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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1911)
TITE STJ"DAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, MAY 21, 1911, Y. M. C. A. BRANCHES ARE IN GREAT DEMAND IN OREGON Manager Rhodes Declares Association Could Double Number of Organizations Within Week if It Were Not Contrary to General Policy. Ir tit Young Men's Cbrwttan Associa tion desired to. It could start out to morrow and double the number of 11 octatlona In the Northwest within a week. Each of these new association would have a good-sized membership and no end of enthusiasm. If the T. M. C. A. desired to found these new tranches It could do so easily. But It will not. That lan't the war the T. M. C. A. operates. Many people have a mlstakrn Impres sion as to the methods followed by this great organisation, which baa a foothold Iti every civilised country of the world and la many nations that are not yet rtaseed In that category, according to 1. B. Rhodes, who for several years ha ln at the head of the Y. M. C. A. In Oregon and Idaho. -Hardly a week passvea." said Mr. Rhodes the other day. "that I do not re eelve a letter from some town or city In Oregon or Idaho, asking that the T. M. C A. organise In that particular town, in nearly every Instance all that I can do la to write expressing regret that the time Is not yet rise for action. The few cities In which It Is Alvlaable to round new sseoctatlona in Tne near future we are watching closely and when conditions become Just right In any one ct them we go ahead without delay." It Is unusual for the Y. M. C. A. to form a branch In any city that has a population of less than 10.000. As a gen era I policy the sasoctatlon does not care to co ahead with any place under this else. Of course, there sre exceptions and when the T. M. C. A. ascertains that some particular town really wants a Y. M. C A. and Is willing to support It. steps are taken to meet the demand. Rule Is Inviolable. The Y. M. C. A. has adopted lt. poll cles sa the result of many years of ex rrlence and Its fundamental working rule Is that new associations shall be es tablished only where there la strong de mand for them. Its preliminary work In any city Is educational, for Its officers realise that when any city knows the advantages to be gained by having an association within its borders that city will not only be glad to have an associa tion established, but will cheerfully pay for Its building. And with a building once constructed and occupied. It Is al most unknown for an association to prove a fallvre. Constant expansion Is the rule and there are f-w exceptions ro exceptions. It may be said. In this growing Western eountrv. In the Pacific Northwest the course of tiie Y. M. P. A. has been one of unin terrupted progress. I'p to about a de cade ago tne association In Oregon, Washington and Idaho w.tsj under a sin gle manarement. Then Washington be rime a separate district and Oregon and Idaho were Included In another district. This arrangement Is still In effect and tne affairs of the Y. M. C A. In Oregon and Idaho are administered from the Portland headquarters In chsrge of Mr. Hhodrs. Growth Is Remarkable. In the past ten years there has been remarkable growth of the Y. M. C. A. In these two state. At the beginning -f that perlM there were :i3 members. 13 employed officers nnd property valued I . :"W;V.U ' -;bw UH1; .' .life, rnvP. ,r. 'j f .ill1- ' - 'rr-. ji . n "r'Uil r .- J I""" "; . -v' ; , .' V i 4 . ' ' i j : ' i , ' "4 je " ' ? i ..., ifTrl 1 i ir. 5 I!, i fcJSS 1 'yi,! - . i 4 - ill -t ' l!lfC' v .t 5! i : ii-b .. 1 1 s--,,s.-7- III! , I . ' n.. f I ' - - - , v B . . i , Mw-?wev.4 B it- ''e1, i 1 1 h-I- Mir r ; : j c s M i i i -V ;" 'y!,! , I'.v; cv ! ;H4 .1 ,, ' - " . 1; v iei v-?-" ' Jki-t S-wi-: " . K i at ,! , f : Xj 7 i t Ut'dyr . . st SlVi.OOO. Now there are 9300 mem bers. B employed officers and property slued st l?oo.o.o. Y. M. C. A. work Tn these two states n separated Into four lilvlslons city. coltere. railroad and Industrial. Of these he city work, of course. Is most Im portant. Naturally the Portland Y. M. C. A. l far In the lead among the cities of tha territory and Is. In fact, one of the largest and most Influential associa tions In the United States. The other principal city associations are at Boise and Salem. Within the past year the city divi sion has made quite a move forward. Eugene has erected and occupied a hand some building and Sellwood has slso erected a Y. M. C. A. home at a cost of 118.000. Both of these associations are flourishing. The most . remarkable rec ord, however, was made at Central Point. This place has only about 1000 inhabitants, yet the Y. M. C..A. went in there in response to persistent requests and It has had no reason to regret this sctlon. The Central Point people con tributed $7500 In a six-day campaign and a building is being; erected. Steps have been taken to establish associations In Baker and The Dalles. In Baker chief Interest In the Y. M. C. A. was manifested by the young men