10 TTTR MORNING OREGOXTAN, MONDAT, 3IARCTC 19, 1D17. 1 - .' - '" t ' .: t i s . i- : - SHIPBUILDING HELD I'S OHEGOn CHANG E DAUGHTER OF LATE UNITED STATES CONGRESSMAN WHO IS TO BE NEW LEADING WOMAN AT BAKER THEATER. F. N. Clark Says Industry May Be to Portland What the Auto Is to Detroit. CAPITAL MAY BE OBTAINED Prominent Realty Dealer, . on Re turn From Extensive Trip, Saya This Section of Country Is Much in Fufcllo Eye. Confident that Portlinders now have an opportunity to capitalize the ship building lndustrv in much the aame manner that Detroit has been made & world city through the automobile in dustry, F. N. Clark, president of the Greater Portland Association and vice president of the National Association of Real Estate Boards, returned home Saturday night aften completing an 8600-mile trip around the entire border of the United States during which he" visited virtually all of the large cities of the country. Incidentally Mr. Clark was In Wash ington. D. C. on the day of the famous filibuster over the armed neutrality bill and reports that the feeling was extremely tense on that day. "If someone had run up the Capitol steps and suggested hanging the 12 Senators who spoiled the plans of President Wilson I am satisfied that the mob would have followed the sug pestlon," said Mr. Clark yesterday. "Harry Lane, the Oregon Senator who participated in the filibuster, is a joke back in Washington and nobody takes him seriously as a rule, but he suffered the same condemnation as was heaped upon the other 11. Inauguration Is Attended, "An immense crowd was in Wash ington that day to attend the Inaugu ration ceremonies next day and the filibuster served to make a surging mob. of the affair. The city was full of secret service men and the fact that one of them watched you every time you turned around did not detract from the tenseness a particle." On his way home through snow- covered country all the way from New York to Seattle. Mr. Clark took occa sion to sound the views of trainmen on the railroad strike situation. "I asked all the conductors and each of them expressed the opinion that there' would be no strike," said Mr. Clark. "Several of them appeared to be angry at the strike-promoters and criticised them for calling a strike at such a critical time.. "Everywhere I traveled In the East I heard about the new shipbuilding in dustry of the Pacific Northwest. All Portlanders have to do is to wake up to the fact that they can make Port land the center of the wooden ship building Industry Just as Detroit Is the automobile center of the world and they can capitalize the idea without limit. Eastern Capital Available. Those planning the establishment of shipbuilding plants in Portland will find ready assistance in the East ern financial centers. Their proposi tlons must, of course, be absolutely right, as wild promoters cannot hand Easterners anything, but all the legiti mate promoters have to do is go East and place their plans before the men with surplus money to invest. "The shipbuilding industry has East- , erners by the neck,' especially the wooden ships, which can be built so cheaply tn Portland. It will no longer he necessary to go to Europe to sell I- ' V -' . v : if k . - I V"-" -lVV : . ; y . '. ; , -. ' ' . HEW STAR ARRIVES IkTTrilr Late United States Congress man's Daughter at Baker. ENGAGEMENT IS SURPRISE If j mi can't come to the store in per son. Marshall 4600 or A 6101. "ttUir QjJAL.ITY' STO Of1- PORXUAKD MBrs D elineator Tot Bubscribers, April advance Butterick pat terns and free fashion sheets are in Easter "Butterick Fashions" 25c and any 10c or 15c pat tern free. 2d Floor. Miss Alice il McDcrmott '.Will Appear Next Sunday In "Old Kentucky" as " Leading Woman Miss Ruth Gates Departs. 