The Alta Theatre

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Alta Theatre EIGHT PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1916. PAGE FIVE Motion Picture (News What the Picture TImAUth Have to Tell You. The I M IMII.S GIIKAT Theatre KM UOHK Alta IN' THE BONDMAN" tkrea Triumph bj PUrlnt Two DUwtmilar Part. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT! Cine of the moat i;: bitti of act- ing ever seen In photoplay done hv We beg to announce that William Farnum, who plays two sep- arate parts In "The Kondman," a Commencing Sunday, 4th Today and Tomorrow William Fox production of Hall June Calne's celebrated novel. Mr. Far- num, who, while on the legitimate We will give the public a chance to see the WILLIAM FOX PRESENTS stage, appeared for rive solid years in "Ben Hur," plays the part of Stephen Orry and Jason Orry, rathe,-an- son. "Hippodrome Vaudeville" The types are radically dissimilar Se- WILLIAM FARNUM Stephen Orry is a huge, heavy-limbe- d the same that plays San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland, Portland, giant; a vagabond, indifferent to the attle, Spokane, and Butte. Acta that are acts, not the old style of song and dance, needs of those dependent upon him. ordinary-W- and talk, but new, novel, neat and entertaining; something out of the e Jason, the son, who vows to kill his request the show-goin- g people to read the Portland papers and then review the William IN THE illBsolute father, u) a vigorous, clean-c- Farnum type. In the development of the acts as we show them, here action there Is a lapse of several years and Stephen becomes an old man. Th" OPENING SUNDAY, JUNE THE 4TH, WE HAVE transition from the Stephen of mid- dle life to the aged Stephen allows Mr OHM & CO. VINCENT & CUNNINGHAM Farnum to display ro the utmost hi "IE exceptional dramatic talent "AS "COMEDY SONGS and STORIES" In one of the scenes Jason rescues SHI K WIS" Stephen during a shipwreck and swims to shore with him. In view of the fact THERE WILL BE THREE CHANGES EACH WEEK AS FOLLOWS: SUNDAY that Mr. Farnum plays both parts, the AND MONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. Bondsman scene constitutes one of the most re- markable photographic achievements We also beg to announce for the higher class of acts we are forced to pay more since advent of photoplay. that BY HALL CAINE' the the will be to 7 7 Reels Thi famous star has been seen in money and the price of admission raised 25c, children 10c. We know our Reels many ureal stories with big dramatic Pictures please and now our Vaudeville will also please. 1000 SCENES climaxes pregnant with compellent A PHOTOPLAY IN power but never one to equal the role IN ANNOUNCING OUR NEW POLICY AND HIPPODROME VAUDEVILLE WE of Ited Jason In this mighty photo, ARE GOING TO GIVE THE PUBLIC ONE GRAND FREE ENTERTAINMENT Iceland and The Isle of Man are used for first time as play triumph with one of the greatest ever conceived Critics are climaxes Mr. Bert Vincent, once a Pendleton boy, sing some of the doubt the Greatest united In declaring it the greatest Photoplay Settings. Without a picture to date. This production was most popular songs of the day from the top of the Pen- originally intended to be shown at ad-- i HEAR dleton Hotel Sunday at 12 o'clock, noon. His voice can Photo Play Fox has ever made vanced admission prices throughout be heard for 10 or 12 blocks away. the United States but by special IN ADDITION CHARLIE CHAPLIN CARTOON. with the Fox Company, it will be shown at the Pastime at the regular admission. Remember this engagement is for two days only. Ar-- I REMEMBER TWO DAYS ONLY range to come early. woman. -- THE STEPPING STONE" Adult 15c Children Sc llou Many a Man IcIucac Success Through His Wife Shown in Tri- COSY TODAY angle Photoplay. The For rent Furnished rooms for $15.00 and $20.00 per set. The spectacle of Mary Beresford. light housekeeping or lodging Brown Scott, Athena. the heroine of "The Stepping Stone,' RUPERT re- JULIAN in Hall. Phone 350 Mattresses made over, furniture the new Triangre-Inc- e release starring For rent Office room In Judd pairing, upholstering Calls city or Frank Keenan and Mary Boland, aid- LOCALS building. Apply F. E. Judd, American country. La Dow Bros ., 219 Beaure-gar- d ing her unappreoiatlve husband in his (2b in National Bank. Phone 227J. upward climb to success, is going to "NAKED Advertising Brief responsive note HEARTS" For sale, reasonable Horse, wagon $300 buys a big. powerful automo- strike a in the hearts condi- of many women, perhaps awaken KATKa" and harness. Inquire Telephone Sta- bile. Machine and tires In Al and line fhut lusertU ltle tion. Terms to responsible party En- consciences of some careless men. Wonderful Bluebird Photo Play, tells lr line, additional gUkertlon Of bles. the story of Or office. Ever since their marriage, Albert I'er llnr, per nuath II 00 Suits pressed 50c; dry cleaned, quire "C" this - In 2o-- ( lieresford had depended on his wife No si. taken for than $1.50. 