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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1908)
TIIE 3IORNIXG OREGONIAX, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1908. Opera Melody in Theater of Munich Enraptures' American Visitors SERIES OF MOZART AND WAGNER PRODUCTIONS IN FAMOUS CITY OF ART AND MUSIC DESCRIBED AS SUPERB IN CHARM OF HARMONY AND TECHNIQUE SAILING VESSEL Bark Andorinha Clears With . 182,282 Bushels of Wheat for United Kingdom. IN EXCESS OF 5000 TONS British Craft Carries More Than ID 0 CARGO Many of the Steamships Which Are Under Charter to Load r Grain at Portland. The British bark Andorinha, Captain Griffiths, cleared for the United King dom yesterday with 189.282 bushels of wheat, valued at $170,500. The vessel dropped down to anchorage opposite St, J ohn and will leave down for Astoria tomorrow. The cargo on the Andorinha Is the largest ever shipped from Portland on a sailing ship. It weighs 6071 long tons and Is 20.000 bushels in excess of the cargo taken out on the British steam ship Braemount. which cleared on the first of the present month. Wheat shipments to foreign countries for the first half of the month amount to more than 600,000 bushels. The barley shipments amount to 228,125 bushels. To date there has been no flour exports and shippers did .not look for any movement 0TXAUER INTELLIGENCE. Dim to Arrlr. Nam From. Data. Numantla. .. .Hongkong. . ... In port Breakwater. . Coos Bay...... In port. Stat ftt Cal.San Francisco. .In port. Go. W. ElderS an Pedro In port. Alliance Coos Bay Sept. 17 Rose City.... San Francisco. Sept. 21 Roanoke Los Angeles... Sept. 22 Arabia Hongkong..... Sept. leal Honskong Nov. 1 Scheduled to Depart. Nam. For. Data. Breakwater. . Coos Bay. . . ..Fept. 16 Geo. W. EiderSan Pedro Sept. 17 State of Cal.San Francisco, fept. 19 Alliance Coos Bay ....... Sept. 10 Numantla....Honckon Fpt. 20 Roanoke Los Angeles. . Sept. 24 Rose City... Ban Francisco. . Sept. 2ft Alesla Hongkong Nov. 23 Entered Tuesday. Beechley. British steamship (Will- -lams), with ballast from Puget Sound. Nederland. Dutch steamship (Klerk . with ballast form Puget Sound. Americana. American schooner (Mc Icar), with ballast, from San Francisco. Breakwater, American steamship Macgenn), with general cargo from Coos Bay. Geo. W. Elder. Am. steamship (Jes scn, with general cargo form San Pedro. Cleared Tuesday. Andorinha. British bark (Grif fiths), with 180 ,282 bushels of wheat, valued at $170.oO0 for the United . Kingdom for orders. Breakwater, American steamship (Macgenn), with general cagro for Coos Bay. Geo. W. Elder. American steam ship Jesen). with general cargo for San Pedro and way. in that line.- Space however, has been engaged on the Numantia for 4000 tons. In spite of the rise in freight rates, the flour shipments will keep ui- During the next two weeks the ship ments of grain will run up fast. There are a number of steamships either await ing cargo or lining and all of them must be cleared before the first of the month. The Cambrian King and the Queen Amelie are working and the Nederland is taking dunnage. By the end of the month it is expected that the grain ex ports to foreign countries will run well past the 2,000.000-bushel mark. BIRTHDAY OF CROWX PRIXCK Officers and Men of Cruiser Puglia do Homage to Heir to Throne. With officers in full dress uniform and the ship decorated from stem to stern with flags, the company of the Italian cruiser Puglia celebrated the birthday of the Crown Prince of Piedmont, heir to the throne of Italy, yesterday. Not i man was allowed on shore and the offi cers and members of the crew gave up the day to entertaining their friends and visitors. Counsel Dr. C. F. Candianl visited the ship during the afternoon and dined on board. Captain Cussanl-Vis conte was prevented from attending the banquet given to the Oregon athletes at the Commercial Club. eptemoer it nas been set apart as a day of celebration for all Italians. It is the birthday of the son of King Vic tor Emanuel 111 and the heir to the throne has now passed the fourth year. The present King has three daughters, two older and one younger than the Crown Prince. The Puglia will sail from Portland for San Francisco, September 23. From the California port she will proceed to Hon olulu and from there to Japan and Chinese ports. She will return to Italy via the Sues. Ef A ! - V- I i lhhitB $ ' ' W mar Atom. cvswcsoro -lrXt if - -i f :. ; j L . rssj5 cjep-jte-j? '"' r:"" PirJ? - ; pilirmS ty1 - - . f . tlV I V; TA P - te-rr- - ? S - - r A" '1-V-Jr : jS " ii III SRI n f j M I . 