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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1915)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAy. PORTLAND. JANUARY 17, 1915. order It was provided that the com- , 1, . Aff-rirtuitlir&l Col- LABORER, SERVING CITY SUCCESS OF "DRIVEN" ON BROADWAY DOUBTFUL . : WITH 71 PLAYS IN LIST OF SEASON'S FAILURES y. M. W. of Member T,., "E SL.0 " mervichi ... . . lege should continue as before, autnor- ity being given tne umvei.uy, " LONGEST, TELLS METHOD Constant Albertini, Who Begins Thirty-third Tear on February 1. Gives Health Rule Credit for HU Able Work. ever, to offer courses in "nigner com merce." It was understood inai inn . . . . ; hA AllP.h 1LS tO aivisiuu m " " " " avoid duplication or unnecessary ex penditure or money. i-u. n " -in commerce at the University and if me survey uwub "i'"v ' " ' of these institutions should be found cides to Enjoy Herseil wun xonng Army : in conflict with tne orders oi me Board of Higher Curricula, there is ap parently full authority vested in this board for an easy settlement of the question. In fact, since the decisions . .1.1- hav. thA effect of law. Ul 1.11 . a irvu " " " how could such a question bo any more effectively settled by an educational ) board in run cnargo uum iu". tionsT t. a . rna. - that the. plan pro Li ; r f J '1 111 00) $V ' t -I.;""" ' M ' ;1 .K' tts Orymt stS ifcS2d I 1 Jn 1 - -, - - - - r -v. Vv f T T - x; 1 " ' iff' -mtf i Vk ' W;-v -j r --VM ff? fO' " , V .. ...... ... JJtor-Gocrr-e - - " oAr Z0 . Zm' i Cf ri?-; ;,V - IP l i "s i BY LLOTO F. LOSEBOAN. NEW YORK. Jan. 1. (Special.) Christmas ends what is practic ally the first half of the theat rical season and managers are now proceeding: to take account of stock. According- to the official figures, there already have been 71 failures this eason on Broadway, with a number of other candidates fighting to avert annihilation. Road shows, with a few exceptions, have not made much money, and all producers will welcome the new year, hoping that it will be kinder to them than 1914 has been. Charles Frohman saw "Driven" while In London and decided that the play and Alexander Carlisle, the star, would make a hit here, so he imported them. They axe now the attraction at the Kmplre. succeeding "Diplomacy." which bad held the stage there for some time. "Driven" Is the- work of E. Temple Thurston, a novelist author of a num ber of "best sellers." Who is being "driven." or whence, or why is not clear. London may have liked the play, but it is doubtful if Broadway will adopt it. , . In "Driven" Miss Carlile is the wife of a middle-aged member of Parlia ment, and she is thoroughly weary of him. Then she overhears a doctor say that her condition is incurable and that she will die in six months. She de cides to enjoy herself for this period, and her choice falls upon an army of ficer. The audience sees this wife, who la struggling to crowd so much into the lrttle of life that is left to her. in the rooms of her lover, and then observes her retirement when she discovers that a place has been set for her. implying the lover's belief that she will remain there. She resents this, bnt finally 3Z o&r75 y relents and agrees to return the next day, prepared to elope In the meantime, the husband, whose suspicions have been aroused, has de cided to appeal to the lover, who does not Know or me who -to death. The lover, rather than part a dvlne woman from her husband. surrenders her. It turns out that her health has been entirely restored by this course of happy living and the audience is convinced that she now will be happy with her husband, even though he IS mucn nw There are some unique touches in m.i... " TTni iinmnlp. in the first act when the hero asks her to sing. he listens to aDout two oars mu m vanorbn that he WOUld ' AkMi-h..rMtp Tn the third act she declared she was frightfully hungry, grew enthusiastic over mo and peaches, and then left the fruit on HofcMiKM there were too ob vious evidences of preparation. In the last act, tne neroine, iuj health, started to take poison and die, but learning that her husband loved her and had not read the letters she wrote . v. Vi or- man. una accemea Pekingese dog from hlin and decided to live happily forever afterward. The heroine is the most peculiar thing about "Driven" and it is not Miss Carlisle's fault that she was peculiar without being funny. She did the best she could, as did Haldee Wright, the interfering sister-in-law, but the au thor 1b to blame for their inability to make any Impression in colorless, un natural and impossible characters. Arte? tf&J ye e W7s?