310 W. Webb. Phone It pays to buy meats from Boucher Tennyson s Immortal Poem ount (1 wrrdi to Una. Rudd. Mary, always had he MAUD ordinal? Rains We carry a full line of beet, and found her Locals will not he wkea orr tbe III. ready, willing, In beginning, except TUT Oregon mutton, veal, country sausage, able. the frodr Few head of heavy wot horses for pork, ,.i paid up subscribers. when it had been a hard struggle to 1. hog lard, smoked bacon and all kinds sale. Phone F12, or write Route meet, uncomplaining-- j of smoked meats. We try to please make ends she 44. wash-- 1 L Box ly done scrubbing and 118 W. Webb. We buy cattle, hoga had the - -- Brown Lewis com- !ng. up library. City pound Pbone 4Jd. For sale- and sheep, veal and poultry. Prompt and then had sat half the be a The finance committee' AMERICAS LRAGCE. bined harvester, 16 ft. cut nnd almost night aiding him in his law studies, Mausoleum to be is empowered to make a contract with New For rent 3 room Turnlshed cottage, York g t good as new. N K. Bott. Helix. Ore. nursing, babying and encouragins j the library board whereby - 7a Johnson street. this main- Philadelphia 7 gon. him to good work in spite of himself tenance fund is guaranteed in it on Iviwe at German Hall. Built; City Will return Second game: Wanted Man and wife to work And. like most husbands who take all for a guarantee from the board office. For sale A few nead full blood There will oe a social dance given that New York 9 ifl ranra Inquire this give nothing, he is ready to cast least new evening. and J500 worth of books will be Philadelphia & apartment Shropshire sheep Jas. Porter. Phone at German hall, Saturday Donate the Site g For rent Furnished off when his beggarly goal has purchased each year -j Louis-Cleve- 241R June 3rd. All cordially invited Good her and that the At St. land rooms 102 Water street. been reached. brary will be kept in good condition Experienced girl for gen- music Adv. 10 12 Good building lot for sale on West Wanted Temple today. A petition was presented to the Phone 113 or call st Louis 5 Webb street. Telephone 114. eral housework. An ordinance accepting the proposi- council last evening for a crosswalk n HnsweU Bny Barber Shop At Boston 8o0 W. Court. PhlUtus tion of the Portland Mausoleum Co. across Willow street at the Intersec Penland Bros.' transfer Co. havi Phillips and Kmery Hassell At the Cosy. Boston 10 17 For rent Large, nicely furnlshe,! lale for the construction of a mausoleum tion of Willow and Tustin. storage warehouse Phone tit. purchased the Central Baths at The latest Bluebird photoplay, en- Washington 1 s front room In private home North have at Olney cemetery and one providing The fire committee was instructed Far sale. Holt gas harvester, street, next to Bond Bros, titled "Naked Hearts," is based upon At Detroit Side. Phone 536J. 636 Main for the future maintenance of the to hand In a written report upon the eat. Phone nnd all their friends to drop In Tennyson's poem, by Detroit 7 Fll. wagon, cook house and bug- Invite public library were passed the city property of H. A. Medernaeh. recently f Header a good shave, cut "Maud." in which some of the most Chicago 4 14 Wanted Experienced man cook. any articles. Four barbers, hair council last evening. damaged by fire. gy for sale. For above charming lyrics which the master of Mrs, n O Crawford, Rleth. City or bath. Adv. The mausoleum ordinance authoriz- 135.00 Write Walter Relmann, lyrics ever wrote occur The story is Competent woman wants to sew in es the cemetery committee to enter in- NATIONAL I.KAGI'fc. Found Fountain Pen Owner can never fully told in the poem, and per- homes 3&0 to a contract with Portland Mau- At Chicago private Phone have same by addressing Box 666, For Hire. haps its very mystery inspired Rupert the A car. D. B. Waf- soleum Co. whereby the city is to BASEBALL St. Louis Dressmaking by day or at home. proving property and paying for this Studebaker touring Julian tn make a photoplay of it RESnTS. 5 1 Office phone deed the company a tract of land in Chicago Room It, E.
