Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, February 06, 1922, Page 9, Image 9

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    TIIE MORXIXG OREGCOflAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1922
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
City Edf.nr Main 7o70. 5-!
Sundir Editor Main T70. iA-
Aivrt!slna; rpa.rtn.ent. . Main 7O70,
bUKiml.OLient of Bid .. Mm TtKO. froO-OJ
AMVSEMESTS.
CRPIIEIM IBroadwir al Taylor) ThU
afternoon and toaisht.
BAKBR (Morrison at EInth Bakar
P.era id "Adam and Bv." Tonlarhl.
1.TRIC Broadway a: Morrifon) Muaical
comedy. "late, the Pawnbroker. t
ebowa daily. X. 7 and P.
BIPPODHOME (Broadway at Tamhill)
VauJevtile and moin ptcturea. - 10 .
4i to 11 P. II. Saturdaa. Suudaye and
Mondays conunooua. 1:1-5 to 11
PAN'TACES fBmaawar at Alder) Vaade-
vilie. Three allows daily. 2, 7 and :Oi
P. M.
Nobel Prize Lbctvfb Tciuidat.
The third lecture in the course on
the Nobel prlie winner will be given
in library hall Tuesday, February i,
at P. M. Barry Caxf will speak on
"Anatole France." The following
books by Anatole France are in the
public library: "At the Sign of the
Kerne Pedauque. "Crainquebine,
"Crime of Sylestre Bonnard," Garden
of Epicurus." "Girln and Boys: Scenes
Krom the Country and the Town.'
-Honey Bee." "Life of Joan of Arc."
"L.iitle Pierre." "Man Who Married a
Dumb Wife." "Mother of Pearl." "My
Kneads Book." "Path of Glory."
-Penguin Island." "Pierre Noxiere."
"Red Lily." "Revolt of the Angels,"
-Seven Wives of Bluebeard," "Thais"
and the "White Stone." The public is
cordially invited to these lectures.
Ir. Waisos Hearixo Resumes Today-.
Public hearing of the govern
ment's charges against Dr. N". E.
Wavson. chief of the United States
public health service In Portland, will
be resumed in earnest today at 10
A. SI. A board of inquiry from the
public health service is here ready
to hear evidence in the charges
against Dr. Wayson's conduct as head
of the local hospital. Testimony from
veterans who have complained of Dr.
Wayson's treatment of their cases
ill be heard. The public has been
Invited to attend the hearing.
Clatskanie Chief Changes Hands.
Earle Richardson has resigned from
the local news staff of The Oregonian
and will leave Portland today to be
come local editor and publisher of
the Clatskanle Chief, a weekly news
paper, which he Iras purchased In
nartnershiD with Arthur Steele, lor
merlv of the Iewiston Tribune of
Idaho. The Clatskanle Chief was for
merly the property of S. F. Scibird
and Mrs. M. U. Hyde. The 111-neaitn
of Mrs. Hyde was partly responsible
for the sale of the. paper by these
owners.
Pat Telephoxb Ixoted. The thief
or gang of thieves who have been
making a comfortable living for the
nut few weeks bv tearing the coin
boxes off of pay telephones operated
gain Saturday night and robbed the
liar telephone at the Frederick apart
ments. 20 Kast Sixth street North.
The telephone was broken with a
Jimmy and the nickels taken from the
box. This made the fourth telephone
robbed in three consecutive nights.
There have been about a dozen more
robbed recently.
Rooc Growing to Be Topic. Vari
ous phases of rose growing will be
discussed at the annual meeting of
the Portland Rose society tonight at
S o'clock in the green room at the
Chamber of Commerce. J. G. Bacher
will give a demonstration with rose
bushes, showing proper methods of
pruning and planting. Other speak
ers will be Albert Clark and Rev.
S. S. Sullinger. Officers for the com
ing year will be elected and plans
made for the 1922 Rose show.
Masons Hold Degree Work. The
third-degree team, composed of em
ployes of the Spokane. Portland &
Seattle railroad, exemplified the work
of the degree in Goldendale lodge No.
31 of Masons at Goldendale, Wash.,
Saturday night. H. J. Turner. Spo
kane. Portland A Seattle agent in
Goldendale. w raised to the mas
ter's degree. The ceremony took
place In the new Ma-sonic temple,
with A. E. Bryon of Portland as
master.
Astoria Rotariass to Be Here.