of the city. While their elders hesitated to take up the movement the young men went out and signed up 400 members besides contributing money for a build ing site. As the. citizens are now en gaged in erecting a hospital, the cam paign for building funds has been put off until next Fall when it is expected enough money to put up a fine structure will be collected. The Dalles project also is well along and It Is certain that it will be carried to a successful conclusion. i Astoria and Marshfleld are other places for which tentative plans to found as sociations have been adofited. Associations are conducted at all of the principal educational institutions of the two states. There are 16 of these college Y. M. C. A.'s and all of them are doing good work. Oregon Agricultural College has the only stu dent association on the Coast possess ing a building toward which the stu dents themselves contributed any large part of the money. This buildinir. Shepherd Hail was erected two years ago at a cost of $23,000, half of which was contributed by the students. It was the second college Y. M. C. A. built on the Paelflc Coast and is the only one in Oregon or Idaho. There are also college associations in Oregon at the University- of- Oregon. Pacific UnlversityJ Willamette University, Pa i cine College. Dallas College. McJIinn I ville College, Philomath College and Chemawa Indian School. The main event conducted by the college associations Is an annual con ference at Columbia Beach, near Sea side. This year the conference will be held from June 16 to 25. It will be attended by about 150 students from schools in Washington as well as Ore gon and Idaho. Leading speakers from several states will bo present at the conference and games of many kinds will till the time that is not given over to meetings. The Industrial work of the Y. M. C. A. is securing a strong foothold in the' Northwest. The largest industrial as sociation Is located at Kellogg, Idaho. Its building was erected by a mining company at a cost of $40,000. Al though the building has been occupied only two months, the association ha3 I a membership of 500 and employs four secretaries. Its influence on employes of the mines has been very noticeable. Recently Mr. Rhodes was seated in the lobby of a hotel at Kellogg, while two liquor drummers were talking nearby. "Yes, business Is rotten. This town lias gone to h since the Y. M. C. A. came' he heard one of the drum mers remark. Industrial Work in Oregon. In Oregon the, industrial work so far has been confined .to the construction camps along the new railroads up the Deschutes River. Soon, however, there will be an industrial Y. M. C. A. In the camp at Celilo Canal, where more than BOO men are employed. The Govern ment has appropriated funds for the building at Celilo. Several Industrial Y. M. C. A.'s probably will be founded among the logging camps on the Col umbia River, some of the leading com panies having become interested in this matter. There is only one railroad Y. M. C. A. in the Pacific Northwest, its loca tion being Pocatello, Idaho. It has a membership of from 1100 to 1300 and Its building Is a center of activity for all of the railroad men who have head quarters at Pocatello. It Is probable that the second railroad association will -be founded in Portland. General Man ager O'Brien, of the Harriman lines in the Northwest, has become interested in the movement and International Sec retary Day. of the Y. M. C. A, Js in Portland, working on the plans. SOTHERN - MARLOWE ENGAGEMENT NOTABLE EVENT Shakespearean Stars Will Appear Week of May 29 at Heilig "Macbeth" Has Prominent Place in Repertoire. , V: IHI lllll, ;. -i , - H m. 11:1 .'ri- iV': 1 t -3 "si jF ' "V A - NL I ? - jr I t yi-J .- . II -aJX-a : awvi V '--'' 7 "": IP . . , ! r: , - - k- 1 I THR VFEKI REPERTOIRE. I I ! fc -If . I : - A ZZZ ; - ' J?j '.;.-- f I I MONDAY NIGHT. May 2, II J k ' . T ft 4rr- : )f , - v. . ; j . kU i - ? r , ; J i i MONDAY NIGHT. May 2, ' "Macbetk." TUESTJAY NIGHT. May 30. -Taialag of the Sirew." WEDNESDAY MATINEE, May 31. ' "Rosses aad Juliet.' WEDNESDAY NIGHT. My 11, "Roar M Jallet." THURSDAY NIGHT. June 1. "Mrrrhaat of Vealce." FRIDAY NIGHT. June I. Twelfth Mibl." SATURDAY MATINEE. June 3. -A a Yaw Like SATURDAY NIGlir. June 3, "Hamlet." ' RMEO 5r JUt-lET -,-s 5 ftfia i IO Ir Petruchio cvkatheirine: ONE of the moet notable engage ments of the local theatrical sea son I the appearance at the Heilig the week of My !f to June 3. of the t-o-stars, E. II. Sothem and Julia Mar It we. In a Shakespearian repertoire that Includes "Macbeth." "The Taming of the Shrew." "Romeo and Juliet." "The Merchant of Venice." "Twelfth Night." "As You Like It." and "Hamlet." Of these "Macbeth" has perhaps had the most raried existence of any of the foremost of Shakespeare works since Its first presentation In 1(0$, when Richard Burbage had the honor of first presenting the hero. Fifty years after its Initial produc tion found "Macbeth" thrown aside and neglected. In 1S. Sir William D'Are naat Introduce! "Macbeth" as a grand