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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1920)
rK IJGHT THE (5 A7.ETTK-T1MKS. HEPPXER, OKK. TRTKSDAT, OCT. 7, 1920. BEDROOM FARCE COM ING TO HEPPNER SOON TarUr, H4mm 4 BalK.- mm Hiltr- crm rmU of K road way ,iPPfi "TaMor. IWroom an.i F;th, the ore fare which tct ft-rth the tabu lations and misadventures of a rnoile' husband ho won his wife under s fals pretense of ttevilishness, is s hsi uled for its first local showing Turvly icttber 12, at the Star theatre. For one of the longest and most hi larious seasons a comedy has ever run Tarlor. Bedroom and Path," written b C. W. Hell and Mark Swan, and pro duced In the theatre by A. H. Woods, convulsed New York; and those who had ths orrrtunity of seeir.p pre-release sho winirs of the production in pictura, with an all-star cast, assert that the play has trained rather than lost In hilarity in the translation to the silver sheet The situation or at least the central situation, (or there are any number of them dealt with Reggie Irvine who for many years had sought to win An irelica. This young woman wanted a man Just the opposite of what her own name Implied. She wanted a wild one, and since Reggie had no idea of how to be wild, had no Inclinations toward owing even a little patch of the un tamed oats, he perforce songht outside aid. He went to Polly Hathaway, so ciety reporter on the scandal sheet, and asked her to use dark polish on his reputation. Ruth Stonehouse enacts the breeiy resourceful girl reporter; and Eugene Pallette, who was the innocuous Billy Bartlett In "Fair and Warmer" starring May Allison, and who later was seen with Bert Lytell In "Alias Jimmy Val entine," plays Reggie. The part of An gellca Is deftly and delightfully enact M by Kathleen Kirkham who, after this production, will form and appear In special pictures made by her own company. Henry Miller. Jr son of the famous actor-manager, has also an lm portant part In "Parlor, Bedroom and Bath." The picture Is one of the big Metro apeciala It was directed by Edward Dillon, photographed by W. M. Ed- mond and adapted from the stage play by June Mathis and A. P. Younger Special art interiors were designed for it and done under the direction of Sid ney Ullman. I.'.'S th&n the Government could pro u in a year's tune. P;:U another expert () ordered six :il:i-:s. five nose bags and four covers ;.;ee for those cavalry horses, and an other one purchased four curry combs for e.u-h of them, rut another "dollar a year" man pull ed the biggest "boner" of them alL He purchased two branding Irons apiece tor those horses not ordinary steel branding Irons either, but made of cop per and fearfully expensive. To cap the climax, another expert or dered that the horses be branded on the hoofs, regardless of the fact that the marks would grow out In a few weeks Verily. Thompson .'a fool colt had plenty of company. Marines Ealtat Yraas Walte Here. Washington. D. C, Oct H. The en listment of a fifteen-year-old lad In the Marines was authorlied y Major Gen eral John A. Lejume when the Fort Wayne, Indiana, recruiting nation re ported that the son of Captain H. A. Duemling, Medical Corps, U. 8. Army, had white hop measurementa The ten der age of sixteen, for apprentice to learn the drum and trumpet calls, la the minimum age for the sea-soldiers and according to all the medical and mili tary experts a height of Sve feet four inches and a weight of 1!S pound! is all that can be expev-te.1 of these youth ful warriors. As young Puemling came across ith a hetKht of five feet, ten inches and tipped the scale at 175 pounds, he not only broke the tifteen-vear-old record but also several yards of red tape. The sea-soldier at Port Wayne predict a great future for their young Hoosier. who will be the young est Marine in the Corps by a margin of ten montha Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Frad have returned to Heppner after spending summer months at Newport on the coast. They had a very enjoyable outing. Mr. Frad brought home with him a fine collec tion of moss and water agates, for which the Newport beach Is famed. Wm. Flnley. prominent farmer of North Morrow, spent a few hours In Heppner on business today. Mrs. 0. C. Aiken. Heppner, Or. Box 14 2. Phone 395. EEAUTT WINS IN WEST v-J LOST Black fur scarf. Finder re turn to Thomson Proa and receive suit able reward. Maternity