The entire programme of the Rotary
club at the Benson hotel tomorrow
noon will be in charge of a delegation
from the Astoria Rotary club. John
Tait. president of the Astoria Rotary
club, will be chairman of the day.
Sneakers will be J. M. Anderson of
the First National bank of Astoria
and Ke. William Gilbert. There will
also be novelty stunts and club sing
lnr. Kpttor to AprtRES" Forum. Edwin
Selvln. editor of Business Chronicle
of Seattle, will address the mem
bers' forum of the Chamber of Com
merce this noon on the subject, "Ne
cessity for Co-operation Among Busi
ness Men." George L. Noble, execu
tive secretary of the national com
mittee on boys' and girls' club work,
will speak on "The Importance of
Bovs" and Girls' Club Work in Rela
tion to the Industrial Situation."
Ship Merger to Bk Discussed.
IT B. Van Duzer. president of the
Portland Chamber of Commerce, will
apeak on various phases of the pro
posed Pacific coast steamship merger
at the luncheon of the Kiwanis club
at the Multnomah hotel tomorrow
noon. Monte Austin of Remick's
Music house will sing, accompanied
bv Robert Werschkul.
Music Ixvers to Hold Study. All
Interested in the music to be present
ed bv Helen Stanley and the Port
land Symphony orchestra Wednesday
night have been Invited to attend an
illustrated lecture on the programme
to be held at the Kllison-White con
servatory this afternoon at S o'clock.
Mias Pauline Alderman will be in
charge of the study.
Baptist Board Meets Tonight.
The regular monthly board of man
agers' meeting of the Willamette
Baptist Young People's association
will be held in the Y. M. C. A. cafe
teria annex at :15 tonight. Rev. Mr.
Factetti of the Baptist Italian mis
sion will speak on his work among
the Italians of the city.
PSTCHOLOGT SOCIETY TO MEET The
Tortland branch of the 1'nlversal Fel
lowship of Applied Psychology, at its
meeting in central library tonight,
will be addressed bv Dr. J. D. O.
Powers of Seattle, international sec
retary of the organiiat ion. Plans
wi'l be presented for enlarging the
scone of the society.
Chorus to Be Presented This Eve
king. The Monday Musical club will
present its chorus st 8:30 o'clock this
evening in the main parlor of the
Portland hotel. Members have been
notified that this is the regular pro
gramme and that the meeting is open
to guests.
Try THt Red Miu. Cafeteria. Fifth
and Stark streets, for wholesome
"homey" cooked foods Tonight's
carefully prepared specials: Fricas
see of veal with dumplings. 50c; T
bone steak with French fried pota
toes. Sic. Adv.
The Only Number to call Is East
!SS when you want the Salvation
Army trucks to call for your waste
material. Help us to help others by
your help. Address 2 Union av.
Valor John Bree. district officer. Adv.
W. P. I.aRoche. J. B Ofner and
Edgar Pinder have moved their law
off ces to S15-31 Failing building
Broadway 71156. Adv.
Free Demonstration in candy mak
ing today at "The Little Candy Fac
tory." $10 Dekum building, at 3 and
T:S0 P. M. Everybody welcome. Adv.
Kkmmerkk Coau for family use.
freplace. furnace or stove. Carbon
Coal Co.. East USS. Adv
Norris. the hatter, moved to 430
Wash. bl. bet. 11th and 12th. Adv.
Dr. Hunt has returned to h!s office,
t:t .Medical bldg. Mam ITM. Adv. I
Reed Gets Economic Statistics.
A complete set or the three volumes
of the review of economic statistics
published by the Harvard university
committee on economic research has
been given the Reed college library
bv Strong MacNaughton through
E. B. MacNaughton. a member of
Reed college board of regents. The
volumes cover the business situation
since 1919. when they were first pub
lished, until the present. The ma
terial outlines all aspects and aims
to establish a correct interpretation,
as well as to determine the correla
tion between prices, bank loans, dis
counts and crop estimates lie the eco
nomic structure of the world. The
reviews will be utilized in the busi
ness cycles course, which is making
a survey of inflation and deflation of
the past cycle, as well as other pre
vious economical phenomena.
Chief Chaplain Dub Today. Colo
nel John P. Axton, chaplain-in-chief
of the United States army, will ar
rive in Vancouver barracks this
morning and will speak tonight at
7:45 o'clock In the post theater.
