flttf SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, AUGUST 4, 1912. - ' t I. CATHRINE COUNTISS IS ARDENT FIRST-NIGHTER At the Early Age of 7 Tears Star at Heilig Theater Developed Fondness for the Glare of tne rootiignra. j . I 1 If" called ragtime, as is any musical form that has Its origin in the emotional expres sion of a people." The group at the table stared in astonishment, and each individual men tajly asked the man's forgiveness for him with the Daranoi- acs.. Miss Tucker proffered a chair, wnian ne rerusea wiin maims. proceeded: '"TK evrufina H nil fhat TT1 H it P 8 ragtime represents the crude effort of the negro to transrer to tne r U mnHArn nianAfnrt th Kftlf beat of the banjo; in brief, to make one medium copy the tone or anoiner ui- dlum by musical expression. Ao-ofn fla TnnkAr ankeri him to sit down, and again he refused with thanks, and went on to say: "I should not have intruded were It not for my desire to dispute Miss Tucker's contemptuous regard of the appeal of ragtime in its melodic aspect. Tint tlne mvnfctna tort form of composi tion will one day have its place in serious music, as surely as the folk songs of Russia and of Hungary are given place in the great compositions of a Tschaikowsky or a Smetana! You can no more deride the ragging that is to come to us from the musical soul of the negro than you can deride the broken beat of the song of the Hindu devotee who sits of a morning with his tom-tom on the banks of the Ganges seeking with song to propi tiate the sun.. Take tne case 01 Dl.aaa I nurn " uftked fl Tl O til T Of the ladies, pushing a chair toward the Interesting ana eiunuacu "Please do." cmiiiniriv ho n train waved his hand in refusal, and then said, with the all- sufficient air or a man raaxing wimi he regards as an unnecessary explana tion: 'I can't sit down. You see, both my legs are made or tnin giasa. T L-ATHRI.M2 COINTISS t WAS about 7 years old when I de I elded to fo upon the stage," says Cathrlne Countlss, who is playing a fine engagement at the Hellig. "My father was the oldest newspaper pub lisher in Texas, and wrote his own crit icisms mighty clever ones they were, too. He usually took me to the. theater with him. I was the best little first nighter in Penison. and my passion for the drama spread like one of our own prairie fires. My favorite dramas were The Hidden Hand" and 'East Lynne,' and I wept tears enough over them to flood a city reservoir. "I was about 13 when I got my first chance in an amateur performance. It was a musical comedy for charity. I was the gay soubrette. Everybody, from the postmaster to the town con stable, said I had a great future. I wanted to take the first train for New York and become comic opera prima donna at the Casino. My mother, a sagacious and conservative woman of the sturdy southwestern pioneer type, compromised by sending me to a Mary land convent for two years; but all the time the theatrical bee 'n my bonnet never ceased buzzing. "How did I get on the professional stage? 1 Just made up my mind to go, and I went. It was in a New York stock company. I was an 'extra lady." So was Frances Starr. We began on the same night, and got up early next morning to buy the papers; but by some fatal omission wo were not men tioned. 'The Moth and the Flame' was the play. I blackened up, and did a song and dance in the amateur theat rical scene of the first act. Then I made a lightning change to white face and was a housemaid. After that I was a wedding guest in the church scene. Miss Starr was another. She forgot her one line and I spoke it. At the end of the week I was handed a salary en velope containing 7, and I had ex pected JSO. Thereupon I Indignantly resigned; but the manager betrayed no emotion." SOPHIE TUCKER TAUGHT BY UNKNOWN PARANOIAC Passing Stranger Includes Himself in the Conversation, but Refuses Chair Because His "Legs Are Made of Thin Glass." T i.niiUP'' "" "I'M jii mJ..i.....Wiiu .in .....iuii .. -!-(" ""-J'"? i 'h - - ' - I y tjs , I Is - - I C: f ill ft' V V. ! ft, )r it4 : I T4i-v, r -x MISS SOPHIE TICKER. 