31, 1912. 11 TUT. SUXDAT OREGOXIAN. rORITAyP. MARCTI Kate Douglas Wiggin Brings to Thousand Hearts Easter Cheer Many Little Children of the Slams Made Hippy Each Year Through Her Kindness and Charming Personality. . V .y.V; -,:tr-j .V- "--- - V-- ' HATH IOIGLAS WIOGIX, OK "H V :: M lhM lll'ADRKDS OK KBtCtA OK SIXXYBROOK" FAME, TOTS HAPPY EACH EAITEK. THRE 1II"XPRED little waifs of the street. sad-ryed Hebrews, olive tinted Neapolitans, merry-faced Erln-Ites, with eyes as Mue as twin lakes, here and there a happy little Topsy, her wool tied with resplendent scarlet bows In honor of the season, all these little strangers of the city stream Into the doors of the Clarke Neighborhood House In Hlvlngton and Tannon streets. New York, for their Easter celebration. "Don't shoTe. Becky. Keep your place there In the line, Isadore." The friendly bluecoat who has mar shalled so many similar Easter crowds tries to straighten the eager line. "dure, you won't get In no quicker by stiovln. and she won't begin the Eastern hymns 'till every last one of ye's gets In." Smell the greens and Easter line.' Hear the sweet, high notes of child voices as the 300 children of this neighborhood kindergarten join hands and circle about, marshalled and smiled upon and Inspired by the radiant, graceful fizure of Kate Douglas Wlg irtrv. who finds Easter day at Clarke House her most pressing engagement of the year. But we must close the doors as she bends over the children, riving each a word of greeting or ap probation and playing Easter angel as he distributes the gifts. We will turn back 2 years to another picture la the life of this successful author. Kladergartea Pint laaplratlea. She Is a girl figure here, the Vlnder gartner tn the Golden G:ite Kinder garten. Pan Francisco. The group of children huddled close about and list ening to one of her wonderful "once-opon-a-tlme" stories. Is less In num ber than the throng that fills our free kindergartens today, but they are the tame sort of babies: starving for love, lacking in wholesome home environ ment and InnKing with all the power of their child souls to lore, to be happy, to create. From the UoM.-n Gate Kindergarten that sheltered the original of Timothy, In "Timothy's Quest." and Fatsy. In "The ftory of Palsy." grew the move ment that has given to all waifs of the street the Joys of the child-garden. Through IS years of playing with little children, teliirg them stone, working with tem and working for them. Kate Iouglas Wlvin has given us a new type In fiction, the type revealed In Carol Hir-I and the grateful llf.l- Kug gleses In "The Birds' Christmas Carol": Timothy, the foundling asylum waif whose search for a home for Lady tiay, his li-months-old protege. Is Immor talised In "Timothy's Quest": l'atay, the plucky little Irish lad. and Ke- becca, that bravest of all Mrs. Wig gin's heroines, who conquers prejudice, and wins for herself a place In her aunt's "brick house," which she en tered so unwelcome a guest. These are all militant characters: the,y weave dream stuff In the pattern tbat will enfold us through all the years. Through them. Kate Douglas Wlggin has given us romances made of the homespun threads of everyday life. This author of published volumes which reveal upwards of a score of titles and whose sale list to date Is over 1.000.000 copies, has, herself, been a part of the humdrum, everyday hu man living about which she writes and whose Incidents she paints, with a pig ment, the. color of gold.. She was born In Philadelphia, but spent most of her life In the quiet little village of Mol lis. Me. She attended the district school there, made famous In "Rebecca of Bunnybrook Farm." and although she never puts her friends' pictures be tween the covers of her books. It may be surmised that the village folk who fill the pages of this most successful of her stories, find their prototypes In the little Maine town. Drasoa Great Sierees. It was Inevitable that -Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" should make a place for Itself on the American stage and hold that place for hundreds of nights While the putrid love story, the sordid society drama and the cheap musical comedy came and went, Ursula St. George, the girl actress who takes life quite as seriously and sweetry as did Rebecca, transformed footllght into country sunshine as she romped with Emma Jane, charmed Mr. Aladdin, and comforted sad Mrs. Simpson for one of the longest runs New York has ever known. "How were you able to construct so successful a play?" the dramatic critics asked Mrs. Wlggin. "It was an adventure In play-mak-Ing." she replied. "I sat down at my desk, prepared to plan new scenes