8 MISS ALINE M'DERMOTT. LYDIA BARRY SHINES Talented Irish Comedienne Delight at Orpheum. Is BILL IS FULL OF LAUGHS liols Josephine and Wellington Cross Give Great Song and Dance Act "The Cure" Keeps Audience Puzzled. BY UEOiNE CASS BAER. I,ydla Barry Is a name to conjure with on a programme. So you may know there's a lot conjurln going on over at the Orpheum this week. Lydia Barry has returned, a shade of a mite thinner in occasional places, but not reduced one iota in her comedy. Lydia Is a lyrical reconteur. and also she is Irish. She sings a merry ballad about being Irish and the daughter of Billy Barry. She gives us that moving song account of the progressive widow who keeps her husband planted in a marble orchard. Her famous hat song. too. is again on tap, and that hat of Lydia's Is one of thevorth-while bits In an estab lished act which doesn't need retrim- mlng. For a wind-up to her act the generous Barry girl gives a complete Feats of strength and skill make the offering one -that holds - ihe attention throughout. ' A beautiful ' girl and. an entrancing voice., natty dresses and a heart to-heart I-want - you-and-fou-want-me personality-make the appearance oi tne little prima donna. Esleile xuornton, a welcome one. Her songs are wen chosen and are rendered with feeling. But her pretty smile is the key to her success. - "The Cowboy's Courtship" Is full of the ginger of the plains. The man. set ting out to -win a bride and a fortune. learns that the woman will marry only a man of force. And he marries her regardless of her protests, but not against her will. The two Harrys on the bill provide a little diversion by bunching up mts of chatter and throwing it in the other's face. They sing. too. Or it might be better to say that they re ceive credit for singing, while, n real ity, they only perform. The vaudeville closes witn JDittie Donna presenting. Chin Chin, heralded as the smallest periorming eiepnant in the world. The dog and pony also are popular with the children, and the act is one that interests the older folk as well. The elephant is put through paces that would seem impossible for an animal of its size. The dog skips roDe Just as the delighted children would have him do, and the pony has an act almost all its own. Another episode of "Pearl of the Army" was shown with the "Silent Menace" as the center of interest. Metro-Drew comedy concludes the bllL A rtaiicVitxi. of a. late United States Congressman is to be the new leading J( woman with the Alcazar Players. K This became known yesterday when Miss Aline McDermott arrived in Port- A land, quietly registered at the Benson Kt Hotel, and when so much good-looking IJ femininity attracted attention of the reporter on his "beat," casually replied that she had come to be the leading wnmiiT, .t tha Baker Theater. Then it was ' that Manager . Milton Seaman announced that Miss McDer mnit hiLd been held In reserve as a .a tar thu Lenten season. Miss McDermott succeeds Miss Ruth .t.N who has had a successful sea son with the Alcazar Players, but whose season in fortiana is i. -n Miss McDermott will open her Port- g land engagement next Sunday after- fj noon in "In Old Kentucky." 0 Miss McDermott is the daughter of A the late Allan L. McDermott, who for Kt . - t. i - .1 IT-. Anc Aae- 12 years was a uxiictsu dimcb i ta i,n fi-nm Now Jersey. Miss acuermoii in as been educated privately almost ex-rA itiivi an A ,.. DDftnt much of her I Ya life in "Washington and abroad. sh comes to Portland fresn from a stock engagement in Kansas City. She played there three montlls and her engagement-ended with the destruction of the theater by rire. Miss McDermott has also played in trfelc In Minneapolis. St. Paul, Toronto, Washington, D. C, . and Denver. This is the first , time she has been . west of Denver. She has been cast with some of the leading American players, among them being Minnie Maddern -nsKe, ueorge Arliss. BUlie Burke, Henrietta Crosman and H. B. Warner. . . ' She toured one ' season as "Mary Turner" In "Within the Law." . 