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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1922)
18 TITE MORNING OREG ONI AN, MONDAY- MARCII 20, 1922 raw READY ' FOR OPERA OPENING Rearrangement, of Stands in Building Completed. NEW BILLS AT THE THEATERS SOME EQUIPMENT HERE Entire Company of SU Persons and 17 Baggage Cars of Scen . ery Due on Wednesday. - 3 Rearrangement of stands has been completed for the Chicago Grand Op era company's five great performances I whlcn are to oegin weanesuij i"s" In 'the public auditorium with "Monna Vanna." Yesterday saw the beginning of the assemblage of the great pro ductions in Portland and by Wednes day noon the entire company of 311 persons and 17 baggage cars of scen ery will be here, ready for the open- ing performance. Word was received yesterday by the Northern Pacific company that Lucian Muratore, world's greatest tenor, who will sing Wednesday night in "Monna Vanna-" and Friday night in "Romeo and Juliet," left St. Paul ahead of the rest of the company and will reach Portland Tuesday morning at 8 o'clock, in order that he may have 24 hours' rest before his first appear ance. He la accompanied by his wife, Mme. Lena Cavalierl, and they have been making a leisurely trip from St. Paul In order that the world-famous French tenor may be in the very besj 1 of voice. Plana Are Not Disclosed. Just what Muratore's plans are when he arrives In Portland have not been disclosed, but he probably will not accept any social engagements. The main body of the company will arrive in the city Wednesday on three palatial special trains direct from St. Paul, where the company closed an .engagement Saturday night. Upon the arrival of the first train Mary Garden and some of the other world stars will receive a rousing welcome from the citizens of Portland, headed by Mayor Baker and Governor Olcott, and also from a committee of the Portland Chamber of Commerce and the other civic organizations. The station will be thrown open to the public and it is expected that thousands will take this opportunity to eet a glimpse of the famous Mary. She will be escorted to a stand in the depot square, where she will be pre sented with a large floral key to the citv and to the state by Governor Olcott. A band will be on hand and a big general reception is planned. Equipment Reaches Portland. One carload of special equipment and a crew of stage hands arrived in the city last week and this was fol lowed by another carload or special stare eauinment yesterday. - The main body of stage help and me chanics will arrive tomorrow and Wednesday morning. Everything is In readiness at the auditorium for handling the largest crowded in the five years' history of the building. The hundreds of people who are coming from outside the city are beginning to assemble. People are coming from almost every city and town in the northwest inasmuch as Portland is the only city in the north- west where the company shows. Be ginning today everjf train is expected to bring large numbers. The ticket sals indicates no fewer than 4000 visitors in the city for the event. Announcement was made yesterday by W. T. Pangle, manager of the local engagement, that there are still plenty of good seats left for every performance. The ticket office at Sherman Clay & Co.'s store. Sixth and Morrison streets, will be open today and tomorrow from 10 A. M. until 10 P. M. On the days of the perform ance the ticket window will be open at Sherman Clay & Co. from 10 A. M. until 6 'P. M., and from 6:30 P. M. until the end of the performance at the auditorium. Commendation for the Chicago Opera association, as the best and biggest attraction of its kind St. Paul has ever had, was contained" in a telegram received yesterday by Mr. Panglo from E. A. Stein, manager for the guarantors of that city. The message was this: "Chicago Opera association closed with us last night, to the best busi ness and gave the greatest opera that St. Paul has ever seen or heard, and we have had them all." Orphenm. BY LEONE CASS BAER. - THE Orpheura bill this week is a direct answer to prayer from a lot of us whose country relatives and friends have come to visit us while' the women folk take in the opera. If you find Uncle George or Cousin Arthur "hanging heavy on your hands get them tickets to see Frank Van Hoven, the mad magician, and if Aunt Dora has come in ahead of the opera dates so she'll be here in plenty of time buy her a seat to watch the fascinating Adelaide dance, There hasn't been such a bill in ages. Even that well-known char acter of fiction, the "veriest tyro' would know that