4 1 SOPHIE TUCKER, the Jennie "Wimp of "Louisiana Lou," was among the professionals who provided a recent entertainment at Dunning dur ing the engagement of the piece In Chicago. She Joined a group of men and women at tea following her last song, the while she looked on at the remainder of the entertainment. Pacr Ing up and down by the table was a tall, distinguished looking man who, all present felt certain, was one of a score of men that had been pointed out earlier to the visitors as "delu sional paranoiac, harmless but Incur able." A lady at the tea table asked Miss Tucker why she confined herself well nigh entirely to ragtime songs. "Because," replied Miss Tucker, "they really make small demand on the sing ing voice, and can be delivered with out fatigue If one knows how to make the accompanist take care of the mel ody while employing only the speak ing voice." The man stopped pacing, turned to the table, asked pardon for the intru sion, and began: "I heard what you said. Miss Tucker, and should like to try to show you that you are' mistaken. The melodic Muzzled Spitz Bewails New Jaw-Locking Device - Ordinance Falls to "Make Hit" With Little Wlilte Dot as He Tubs to Be Freed of Contrivance ot Which He Knows Not Use. THE dog muzzling ordinance may be popular with the medical frater nity, but it does not "make a hit" with a little white Spits dog. one of the kind that couldn't be Induced to bite for any consideration, which lives on Hall street between West Park and Tenth streets. Neither Is it popular, at least as far as It concerns the canine In question, with those who yesterday witnessed the frantic efforts of this Innocent little citizen of the dog king dom to rid himself of a muzzle. The Spitz didn't know Just what to make of the contrivance which bound his Jaws and practically prevented his opening bis mouth. Sitting out in front of the residence which houses his owner, he alternately yowled In de spair, or sought In vain to remove the muzzle by rubbing it against the steps', a tree or a telegraph pole. Unsuccess ful in this he would try with his paws but the pesky thing refused to move, and then there were more pitiful wails. As his auditors moved on the Spitz was still protesting In the only way he knew how against the presence of the Jaw-locking device. WAR FAMINE PERIL SEEN Germany Advised to Prepare for Food Shortage In Hostile Time. BERLIN. Aug. 3. (Special.) Dr. Felix Somary, an economist, discussed Germany's food supply in war-time in a suggestive article in Professor Schmoller"s Jahrbucher. He foresees grave peril from the "encircling" of the Fatherland by hostile armies and fleets, and advocates the novel proj ect of building forthwith gigantic warehouses for the storing of at least 2,000,000 tons of wheat. He estimates that the cost of purchasing and hus banding the wheat, including the con struction of steel and cement storage vaults, would be approximately $100. 000,000. which he thinks would be a cheap, investment, viewed from the standpoint of the vital emergency it is sought to meet. The $6,000,000 a year interest which the project Involves, if carried out with borrowed capital, in dismissed by Dr. Somery as a bagatelle. He thinks Germans are concentrating their atten tion too exclusively on the purely mili tary side of a great European war, and neglecting the vital question of physi cal sustenance. Norman Angell. author of "The Great Illusion," Is paying his first visit t) Germany to expound his doctrine of the futility of war. He addressed a cosmopolitan gathering recently under the auspices of the Foreign Press As sociation of Berlin. Mr. Angell's book is shortly to be brought out in a new German edition. He recognizes that the Fatherland is something more than diffident soil for the propagation of his doctrine, but as Its appeal is made primarily to economists and business men, he is hopeful it may not be denied a worthy hearing in this land of am bitious industrial and financial energy. LONDON GIRLS DISAPPEAR In Tear Statistics Show 1118 Be tween 1 0 and 1 6 Year 6 Missing. LONDON. Aug. 3. (Special.) The Home Secretary gives in the Parlia mentary papers a set of astounding figures regarding the number of women who were reported to the Lon don police as having disappeared dur ing the last 11 months. In Teply to Mr. Snowden, he writes: "During the last 12 months 1118 girls between the ages of 10 and IS were reported to the metropolitan police as missing. Of these. 