Recommended publications
  • The Tragedy of Hamlet
    THE TRAGEDY OF HAMLET THE WORKS OF SHAKESPEARE THE TRAGEDY OF HAMLET EDITED BY EDWARD DOWDEN n METHUEN AND CO. 36 ESSEX STREET: STRAND LONDON 1899 9 5 7 7 95 —— CONTENTS PAGE Introduction ix The Tragedy of Hamlet i Appendix I. The "Travelling" of the Players. 229 Appendix II.— Some Passages from the Quarto of 1603 231 Appendix III. Addenda 235 INTRODUCTION This edition of Hamlet aims in the first place at giving a trustworthy text. Secondly, it attempts to exhibit the variations from that text which are found in the primary sources—the Quarto of 1604 and the Folio of 1623 — in so far as those variations are of importance towards the ascertainment of the text. Every variation is not recorded, but I have chosen to err on the side of excess rather than on that of defect. Readings from the Quarto of 1603 are occa- sionally given, and also from the later Quartos and Folios, but to record such readings is not a part of the design of this edition. 1 The letter Q means Quarto 604 ; F means Folio 1623. The dates of the later Quartos are as follows: —Q 3, 1605 161 1 undated 6, For ; Q 4, ; Q 5, ; Q 1637. my few references to these later Quartos I have trusted the Cambridge Shakespeare and Furness's edition of Hamlet. Thirdly, it gives explanatory notes. Here it is inevitable that my task should in the main be that of selection and condensation. But, gleaning after the gleaners, I have perhaps brought together a slender sheaf.
    [Show full text]
  • 6. Master and Manxman: Reciprocal Plagiarism in Tolstoy and Hall Caine1 Muireann Maguire
    M Reading Backwards An Advance Retrospective on Russian Literature READING BACKWARDS EDITED BY MUIREANN MAGUIRE AND TIMOTHY LANGEN An Advance Retrospective This book outlines with theoretical and literary historical rigor a highly innovative approach to the writing of Russian literary history and to the reading of canonical Russian texts. on Russian Literature AGUI —William Mills Todd III, Harvard University Russian authors […] were able to draw their ideas from their predecessors, but also from their successors, R testifying to the open-mindedness that characterizes the Slavic soul. This book restores the truth. E AND —Pierre Bayard, University of Paris 8 This edited volume employs the paradoxical notion of ‘anticipatory plagiarism’—developed in the 1960s L by the ‘Oulipo’ group of French writers and thinkers—as a mode for reading Russian literature. Reversing established critical approaches to the canon and literary influence, its contributors ask us to consider how ANGEN reading against linear chronologies can elicit fascinating new patterns and perspectives. Reading Backwards: An Advance Retrospective on Russian Literature re-assesses three major nineteenth- century authors—Gogol, Dostoevsky and Tolstoy—either in terms of previous writers and artists who ( plagiarized them (such as Raphael, Homer, or Hall Caine), or of their own depredations against later writers EDS (from J.M. Coetzee to Liudmila Petrushevskaia). ) R ) Far from suggesting that past authors literally stole from their descendants, these engaging essays, contributed by both early-career and senior scholars of Russian and comparative literature, encourage us to identify the contingent and familiar within classic texts. By moving beyond rigid notions of cultural heritage and literary canons, they demonstrate that inspiration is cyclical, influence can flow in multiple directions, and no idea is ever truly original.
    [Show full text]
  • Women and Slavery in the Early Irish Laws
    Women and Slavery in the Early Irish Laws Charlene M. Eska Abstract: As stated by Fergus Kelly (Early Irish Farming, 438), the numerous ‘references to slavery in law-tracts, wisdom-texts, saints’ Lives, annals, and sagas’ attest to the ‘considerable importance [of slavery] in early Irish Society’. Yet, despite these numerous references to slavery, only a handful of scholars to date have undertaken the task of researching this subject: Paul Holm has analyzed the slave trade of Dublin; Niall Brady has looked at labor and agriculture; and Fergus Kelly has described slavery in general and slave labor as represented by the early Irish law-tracts. This paper builds upon the work of previous scholars and, in particular, focuses on women and slavery as represented in the early Irish laws. This paper will discuss, from a legal standpoint, the specific law-tracts in which women and slavery are mentioned, the legal contexts of such references, and possible interpretations of the material. For scholars of medieval Ireland, it is common knowledge that slaves formed an important part of the economy and the labor force in any wealthy household.1 Fergus Kelly has remarked that the numerous ‘references to slavery in law- tracts, wisdom-texts, saints’ Lives, annals, and sagas’ attest to the ‘considerable importance [of slavery] in early Irish society’ (1998, 438). Yet, despite these numerous references to slavery, only a handful of scholars to date have undertaken research on the subject, among whom are Paul Holm, who has analyzed the slave trade of Dublin (1986); Niall Brady, who has looked at labor and agriculture (1994); and Fergus Kelly, who has described slavery in general and slave labor as represented in the early Irish law-tracts (1988, 95–98 and 1998, 438–42).