&C Leslie Faber, as the lover, was as human as he could possibly be, while Charles Bryant did all that was pos sible to make something out of the role of the Ill-treated hUBband. For her second bin at the Comedy Theater. Miss Marie Tempest is pre senting "The Marriage of Kitty," which already has been' given here with another actress in the name role, pre ceded by a new one-act play. This latter is "The Dumb and the Blind," by Harold Chapin. .It is a character study, dealing with the poorest class r,r T.nnHnn lifo. Tho characters are a mud barsre worker, his wife, two children and his "pal," also employed on a mud barge. Joe, the head of the B-as n hnnffA Of WOT"lC which laimij, 9 enables him to be home every night, instead of once a week. He tells his wife and later is surprised to find that . j .i l.,,.Tl,r nMvlnir This frives BOD 12 niwti.A , J . J n - ' - rise to a question of religion and Joe Is enragea to nna not winy m,. ., 4r finA hut that his nal w ii r uciicteo . "BUI" also does. He is about to leave his home in disgust when the appear ance of his little daughter and baby saves the situation, and brings a happy ending to the play. "The Dumb and the Blind," it is an nounced, was "written especially for nn Tmneat" Why this was so is not stated. ' posed by Mr. Hofer would only add to tne cunicuiiy. xio adopted during recent years in Kansas and Iowa. The fact is, that no good has come to these states rrom tne change in their educational policy, as evidence of this it is necessary to refer to only one fact.- Soon after the single board assumed control of the State University and the State Agricultural College ancf the State Normal School of Iowa, orders were Issued making changes in courses of study, eliminat ing engineering from the state univer sity, discontinuing worn m grade at the normal school, and so on. But conditions became such, with pro tests from alumni and other friends of these different institutions, na.i who.. .... -r lal..a. nftnvar.rl in order to avoid the abolishment of the board by the Legislature and the readoption of the old plan, tne ooaro rraciauuu in action and left the institutions as they had been .before. The result there has been to agitate and unsettle matters rather than to effect any permanent or satisfactory adjustmnt. Certainly . . . i in(. tn th )hT- tnere.nae uoeu t payers and no improvement in the ef ficiency or tne worn oi mo iu6-' Btitutions of that state. - Kansas Flam Discredited. The plan In Kansas, too, is conceded to be more expensive than the old one, without any compensating advantage. In our neighboring state of Montana the higher institutions, as well as other educational work, has been for some years in charge of one board, the State Board of Education. But in Montana the result is no more satisfactory. The plan has failed to accomplish the pur pose intended. This is clearly shown by the fact that as late as 1914 the conditions in Montana affecting the higher educational work were so unsat isfactory that a measure was Initiated and submitted to the vote of the peo ple providing for certain changes in the policies of the higher institutions. An active campaign was carried on throughout the state. People were lined up on one side or the other, and when the votes were counted conditions were found to have been left as they had been before. There was no settlement P.egarding financial responsiDimy. there any reason why a board having . i A AnA Institution should be any less responsible for its official con duct than it tne same uumu duwhu m in charge of several institutions r ur is it thought that two or three "busi ness men," at so mucn a aay, wouia be any more interested in the work of the institutions unoer tneir cnargo, .-i j wo., .. .i i csotpr ahllitv. or nuuiu ii i. . U j 13 - V , would be any more unselfish and pains taking in the discnarge oi meir uu ij.. v. ..