Colonel .Axton. was to have arrived
Tuesday morning and Chaplain Bron
son of the 59th infantry had made all
arrangements for a reception and
meeting on that day. However, last
night a telegram was received from
Colonel Axton announcing a change
of schedule. There will be & con
ference with Colonel Axton in the
post service club this afternoon at
2 o'clock, and at night there will be
the big mass meting with the famous
chaplain as the principal speaker.
Church Concert Tonight The
pantomime of Coleman's "Rose of
Bagdad." with concert to follow, will
take place tonight at 8:13 o'clock in
the parish house of St. David s Epis
copal church. East Morrison street,
near East Twelfth street. The pro
ceeds are to be devoted to Sunday
school funds. Songs will be sung by
Dr. Stuart McGuire. John Ross Fargo
and George C. Graham, with Scotch
musical and dancing specialties.
NEW BILLS AT THE THEATERS
BOY SCOUTS DINE TONIGHT
500 TO ATTEND BAXQCET AT
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Each Itad Required to Take Father
Along or Provide Substitute
If Without Parent.
Five hundred men and boys will
rather tonight at the First Presby
terian church for the annual father
and son banquet of the Portland
council of Boy Scouts, this being one
of the features of the observance of
the 11th anniversary of the organi
zation of the scout movement tn
America. Each scout attending the
banauet must be accompanied by his
father: for scouts who have no fath
ers. "emergency fathers" have been
obtained. Scout songs, yells and
stunts will be indulged in. and there
will be short addresses by the presi
dent of the council. C. C. Colt; Rev
Harold L. Bowman. Rev. B. Earle
Parker. F. A. Rasch and R- H
Thomas.
Yesterday was Scout Sunday and
throughout the city pastors preached
special sermons on the boy problem.
some of the discourses being ad
dressed to adults and some to the
boys, many of whom attended serv
ices, where they furnished the music,
acted as ushers, took up the collec
tion, etc.
Abraham Lincoln was pointed out
as the most striking example rn
American history that "it is good for
a man that he bear the yoke in his
vouth." in a special sermon delivered
last night bv Dr. Arthur S. Phelps
at the White Temple, where members
o trooo 20 of the Boy Scouts, of
which Binger Underdahl is scoutmas
ter. were guests. Dr. Phelps declared
that Lincoln's loss of his mother
when a mere bov and the subsequent
passing of a swetheart so softened
hi nature and strengthened his sym
pathy that this duality was always
outstanding in all of his great ac
comolishments.
t make first things first through
out their lives was the plea made by
Rev. J. H. Irvine, psstor or tne noira-i.i-n
Methodist Episcopal church.
yesterday. In addressing the members
of troop 36. who. witn tneir scuui-...,-
is c Janin. attended the
service" in a body. Rev. Mr. Irvine
h turn to seek divine aid in
making their decisions for their life's
work, that they leave nothing undone
to find their niche, ana men to tui
ther seek divine guidance in making
their lives useful to others as well
as to themselves. He said that the
bov in high school is rot too young
to find out what he Is best fitted for
and to hold to his objective moras"
out his life.
HEALTH WORK TO EXPAND
State Board Launches Series of
Letters to Guide Mothers.
The state hoard of health, through
Its bureau of public health, nursing
and child hygiene, is perfecting plans
for an expansion of work in connec
tion with maternity and infant care,
under provisions of the Sheppard
Towner act. Under the provisions of
this bill, any state applying to the
childrens' bureau will receive an ap
propriation outright of $10,000 and
additional funds as matched by the
state. The initial amount was for
mally applied for in a resolution in
troduced in the last legislature by
Representative Kubli.
As a feature of its work, the bu
reau is launching a series ol pre
natal letters, designed to be of
special guidance and encouragement
to expectant mothers. .Instructions
as to proper care, dieting, clothing.
tc. are Included. The backing and
co-operation of various women's or
ganizations, county school nurses and
others are enlisted.
BROWNSVILLE TAILORING
SALE.
Order your spring suit now at the
Brownsville Woolen Mills, Third and
Morrison, and save dollars. During
this month we tailor to order at re
duced prices IJ5. $40. $45. $50. $55.
$60. Perfect cutting and tailoring.
Adv.
PAY OFF YOUR MORTGAGE
In monthly Installments, and really
own your home. See us about your
renewal. Special proposition. Port
land Turst company. Sixth and Mor
rtson streets. Adv.