any bill having on it Adelaide and Hughes, the dancing pair, and th maa Van Hoven, and sober Jim Cullen, the man from the west, and Jim Dutton and his society circus act would be a bit out of the ordinary, and it is. ' In 1913 Adelaide and Hughes were here, honeymooning, and a big part Grand Opera Forms Text of Popular Concert. Portland Opera Association Prac tically Takes Charge of Event. of the "Passing Show, in which they were featured. They are still honey mooning, and young and happy, and their Joyousness pervades their dance moods. Adelaide is dainty and impish. Someone called Fritzi Scheff the little devil of opera. In the same sense Adelaide is a little devil of dance, alluring, gay, all color and action. Her wonderful little feet weave stories and spells in just the same manner as the hands of a gifted pianist wandering over the keys. Little modern steps, shufflings and heel maneuvers, toe dancing of a very fine quality and even an acrobatic adventure in terpsichore, Adelaide generously gives us. Her partner Hughes is a male dancer of splendid , attainments, thoroughly masculine, and there is not an . "esthetic" or "classical" wiggle or step. in all his brilliant offerings. Their most in teresting number is a pantomime in which Adelaide as a gay French doll wreaks havoc with the feelings of the flirtatious tin soldier Hughes. The little Adelaide dresses artistically, the full stage setting is handsome, and John Michael Daly at the piano adds his musical bit delightfully. Frank Van Hoven defies reviewers or anyone else to analyze his act Nothing he does seems premeditated and every word he utters has the quality of being spontaneous and as if it popped into his mind the minute he said it. Van Hoven is billed as the dippy mad magician and, while there may be others who are more of a magician, there certainly is no one dippier or madder. He is a clean-cut, interesting young man of home-folks type and his audience is frankly f as-j cinated and completely absorbed by his carryings-on. When he ended nis whirlwind of nonsense, pandemonium reigned and the audience swayed and rocked in howling mirth. James H. Cullen. "the man from the west." which may, of course, b any Dlace between here and Chicago, returns with his memorandum book, from which he reads advertisements he has culled from want ad. columns. He rhvmes a bit and sings new paro dies and, as invariably, is popular and amusing. Clarence Oliver and a clever young woman named Georgia Olp who used to be featured in traveling productions have a deliehtful sketch called Wire Collect." It's a human-document sort of story, full of bright lines and hrimniine- with interest. Both MISS OlD and the ingenious and likable Mr. Oliver display, histrionic ability, Miss Olp as a telegrapher and Mr. Oliver as a wanderer who sends a wire col lect and later returns to collect wife. James Dutton, an equestrian whose achievements are known wherever the tan-bark and sawdust are flung, is DUttins on a ocautiiui slice or cir cus life. He. stands on me oacis oi two snowv fat steeds which caper about the ring while two dainty but terfly girls pose and balance with hinf. The snowy steeds, the girls and Dutton and the smart little phaeton all in white, not forgetting white-clad ring masters and a tuzzy wnue aog, enhance the beautv of the turn The three Haley sisters are, a proor that some families have more than one flower and pride. Ma and Pa Haley have three, all clever, charm ing maids, with fresh, sweet voices. One is a Charlottish Greenwoodish tvoe. and ittis she who adds thecom- edy and the deep, rich contralto in the harmony. The Haleys have picked nice frocks and nice, popular) tunes. A capital act opens the bill. It s a cycling turn, 'way out of the usual run of this sort or act, witn one clown, who does sensational maneu vers a-top a seven-foot cycle. He also rides original wheels and keeps up a lively flow of humor. A grace ful girl named Genevieve and an other chap who works straight add interest. This bill closes on Wednes day afternoon. GRAND OPERA formed the text of the usual Sunday concert yester day afternoon in the public audi torium and one of the largest au diences that has attended these events for months was surely en thused with the spirit of grand opera. The Portland Opera association, Mrs. Edward L. Thompson, president, practically took charge of the entire event and furnished a splendid pro gramme. Judge Kanzler made an address in which he asked the people to buy tickets and attend the per formances in this city March 22-23 of the Chicago Grand Opera associa tion. The big scene in