2 Pages in Each of the Sunday Papers CarriedMeier&FrankShoppingNews of InteresttoAllReadersofThisPapef Both of Our Ads Are to Be Found in Section 1 ReadThem-Then Come to the Store and Profit ROSES ASKED FOR BRIDGE Portland Woman Suggests Motorists Set Plants Along Approach. little "vodeville bill." beginning with I A suggestion that Portland motor the inevitable Juggler and moving I i.t. thu nw interstate bridge. ships if Easterners are approached in I right down to the thrillo-dramatio I interest themselves in a movement to the proper way. I eternal triangle. Lydia has a delightful I plant twin rose hedges on either side Air. warn, wub was Mtumanicu uu i sense or numor, wmcn is rigni on me I of the Oregon approacn 10 tne Driage his business and educational six weeks' job all the time. is made by Mrs. Eustace B. Scott, of the trip by F. L. Warren, of Astoria, made The headline act is that famous pair 1 Avalon Apartments, herself an ardent it a point to visit the leading realty Lois Josephine and Wellington Cross, in motorist and lover of the flower that operators ana investors in an tne large an artistic offering of song, dashed has brought pleasant fame to Port cities, no anenuea me raeeiing ji u witn excellent dancing. Mr. Cross' best I land executive officers of the National Asso- song-bet is "Everything Is Going Up," Mrs. Scott suggests that each motoris elation of Real Estate Boards at Sa- and the subject takes in everything feeling so inclined contribute a plant vannah, Ua. . . I from food prices to ladles' shoe tops. I or so. and personally attend to the set Portland Attracts Realty Men. A delightfully quaint numher is "The ting-out. predicting that the consequent a I Old-1 asnioned viroom and the Up-to- I lane of roses would prove an attrac I..,, their- even nr Portland- l.rpplv ale nriae, in wnicn moaern ana an- I tton or real wortn ana genuine pleasure, as a resllt of the Vecent Westover clent methods in domesticity are con- It is her opinion that the Caroline Terraces deal .hi f whlrt neZrl ' 1000 1' ,a"d wich is further enhanced Testout, blooming in pink Profusion leading realty men of the country are r'"', " 5T1 -IT-n- fA, interested financially. he said. In vestors generally seem to nave an inkling that the Pacific Northwest Is to boom after the close of the war and ,-, ..c,,! r ,n.Miiii.. .hiH -t,t sented by Ralph Locke and Ida Stan- o t" thL .-ti hope with their company. It is a do- I and the old-fashioned grace and groom- I ablv adapted to the plan, details for lng of the bridegroom. The dancing of I which, however, would be worked out mis pair is incomparably noteworthy. I by a committee. a priuiant sKetcn is -The Cure, Annual March Sale Drugs and Toilet Goods B egins To day at 9 A. M.--Among the Hundreds oi Underpriced Articles There Are Many That Will Interest YOU See Yesterday's Papers for. More Complete Details Drug and Toilet Goods Shop, Main Floor. DIRECTORY UNDER WAY p CHAMBER OK COMMERCE PREPARES FOR FOREIGN TRADE. Gveat Amount of Data Resardlns; Manu facturers and Jobbers ef OrtgoS Are Being Compiled. A business directory for Oregon has been compiled by the Portland Cham ber of Commerce, in an endeavor to prepare for the resumption of shipping from this port on a large scaie. The directory will cover the names of those Individuals and firms of Oregon who now act as manufacturers" agents for Eastern concerns handling com- mniKHsa mi Hah In for export. Th nhamber is gradually collecting a great amount of data with relation to these firms, snowing tne nn " vi nrruluct. exnort fields now served, additional fields contemplated, airn- culties that must be overcome in eacn When there is added to the directory of manufacturers a directory of Job- nnsi mMiuf acturers' agents, to gether with the data affecting each class, it is felt thatjthe ground work for concerted and narmonious aougn iu any trade extension campaign which may be originated win have been laid. In order that this work may be-completed as expeditiously as possible, the Chamber has requested all manufac turers' agents of the state to address the foreign trade department of the Port land Chamber, -of Commerce setting forth the title of their firm and all data. ' Board Advance Brings Strike. WALLACE. Idaho, ' March 18. Dis satisfied, it is declared, because the price of board at the company board ing house has been increased from 1 to $1 25 a dav, miners of the day shift of the Tamarack and Custer Consolidated mines today Joined the night shift in a walkout. About 375 men are involved. pre- a stampede In this direction. 