Police Seek 4 Cedars Girls.
Police last night were searching for
May O'Malley, 19; Elsie Hippman, IS:
Peggy Rotter, 19. and Peggy Hayles.
24. inmates of the Cedars who took
"French leave."
CARD OK THAXKS,
We wish to thank our friends for their
kindness and many beautiful floral
tributes during the illness and death
of our mother. Savanrh I. Dailey.
1 . MRS. C. II WHITE.
MRS. G. E. M ATHEWS.
SIRS. M. W. KE.N'AOr.
C. A. DAILEY.
JAMES E.MILLER.
AdT. K- K. BRANDON.
Orpheum.
BY LEONE CASS BAER.
YOU'LL like Dave1 Harris and his
band of seven gilt-edged players,
on the new bill at the Orpheum, and
you will like Ben Bern!, all by himself.
and Mrs. Ward's two thin boys. Bob
and Al. when they yodel and when
they dance.
Dave is a music hound, Tou name
the instrument and Dave plays it. He
is backed up and reinforced by a
group of seven youthful and busy ex
ponents of syncopation. There's a
baby Kreisler, a banjoist who twangs
a mean chord, there's a moaning saxo
phonist and a cave-man drummer,
there's a Paderewski named Kelly and
a slide trombonist and a cornetist be
sides Dave. They play anything and
everything, done into syncopation,
weaving spells of real harmony. Dave
sings sundry ballads and fiddles or
toots or saws on a viol or chords on
the piano as the mood seems to etrike
him.
The boys are individually talented
and collectively furnish a musical sen
sation. Xhis is not an instance of
"useless each without the other," for,
while Dave might be interesting as a
single, the boys' orchestra positively
would be a riot anywhere by them
selves.
Ben Bern! says that Dave's adven
tures on the violin encourage him
to try. So Ben tries, to our great
joy. He calls for ideas and plays
whatever he wants to play. He tells
stories and tells what he knows about
girls. He is very funny and every
thing he says has a ring of having
been thought of just that minute.
Ben's twinkling eye and ready smile
enhance what he says and does.
The Ward brothers are Al and Bob.
They are extremely slender and fit
perfectly into characterizations of
English dumb-bells, "Bertie and
Archie," in a fine frenzied argument
about penny ante. They dance amaz
ingly well, twirling like cork screws
and tapping their toes as lightly as
the late Primrose. Their yodeling.
too, is of an excellent quality and
they add a delightful novelty of
their own, a yodeled "Blues" ballad.
"A Dress Rehearsal" provides amuse
ment. It is a travesty in one act in
which a beaming young author puts
his actors through a rehearsal. The
cleverness in the idea appears to be
in having exaggerated types for the
roles, a flossy hand-painted hero, an
Amazonian vampire, a Mack Sennett
villain, and a cherub girl for the
heroine. The lines occasionally are
humorous and the situations often
ludicrous and mirth-provoking. Will
iam Lemuels as the villain is ex
cellent. Bobby Adams and Jewel Barnett
have a turn that captures much ap
plause. One, a tall girl in a creme
de menthe dress, has a sweet flute
like soprano which harmonizes beau
tifully with the voice of the m other
girl. One medley that was inde
scribably sweet was a string of lul
labies, put together so as to read
and harmonize, exquisitely. One of
the girls, not the pianist, is extreme
ly interesting. She is a singing
comedienne with an impish charm
and sparkle in her carryings-on.
Emile and John Nathane open the
bill with an exceptionally worth
while arrangement of balancing and
tumbling, touched with fine comedy
and extremely artistic in every es
sential. ...
The closing number discloses femii
Pollenberg and his two bears, which
go through unusual tricks, includ
ing skating and bicycling.
Hippodrome.
FIVE Hawaiian instrumental mu
sicians and a native dancer, billed
as Kalaluhi's Hawaiians, in "A Night
TJ 1 ; " 1 1 n t ra tllA bill that
opened at' the Hippodrome theater
yesteraay. l ne progi amine
. i- .. 11 Klunr.At nnri ntPfUin-
DUl la v, c; 1 1 i-" ' " -' 1 - - ---
ins. but the Hawaiians with their
dancing, singing ana .iimm,.,....-.
numbers are in truth the headliners.