the operatic pro gramme came with the portrayal of part two, act two of Verdi's opera, "The Force of Destiny," an opera in which the association has Won hon ors in the recent past. The stage picture shows black-cloaked pil grims, two monks and the heroine, singing and acting. There were 58 singers in the chorus, and they ap peared In black cloaks, with hoods. Mrs. Thompson went to some trouble to get these cloaks, without getting into too much expense, and she was, fortunate in being able to borrow them from an educational institution in this city. She herself made the hoods after obtaining a pattern. The soloists in this scene were Mrs. Mischa Pelz, soprano; Mark Daniels, baritone, and Edward Moshofsky. basso, and they all sang and acted with much success. The . chorus, grouped in front of a white cross, sang the prayer scene with impres sive effect, and Roberto Corruccinl directed with fine ability. The ac companists were Evelyn Cheely and Fred Brainerd at two pianos and Lu cien E. Becker, organist. Six separate operatic numbers, principally from the. opera. "The Force of Destiny." were finely sung by Herman Hafner, Mark Daniels, Margaret Masonek. Edward Moshof sky, Harvey Hudson. Randolph 'Thomas and Blanche Nelson. Each soloist was encored, and the piano accompanists in this section were: Fred A. Brainerd, Miss E. Parker, Evelyn Cheely and Dorothea Schoop. Mr. Becker played admirably several organ solos. Lyric. TJEN DILLON, Al Franks and the J Lyric principals and chorus gave customers of the popular musical com edy playhouse a pleasing menu of en tertainment in "Minnie B.," the new song and fun show which opened a week's engagement yesterday after noon. Minnie B. is a racehorse and the ac tion of the play speeds along like a galloping thoroughbred on a Ken tucky, track. Dillon, as Mike Dooley, has great confidence in the ability of his horse to win the big race in a walk and is prepared to back his judgment with his money, watch and cuff links. Mrs. Dooley, played by Dorothy Raymond, has other ideas about racehorses in general and Min nie B. in particular. The Dooley fam ily feud is the basis for a wealth of amusing situations. The stage setting is exceptionally attractive and makes a colorful back ground for the songs and steps of the Rosebud chorus maids. Several of the girls step out of the ranks to do spe cialties that won enthusiastic ap plause yesterday. Evelyn Hunter has a song number, the Buckman sisters contribute a whirlwind dance and Babe McCarmack sings "Here Comes Dinah." The finish of the show is a riot of fun, as the company is divided into two "sides" which compete in dancing for the prize of the audience's ap plause. Ben Dillon tears off some rapid-fire Irish toe-tapping that goes over in big style. Howard Evans con tributes some great dancing to the show. Song bits of the play include "All Over Nothing at All," sung by . Doro thy Raymond: "I'm Wild About Wild Men," by Blllie Bingham, and "Angel Child." by Jewel LaVelle. Baker. BY LEONE CASS BAER. FOR a couple of hours or so it ap pears as if Jane Gilroy were go ing to break up all the happy house holds In the play, "Parlor, Bedroom and Bath," in which she is .the bright and especial figure, at the Baker this week. . She wasn't entirely to blame, you know. She was attempting to straighten out the tangled love affair for a friend of a friend. The case wasn't such a difficult one on the surface. The patient was a young husband who was very, very good, so good that he had no past, his future promised nothing exciting and his present was exceedingly dull. His wife, a vivacious, worldly girl, led a bored existence and daily sought some proof of her -husbands perfidy, sigh ing that his goodness was driving her mad. Upon the husband's desire to be wicked enough to please his wife hinges the comedy. It is called "Par lor, Bedroom and Bath" because this is the suite of rooms rented at a sea side hotel in which the events are staged. The newspaper girl Is to be caught having dinner In the private parlor along with the Sir Galahad husband. It is so arranged that the wife is to step in unexpectedly and discover her husband in the role of a gay deceiver. But the best-laid plans in this instance as in others "gang aft agley" and they gang so far agley that a series of unexpected situations crop up. For instance, a rattle brained bride and her elderly aunt are both dragged into the parlor epi sodes and the wife discovers not one but three women in whom her hus band seems interested. Naturally the jealous bride- has a husband and that provides another angle, and what with one