1102 were traced. "Two thousand six hundred and seventy-six women of all ages above 16 were reported as missing and 2540 of them were traced. "In the case of the 16 girls and 136 women who were not traced, their ab sence is in many cases explainable, for such reasons as having absconded to avoid paying debts, having quarreled with friends or husbands, and a variety of other causes. "One woman is known" to have gone abroad with a foreigner with whom she had been keeping company." ARCHAEOLOGISTS TO MEET Rome Prepares to Entertain Antique Hunters Elaborately. ROME, Aug. 3. (Special.) An In ternational Archaeological Congress will be held in Rome early In October and a great many are expected to at tend the meetings of its 12 different sections. The committee Is a stronir one B-nd the programme includes, be sides the ordinary work of the sec tions, visits to the excavations at Os tla and Cerveterl an4 excursions to Sardinia. Calabria and Sicily. Reduc tions on the British, French and Ital ian railways have been promised to the congresslats. It is feared that the new scheme for bringing the proposed Ostla Railway into the city will do considerable dam age to the buried remains of the Cir cus Maximus, which, it had been hoped, would some day have been excavated. The plan of the engineers in to sub stitute, for the previous scheme of two tubes under the Palatine and Capitol, POPULAR PRICES: THEATER HEILIG Seventh ind Taylor Streets Phone Mala 1 and A 1123 4&T w t Y T O BEGINNING Bargain fN 1 J H I 3 "TONIGHT 8:1 S Toeday and Wednesday EXTRA MAT. TUESDAY OwlmsT to the EnnrmoiM Demand Any Seat 23 Cent. The Actress That AH Portland Lores CATHRINE COUNTISS Supported by SYDNEY AYRE8 and the En tire Hla-h-Claaa Company The Famous Human Nature Book Play of Comedy and Sentiment The Awakening of Helena Richie In Which Mlas Countlss Succeeded Margaret Anglln MISS COUNTISS HAS COURTEOUSLY RELINQUISHED THE LAST HALF Or THE WEEK TO "LOUISIANA LOU" AND WILL THEN RETURN Sunday, Aug.ll, Miss Countiss' Engagement Resumes y.nCd TZrr The Girl With the Green Eyes PRICES EVENINGS, -75c, 50e, 35c, 25c. Both Matinees, Any Seat 25c HE I LIG THEATER Seventh nnd Taylor Streets Phones Main 1 and A 1123 3 Beginning Next Thur., Aug. 8 Matinee Saturday LA SALLE houe THE CHICAGO (Mr. Harry Askln, Muarliig Director) Makes known In this city lta all-season, 35d performances, musical com edy success OUISIANA jQU i Written hy Addison Burkhardt and Frederick Donagbey, music by Ben M. Jerome ORIGINAL COMPANY AND PRODUCTION BARNEY BERNARD SOPHIE TUCKER Harrr Hanion, Helena Sallnser, Robert O'Connor, Bessie De Vole, Lester Crawford, Eleanor Henry. Mortimer Weldon, George T. berrels BEST S CHORUS pTT-1?C Both Evening and saturoay miinRi IN THE I'NITED STATES Lower Floor, $IM. Balcony, $1.00, 75c, 50c. Gallery, 50c. SEAT SALE OPENS NEXT TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1 A. M. a tunnel across the old Vicus Tuscus. This will also prevent the exploration of the Lupercal. Commendatore Bonl is busily continuing- the excavations on the Pala tine. In the course of them he has found a number of votive offerings of the second or third century, B. C, including an admirable representation of a camel. He has also laid bare what waa probably a vivarium for fish. The work of draining the lowest church of S: Clemente has been begun. "CORPSE" COMES TO LIFE Youth Objects to Mother Dressing Dead Body In His Clothes. PARIS, Aug. 3. (Special.) The ap pearance ti a man at the moment when what was supposed to be his body was being placed In the coffin led to a dramatic scene at Courebvoie. a suburb of Paris. TTVt . niffht a vonne man threw himself Into the Seine from the Pont de Neuilly. Yesterday morning a corpse was recovered and was identi fi a hnv nAmpfi Arriax as his 19- year-old brother, Hubert, who had dis appeared irom nome aner a ijmniei. The corpse having also been identified by the mother, the authorities gave permission for the remains to be taken to Mme. Arrias' house for the funeral. TV.. ..nHortaltprq -were fastenlne: down the coffin when shrieks were heard from the staircase, and a woman criea, "It is he! The corpse has come to life! Help!" Amid screams the mourners made a rush for the street. In the midst of the din Hubert Arrias wdivaii imfitnirc and exDlained that he had decided to live at a hotel in the future, but rememDering nis mowers promised present had come for his .lAtl... 17. tmraa mnnt InillTIJLnt tO find that a corpse was dressed In them. The youmg man is still a corpse in the eyes of the law. At the mayoralty. where he called to announce his return to life, he was informed politely that he was dead. He has now retired to the country pending his recall to life by the Seine Tribunal. 