-nni ii tha men nnd women vieo i-i" ii w n . - - .ta nhAsnn from amonir the best citizens of the entire state, merely be cause the latter serve wnnout cuiunu? satlon and have only one institution in stead of several to look after? Leas Agritatios Recommended. mx- TJ.r.. nniTD that thA ninele I'l 1 II 'ill ao.j - ' board "should Tepresent the interests of the whole taxpaylng body of the state, instead of the local interests. Now, is there any Known reuun a board should be any less representa n. - w t. .nnBfltn nf 13 members and has charge of one institution oniy than if it snouia conBisi oi mioo uu. mn hut have charge of three different, institutions? As it appears to tne average cmson who is interested in the general wel , . ti. ccatA what niir hlffher lalU ui in o 1 1-1 m . educational Institutions most need at the present time is less agitation and more opportunity to devote themselves to the real interests ior wmcn moy i i i .... .1 Tkav hava hnan nrnvlded QlltLULttlllcu. i J with permanent income through con tinuing appropriations miu h"s" measures, riy acuon ui mo v- Hlcrhur Curricula their courses have been outlined and assigned to the In stitutions In a way sucn as to avoiu unncessary duplication. Why now over turn what has been accomplished through the efforts of a quarter of a century and throw the institutions again into a Condition of uncertainty, with the resultant sparring fof advan tage and dissipation of effort, waste of . '1 . i - j r aftlnt.nnvV iunas ana uujj.u mon m ...i.n-i.., . Why not leave the institutions alone, each In its own field, under Its own board, charged with the responsibility of taking the funds provided and mak ing the best use of them in developing the respective institutions m -j ..h to make them of the greatest value to the state? OBSERVER. PROPOSAL TO ABOLISH REGENTS OF STATEINSTITUTIONS DRAWS PROTEST -ThreeBTnessMen-Me Over University, Agricultural College .nd Normal as Suggested by IV Hofer, SHH No Advlges, Write- "Obser-Less AgiUtion nd More Co-Operat,on Recommended. ryORTLAXD, Jan. 15. (To the Ed Ym Itor.) In The Oregonian of Jan- uary 7 I note the communication from E. Hofer, recommending the abol i.w . r .v.. haiHi nf reeents of the State University, the State Agricultural College and the State normal ora his idea being to place all these Insti tutions under one board, comprising "three business men." A careful analy sis of Mr. Hoter's statement leaves the casual reader in doubt regarding the advantages of the proposed plan. For instance, he speaks of the State Board of Higher Curricula, established by the Legislature "for the purpose of cutting out all duplications in courses of study by these institutions." Then he says: "Only recently we have seen the estab. Iishment of a school of commerce at the University of Oregon, when there is already a full-fledged school of commerce at the Agricultural College, and each- of the Institutions Is carrying on an industrial survey. According to the law. the State Board of Higher Curricula, consisting of five persons with no connection whatever with either of these higher institutions. has full authority to deal witn mi question and to avoid a oupiicuu . courses. That this is true is shown by the fact that since the establish ment of the board, as is well known to the publio through announcements in the press, different orders have been issued, eliminating courses of study . i )........ n thA nther. The irom duo .'1 . . object in view, no doubt, was to limit each institution to a P"""' and avoid a duplication of courses that would Involve unnecessary expenditure of money. .. . x.tia. nin a vear It is only I'n'i' - ago that the board Issued an order elim inating all engineering wv..-. State University and centering this work at the Agricultural College. The duplication of engineering courses at these institutions had been the one ii AV,au.t,4 tn hv thA nAODle of Oregon. It had been agitated for a great many years. During reierenaum campaigns, when educational aproprla tlons were Involved, one of the argu ments advanced against these appro . . - V. . .kaA waa i 1 1 W 1 1 pnauons " n - . - f lcation In the duplication of expensive engineering equipmoni o.uu iimn-w-i , . c thataA twn institutions lionm iwawcc - .11 tna .nirin,rrlnf work could De centered in one Institution at great saving to the taxpayers. Newspaper files show that when the order of the Board of Higher uurncuia was issueu assigning the engineering work to the i inn tho H i-i ui rm met With gne tuwmii" . , f.mr throughout the state. In fact, there is no "evidence of opposition, the people of the state apparently hav ing accepted that" decision as