exciting in cident treading on the heels of an other, its a fine large evening. But it ends happily, with the goody-good husband restored to his wife who is blissfully happy when she thinks how she rescued him from the designing vamps. ' The play is nicely put on, with pretty and' attractive furnishings end an air of reality in its scenes. Jane Gilroy is very fine as the "plant." She is vivacious and active and looks smart in a tailored, suit, but no newspaper woman on earth ever wore a pencil over her ear like a grocer's clerk. Stage reporters and reporteresses invariably carry their pencils tucked over their ears, and so possibly Miss Gilroy doesn't want to break a tradition, but if she ever met a real newspaper woman she'd find that pencils are not being worn on the ears in that profession. The next big bouquet goes to Sel mer Jackson, who is a Chic Sates in delineating types. This week he- is the spineless hero, and his sickly and pathetic efforts at being a gay dog set the audience roaring. He never steps out of the role and is constantly a -source of real joy and interest. Mayo Methot as the wife who wants her husband to have a past contrib utes an excellent piece of work and is brilliant in her emotional moments. So, too, is Leona Powers as a bride who wants to make her husband Jeal ous, and both oung women wear smart attire. The rest of. the cast is notable for the fitness and excellence with which they fill unusual roles. Leo LRpdhard stands out as a Mister i lixit who doesn't fix anything-. Walter Gilbert who has an eye for farce situations, has seen to it that the action is Epeeded upland so the piece proves one of the big laughing hits of the season. " The cast: Nita Leslie Leona Powers Miry Virginia Richmond Virginia Bmbrey.... Marion Albion Leila Crofton Lora Rotrera Angelica Irving Mavo Methot Reginald Irving Selmer Jackson Jeffrey Haywood... Leo Lindhartt Frederick Leslie.. Rankin Mansfield Samuel Barkis Guy B. Kibbee Folly Hathaway Jane Gilroy Wilfred Rodgers...i William A.Lee Mr. Carroll Georire P. Wphstpr Police officer .- Irving Kennedy m BODY 1I1CH. TO CHURCH 250 Members of De Molay Chapter Attend Services. SPECIAL SERMON GIVEN Hippodrome. 'HE new policy of one show a week instead of the second change on Thursday was inaugurated at the Hippodrome yesterday with an .especially strong and well-balanced bill, headlined by a favorite of Portland vaudeville goers, LaFollette. protean actor, character impersonator and mystery worker. In a beautiful oriental setting, which represents the throne room of the imperial palace at Pekin, LaFollette spreads his mys tery over the audience in a way that is as fascinating and strange as the far east myths would have us believe. After this part of his act he imper sonates a number of famous char acters in a remarkably funny and clever style. Margot and Francois, a pair of French entertainers, present an act that is somewhat of a departure from the usual vaudeville stunts and which is characteristically French in its style. They enter on stilts, and after an exhibition of stilt-walking they indulge in some knock-about ath letics and clown-acting. Mammy, as 'the Southern Star of Syncopation," and weighing about 200 pounds, is another good act with a Dixie flavor. Guy McCormick and Cliff Winehill put over' some clever chatter and a few popular songs in their turn, and the other item in the new bill is a short and snappy three-scene comedy called "The Chatter," put on by four actors, - 'The Right That Failed" is the name of the motion picture part of the programme, in which Bert Lytell and Virginia Valli play the lead parts. Lytell plays the part of a prize lighter, who falls in love with girl he encounters in a park. He conceals his real identity for fear the girl would not approve, and follows her to a summer resort, where he plays the part of a gentleman of leisure, with decidedly fortunate re sults, winning the girl in competition and also the esteem of her father. Beware of Contaminating Things of Life, Youths Are Advised by Rev. Mr. Gallagher. Members of Sunnyside chapter-of De Molay. 