'Men back East have much more rtoney than they know what to do with and have no respect at all for a dollar, but many realize that present times mestio comedy, which narrowly misses being a tragedy and preaches a fine little lesson about Jealousy and one man s emthod of curing his wife. It's a surprise act. Every time you settle fhl "lm"8ten.dad.arf lok.: Sack. satU that y'on know "the ! v.u f ' Viit- t-i j j -r 1,L I and take notice that you are clear off. 5 7. e MteB Stanhope is a beauty and an ex- TiV. vT'i. ., I cellent actress. Mr. Locke, ... V . finished artist. Will U6 IU Will LUQ 1.1. VUIIV Cll- too, is a Irving Newhoff and Dode Phelps live up to their billing as "somewhat diffe- tlon of the National Association of 1 Z j Tj rent singers." They have- what we "T 6" -Z .u " 1 might call "hitherto unheard of and un- 13 ftrnSv.W;he Z&lZ mff' h!..yS' Published" material, because it s all a . i . XV "t". I brand new to us, and so cheerily, mer- wamea out mr. ' riiy and smartly put over that they al- the way, has several large deals on- L... f.nn.d th. ,h. ,t.,H9. h. ocr "'B ' T. . Newhoff -Phelps' voices are good, too. expects to return r-a again iiwuiy ior youthful nair are Fred anrt AiPl the annual convention of the realty Astaire. clever, clean cut. snappy happy men in Milwaukee and again in the chdret a orother and .sister who must 1 all on business. hav haH a ronrl fotrv nt Aar. song hiding under the bed when they I were born a few years ago. Hans Linne preesnts an artistic, col orful dancing act, featuring Mile Una, Ilazelwood Company Holds Celebra- . 'r .Lto7L ? I tippy-toe eteps, assisted by a corps da ballet In a series of classic impersona tions. Mile Una's dancing is spiritual and exceedingly dainty. WASHOUGAL, Wash.. March 18. Opening the bill is a trio of funsters. (Special.) A big celebration was held Rice, Elmer and Tom, In a trampoline here Saturday at the opening of the I and bar act that whirls along at a great milk condenser by tne Ilazelwood torn- I pace. pany of Portland. At noon dinner was served to the farmers and dairymen. W. D. B. Dodson. secretary of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, spoke on the marketing of dairy products. and Professor W. S. Thurnber, director of the extension department of the Washington State College, told about I EVERY ACT WINS PRAISE FOR EX- "Better Productive Methods for the MILK CONDENSER OPENED tlon at Washougal. HIP" BILL HAS "PEP" Farmers." Caf 1 Schalllnger, .superin tendent of the Ilazelwood company, and A. S. Millar, local manager of the condenser, described the new project. MINNESOTANS TO EXPAND Society in Portland to Launch Mem bership Campaign. The Minnesota State Society is launching a big membership campaign and will hold a business session tomor row night, at 8 o'clock, in the gray parlors of the Multnomah Hotel. All former Mtnnesotans are urged to CELLEXCE AND VARIETY. Little Folks Enjoy Seeing Diminutive Elephant, Dog; and Pony Go Through Paces.. Merry little witticisms, clever bits of dancing, pretty costumes, charming girls, a playlet with the breezy West ern kill- em-dead atmosphere, and an unusual animal entertainment make the bill that opened at the Hippodrome yes terday a riot of fun from start to finish. Some everybody-have-a-look changes of costume by the comely, vivacious woman take the audience by surprise. attend and Join the organization, as It I TnJ man with Dunlap and Vlrden opens is planned to strengthen It as much aa Uh. wav tnr thxir nhattv mtt,r Th, poible for handlingithe reception of way that they put across their songs the Minnesota visitors to Portland dur lng the convention of the National EdU' cation Association next July. Read The Oregonlan classified ads. wins the crowd Irom the start by their unbridled foolishness. Acrobats with few peers are Eddie I Love and Jeanette Wilbur, who fear nothing - in their daring ' gyrations. Are Your Eyes Weak? i U 111 " A 11 J S'T?