir.-h wit. We are oil the train i ing the trial of the Stokes conspiracy
il.ng wett fr iii Dublin to tialuay, :ca-e here. Shapiro formerly rep-
WASHINGTON. Feb. 28.
At the ropiest of President L'oolidge
tha senate has struck out of the
river snd harbors bill the require
ment that all authorized projecu be
completed within five yeara.
The president let it be understood
i lint this provision ii In confliet with
the program of the budget bureau.
The amendment of the r.enste com
merce commit tee eliminating it was
approved without debate.
Projects for the improvement of
Tillamook hay, Oregonwere provided
for in the bdL
A first step towsrd a nntional sur
vey of potential water power wa
taken, when the senate approv
ed an amendment to the rivers and
harbors bill directing the secretary
of war to rsiimate what ainh a pro-
The Place To Go
Dancing
Tonite
nt the liraiitiful
WINTER
GARDEN
SPARKLING LIGHTS
JOYOUS LAUGHTER
WONDERFUL MUSIC
Winter Garden Dances
Are Different
(Ipnllnmen
I.a.llna lOr
K:,h,'.:L,;:,i,!,:!V!vi:::
Alas Fairbanks!
msm- -4
1
fr'te'SiiiilSi'iNl!!:: JTaUL.:':Hi'ii
Have you ever
seen Magic ropes,
live dragons and
bats as big as ele
phants? Have you ever
seen an "invisible"
cloak?
This beautiful
story of romance
ana adventure
abounds in happen
ings of astounding
and unbelievable
magic
It All Comes to
The
HEILIG
next week, starting
MONDAY
' ?i"s r s's hiik.:''. 'v ' '; ' 7!,
I H,Iii i 1 1 if j-f-a-f f s a-.
RIALTO THEATRE
SUNDAY JUNCTION CITY
Only a four mils drive from Eu-
, one and street car aervlce every
I half hour.
' matter on Page -n" j
r.gilt a lo-- the iHi.-iiifl. After u wtnle
it Mtop- -pcdmg. It crawn.
I ri-h I 'aft n i;e r In I tut a fat
train .'
1 1 .-Ii ' "ImIu- tor
engi-r
I
- It
mind my
g-tling
1-
'f-t pfiough.
the box offie-
octis ran hardly
i-jtotroUM hfl-I it not he Ml ftiM-o' i ,)Ut
that ther- was a bit of .tup in h.m. i ..mlurtor And what for?
hi mother apparently hawiuf been pjger- I want to m-p what the
the original Madam Huiteifh. uuin is fmt to.
-'"j Lemiftcr will wear! .Mr. Ktlasco in pnt-lucug -The IrUU We are ui, a little ship . leave the court
renenti-d Mrs, Helen r.llwol mok'
in h-r rontest of the divorce suit of
V. K. n. St.des. New York million
aire, now on trial.
Shapiro bad been seated in the
front bench i hatting with Mrs.
Stoke. Suddenly, h Former As
sistant State's Attorio'V t'harles S.
Wharton was bing called to tha
stand, .lodge fietnmiil shouted stein-I-
: "Will that man in the front row .
I
Hi-ginniTS fiinl Atlviinccil
I'oimliir Solids Jnoocrtlnlfly
WATERMAN METHOD
WINNIE IRENE RUSSELL
244 7th Ave. E.
Phone 1967--J
I
A powerful drama that teems with thrills in the
last stand of the Western Cattle Kings, and their
final gigantio drive with 100,000 steers across the
border.