250 strong, attended the services of Sunnyside Methodist Epis copal church in a body yesterday morning and heard Rev. T. H. Gal lagher, pastor, deliver a sermon for their particular benefit. Accompanied by the advisory con sul of the order' the boys marched in a body from the Sunnyside Mesonic temple to the church. Many of the parents of the boys attended the services and the church was crowded. The subject of the pastor's sermon was "The Man With the Set Face." Advantage Seen for Youths. "What an advantage you youn men have over your fathers and fore fathers in solving the problems of life," said the pastor. "You have available the wisdom and experienc of generations and the ways an means of solving problems about which your fathers knew nothing. "Life fs like algebra, with the plu and minus signs, and many a failur can be traced to the fact that young man started out with the minus rather than the plus sign Many a life has been wasted for lack of an ideal, because the boy did no have his face set and his ambitions and energy directed toward a definite goal. Profit and loss in business is the absorbing and dominating influence in too many lives, to the detriment of the higher things. Too many turn the rule of God into the rule of gold, The young man whose face is set toward the accomplishment of th finest things of life, whose ambition is to do good, can begin anywhere in life s game and reach the goal God gave us. the face we have at 15, but at 50. faces are the outgrowth of soul, body and mind. Safe Pilotage Advised. Young men, don't see ho'w nearly you can come to the edge of the precipice without driving off. Don' look for the rocks and the handbars in the ocean of life, but pilot your ship in the deep waters away from the danger points. . Dont' mingle with or near the things of life that are contaminating, but fix your faces on the just, the righteous, the holy and the good. The large steel ships are not made for the calm seas and the peaceful weather, but for the storms. The order of De Molay was not made for the sunshine and shallows of life, but for the storms and billows and to fortify the youth against the strug gles and turmoil incident to human life and to help him withstand the weakness of the flesh and build for a greater humanity and a' stronger manhood as exemplified through Jesus Christ." EXTREMES ARE POINTED OUT 'We Are Half-Baked," Is Deelara tion of Rev. E. E. Flint. ' "A Weil-Balanced Christian Life' was the subject of the sermon de livered yesterday morning by Rev, E. E. Flint, pastor of the Atkinson Memorial Congregational church. '"It may be repeating what is often said, but it is nevertheless true that our age is suffering from the affile tion of extremes. The old prophet would say we are a cake not turned. In other words, we are half baked. Jesus would say. probably, something as he said to Nicodemus: We have but one birth and we need two: the second one is still necessary. Poise has taken a drop. The one who talks and writes the worst and Bometimes the blackest, talks and writes the most today. The one who feels the worst and meanest is the one who is doing the most to change the world. . - - "The best type of person Is too often found in the back seat. A few outstanding examples are sufficient. The much parading of lax morality and low moral standards overshadows the better specimen and standard. We may concede this much, that the moral condition of the world is bad enough, but to keep this side con stantly on parade and keep the other locked up in the closet is bad busi ness. If 10 per cent of our youth are loose and bad tn morals that is enough to talk about and write about to cover up the other 90 per cent. "The soul of religion is in the inner man. The kingdom of God is within us.' We need the Sabbath, we need the Bible, we need the secret place of prayer, we need spiritual baptism to make a balance and give poise to modern life." CHRISTIAN DUTY DISCUSSED To Vote and Help Clean Up City Is trged by Rev. H. H. Griffis. 'To register your name and ad dress and become a qualified voter, to study municipal conditions and prob lems, to work for such men and meas-ure-s as will make for a cleaner city, to vote at school elections, to help in. the cause of providing wholesome amusement and entertainment for the young these things, my friends. are just as much a part of your Christian duty as to read the Bible, sing psalms), or sit at the Lord's table." said . the Rev, Harold H. Griffis in his sermon yesterday morn, ing at the First Christian church on "The Programme of Jesus." Affirm ing that this programme involved four concentric circles of duty, the speaker said in part: "The individual who is going to be a positive force- in the extension of Christ's kingdom must begin by get ting his own heart right before God. No use for a man to talk about being an agent of social righteousness when ho himself is impure and crooked and unscrupulous. God has given us a far-reaching work to do, but he has made it perfectly clear that, -however far that work may reach, it must begin right here at home In our own hearts. To