    [Show full text]
  • Three Icelandic Outlaw Sagas
    THREE ICELANDIC OUTLAW SAGAS THREE ICELANDIC OUTLAW SAGAS THE SAGA OF GISLI THE SAGA OF GRETTIR THE SAGA OF HORD VIKING SOCIETY FOR NORTHERN RESEARCH UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON 2004 Selection, introduction and other critical apparatus © J. M. Dent 2001 Translation of The Saga of Grettir and The Saga of Hord © J. M. Dent 2001 Translation of The Saga of Gisli © J. M. Dent 1963 This edition first published by Everyman Paperbacks in 2001 Reissued by Viking Society for Northern Research in 2004 Reprinted with minor corrections in 2014 ISBN 978 0 903521 66 6 The maps are based on those in various volumes of Íslensk fornrit. The cover illustration is of Grettir Ásmundarson from AM 426 fol., a late seventeenth-century Icelandic manuscript in Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, Reykjavík Printed by Short Run Press Limited, Exeter CONTENTS Preface ............................................................................................ vii Chronology .................................................................................... viii Introduction ..................................................................................... xi Note on the Text .......................................................................... xxvi THE SAGA OF GISLI ..................................................................... 1 THE SAGA OF GRETTIR ............................................................. 69 THE SAGA OF HORD ................................................................ 265 Text Summaries ...........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Bondman Hall Caine
    The Bondman Hall Caine CHAPTER I. STEPHEN ORRY, SEAMAN, OF STAPPEN. In the latter years of last century, H. Jorgen Jorgensen was Governor-General of Iceland. He was a Dane, born in Copenhagen, apprenticed to the sea on board an English trader, afterwards employed as a petty officer in the British navy, and some time in the command of a Danish privateer in an Alliance of Denmark and France against England. A rover, a schemer, a shrewd man of affairs, who was honest by way of interest, just by policy, generous by strategy, and who never suffered his conscience, which was not a good one, to get the better of him. In one of his adventures he had sailed a Welsh brig from Liverpool to Reykjavik. This had been his introduction to the Icelandic capital, then a little, hungry, creeping settlement, with its face towards America and its wooden feet in the sea. It had also been his introduction to the household of the Welsh merchant, who had a wharf by the old Canning basin at Liverpool, a counting-house behind his residence in Wolstenholme Square, and a daughter of five and twenty. Jorgen, by his own proposal, was to barter English produce for Icelandic tallow. On his first voyage he took out a hundred tons of salt, and brought back a heavy cargo of lava for ballast. On his second voyage he took out the Welshman's daughter as his wife, and did not again trouble to send home an empty ship. He had learned that mischief was once more brewing between England and Denmark, had violated his English letters of marque and run into Copenhagen, induced the authorities there, on the strength of his knowledge of English affairs, to appoint him to the Governor- Generalship of Iceland (then vacant) at a salary of four hundred pounds a year, and landed at Reykjavik with the Icelandic flag, of the white falcon on the blue ground--the banner of the Vikings--at the masthead of his father-in-law's Welsh brig.