Douglas Flint, the comedian, with
his company in playlet "Grouch Greg
ory" make a decided hit with the
audience. The act is full of humor
., .... r,j it i well fitted for
1 1 I UUft "U - ""--
the acting of Mr. Flint. The com-
uanv supporting Jir. rum. i buvu. ,
" ..',... -j svu-l.., in a skit known
.lilt ir aiiu v ...
as "Up and Down." are extremely
rood. Their impersonation -
characters are particularly good.
i . V. . i r, Anisi-gVtltt iK
Anotner numoer ihhl i i
. t. j ra.tl.tnn These
rnat ui ."I". - , .
J and through
L Vt U I4tig onto, - - . .
a series of athletic stunts that hold
the attention of the Hippoarome .-
lowers. .
t. i o l ; T.norntP nilt Oil SOme
rtasiii tv v -n i , - - '
new and clever stunts. "The Lure of
. , j mntjnn Tilcture starring
Pauline Frederick ro-mds out the bill.
Baker.
BY LEOXE CASS BAER.
mHE way of a man with a maid Is
X revealed again in the novel theme
of "Adam and Eva." which the Baker
Players are putting on this week.
Taking every role Into consideration,
a happier choice could hardly have
been made to display the talents of
Leo Lindhard as a leading man and at
the same time. Introduce again into
our midst that youthful and charming
leading woman Leona Powers. Con
sidering the play as a whole It Is de
lightful, light and interesting enter
tainment. Selmer Jackson is out of the cast
this week, and for a fortnight more
he will be taking a much needed rest.
Henry Hall, formerly a Baker Player,
is coming to take Mr. Jackson's place
in the next two bills, but for this
week Mr. Lindhard has stepped into
the leading man's role and he fits it
nicely.
The play is a comedy and amusing.
A middle-aged millionaire, one
James King, finds himself regarded
only as a source of supply for his ex
travagant and idle family. One of his
daughters, Julie, a social butterfly,
has wedded a waster and idler, and
both live In the old man's home and
spend his money. Another daughter,
Eva, is wasting her hours in idle
pursuits and is carrying on flirtations
with two money-seekers, a neighbor
ing physician, and an impecunious
Englishman- with a title. The old
man's family is further enlarged oy
the presence of two more parasites,
an elderly sister-in-law, widowed,
who selfishly spends every moment
in club activities, and an elderly man
cousin who came for a week-end visit
some 20 years before and had pro
longed his stay, spending most of his
time in sleep or at the table.
To these the old man one morning
remarks that he plans to send them
all up to a farm he has in Jersey for
a vacation.
When they have recovered from the
surprise into which this announce
ment stuns them, they set about cir
cumventing his plans. Eva wheedles
her suitor, the doctor, who is the old
man's phiysician, Into prescribing for
the old father a long trip and an ab
sence from his family. Completely
trapped, the ' old man plans to make
the trip and leave his family exactly
as they wished .it, to fritter away
their time and his money. However,
the best-laid plans go quite astray in
this instance, and the somnolent old
hanger-on cousin awakens sufficient
ly to reveal to the old man the plot
his dependents have hatched.
So the old man pays, them in their
own coin. He goes on the trip he
has planned, but he leaves a "substi
tute father" for his children in the
person of Adam Smith, a conscien
tious and likable chap who has long
been in the old financier's employ.
Mutiny and an open rebellion fol
low the assumption of control by
Adam and he is at his wits' end until
he hits on the idea of telling the
gambling, cheating spenders that
their father's fortune has been swept
away.
The author skates a bit on the thin
Ice of probability In the instantane
ous reformation that take place, but
it is very good entertainment any
way. The girls decide to start a
chicken farm on the Jersey estate,
the idle son-in-law turns into a deb
onair and dashing salesman, the old
cousin studies shorthand and takes
up a line of life insurance, and the
old club woman weds an aged and
ailing millionaire suitor. 'ihe dull
and impecunious English lord turns
so democratic that he opens a livery
stable near the chicken farm and be
comes a fine groom. As for Adam,
he pursues a silent courtship of Eva
and wins her just as father returns
and finds the splendid reformation
that has gone on during his absence.