the final settlement of the vexing problem. I am also advised that in. the same l rL.v! --X'- r,svs , 1 -V V , u4 'Tk X-, '-'71 NO LATE hours; total abstinence from coffee and tea; moderate use of tobacco; plenty of rye bread, cheese and simple, wholesome foods; little or no meat; moderate use of good wine: plenty of hard work. These are the health rules of Con stanta Albertini. He is the oldest la borer in point of service in the city's employ. February I he wil'. celebrate the 33d anniversary of the day when be first took up a pick and shovel and entered a trench to lay water mains in the Portland water oureau. do . ii- - 4.h aua,tf AV rA.ln. BDOW OT shine, and he still is rated as one of the best maintenance mou Ber,T?Ce 1 .l.n. ata,tail VOrlf t h A WateF system was owned by tae old Portland Water uompany. ini. - --- was then 36 years of ae. He is now 69 and says he is just as much of a man as he was then, ewen though for 38 years he has missed but few days t.. i ..i..t mnnuAl labor. Hi says hard work doesn't hurt any man if he knows how to taKe care oi Thirty-thrM years ago mr. CRESWELL DEBATERS WIN Eugene Team, With Leader Absent Due to Injury, Is Defeated. niOT-TC Or. Jan. 16. (Special.) v i-. tTio-H Snhonl debating XDB to " i'i 1 1 o team last night defeated the Eugene team on the negative sine oi mo vru ernment ownership of railways ques tion. , . The Creswell team was composes oi Edmund Padden ana Aioert otuujuoi. The Eugene team was composed of Day i ,i nuth Ynune. The latter DttVlCT i . . c. ,KnttoH William Rebec, leader of the Eugene team, who was injured by an automobile last night. PHARMACIST TEACHES TOXI COLOGY AT Y. M. O. A. . COLLEGE. : , - I ri i HantTrilf 1 Jrf- .sT D. Ji. Crockett. D. N. Crockett, a graduate of the Indiana College of Pharmacy, has been appointed instructor of toxicology in the college of phar macy of the Y. M. C. A. Mr. Crockett is a registered pharmacist in the state and has been in business for himself since his graduation from school. He is 26 years old. COiSirA-TA ALRKMTIM aw.ai wlfeUlnar & filrk fend shovel. flU"!" y Ing water pipes weighing hundreds e'j ..,,.. nnriarnlii tiArdff hi ts and ex posure of the most unusual kind an doing otirer feats that the aver' M.n unifiil nnt att.mnL Tfxl a T he I in tha uni llnw vet he does not show the effects of his rugged life. He Is .... ... 1 . -A k.allhw 11 M liovuy, i uu . w i j - says If tle city Is willing he will still be on thoi job for many years to come Elrht . M. Is Albertlnl's deadline for retiring. He generally goes to bed m.un 1 .I..L K.. ...in a.wapal nf . St I .111 V UlWn, n n 1 mv.. . . - . caslons, hrt says, he has indulged In the dissipation or staying up vmn utur... Tka m nut, ic ereta b o ciotk in m mnpninr ha la out of bed and a IIMI t.li. l.tur ha la off to work. Ill work la with a rang of men whose duty It is to Stop leaks In water malna. Albertini says the trouble wtlh moat la- hAran la that thev are not rcsuiax (k.i. KaiKitH Ha aava a workman ca not kaep his pice unless he takes cai of himself properly. He nays that 1 . i . .I-...IJ ka. an. anat h.ll IS KlnS W i ui nu 1 1 .... I careful about une of stimulants, oveil eating, not getting enougn ni keeping late Hours. He never has In his 33 years missed a nt Once he was ,-.lMrl hla BHIUO 1""" waa i. " . ... ....... . He will celebrate the 33d anniversary of hla service in the water bureau by doing his usual hard day's work, he says. Possibly he will not go to bed that night until o'clock and during tha day he might possibly partake of a portion of meat or might drink an extra glass of wine. . . . been sick, ne says, an a of service be has no V r on account OI an'anon. a off a few days when he bark and once or twice 1 SAFEGUARD FAMILY, IS CLUBWOMAN'S ADVICE1 Prevent Scattering of Member on Death of Breadwinner, Is Mr. Thomaa G. Wiater'a Plea Insurance la Prevention. mimw a n tp-tktiCR. President Woman's Club, Minnapolla n-, s soon as your an-nnom --'""' i to it, you reallxe that detached peopi peopiw "-""'" cannot make a city or a -tate -ja na tion. It is tne iamny ; " ; . ' upon which society Is buUL The fam ily and family life are the sioeration to every community, to which all other interests are second ary and tributary. So marriage ooes . Join one man ano one wi., create, the new social than either of the two dividual. which mane it, a uiiiii- ----- ---- guarding all