- i Thompson's) Opthalmoscope Detects Every Error oi Vision Iastanily. J Are ' you troubled : with Imperfect sigHt -letters blurred or running : into each other skipping of words or letters in reading seeing objects double floating specks aversion to light confusion of ob jects which is relieved by closing the eyes a. tired feeling in and behind the eyes a necessity for bringing the light between the eyes and the object looked at holding the book or work further away than formerly in order to see clearly or an inability to see distant objects as well as your friends see them?. CJ If so, it is quite time your eyes received attention. CJ Our 26 years' experience in scientific eyesight test ing is at your disposal. Whether your glasses cost $2.00 or more, we guar antee absolute satisfaction. t THOMPSON OPTICAL INSTITUTE 209-10-11 CORBETT BLDG., 5TH AND MORRISON ! ! ! MEN! Your New INVINCIBLE SUIT IS HERE AT ONLY $15 All Styles All Sizes From the standpoint of quality, style, service and economy we challenge the world to better these Invincible suits at -$15. One of the foremost tailors of the country builds every Invincible to our own most exactinp: specifications from fabrics tested for worth and wearing qualities. To look at an Invincible you would at once class it with GOOD $20.00 suits and it is equal, if not superior, to most of the so-called szu.uu values soia eisewnere. Come in and see the many smart new ar rivals" we are showing for Spring and Easter wear today! Styles for men and young men. All sizes to fit all builds. Excellent eassimeres. tweeds and worsteds in a beautuui assortment; oi patterns and colors. They fit, they wear, they hold Invincibles have no peer at or near the price of $15. Men's tiotiung nop, naxa ifioor. BOYS! New Spring Models Here in Famous Two-Pants Suits $6.50 STRONG, as the name im plies, beyond all others. And not merely serviceable, but worthy, stylish garments as well. Fancy tweeds, cassi meres and cheviots 5n gray, tan, brown and green mix tures. All models just like "grown-ups' " styles. Two pairs knickers witn every Samson suit always priced at $6.50. Sizes 6 to IS years. Boys Clothing Shop. Third Floor. ,t Grocery Royal Baking Powder, 5-lb. cans $1.85, 2-lb. Cans 95c, 1-lb. S9J. Quaker Oats, fresh shipment, pkg. lOti. Evaporated Loganberries, finest quality, new crop, lb. 29. Graham Flour, one of the best brands, 10-lb. sacks 47t. Heinz Spaghetti, medium size, doz. $1.90, 3 for 50c, can 17; small size, doz. $1.25, can 110. Evaporated Peaches, ancy grade, Yellow Crawford, new crop, 12 Me grade 11. Yellow Cling Peaches, Bed Ribbon, doz. $2.50, large cans 220. Fine Sago, best quality, 3 lbs. 250. Coffee, Tea Room blend, freshly roasted, 40c grade, lb. 850. Ninth Floor. Fifth Street. Victrola X Outfit $84llif Consisting of Machine as Pictured 24 Dance Selections (12 D. D. 75c Records) Or if you prefer you may substitute any other records of equal size and price. PAY ONLY $5 down and $5 month until you have paid $84 in alL ..r i I ii ir i it,;, i Hi w JTionogrraph Shop. Sixth Floor. Our Big Daylight Bakery Offers Homemade Coffee Cakes, made from fresh every morning;, each 25. ' Mince Pies, fresh butter, eggs, purest milk, spices, etc., each 30. and filled with delicious almond and raisin Mocha Cream Pastry, dozen 75J. fillings, fresh every morning. Kranz Kuchen, French Pastry, dozen 60. each 40. Coffee Rings, each 30 an( Layer Cakes, only sweet butter, churned 10. Cinnamon Rolls, doz. 15. Tea daily in our sanitary churn, fresh eggs, pure Sticks, doz. 20. ' milk and best patent flour used. 3-Layer Breads: Homemade, Whole Wheat, Rye, strawberry, fig, banana and pineapple Cakes, French and Poppyseed Twist, loaf 10d.' each 40. Gold Cakes, each 60. Nut Gluten Bread, guaranteed above Government Loaf, each 200s. Angel Food, each 40. standard, loaf 20S Bran Bread, to order, Devil's Food, each 50. loaf, XO. Wedding and Birthday Cakes to Homemade Pies filled with carefully se- Order. Ornaments and Cake lected fruits and delicious cream fillings, Decorations in Great Variety Floor. Fifth Phone Your Want Ads to The Oregonian Main 7070 A6095 it-: ' - f r- I AM"-" I i t t 1 1 i