Guy B. Kibbee is the whole thing
while he is in the action. He is poor
mil
ortisl
rr actor
TEN MEXICANS ARRESTED
Men Are Held for Federal Authori
ties to Investigate.
r- xtn.i.... i rn:i ir h t into the
United States for railroad laborers
during the war when there was a
shortage of labor, were picked P by
Inspectors van v aiKtiiuuiei.
iams last night and were neia in tne
;ity jail for federal action, u
' -J . ihmit 300 Mex-
IimaLeu mat. mt- " - ;
leans illegally in Idaho, W ashington
nd Oregon and a concert !
leing made to round them all up for ,
deportation. I
, rf last night were:
Jose Jigeroa, 2S, Ambrosio Montogo, ,
3S Jull Mastini. 26. Juan Seeneros, I
3 A. Ochoa. 35, Faustino Hernandez, ;
32, Reuben aiorenes, t, .ui.u... ;
uo-nanriez 40. Francisco t-att,
and Ventura Sanches, 45.
t.-v ibt-ifa citv has one newspaper
which by universal consent, is the
Want-Ad medium of the community.
n Portland It's The uregonian.
SEATS NOW AT SHh'KMAN-CLAY
CO., SIXTH & MORRISON.
AuditoriuM
KBEG. MON., FEB. 13
SAN
J
raaiu"t i ' '
Uruirtnirrt
MOV. "MME. BlTTEBFLr." Mlura
(guest), Klinova. AgostinI, Valle. Tl'ES.
"CAVALI.KRIA Kl STICAN'N'A," Saroya,
Klinova. Boscaccl, B'Amico. "PAtiLIACCI."
Fitziu (guesL), Tommasini, Royer, Tudisco.
1VEU.3IAT. "FA I ST,"Charlebois, Klinova,
Agoftlnl. Valle, DeBlasI. WED. EVE.
"RltiOLETTO." Luchee, Klinova, Boscacci,
Rover. Cervi, DeBlasI. IHI KS. "JEWELS
OF THE MADONNA." Sarova,Klinova. Ag
ostini.Royer.Cervi. FBI. "LA BOH EM E,"
Fitzituguestl.Oharlebois. Boscacci, Valle. Ie
IMasi. SAT.MAT. "MME. BUTTERFLY,"
Mlura guest I. Klinova, Agostini. Valle. DeBl
asI. SAT. EVE "IL TROVATORE," Sa-
rova. Fra.canl, Tommasini, Royer, Cervi.
CONDUCTOR, Ernesto Knoch. Engagement
by arrangement W. T. Pangle.
MAIL ORDERS ADDRESS AUDITORIUM
PRICES Evening and Saturday Matinee,
6ic, 2.20; Wed. Matinee, 56c, $1.65.
1 1
Happy
Is the Man
Who Secures
1 Comfort and se
curity for old age.
2 Protection for his
family.
3 Monthly income if
totally disabled.
4 Savings on which
you can draw.
When he buys the
new low premium
endowment at age 65 of
Qregonljfc
Insurance Company
Oldest in Pacific Northwest
Home Office
Corbett BIdg., Portland, Or.
IQ TICKETS NOW SELX.I1VG
TTTJTT TpBroadnay at Tifk
1 L1 VJ Phone Main 1
THIS WEEK FRIDAY EVE.
Classical Popular Concert 4
i i aniFS' nni iimria i
knwihu wvhvniuin i
CONCERT ORCHESTRA
-30 MEMBERS 30-
I
Frances Knight, Conductor.
Floor. 1.50l Bal., SI? Gal.. BOc
Add 10 Per Cent War Tax.
old father and he vitalises the role.
His is deft characterization rich In
mellowness and endowed with an
amiable Quaintness and charm.
Leona Powers was warmly wel
comed upon her appearance. She is
Eva, a youthful and fascinating arch
plotter. ' Miss Powers is charming In
the part, demure and, aa always, of
colorful appeal. She never lets herself
overshadow a role, rather she paints
a portrait. Her Eva is cuddly and
reaL
Mayo Methot has an interesting
part, the only part that has any un
dercurrents of emotion In it. She is a
maid in the Kins; home, a sort of
"Merely Mary Ann" type, whose love
for Adam is always genuine and ap
parent to everyone but Adam, and
who hides her little heartache to the
end of the chapter. Miss Methot plays
it just that way. subdued and with ir
resistible appeal.
Leo Lindhard Is admirable as Adam.