    [Show full text]
  • Postoftice PERFORMANCE PROM '! S: 15 to 1): 15
    THE GRAND JUNCTION DAILY SENTINEL WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, IfN>B. PAGE SIX ' Majestic Theatre ! Masterpiece of Famous Novelist. Cor. 6’h and Main Postoftice PERFORMANCE PROM '! S: 15 to 1): 15. « LADIES* AND CHILDREN’S j! MATINEE Book Store SATURDAY AFTERNOONS. ; Tempie of Joy ana ; “Good Mirth Headquarters Eugene Thomas Mgr. : For Old School Supplies Summer | Ch '•f Entire age Bill j ; Office Supplies Time” Moncjf! and !VI > ; ! Thursday : Fancy has arrived and these hot days re- Box Station- ary mind us that low, cool footwear is necessary An Evening Spent to keep our feet and heads —at — Magazines cool and collected. The MAJESTIC of all Is a Pleasure kinds For women who appreciate dainty e Admission 10c ¦ yet durable footwear we have the Imported and domestic season’s most approved styles cigars tobacco from and Jolin Kelly’s ami Krippcndorf & Ditt- M. F. Fredericks. man\ big factories. Try WHITSON’S WOOD YARD Sizes to fit all feet. $3.00 Styles to lit all eyes. $3.50 for Wood of any old DA VIS Prices to fit all purses. $4.00 kind JUNK CO. Phone No. 4577 261 South ; ® Red 607 N. 6th, St. McConnell Lowe AllClass of Junk The Evening Prayer in Act 1. Bought and Sold Highest Prices Paid When tne curtain rings up at the sail for England. Mr. Hall Caine for Metal of Park March 19, local play-goers will was assured that in Mr. Lackaye \ all Kinds the part I their first of “.luson” would be por- CAMEO have view of COAL. Hall Caine’s trayed by an actor who j Real Estate Investments— masterpiece By is acknowl- BEBT BY TEBT Junction 480 “The Bondman.” edged to he one of the finest char- High Line land from $2O per acre.
    [Show full text]
  • London Manx Society (Yn Cheshaght Vanninagh Lunnin)
    NEWSLETTER Autumn 2016 Editor – Douglas Barr-Hamilton Tynwald Cooish Cambridge is less famous for its lush lawns than for its colleges and almost unknown is the one to be found in Girton behind the house of Sam Weller who, with his wife Mary, played host for this year's Tynwald Day cooish held, for the first time in recent years, on 5th July itself. The society's July event is always less well attended as holidays and competing events clash but an encouraging fourteen made the trip out of the big city to pass the afternoon on grass and patio to renew Manx acquaintances. The members who attended were Bryan and Sheila Corrin, Pam and Mike Fiddik, Colin and Sheila Gill, Sally and Peter Miller, Sam and Mary Weller, Douglas and Margarita Barr-Hamilton, David Hill and Maureen Wigley. There was no need to sing "Ellan Vannin" to get into expat mode for the food brought to the gathering included bonnag that Sam had made to his mother’s recipe and included in a recipe book of Andreas WI, which Mary Weller, a Bride resident, used to attend. Also, there was a box of Davison's ice cream that an enterprising Douglas Barr-Hamilton had packed with a freezer block in a cool bag placed in his hold baggage at the end of a recent visit to the Island, thanking Iceland in Ramsey for their help in the endeavour. Finally, Moore's kippers with particular thanks to Paul Desmond who had made special arrangements to ensure that Peel's perfect product arrived in the best possible state of freshness.
    [Show full text]
  • Thomas Henry Hall Caine Was Born in 1853 in Cheshire, the Eldest of Three Surviving Children of John Ca
    Biography of Hall Caine: Thomas Henry Hall Caine was born in 1853 in Cheshire, the eldest of three surviving children of John Caine, a Ballaugh man who moved to Liverpool to gain work as a ship’s smith, and his wife Sarah. He visited his grandmother, Isabella, and uncle, William, in Ballaugh many times during his childhood, forming a lifelong attachment to the Island’s culture and language. Schooled in Liverpool, Hall Caine (Hall was his mother’s maiden name, which he incorporated into his own) was an architect’s apprentice but he assisted his uncle, James Teare, in the running of Maughold School after the latter became ill with TB and stayed on after his uncle’s death until a replacement headmaster could be found. Back in the UK, he supplemented his earnings as a draughtsman by working as a journalist and lecturing on literature. A lecture given in defence of the poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti led to a firm friendship and, after the latter’s death, Hall Caine published his recollections of the poet. He turned his hand to fiction with the novels The Shadow of a Crime (1885) and A Son of Hagar (1886), both set in Cumbria. Although well received by some critics, the reading public was not impressed. Hall Caine was disappointed and told Rossetti he might give up trying to become a novelist. Rossetti then gave him the precious advice that turned his life around: Write what you know. Write about the Isle of Man. Hall Caine set The Deemster (1887) entirely in the Isle of Man.