1 . s' f ! f - !i ff t I J- sssM!fe,- , , I - - v. ----, f t V; "" """iJgg''"' """" ' ..j)v v - .r" M Concert for Seamen Tonight. A concert will be given at the Seamen's Institute, front and Flanders streets, to nisrht at S o'clock, under the direction of Madame d Auria. In honor of the Puglia, the Italian cruiser In port. Captain L. Cusani- Iscontl and some of his officers. as well as the Italian Consul, Dr. C. F. Candianl. have accepted Invitations, and there will be a large party of enlisted men. All friends of the mission will also be welcome. Following is the programme: "Recordl del Misslco." Rebagliati Mandolin Club; song, "II Bacio," Miss Gronnel; violin solo, (a) Leggende, b Villanella, Miss Myrick: song, "L Parlaie d'Amor," Miss Suia Jones; piano solo. "Rlgoletto Fan tasie," Mrs. Carrie Beaumont; vocal duet, "Hark to the Mandolin." Mrs. Miller; song. "D'Amor Sull All" ("II Trovatore"), Madame d' Auria; "Echoes From the Fair." Rebagliati Mandolin and Guitar Club: American and Italian National Anthems. Americana Takes Lumber Foreign. The schooner Americana, Captain Mc Vlear. from San Francisco, arrived up yesterday. The Americana is under char ter to carry a full cargo of lumber from Portland to Japan. She has been en gaged In the off-shore trade for several years. Sloop Condor Goes on Ways. The gasoline sloop Condor, Captain An- UXICH, Sept. 2. (Special Corre spondence.) After leaving Bay reuth, with Its lavish offerings. one i? quite in the spirit to come to Munich, where a season of Mozart and Wagner operas are In course of per formance. The trip from Bayreuth to Nuremberg was made under conditions which I shall not soon forget, as I was brought from the Wagnerian center to Nuremberg in one of the most superb utomobiles in Europe. The country, won derful as it is from the windows of the parsing train. Is still more Interesting: and more fascinating as one whirls through the very streets of the little vil lages along the road. This in most cases is much to the consternation of the In habitants, who make wild dashes for their children or for their ox-teams. The German farm lands are wonderfully picturesque and the scenes are realy not to be forgotten. These are a veritable series of pictures, composed mainly of long stretches of highly cultivated land, men and women working in the fields, with the family and the geese always the geese in Intimate proximity. Passing at all hours one sees all phases of dally life, most of which seems to be enacted In the fields. To add to the picture, the scarecrow seems to be as much a mem- I ber of the family as the goose, and their presence contributes much humor to the Impression the stranger carries away. There are whole regiments of scarecrows, so many. In fact, that one wonders whether the crows have not come to paraphrase the well-know lines: Vice ir a monster of so fearful meln That to be hated needs but to be seen. An American crow would certainly have called that bluff long ago, but perhaps through intimate association with the geese, the German brows accept certain things prima facie. . The only delay to the automobile was dcrson, arrived up yesterday from Alsea Bay. She discharged at Couch-street dock and proceeded to St. John, where she will be hauled out on the ways for repairs. ' The Condor nearly sank on the last trip south. - While at sea she sprang a leak and it was with difficulty that Captain Anderson made Yaquina. Tem porary repairs were made In order to enable her to get back to Portland. Clear With Lumber Cargoes. ASTORIA, Or.. Sept. 15. (Special.) The steamer Shoshone has cleared at the Custom-House for San Francisco with a cargo of 200.000 feet of lumber loaded at St. John and 500,000 feet of lumber, loaded at Prescott. The steamer Bee has also cleared for San Francisco. She carries a cargo of 700,000 feet of lumber loaded at linnton. Marine Xotes. The Dutch steamship Nederland is be ing lined at the Eastern and Western mills. The steamship Geo. W. Elder will sail for San Pedro and way ports tomorrow evening. The steamship Breakwater will sail for Coos Bay this evening. She will carry a large crowd of passengers. The water In the upper Willamette is so iow at present that boats are unable to get further up than Salem. Captain John Anderson, master of the steamer Hassalo. is critically ill at his home In Portland. He is suffering from a paralytic stroke. Arrivals and Departures. PORTLAND, Prt. 15. Arrived Steam ship Geo. W. Bider. from San Pedro and way ports: steamship Northland, from San Francisco; eteamphlp Tiverton, from San Fran ctoco: French baric NeuiHr, from Hobart; schooner Americana. from San Franctoco; sloop Condor, from Walriport. Astoria, Sept. 15. Condition of the bar at 6 P. M-, smooth: wind, northwest 24 mile.; weather, partly cloudy. Arrived at A. M. nd icrt up at t a. m. steamers Northland. and Tiverton, from San Francisco. Left up 12:30 P. M. German shin Henriette. Ar rived at 12:o0 P. M. Steamer To9emltet from San Francisco. San Francisco. Sept. 1P. Arrived at 7 A. M. bteamer Shoshone, from ForrJaad. at 10 last night Steamer R. D. Inman, for Portland. San Pedro, Sept. 15. Arrived. September 14 Steamer Geo. Fenwick. from Portland. San Diego, Sept. 15. Arrived. September 14 Tug