He Is intensely human and real in bis
portrayal and brought out all the
merit in the role. William A. Lee as
the Idler who turns salesman proves
constantly interesting and his study
of contrasting types proved his versa
tility. This is true, too, in the in
stance of Jane Gilroy, tlrst 'us a super
cilious butterfly and later as a whole
some farm girl, and in the case of
George P. Webster, a eleepy-headed,
lazy old parasite who develops into a
bustling insurance agent selling poli
cies right and left. Rankin Mansfield
in the role of the English lord and
Irving Kennedy as the doctor, with
Lora Rogers as the petulant clublady,
add interesting portrayals. The play
is splendidly staged. The last scene
is a realistic corner near the hennery
and coops of prize White Leghorns
add a touch of realism.
Cast James King, a rich man, Guy B.
Kibbee; Corinthia, hlB parlor maid. Mayo
Methot; Clinton DeWitt, his aon-in-law.
Wm. A. Lee; Julie DeWitt, his eldeat
daughter, Jane Gilroy; Eva Kins, his
youngest daughter, Leona lowers; Aunt
Abby Rocker, his Bister-in-law, Lora Rog
ers; Dr. Jack Delamater, his neighbor,
Irving Kennedy; Uncle Horace Plgrlm, his
cousin, George P. Webster; Lord Andrew
Gordon, his would-be son-in-law, Rankin
Mansfield; Adam Smith, his business man
ager, Leo Lindhard.
Iiyrlc.
WITH Ben Dillon as a plump
Irish "widdy woman" and Al
Franks playing one of his best roles
of the season as a pawnbroker, the
new show at the Lyric, called "Ike,
the Pawnbroker," speeds through a
laugh-getting plot, blended with
pleasing songs and dance numbers.
When Dillon dons feminine attire
and a wig of brilliant red, there is
bound to be plenty of fun. And when
the Irish lady marries Ike, the pawn
broker, there is still more fun.
Franks handles his characterization
this week with great skill and pro
vides comedy that keeps the audience
laughing all the time he is on the
stage. The big riot of mirth in the
show comes when Ike leaves his wife
in charge of the store, and she pays
large sums of money for such arti
cles as gold bricks and glass jewels.
One of the brightest moments in
the play is the novelty number pre
sented by Francis Relford and Eve
lyn Hunter, Rosebud chorus, maids
of singing and dancing talent. Their
HAZELWOOD
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ranging in price from
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Choice selected fruits.
Strictly fresh eggs.
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Tender .steaks and
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EDLEFSEN'S solid fuel excels all others in heat, lasting and price.
specialty is a "Lailghing and Crying
Duet."
Clare Heath. Ted TTllmark and
Eddie G. Wright, forming the Lyric
trio, contribute a decided hit to the
musical portion of the programme
with their songs and comedy. How
ard Evans sings "When Francis
Dances With Me," which he follows
with some old-fashioned stepping
from the New York Bowery.
Other good song numbers are
"When Miami Dreams," by Dorothy
Raymond; "Mummies' Ball," by Anna
Chick, and "Rosemary," by Jewel
La Velle.
S. & H. green stamps for cash. Hol
man Fuel Co. coal and wood. Broad
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Phone your want ads to The Ore
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SUITS
Made to
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We will make you a suit to
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Prices no higher than
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104 FOURTH STREET
Near Stark
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151 Grand Ave. 1043 Belmont.
Store No. 4
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866 East Anlteny 124 North Sixth
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Inferior plumbing
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80-82-84-86 Front Street
W.ianHniMmainiuiia.n
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WEEK DAYS DANCING
Jerry Reed's Orchestra
12 to 1:30. 6 to 7:30. 9:30 to 12:30
American and Chinese Dishes
Service Supreme
11 A, M. to 2 A. M.
Try Onr Lunch or Dinner -"Week
Days
11 A. M. to 8 P. ML
Prices 30c, 35c. 40c to 75o
Includes Soup, Vegetable
ana .Beverage
Special Sunday Chicken Dinner 75c
11 A. M. to 9 P. M.
Refreshing Fountain Drinks
Oriental Cafe
Washington and Broadway
Upstairs
BRADFORD
OVERCOATS
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$25 to $45
285 Washington St., Between Fourth and Fifth
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Payment terms can be arranged.
Call at the Gs Office or Ftsse Main 6500, Automatic 663-74
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ORIENTAL EUGS fit in un
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Fabricators
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Call or write for Booklet.
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2d and Morrison Sin., Portland, Or.
Mentionthis paper when writing.