and write additional dialogue, but as I took up my pencil yes, I have written out. myself, every line tn every one of my books, and every copy of every line I found that the work was going to be of a piece with all the other work that I have done In my life. There was little room for difference of opinion between the author and the stage manager In this Instance. The play Is very like the book out of which It grew: It Is of precisely the samo fabric. I wrote every line spoken on the stage, because I felt that the characters were "born and raised' on my premises, so to speak, and that nobody would know how to report their Ideas and convictions ex cept myself. NEWS AND GOSSIP OF PLAYS AND PLAYERS EDITED IT LCOXB CASS BAER. UNDER a four column portrait of a very stulle-y and pert appear ing young person, the New York Morning Telegraph prints In large type, under a Chicago dateline. March IT: "Tou are a dear brave girl. Fay U inter. Yes! Yes!" Then there Is a lot of "heads." each growing smaller in si me. but all equal ly emphatic, and following close Is a thrilling tale et how srtra death was thwarted by the charming little Port land Ingenue. Here It Is. word for word: "The miniature tide which Annette Kellermann had Just been creating while disporting as a porpoise la the artltlrtal tank before the audience at The Rose of Panama' In the American Music Hall last night proved to be the tide of fortune for Fay Bainter. who took It at Its flood, leaped Into the foaming water to save Stella Tra rers. of tn, chorus, and leaped out again to find herself a famous person. -Mis Rainter wasn't any more dis turbed by her unpremeditated plunge :nto the water, though she took the dtp In her street clothes, than she was rhen she found the curtain down tM no one out trie memoers or tne com pany there to applaud, tfhe didn't care for either the bath or the publicity, hut when she found that she had to accept the latter as a consequence of :he former she smiled, Dluehed ami .-a the red in all the compliments la light. , . Just how Miss Travers succeeded 'n falling overboard no one seemed -si know. But when she found herself out of her element she announced -h fact to tie rest of the company. who were flocking out the stage door nfter the' show. In the same sweet voice that1 baa floated over the foot lights every evening for some time pat. "Nobody envied Miss Travers the splajh she had made. It wasn't of the right kind. And nobody cared to get wet. So they gathered around the tank and screamed energetically for Miss Kellermann. "Miss Ktllermunn didn't appear just then. 8he may have mistaken tne up i roar for another one of those dread I ful encores, which are the bane of an actress' existence. Some one had to be a heroine In a hurry. One young laxly removed a garter and tried to pass It to Miss Travers, who was keep ing her head above the water at least half the time, but both owner and gar ter nearly fell In. "Suddenly the crowd parted and Fay Bainter came to the front. She would have been there sooner, but she had experienced some trouble in getting the hatpins out of her hat. She didn't wait for any lecturer to announce a forward standing dive; she simply plunged Into the tank, grabbed Miss Travers by some of her real hair and lifted her out upon the stage before the grateful young woman could have a chance to get a half-nelson on her rescuer's throat, as drowning people love to do. "While the two amateur mermaids were shaking themselves like water spaniels. Mies Kellermann came out of her dressing room and found that an understudy had been playing her part. To prove that she wasn't enough of an actress to be afflicted with temper ament, she rushed back, dug up one of her finest medals and Insisted npon pinning It upon Miss Bainter before the whole company. "Then Miss Bainter told the story of her life. She said she had been brought up In California and had played In the surf at all the beaches of the Pactflo Coast. Then, deciding she could never be an Annette Kellermann, she had studied to be a dancer. "By this time she found herself get ting Into deep water, figuratively speaking, and a motion that rescuer and rescued get Into dry clothing aa soon as possible was unanimously car ried." Herbert Ashton, a former Portland man. and for many years Identified with local stock organisations, will re turn on Thursday In his capacity as stage director for "Madame X" which opens on that night at the Helllg. Mr. Ashton'a wife, Lillian Branscombe, re membered as a player of soubretto roles. Is acting with th Edison film company. Florence Roberts In a sketch called "In the Revolution." has been booked for a trial in vaudeville