0.-W. R. & X. Acts Slowly. SALEM. Or., Aug. 3. (Special.) With the Spokane, Portland & Seattle acquiescing In agreeing to carry chil dren's exhibits to and from the State Fair free on the Astoria & Columbia River, the Oregon Trunk and other lines in that connection, all the roads In the state except the O.-W. R. & N. have now notified the Superintendent of Public Instruction that such exhibits will be carried free. There are 10 motor lifeboats in u on the coasts of Oreat BrttlnJ BASEBALL RECREATION PARK, Cor. Vausbn and Twenty-fourth Sta. VICTORIA VS. PORTLAND JULY 30, 30, 31, AUGUST 1, 2, 3, 4. Games BrEln Weekdays at StOO P. M. Sundays at 2:30 P. M. LADIES' DAY FRIDAY. Boys Under 12 Free to Bleachers Wednesday. FIRST ANNUAL PICNIC, CONGREGATION TEFFERETH ISRAEL TODAY AT ROHSES' PARK. Big pavilion. Free dancing afternoon and evening, first-class music. Bowling alley. Refreshments served at the grounds. Take Fulton cars at Second street and Morrison. Jolly good time for all. Don't fall to come. PEOPLES THEATER THE KING'S POWER 2 Reels Absolutely Defies Comparison Superb Acting Photography Perfect. ' , OTHER STANDARD QUALITY FEATURES. THAT TRIO. STAR THEATER ONE OF THE HONOR SftUAD -A picture about the New Ttork police, where today the world stands shocked at murder done to shield shameless graft. Three other lllma, 2 musical acta. Votlna- still on for the BABY CONTEST. ARCADE A Life for a Kins. Thrilling. Farmer Allen's Daughter. Comedy. Romnnce of Palm Garden. Artistic Bottles. Farcical. Tomorrow Bud Anderson In Life In a Training; Camp. SUNNYSIDE "Pride of the East Side" TREASURE TROVE For Youth and Age. GAUMONT WEEKLY Regular Every Sunday. WHERE THERE'S SOAP THERE'S HOPE 1000 Feet Good Laughs THE LION'S REVENGE Thrilling but not Sensational. MRS. DOURIA in Old Scotch Melodies. Theater Comfortably Seats 500. Council Crest Portland's Roof Garden 1200 Feet Above the City GRAND FREE DISPLAY OP FTOEWORKS EVERY - THURSDAY Free Scenic Amusement Park. High-Class Attractions. Open Air Rink. Picnic Grounds in Old Apple Orchard. ADMISSION TO GROUNDS FREE Phones Main 6 and A 1020 m - a ft VS NSJvJA-f VI V advanced vaudeville Beginning Monday Matinee, Aug. Sth AN ALL-COMEDY BILL M.Gej. H W- C. HeldS Ve,,, Could 41111 v,w Impersonations 12 Present "TOUT H," TL M 1 n u te. With the a Comedy Playlet by 111C Edgar Allen Woolf n.i , n . Silent Humorist Van Brothers Bradshaw Brothers Harmony and Comedy In an Act of Comedy Contortions Belmont and Harl The Stanleys Th Man The Girl And the Piano Silhouette Fun In Shadowland "daiZ 1 Orchestra Pictures M"nL EVENING PRICES IS, 20, 25 and 50c DAILY MATIXEE, 15c, 25c, BOc. HOLIDAY MATIX EES Night Prices MATINEE EVERY DAY 111 I HI II 33 Week Aug. 5th V SULLIVAN & CONSIDINE Special Summer Prices Nights, 10c and 20c Matinees, Any Seat, 10c "Models of Jardin de Paris" 1 A Rollicking Musical Satire on H French Student Ltf H A Blp-Rorlnr Laugh Producer J) LJSL AJJJ) VERNON JOHNWHITE'SCOMEDYCIRCUS Character Singing .Comediennes CONSTANCE WINDOM & CO. YERONI, YERDI AND BROTHER Playing the Comedy Triumph, "An "The Elf and the Musical Maid" Up-to-Date Invention Extra Added Feature HUGO LUTGENS The Swedish Dialect Comedian TWILIGHT PICTURES ORCHESTRA MATINEE EVERY DAY, 2:30 UNEQUALED VAUDEVILLE SEVENTH AND ALDER ST3. Week Commencing Monday Matinee, Aug. Sth ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY JEWELL'S MA MUCINS The Greatest of All European Novelties. Featuring "The Peath of Cleo patra." Considered Greatest Mechanical Production on the Stage Today Max Witt's Southern Girls Francesca Redding & Co. In Songs of the Sunny South In "Honora" Raymond Williams and Wolfus The Celebrated Acrobatic Juggler In "Plano-Fun-Ology" Pantagescope Pantages Orchestra Latest Animated Events H. K. Evenson. Director POPULAR PRICES. MATINEE DAILY. Boxes and First ilorr Balcony Reserved. Box Office Open From JO A. M. to 10 P. M. Pbones. A 2230, Main 4636. Curtain 2i30, 7:15 and . ICS The OA Portland's Greatest Amusement Park POSITIVELY LAST WEEK OF BOYD & OGLE CIRC US King Pharaoh Last Week Lady Livingstone Last Week EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING GREAT SHOW MUST CLOSE SATURDAY ALL THE USUAL CIRCUS ATTRACTIONS TAKE ANY CAR FOR THE OAKS 5 CENTS FAST LAUNCHES FROM MORRISON BRIDGE JTI 109.2