lyenlii'ulit Oiiara, Millting ail Ua possibilities then known to the stage. The supernatural witih. ghost and ap parition s-enes. and the banquet, war. and massive episodes of the play were elaborated upon aad a musical setting written by the leading composer of his time. Locke, was Introduced. Fly ing, dmrlng and singing witches and ghosts Introduced In a startling man ner, with the Interpolated music, com posed slma of his effects. For eight years. D'Avenant's version of "Macbeth" held the stage until the advent r.f Iwvld Oarrlck. who. In 1774. though not quite, restored "Macbeth." to Shakespeare'a original. Locke' music, however, he retained, and he wrote a lying speech for Macbeth. This ar rangement of the play, with sy-enes from Middleton's "Witch" and with murlr and dancing, held the stage for ).., abainlraftLA aaxa, tux la waj-juil until Phelps, at Saddler's Wells In 1S47. banished both the singing witches and all of Locke music and gave the play practically as It Is presented today. Charles Kean In his spectacular pro duction of "Macbeth" at the Princeaa Theater, London, in 1852. restored the scenes of Garrick's version; this ap pears to have been the laat occasion. though, on which they were used, and with the elder Booth and Macready. In hi later performances, both Garrlek and Locke were completely discarded. The Sothern-Marlowe version also dis cards the sacrilegious elaboration and additional alteration given to the play by early actors. They use the first folio version of the play with a few mi nor changes as omitting the murder of Banquo, and that of Lady Macduff and her son, scenes too harrowing for mod ern audiences. The effect of the Sothern-Marlowe version Is to present the drama with as much brilliancy and humanity as possible while still ad hering to the original text of the first folio edition. MURPHY TALKS ON POLITICAL SYSTEM JHENNESSY MURPHY was elected a member of the executive com- mtttee of the Jackson Club at Its last meeting, and. In response to calls for a speech, he said: When Woodrow Wilson reaches Portland the people he will meet and uaat who f)m. have anything to say. of real Interest to him will be the poli ticians. The "people's power" will be tn evidence In the gallery and Irr the back seats down below, where tltey will listen and grin, applaud and clap, when the wise ones start the vocifera tions from the platform or elsewhere, just as they do back In New Jersey. Things may be different when the av erage man becomes a Woodrow Wil son. Here in Oregon, the cradle of the people's rights, the birthplace of the people's power, the Mecca of reform ers, the beacon light of the Nation In all things holy in the people's rule, Woodrow Wilson, as a trained student and profound observer of men and things, may ask himself the elemen tary question: "What the Johnathan is the use of so many reformers In a state where poliical conditions are trumpeted to be so sound and where the people's rule and the rule of the people is a thing of purity, incorrupti bly fair?" "Surely. he may muse to himself. "in a land blessed with the famous 'Oregon plan,' reformers are not needed, for the experience of all po litical history reads that reformers never thrive only where there are spoilsmen a-plenty, or seething cor ruption, or something putrid crying aloud for reform. It's an axiom of civics that when political conditions are really good, reformers lose their jobs." Rule of Babel Is Here. Perhaps the sad and midnight oil phis of the great lawgiver, who re sides In that industrially happy town, where the wage-earner never kicks for fear of being kicked out of work, may calm our illustrious visitor and sug guest to him, as In New Jersey, that the power of the people here in Oregon Is under the great lawgiver's classic dome. It Is surely not In the rumpus we have Just passed through the pri mary nominating scrap. HI Youse, Muck-a-muck. the rule of babel is here forsooth. Every man Is his own initiative and may the devil take the referendum, since he won't let go of the initiative. Hurroo, for the rule of the recall and the recall of the rule. If the state of Oregon could only be an individual for a few minutes, and that Individual an Irish man, somebody would get a punch on the nose and a dislocated speech box for calling this business "Oregon plan"; Oregon has been libeled enough already. We bumped the old bosses' and In stalled the new politicians. Keep up the good work, brethren; it's your bounder duty to see that the reformers are kept a-snorting and a-frothing, for that brings on the conditions that will keep the bunch on the Job. Aristotle, or Edmund Burke, or Jim Foley will verify this. Every Day Is Election By and By. Keep it 'up, and we will soon have as many election days as Spanish holi days, and soak the corporations and cinch the interests for the costs. Let somebody else work while the people's friends Invite us to vote; if we can get to the polls often enough, we won't need a single-tax law; the law will take care of itself; jt- generally does, as the enemies of