next week at Yonkers. N. Y. As her chief support. Miss .Roberts has Richard Buehler. La Petite Adelaide, tho dancer, nas been divorced by her husband. Wil liam A. Lloyd, of Boston, who publishes a weekly paper listing the various cur rent amusementa The grounds were desertion. Mary Adelaide having run away to Paris three years ago. Since then, however, she has returned, and in vaudeville's route visited the Pacific Coast. Given a title and an audience and Edwin Milton Royal will be supremely happy. Those are the only Ingredients lacking In his purpose to present before the public his latest play. The piece !s written, Llebler A Co. have accepted It. and Hugh Ford, the general stage director, la fairly Itching to begin rehearsals. Also the presses of a lithograph company yawn for copy. But the play is as yet unnamed. The tentative title Is "The Snare." The story concerns a woman for whom a snare has been laid and who promptly proceeds to fall Into It- Amelia Gard ner has been engaged for tho role, but the management and the author have as yet been unable to agree upon a title. Miss Gardner was one of the first leading women In early Portland theatricala Occasionally iJeorge 'Bernard Shaw, tiring of taking flings at other people and things, takes the trouble or Is It a pleasure, to i. B. S. to talk about him self?) to tell the truth about himself. In a communication sent to the Players' Club, of London. Mr. fcihaw says: "I shall most certainly do nothing to encourage the playgoers to move Into new and comfortable premises. The theaters depend on uncomfortable clubs and unhappy homes, and my Income depends on the theaters. No sane man would spend an evening In a theater If he could find anywhere else to spend It without being bored or henpecked. "Women drag men to theaters be cause they get so tired of housekeep ing that, no matter how delightful they make the home, they desire nothing more than to escape from it. as a cook desires to escape from the smell of roast fowl. But modern clubs provide a refuge from home life for both men and wonen and the more comfortable a club Is the sooner members will cease to be playgoers. "I know, of course, that the members of your club have long ago settled down and that to meet one of them in theaters is almost as startling as to meet an actor In the Garrlck Club, but still there are a few left, and as I don't want those few to be lured away from the box office, I must decline to give my countenance to your Inauguration lunch." The engagement has just been an nounced of Antoinette Legault. of the Llndsey-Morrlson Stock Company, of Lynn. Mass, to William P. Connery. Jr, who appeared In Portland a few weeks ago as the young reporter In r-uir.hrnir.v . W ulllnsrford." Mr. Connery's father is the Mayor of Lynn. Gertrude Hoffman, exponent of the great undraped sisterhood of dancers, has closed her season with the Impe rial Russian ballet. After a brief rest she Is contemplating going Into vau deville, many alluring offers having been made for her td appear In the two per diem. One of these offers, accord ing to her publicity agent, is almost a record-breaker in the matter of sal ary. $4000 weekly being the temptation held out. Coast actor and producer of other days. Is with tienry . oavage in .lupun. According to letters to the papers In their home town. New York, they are having the time of their lives, gather ing material for the production of the Japanese musical comedy, "The Mous mee." which Mr. Savage will produce Come Out of It! i Quit worrying about not having money enough to fit up the home you have been wishing for ever so long. Come to the Morgan-Atchley Furniture Store f Yon will have placed With your problem. We will help vou towards a realization of your cherished dreams! You will have placed before vou an absolutely complete stock of worthy arid dependable Furniture and Floor Coverings. You will be aided in making your selection by competent, courteous salespeople. You will be enabled to buy at extremely easy terms a comparatively small first payment placing you in immediate possession of the entire home out fit, and of supreme importance are our "always lowest in the city prices lowest because Each Customer Shares the 325,000 We Save Annually in Taxes and Interest Because We Built on the East Side A Clearance of Odd Dining Chairs We've several hundred odd dining chairs on hand that we positively mu9t be rid of in a hurry. There are two, three, four, five and sometimes as many as a dozen of a style. It is impossible to give more than a mention of only a small portion of the various kinds. Those herewith mentioned are thoroughly representative as to