    [Show full text]
  • A New History of the Isle of Man Volume 5 the Modern Period 1830–1999
    A NEW HISTORY OFTHEISLEOFMAN Volume 5 The Modern Period 1830–1999 Forthcoming volumes: Vol 1 Evolution of the natural landscape Vol 2 Prehistory Vol 3 Medieval period, 1000–1405 Vol 4 Derby and Atholl periods, 1405–1830 Isle of Man, after R. Creighton, from Samuel Lewis, Topographical Dictionary of England, c. 1845 A New History of the Isle of Man Volume 5 The Modern Period 1830–1999 Edited by JOHN BELCHEM Liverpool University Press First published 2000 by LIVERPOOL UNIVERSITY PRESS Liverpool L69 7ZU # 2000 Liverpool University Press The right of John Belchem to be indentified as the editor of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act, 1988 All rights reserved No part of this volume may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without prior written permission of the publishers British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A British Library CIP record is available ISBN 0-85323-716-6 (hardback) ISBN 0-85323-726-3 (paperback) Design and production: Janet Allan Typeset in 11/12.5pt Monotype Sabon by Wilmaset Ltd, Birkenhead Printed by Henry Ling Ltd, Dorchester Contents List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgements ix Notes on Contributors xi Abbreviations xiii Introduction john belchem 1 The Onset of Modernity, 1830–80 john belchem 18 Constitutional Development and Public Policy, 1900–79 david kermode 94 Tynwald Transformed, 1980–96 alistair ramsay 185 Economic History, 1830–1996 derek winterbottom 207 Labour History robert fyson 279 Cultural History 311 Introduction john belchem 311 The Manx Language r.l.
    [Show full text]
  • The First Cameraman in Iceland Travel Film and Travel Literature
    The First Cameraman in Iceland Travel Film and Travel Literature Non-fiction has always been the poor relation of early film studies, but several film historians are starting to put this right ... Aswas equally true in later years, the majority of early so-called ethnographic films were not produced by professional (or even amateur) anthropologists, they were made by commercial organizations for the entertainment (and sometimes) education of cinema audiences.2 The early travelogue occupied an interesting space between travel literature and the travel film. Here I examine their common points of reference and the travelogue's place in the early film industry. Earlier research on the filmmaker Noggerath alerted me to his films shot in Iceland in 1901 and released in 1902 by the Warwick Trading Company. Noggerath was therefore the first cameraman to set foot in and non-fiction for Warwick, such as a Naval Manoeuvres series in 1900, Iceland, at the time one of the poorest but most exotic places in a fake collision for the Drury Lane play The Great Millionaire (1901), a Europe. The films themselves have apparently not survived, but we do series of fishing subjects in 1901, and the coronation of the Norwegian have his published recollections, which include a photograph of an King Haakon in Trondheim in 1906. undefined location in Iceland with Noggerath's boxes on the left In September 1901, Noggerath made his trip to Iceland, departing on foreground.3 The early travel film was informed by various literary the trawler Nile from Hull. The Icelandic press commented that he had models.
    [Show full text]
  • Notee Dame Scholastic
    THZ NOTEE DAME SCHOLASTIC •DI5CE-9VA5I 5EMPERV1CTVRV5- -VIVE-gVASl-CRAS MORITURV? VLO. XXXIV. NOTRE DAME, INDIANA, JUNE 8, igoi. No. 35. PREACHER OF THE BACCALAUREATE SERMON, SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 1901. THE REV. NATHAN J. MOONEY, B. S., '77, A. M., '95, Rector of St. Columbfcille's Chorcli, Chicago, Illinois. 590 ry/UTRB DAME SCHOLASTIC. island of Santo Domingo. He derived his Summer "Winds. being from a line of kings.. His father had been stolen from the coast of Africa and sold /'^LAD winds that loiter over stream and lea, into slavery. Inheriting all the ambition and ^"^ Through city ways and quiet valleys fair; energy of his royal lineage, he rose above his Gentle your voice as kneeling virgin's prayer natural condition, and secured an education Before the altar of a sanctuary. that fitted him for the great work of his later Thrice happy comrades of the laden bee, life. As he ripened into manhood he realized I often think those accents that you bear more and more the unhappy degradation of Were whispered by an absent friend somewhere. his people. Once he saw his old father And travelled on your pinions here to me. whipped, and all the compassion and resent­ To what blithe land j'ou go I may not tell. ment of his nature was aroused. For fifty long Yet Avould I share your welcome with the flowers years he endured his bondage and dreamed Whose chaliced heads bow vibrant 'neath your on, while the conviction grew in him that strain; slavery was a monstious wrong; and as the And should you wander where the blessed dwell.
    [Show full text]