Dauntless and raft, from Portland. San Francisco. Sept. 15. Arrived Steamer Watson, from Seattle; Shoshone, from As toria; Tamalpals, from Grays Harbor; Tenyo Maru. from Hongkong, etc; J. B. Stet son, from Grays Harbor; Carmel, from Wll lapa; Bowdoln. from Grays Harbor; tug" De fiance, from Astoria; schooner Stajiley, from Bering Sea; schooner Advance, from Coqullle River. Sailed Steamers Memphis, Hamburg via Seattle and Tacoma; Mongolia, for Hong kong; City of Puebla. for Victoria; Shna Yak, for Winslow; steamer Dorsal, for Willapa; steamer Raymond, for Grays Harbor; Rainier, for Grays Harbor; steamer William H. Smith, for Port Townsend. , Tides at Astoria Wednesday. High. Low. 5:2 A. M 6.6 feet:il:12 A. M 8.0 feet 5:12 P. M 8.0 feat ZOUAVES ARE COMING, TOO Well-Drilled Men Are Feature Wild West Show. of Devlin's Zouaves will be one of the incidental features with the Wild West when Buffalo Bill comes to town. These men are drilled to a state of marvelous expertness in the manual of arms and marches. Thay will con clude their exhibition with a lightning display of wall-scaling to illustrate the usefulness of Zouaves in some stages of warfare. . caused by getting Into a party consist ing of six parts geese and four parts pig It was not possible to discover which of them had planned the onslaught. At any rate, men, women and children were ut tering frantic shrieks as the pigs and the geese manifested the desire to climb abl over the automobile and Interview the occupants as to the power of the pen. Frank King Clark, acting as his own chauffeur, used his most winning manner, but manners did not count, and not until he showed the Intention of strewing the village with gasolined plgsfeet and goose grease did the panic-stricken populace succeed in showing the offenders the error of their way and the danger of pur suing longer their purpose. Gertrude Rennyson, the well-known opera singer, who is coaching in Wag nerian roles in Bayreuth, and one of the paYty, uttered some Walkure yells that would have made her. famous on the Metropolitan stage, as she had visions of the pigs taking control of the car. and nothing appeased her until we reached the little restaurant in Nuremberg where Hans Sachs and Albrecht Durer used to take their beer, sausages and sauerkraut. This quaint little spot is one of the best known points of interest in the quaint old city, which I saw but too quickly! I did not enter Munich under the most auspicious conditions-, as I have tried to avoid arriving In the evening, but this time I did not, and there was an old fashioned drizzling rain, the like of which I had seen before. With bag and bag gage not very much, but enough to be disagreeable to a solitary female arriving at night, I drove around from one hotel to the other, to be informed that they were "ganz besetzt." At first I thought - it must be something very nice, as they looked so pleasant when they said it, but after this happened some four or five times, I had visions of a spare bedroom in the city park, and the words "ganz besetzt" took on new and alarming pro portions. However, at one of the hotels a porter got Into the cab to take me to a nearby "pension." I admit that It sounded good, but only for a moment, as I was not Impressed with the neighborhood, and certainly not with the looks of the house. I was Invited to go up two flights of stairs in the dark and when I demurred, the porter questioned my timidity. I fairly shrieked in my best German, and a little of the worst thrown In: "Up zu gehen in dcr dark? Nicht an ihren Leben." "If they want me, let them .light up and come and get me." He laughed and said: "Ha, ha. Hier sind wlr grite lente." Well, good people or bad people, I had some superstition about dragging my lug gage up two flights of stairs in the dark. However, the fact that I had a very large room for three marks a day consoled me somewhat for the fact that I had to pay for my tickets at the opera, and I admit that I remained four days, but to my friends, where I was continues to be a dark mystery. Munich is over-crowded with people at this season of the year, as outside of its many charms for the sightseer, a series of Mozart and one of Wagnerian opera is given during a large part of the Summer. The Mozart works are given in the Hof Theater, and Wagner is dispensed from the Prinz Regent Theater, which was originally built for this purpose a few years ago. Felix Mottl, one of the best conductors of Europe who was engaged NEED ASUIT? If you do, visit the Brownsville Woolen Mill Store, Third and Stark streets. There is a sale in progress there that is really worth while. The clothes are such as will suit you and the price is only $15, which gives you the free and unrestricted choice of over 6000 suits that sold hereto fore at M5, J17.50, J18.50, 20, J22.50 135, $27.50 and J30. ' . And many other painful and serious ailments from which most mothers