value: $2.75 6olid oak, early English finish C" box seat Dining Chairs... VA $3.50 solid oak, early English finish (JO leather scat Dining Chair pJJ $3.00 solid oak, early English gold- C?0 Q C en l'iuibh leather seat Dining Chair $9 golden oak wax finish, leather CC l7k slip seat Dining Chair pJ f $4.50 quartered oak, early English QO finish leather seat Dining Chair... pJ.fJ $4.00 quartered oak early English C?0 QC finish box seat Dining Chair iptaJJ $4.50 golden wax finish oak slip-CQ QC leather seat Dining Chair pJ.U $4.00 solid oak golden wax finish CO leather box seat Dining Chair ' "'- . See Window Display. uck's Ranges Best in every way by every test yet they cost no more than the inferior kinds. SOLD ON VERY EASY TERMS Open Saturday Evenings " GRAND AVENUE AND EAST STARK Room- Size Body Brussels Rugs at Reduced Prices Our rng racks are filled to overflowing with the best products of the country's leading carpet mills. We must have room for several large ship ments now en route, and soon to be here. We therefore make sharp reductions as follows: $31.50 and $33 9x12 Body Brussels Rugs Choice of an even dozen patterns. Some are light chintz effects for the sleeping chamber; others in allover designs for the living and dining-room. $24.45 $30.00 9x9 Body Brussels Bugs $19.85 It isn't often that one can find rugs that are exactly square. These are, and will be just the thing for sleeping chambers, on account of the size and on account of their patterns, which are in dainty light effects. Bee window display. next Fall. This is Mr. Savage's first trip through the Orient, but Mr. Fraw ley Is regarded as an old citizen all the way from Yokohama to Hongkong. o'clock. Tbea I work as long as the daylight Is good. We have four lead ing women here, and our director en deavors to work ach of us a week and give us a rest of two or three weeks. "Th irnrk in no interesting. I can John Mason will next season be a star under direction or t-nanes r run-i me worn is bo inicicsuut. man having been specially engaged , not say that I have any favorite pieces, for the nroduction of Henri Bernstein's ; j am given emotional parts almost al- TtlaY "The AttaCK, wnicn win uc I luseuiw, emu. vt o sented In September. In this play Mr. j rlety of plays. Today We are working Mason will have the part of Alexander on a French romance here at tne Merltat a role In which Lucien Oultry studio. Yesterday we were engaged has achieved ono of the biggest sue- j on a modern drama out at tho beach, cesses of his career. It is one of the and perhaps tomorrow we shall bo I loneest ever written ror a moaern piay. i taKen ior a spin into me muu.ii- . T. Daniel Frawley. the well-known The story or tne p -' ' ' """":"r . . i stt h a. Hop I nn-er Tor narm WICIUCU "7 " ""K - uun cinciiM v the way of goodby. ' "It Is to me the most adorable city in the world. No, I was not born there. I am a native of South Africa born in Cape Colony but I came to Portland with my par ents when I was very small and shall never forget the kindness of the Port- land people. O, yes, tell them also that papa they'll remember him, William Bernard, you know, is running the Garrick with a stock company at Salt Lake City." Xaw Zealand ha e4.O00,W0 sherpr power for harm wielded by newspapers ' . . 1 1 I I Via nrlvatA In uneartnmg scauuui i-,r this new arrangement the list . You know the public . . . . . i .. t ...In. nnnthpr -fH aiic -n or cinuoeri mum", r. addition. Mr. Mason is perhaps the most accomplished actor now appear ing under their direction. DETAILS ARE FEATURE OF PICTURE SHOW WORK v "Dot" Bernard, Clever Little Actress Formerly of Portland, Explains How She Does It. . ' V," ., - - , " -vi i: ::v: i'-iv:.r, I -V v II i , . VI M. ' LOsJ ANGELES. March SO. (Spe clal.) The essential difference be tween acting professionally before a moving-picture. Instrument and act ing before a real audience In the flesh, relate largely to precision In dtall, according to Miss Dorothy Bernard, leading lady with the Blograph com pany here, known as Miss "Dot" Bernard to playgoers in Portland, where she played Juvenile and ingenue parts at tho Baker, beginning at a Urn when she. was only J' old. "It Is when someone brings It to mind that I really know bow deeply at tached I ara to my work with the Blo graph." Miss Bernard said to The Ore onlan correspondent, who was com pelled to pass muster with the local Blograph director to get an Interview with her. It is a rule with the com pany not to permit Interviews with its stars, and Its players below the stellar circle must remain unknown o the public An xoeptlon Is made In the case of Miss Bernard on occasion, for she belongs to the