be ex tensively powerful our religion must te intensively personal. "At the same time the Christian man has a debt to his own town or city. Many church people seem to tnink that if they can finally get themselves and their families and their immediate friends-into heaven, they will have exhausted the whole power and purpose -of the Christian religion. But such Christianity as that is not- far removed from selfish ness. Every Christian is bound by the gospel of Jesus Christ to bo con cerned with the reformation and sal vation of his own community. "Advancing to the third circle of duty in the programme of Jesus, the Christian looks out upon a horizon that Includes the state and the na tion. Jesus is not only the Christ of Portland, but also the ' Christ of America, and to be a citizen of his kingdom is to reach out a helping hand not only to the unfortunates of our own locality, but also to the mountaineers of Kentucky and Ten nessee, to the negroes of the south, to the children of Chicago slums, to the emigrants of Ellis island, to the orientals of the Pacific coast and to the wage-slaves of New York sweatshops." DR. RICHARD Ii. SWAIN HERE "The Honest Atheist" Discussed by Visiting Minister. . Dr. Richard L. Swain gave the first of his series of sermon-lectures at First Congregational church ' last night, taking as his subject "The Honest Atheist." "I think there are more good Chris tians in the world now than ever be fore," said Dr. Swain. "Many good people are religiously undone in the face of the countless 'isms' that are found in our present life. A great deal of excellent preaching fails to make connections with the mind of the constitutional doubter." At the suggestion of Dr. W. T.' lit. Elveen, pastor of First Congrega tional church. Dr. Swain, who recently passed through an illness, delivered nearly all his lecture sitting in a chair. He traced his own mental struggle with religious problems, par- nuuiariy mat oi ns conception and acceptance of the existence of God. Dr. bwain will give a lecture and answer questions on religion and the ology at 8:15 P. M. every night l.ns week except Saturday. His subjects will ,be as follows: Monday. '"How Science Saves Religion"; Tuesday, "Does Man Have a Soul?" Wednesday. Does God Have a Body and Could He Become a Man?" Thursday. "Los- ng the Bible to Find It"; Friday, 'Losing and Finding the Sense of Im mortality." Tacoma for Peak Supported. TACOMA, Wash., March 19. (Spe al.) Assurance that the Seattle Real Estate association will join with this city in the efforts to restore the original name of Tacoma to the mountain was given yesterday by S. F. Woody, president of the Seattle organization, in an address before the members of the Tacoma Real Es tate association. Sugar Beets to Be Planted. YAKIMA, Wash., March 19. (Spe cial.) Canvass of the Cowiche dis trict yesterday showed that a con siderable number of Cowiche farmers will plant sugar beets this season. There will be no large acreage on any one farm, but the aggregate will furnish a considerable yield. Read The Oregonian classified ads. IharqldsgilberiI f 1 PIANOS fit REPA!RD-ReNTCD-50U II Look for the electric sign just back of the Telegram corner. Y? All Through gr r j luur secunu or nunoreatn tin or ue- 4 Vour pendable Coffee will be uniformly good. And there's more economy in the three-pound tins. Tastes better goes further DEE master aad paeicen af OKroi'i Stop Taking: Medicine Get Your Teeth Attended To How can you ever expect to en joy good health when every parti cle of food is. contaminated as you swallow it? It may not be a pleas ant thing to contemplate, but it is, nevertheless, a fact that bad teeth practically poison each mouthful of food which you swallow and, unless your system is strong enough to absorb and throw off the poison, ill health and disease is the result. You wouldn't eat decayed food, would you? But yet you do not hesitate to chew your food with diseased teeth. You are particular about your person, are you not? You keep your body clean and well clad: but so long as your teeth don't ache and pain you let tnem go. ut course, you brush your teeth not as regular-, ly, perhaps, or just in the way that you should. But the use of the tooth brush and all the dentifrice in the w-irld will not restore your tefith once they have commenced to decay. Teeth Extracted by Gas. Accept Our FREE Consultation Today Dr. Harry Sender DENTIST, Second Floor Alisky Building Third and Morrison Main 6576 DR. A. B. STILES with this office fWOOSTER'S" Sells Everything at Popular Prices. 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