Home. I have arranged to take a limited number of maternity cases at my home in east Heppner end assure the very best of attention and car to all pa tient For full information writ or phone 4ol?t Olive Tb.lt llttl western ml won Nauty contest in California and her reward was trip to Washing ton and a call at the WhlU Hotua, guest of the California Ratal Growers' Association. Her nam la Vlolat OUrer. NtXE SADDLES TO THE HORSE. When Thompson's colt swam the river to get a drink of water that was thought to be about the silliest thing ever. Tet that performance was ex celled many times during the late war. And it was a man, not a yearling colt, that broke the record. Astonishing things were done, during the war, many of which, doubtless, have not ye., come to light j Th Government's leather (head) ex pert ordered 845.000 high grade army j saddles for Just 104,000 cavalry horses. ! This Is about nine saddles per horse. j Just why that expert figures he would need such a back -load of Baddies for those horses has never been ascertain- : ad, but his mental performance clearly j puts him in the same boat with Thomp-1 son..'s colt See If you can solve the riddle: nobody else seems to be able to. Again, another leather expert or dered enough harness at one time to re quire in their construction 300,000 more IF WE SELL YOU A GOSSARD CORSET These original front lacing corsets are a conspicuous example of that superior qual ity of merchandise that justifies our un varying policy of making every sale condi tional upon your complete satisfaction, "VVt offer you a highy specialized corset sen-ice, and you may buy every Gossard with our assurance that it will be worth every cent you pay for it worth it in style, worth it in comfort, worth it in wear ing service. MRS.L.G. HERREN tar Theater TO-NIGHT -:- THURSDAY -:- TO-NIGHT Harry Carey and Tom Mix If you like Western stuff, don't fail to see this show. 20 and 30 Cento FRIDAY A Bid WILLIAM S. HART SPECIAL OCTOBER 8 -:- FRIDAY "Square Deal Sanderson" He's a wonderful mixture in "Square Deal Sanderson," wild, wooly and inflexi ble in his fight for the right; but tender andilmost cowed by the presence of the worn an he loves. ' Also a two reel Harold Lloyd comedy: "AN EASTERN WESTERNER" 20 and 30 Cents SATURDAY -:: OCTOBER 9 -:- SATURDAY A BLACKTON PRODUCTION "Dawn" With Sylvia Breamer, Robert Gordon and an all-star cast in a human heart drama. 20 and 30 Cents COME EARLY WRESTLING MATCH AFTER THE FIRST SHOW. WALLACE REID IN A STORY BY 0. HENRY "YOU'RE FIRED" SUNDAY Supported by Wanda Hawley It's great and you oughtn't miss it. :- OCTOBER 10 - SUNDAY Also a two-reel comedy: "WHEN LOVE 13 BLIND" 20 and 30 Cents Monday is serial night with Jack Dempsey and Ruth Roland Big Attraction Coming Tuesday, October 12 "Parlor, Bedroom and Bath" The hilarious and piquant story of a young wife who wanted a wild man for a husband and got more than she bargained for. This is an all-star production fea turing Eugene Pallette and Ruth Stonehouse, Showing for 20 and 30 cents. Should be 30 and 50 cents, because we expect a full house. SAVE Up to $20.00 MSB on your Fall suit or overcoat. Thru large purchases of sur plus woolens from the woolen mills, UNIVERSAL TAILORING COMPANY THE ALL WOOL LINE are making stupendous reductions on Fall and Win ter suitngs and overcoatings,. EVERY FABRIC ALL WOOL Come in as soon as you can and look over the big dis play of fabrics at reduced prices. We are also making a 7 per cent reduction on our own stock, made up here. Heppner Tailoring & Cleaning Shop Main St. G. FRANZEN Heppner L. MONTERESTELLI Marble and Granite Works PENDLETON, OREGON Fine Monument and Cemetery Work All parties interested in getting work in my line should get my prices and estimates before placing their orders All Work Guaranteed ill rn lean i sU 5 I. ' , i r c I 1! "M 6 i ! I ;t " I N - i f ,K'- - ' 1 I E . . I' f : -r 0 . iff,, 1 I ' ' nMHiltV H Hit? '. Mfi mmfWUImt . Wrestling Match Nels Jepson, Champion Heavyweight of Canada Ted Thye, Champion Middleweight of the U.S. Meet in a Finish Match, Best Two Out of Three Falls STAR THEATER Saturday; (T. October gj) 9:00 P. M. ADMISSION Ringside . . . . $2.50 Reserved Seats $1.50 General 75 JACK O'NEIL, Referee ... - ' . jff ' ..It " vj '"n -jfy 1 ' " ; ! I'" ' E: ;M A ' Ir :" i ' . 1 I. ' 'r-1 m u ? I.. ,T!. '' ' ' 'f"yB - Lj I i r I "NELS JEPSON TED THYE