suffer, can be avoided by the use of "Mother's Friend." This great remedy is a God-send to women, carrying them through their most critical ordeal with safety and no pain. No woman who uses "Mother's Friend" need fear the suffering and danger incident to birth, for it robs the ordeal of its horror and insures safety to life of mother and child, and leaves her in a condition more favorable to speedy recovery. , The child is also healthy, strong and good natured. Our book, worth its weight in gold to Prescriptions filled at Eyssell's. every woman, ana will be sent free in plain en velope by addressing ap plication to BRAD FIELD REGULATOR CO. Atlanta, Ga. Motherhood," is nv fgh Jim V7J rr MUSI Special Rates and Train Service to Salem via Oregon Electric Railway FOR OREGON STATE FAIR . September 14 to 19. Inclusive, and "PORTLAND DAY," THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 Effective Monday, September 14th, the Following Train Schedule Will Be in Effect for Fair Week: Leaving Portland A. M. 6:25, 7:35, 8:35, 8:55, 10, 11:10, 11:20; P.M.:. 2:05, 3:30, 6:05. Leaving Salem A. M.: 6:05, 9:05, 10:15, 11:05; P. M. 1:45, 3:28, 5:30, 6, 7, 8:30. "PORTLAND DAY," THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 Four special trains from Portland and Salem, in addition to other trains above, as follows: Leaving Portland 8 :35, 8:55, 10, 11:10 A. M. , Leaving Salem 5:30, 6, 7, 8:30 P. M. Trains arriving at and departing from Salem stop at Highland avenue, Hood street, State street and Mill-Street Depot. The cars of Salem City Railway will meet all Oregon Electric Railway Trains at . Hood street and handle passengers directly to and from the Fair-, grounds. Highland avenue in Salem is located within a few blocks of the Fairground entrance, and passengers not desiring to go into the city will find this a convenient place at which to leave and board the trains. Rates From Portland: ALL DAYS EXCEPT "POETLAND DAY," ?2.00 ROUND TKU Tickets on sale daily, commencing Sunday, September 13, good for return until Sunday, September 20th. "Portland Day," $ 1 .25 Round Trip Tickets on sale Thursday, September 17th, good going and return ing on any train of this date only. For further information, call up ? i N. L. ATKTXS, Ticket Agent, OR Phone Main 1968. GEO. F. NEVIXS, Traffic Manager1, Phone Main 7098. at the Metropolitan a few seasons ago has direction of both series. It is one thing to present Wagner and quite another to give Mozart, and it is hardly to be expected that the same man should have sympathy for both. Yet Mottl has the breadth and the delicacy, for it is this quality above all else which is required for Mozart. I witnessed a production of "Don Giovanni," and the closing of the Mozart Festival "Cosi Fan Tutte" a tiny gem which is seldom given anywhere. Fritz Feinhak was in the title-role in the former and but for memories of Renand's brilliant dashing Spaniard, he would have been thoroughly acceptable. He Is greater as Hans Sacho in the Meistersingers and as Wotan, and it is for these roles that he has been engaged in America for next season. The productions were superb far beyond the offerings in America, I regret to say, but with a very few ex ceptions the Bingers could not hold en gagements in New York, where a great amount of attention is paid to this detail. It is an interesting fact that the leading prima donna of the Munich Opera-Hruse, and one of the foremost stars in these festivals is a beautiful young Callfornlan, Maude Fay. Ail of ten years ago in San Francisco, I had the pleasure of predict ing this career when she was studying with Mme. Von Meyerinck, and she has certainly fulfilled all promises. She Is a great favorite In Munich, and probably before long her own country will dis cover her. Another charming artist Is 31 me. Hem pel, of Berlin, whose voice is of rare beauty and method, and who would be very welcome in New York. This, by the way, is one thing that I5urope resents in America it was offered me as a personal reproach all through Europe that Amer ica absorbs all the stars and for this reason there are none, or at least very few left in, Europe. Outside of the musical life in the Sum mer, Munich has many beauties and its quaintness is of such importance to the city that an ordinance exists forbidding such architecture that would alter the general character of the city. EMIUE FRANCES BAUER. Men Cured Quickly OUR FEE ( S 11 Ji. j ug. .Jr For a Complete Cure in Any Simple Uncomplicated Case. FACTS FOR MEN Many a bright and promising- career has been blighted by neglected conditions and injurious habits before tho age of "knowledge and under standing, and many have been cut short by the unfortunate contracting of some special disease, which through neglect or Improper treatment has completely undermined and shattered the physical strength and mental faculties. 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