the people have rea sons to know. We have an assembly choosing can didates on every street corner, a con vention in every country gab store, and a constitutional authority In every booze cafe constituting a hot weiner Into a hot patriot, so what fell do we want legislatures and statesmen for? Such expensive nonsense! Let the peo ple rule a while yet, and some day they'll drop the rule like a hot spud and take to hurling bricks at the pal ladium of the people's rights, for they cannot dent a reformer's skull. That will be the power of the people, too. It all depends on the humor of the power. Republics are ungrateful when the people are stung, then you will have a fresh crop of reformers, each crop being a little wiser. BOOKS ADDED TO LIBRARY SOCIOLOGY. Fernanda de Quiros, Constantino Modern theories of criminality. 1911. rjrant Socialism and Christianity. 191". rcraaa Criminal navrhnlOCTV. a manual fOr judges, practitioners and students. lttll. Johnston The negro in tne new worm. llilu. Kinr History of the San Francisco stocK and Exchange Board. 1910. Kinsley Open-air crusaders; a report or ih. iriivahprh McCormlck oDen-alr school. torether with a aeneral account of open-air school work In Chicago. 3910. Loch Charity and social lire. mm. Stlmson The American Constitution: the National powers, the rights of tne states, the liberties ot tne people. iw(v wavman Rsa- introductorv to the study of Engllsb constitutional history. 190L RELIGION. Ti.i. v Testament The acts of the apostles, an exposition by R. B. Rackham. 111 u. T mm hull Sundav school, its origin, mis sion, methods and auxiliaries. 11. Watts Hymns and spiritual songs, n. a. Bound with his Psalms of David Imitated in the language of the New Testament. J USEFUL ARTS. Bvrom Modern cooKIng practice. 1010. Chicago, University Press Manual of style; a compilation or tne lypograpmmi press, with speci Chittenden Forests and reservoirs In their relation to stream flow, with particu lar reference to navigable rivers. 1SXH). Collins Physiology. A manual for stu dents snd practitioners. 199. Ersklne Murray wireless telephones and how they work. 1910. fox One thousand ways snd schemes to attract trade. Ed. 2. 1907. Russell Experimental aairy wuoiu5j. 2?.' 11 . jt..tii-. Af Hnlrv haeterlolOR-y: a concise manual for the use of students In dairying. Ed. 8, rev. 1905. ADDED TO REFERENCE DEPARTMENT. A..., it. ranTi snd statistics. Bureau official year book of the commonwealth of a iiBtF.H. 1001.1(109-11910. Bigelow The campaisa wmamchv,. Ille. a strategic and tactical study. 1910. Business and the bookkeeper. v. 25. 1910-1911. Cedar Kaplan. ia. iuui.. Sion Dlan or governmeni. Grimm A Greek-English lexicon of the Nw Testsment. tr. by J. H. Thayer. 189. Vortland. or., ".u Men of Oregon:" a gallery of likenesses of rAnrAvntatlvc men. toiretTier wun Drier sketches of their lives. 1911. ADDED TO CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT. Persian hero tales from Firdusi, by E. D. Rennlnger. Grierson Children's tales from Scottish ballads. Longfellow The song of Hiawatha with Illustrations from designs by Frederic Rem ington. ' Mowry A history fo the United States for schools. Tappan European hero stories. Keep Friends of Youth. Harper's. In youth our friends are many. Each child, thank God, is born into the world with one friend ready made, complete and perfect: his own mother. For the mother there may be regrets and in sights, doubts and hesitations, but at any rate there is never a lack of under standing, for she. of all, knows the very stuff of which we are made our strength and our weakness, our endur ance and our failures. This, at least, is one of the heartening facts of life that the child need never forego some friendships. It makes slight claims. It BOOKS 1-. . nKn H -tti,,t pr,. 'w.'tr.'p'ecimen. "SfS? and it, interests; its love of sliding anu Ui Buttling, llttJ-ianJiis mm iitfciA- dling. Provided another revel In the same things as we do, behold. Here for childhood Is a friend ready made! And for a moment the solitude of the pil grim's soul upon its long way is dis guised. Youth, too, forms ties lightly from out the very exuberance of its living. It loves as rapidly as it breathes; it Ideal izes and finds it difficult to recognize any bleak fact In human nature. If thf friends seem for the moment to fail, youth has an unexhausted fund of hop that, remembers this one as the onlj failure, or remembers that back of thf failure lies all the material of future success. But manhood is more difficult. Lovi and trust, often betrayed, are not easj for one full grown and far along thi path of life! That friendship is best which is old, and, which, like wine, hat stood the test bf time. Friendshipf born in obscurity and misfortune art hardier and more lasting than thosf born in ease. Like human characters they grow strong on the very obstacles that test them; they are firnfeY, more strongly welded, as they overcome aad Still endure. BOOKS Ar,bot The story of onr navy for young Americana I. i rrfj, n Al mm story tti nuaicm uu vlobi J