the forces of civilization must held. For a family is not a mere heap of people. It has e'""'""? individuality of it. own It ha. . own soul. 11. ' own habits, its own little ways, even Its tricks of manne.a has a being of its own quite as real aa If it had a body. Into a family a child has a right to be born. God does not intend mat human soul stiouia oe orwU j . .... ..ored and less essential. No charitable institution, however well and kindly nanus :.' warmth, the spiritual tmo;,n"B? moral etanuarat ----- circle, so inorousu.y - to be realized that the more dvanced charities are preferring to put desti tute childen Into private homes rather than into xno dwi ihdh-. - tSat even a somewhat flnCsjrtor Smmtlir in & better picw w -i- --- l? . V;...tn-,nr nubile "homes." tne Dest ui .-as.as.. - - It come, nearer to the norma Well, suppose m , , . existence, husband, wife and children forming this compact unit who.. ,, . 'uch 'a Iron;" death "often" fall. Ilk. sucn a a . . nieces, scat- a Bomp "1...s " , ... ltlry individuals, each struggling alone nsuad of m that circle where they belong, that home which 1. the unit of social life. . Better, iduh' V nf it. maimed by .the loss of on. of It. member., pernapa than such a breaking down of the e- e"tlal ."f .... come. in. It is one of the force, that cement. the family in danger 01 """ For, after all. money must give the between the possibility of ...Ping on the normal, imiui . into fragments. And nothing can be of greater Importance to the maKer. and founaers 01 i-..... ----- guaranteeing of the permanence of the . ..-1. t,i..h th hava created. sacrea uun n ....... PICTURE THEATER NEWS (Continued From Pae4.) "Miriam Nesblt, the popular In a two-reel comedy, is one of the most intensely funny "P1"1"; tures yet shown to Portland people, and "Love, Oil and Grease" I. a rapld ?ire comedy featuring .mlllng Ruth BCom1ng Wednesday is "The Tlp-Off -one of the best police stories yet fllmf. in three full reels. The Hear.t-Belig Weekly 'is provided also. The new pipe organ will be ready for dedication next Sunday for future en tertainment of National patrons. STJXSET HAS FEATURE BILL "Mother Hulda""" and "Refining Fires" Are Unusual Stories. Film adaptations of the old-time fairy tales are being produced with remarkable clearness. A new Improve ment of th. lens make. It posxlble tn expose the same film twice. In thin way many novel and spectacular ef fects are being .hown. Perhaps the best double exposure effect is the scene In "Mother Hulda." where -the Fairy Prince wafts his wand and change. : forest Into an army. "Mother Hulda" Is the two-part fes ture of the programme at the Bunnc Theater. The stars of the Broncho Com. pany are used In this film by Thorn" Inc. and William Clifford, two of the most clever producers in America. "Refining Fires" has for Its themn a socloloirtcal truth. The plot is con slatant and Intensely Interesting. The cast is headed by Harry von Meter, Vivian Rich and Jack Richardson. A Keystone comedy, produced under the direction of Mack Bennett, proaurer of "Time's Punctured Romance" and called "Only a Farmer's Daughter." 1 the only comedy on the progrnnime. The Mutual Weekly, with war pic tures snd other interesting scenes, con elude, a programme of -arloly. The Panama-Pnoirio Kpilllon has tablmhed a clerln-huu I"r l"t rhliilr. and rt-latlven. and haa communlratlon ll tha entlra Han rranclnco lrl.ihon lyitin KEW THOCfiHT I.IT!."! TO J LKCTIHK I1KKH Twn-.-'i ' - - -- - V'-f-. -v 1 HU ma 1- - mi Wis ar ' ' W II. Edward Mills. H. Edward Mill.. New Thought teacher, of Spokane, Wash., will lecture in Portland today, Mon day and Tuesday evenlnga Mr. Mills Is associate pastor with Ir. A. C. Grler, of the New Thought Pool 'v In 8pokane and comes to Port -d under the auspice, of the I gon committee, for the World. Congre.. of New Though to be held at Ban Fr.n clsco In Connection with th. Panama-Pacific Exposition In June. Mr. Mills will deliver his first lecture this evening st t o'clock, at Temple of Truth. Kllers build ing subject, "Truth. Principle, and Practice." On Monday even ing at I o'clock, he will lecture at Central Hall in the Publio Library, Tenth and Yamhill streets, subject. "Con.clousne.s-j Key to Conquest," and Tuesday evening, In the Lincoln Wn School auditorium, subject. "Tho Signs of the Times." His lectupa. in this city are free to the gen eral public. f