Blograph stars of first magnitude, but eh observes the admonition to exercise discrimination In her interviews. "It is delightful, this work of mine before, the camera," she said, "and the Blograph people are splendid to be with. Just think of it, no night work, no worry Incident to traveling, catch ing trains, long waits at stations, find ing accommodations at all hours and putting up with everything that comes; and the pay is almost anything I ask. In fact they practically allow me to fix my own salary. aulrements of the piece. You can hare no xuea wnai a va riety of charming experiences we meet. the PUD11C IS BO- with our work now, particularly . around Los Angeles, that we are per- I mitted to go and come as we please. I People are glaJ to give us the use of their homes and their beautiful grounds. Only recently we were per mitted to use the handsome estate of Mr. Huntington, at Pasadena, and not long ago we had the use of the charm ing home of a countess in Pasadena for one of our reels. "Our runners are out constantly look ing for scenic effects. One day we may be sent to Santa Monica. We start early, in automobiles, and find every thing arranged for us when we get there even to a place for luncheon l and siesta. Perhaps before we return we may take a run 20 miles rartner down the beach. In our machines It Is delicious, and we get back home in time for our dinners." Off the stage Miss Bernard's name is Mrs. A. IL Van Buren. Her husband is In the theatrical business In New York. Wilmington, Delaware, and Washington, D. C. "I wonder if my Portland friends have heard of my wonderful baby," this exquisite little woraun went on, medi- i tatlvely. "sshe is a year and a half old, and the dearest, sweetest thing In the world," and for a few minutes the glory of motherhood cast 'ts gleam itimnffh thA fxtnen tnakfun. "It is chiefly on her account that I am so ) irlad to be at this work." she chatted u 1 .in (r AntVtMx!9Mtifnllv- "Yon nee. I J can be with her and what Jolly Umea we nave. "Mr. Van Buren and I were glad of the chance to get her out on the mag nlflcent Pacific for the Winter, .for she Is so well and happy here. I brought m niir tm1 wa have a cozv apartment i that is a perfect dream.' My husband's . business would not permit him to come I with us. but the warmer weather is I soon coming In the East and baby and I exoect to Join him in May. Then I hall take a rest for the Summer." Miss Bernard has been with the Biograph people more than three years. Most of her work for the company has been done In Eastern cities and it was not until the beginning of the past Winter that she was sent to the Coast. - She pointed out the advantages moving-picture actors and actresses have In the time and opportunities afforded for study and recuperation. "We must be at our very best all the time," she said, "but our work and manner of liv ing ar altogether conducive to good health and active minds. We must have our parts letter-perfect, and what Is more Important, each gesture, movement- and posture must be correct, for you know we must express ourselves by our acting, so that the film will tell the full story of the play when spread on the canvas. "No. our acting Is not pantomime, by any means. We must speak our lines. Just aa we would on any stage. That - Wrk Is Exactla. "It Is particular work. People per haps do not think of this, but the camera Is much more critical man an jusi wo " j . r. . . .isn tt hrinv ntli trie lull GX' audience or human Deings. ine camera is -. " " " i7 ,i..r . . i . i . I I I n a nnJ malTA ttA IT) PHT1 1 fl CT Clear iriQNtiuu . on the Him. X COUia penmim J n 1. 1 n a. ,n., bnn Tar .(id li tlf.a that a m uiMviuiia BMW.., - - . - cold-blooded, mechanical way of reg istering defects and mistakes. Where theee appear In a film that- film must be destroyed and a new one made. Sometimes we go through a scene 13 tiroes to get a suitable film. It must be perfect to pass Inspection. "My hours T I come down to the studio about 9 o'clock In the morning, and am usually called at about 11 an affirmative or a negnux "j inclination or a shake of the head, but that Is not enough. We must strive to put our full emotions In our acting and that can only be done with the spoken word In conjunction with the "Don't forget to say how much I still love dear, old Portland," she said. In MT. HOOD BOCEC B .Infills IS NOW READY FOR DELIVERY The famous Mt. Hood Bock Beer is made in the old German way, which accounts for its excellence and being unsurpassed. This year the Bock Beer is supe rior and will undoubtedly please your palate. ORDER A CASE SENT HOME Mt. Hood Brewery Telephones SeUwood 904 East 139 B-1319