a PLAY DUE AT HEILIG IS SMALLTOWN MIRROR Comedy With Rose Stahl Shows Hour Dreary Village Changed Under In spiration of Dance and Becomes Broader and Happier. y-1 Main SO rnones a 1020 HEILIG THEATER BROADWAY AT TAYI.OR Paoaeat Mala 1, A NIGHTS NEXT WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24 COMMENCING SPECIAL PRICE MATINEE SATURDAY. THE HENRY B. HARRIS ESTATE PRESENTS. Broadway at Stark 1305 Matinee Seats at 25c Week Beginning Sund.y Matinee, March 21 INITIAL VAI'DEVILIE APPEARANCE NA ABARBANELL IN THE NEW COMEDY TITE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAX, PORTXAITO, , MARCH 2U 1915. .AS LI Hi i 9 9 9 5? l? Ajr "-t II v b- VvV Ni f- It! JF ii 8. Jk.k.wll I If 4 I "I at rra tffilittil i-W', b iMi'-.r;;. till -i'-i;-r' IA i, TISv'.y. 'Vif.';-:i;.i:Vv.;rt; ' i IS "A Perfect iAay." the new comedy in which Rose Stahl will appear here a.t the Hellls. there Is brought into strong relief the drab dreariness of the average small country town. In the first act the minister tells how they are trying to build a church, how they have weekly prayer meetings and the Kpworth Leagcue. and the Bus Driver makes of the fact that Bryan lectured there the past Winter as though It were an epoch-making incident in the social life of the village. This is in fact a record of all the social activities of the place and. while at first glance it may seem overdrawn, it Is in fact very true to life. Analyze the social activities of the average town of from two to four thou sand and what do you find? Just ex actly the condition pictured by the words written for the characters In this play. And It is this deadly monotony of the average small town that drives the young folks to seek situations in the cities and puts in them a desire to live in an urban community. Three members of a smal burlesque troupe land tn Sycamore. Kan. They bring with them the ideas and spirit of the big outside world in which they . . . ' I MAGGIE T E Y T E HEILIG THEATER Tuesday Evening, March 23 SEATS SELLING Floor, except last five rows $2.50 Last five rows 2.00 Balcony 2, l-50. 1.0U Gller- reserved 100 Gallery, admission - .75 Doors Open 7:30 P. M. have lived. They realize the place which entertainment holds in the lives of all folk, and how very essential it is that we shall be happy In order to be good. Under the directing nana or leucine Hisglns. who was known in the bur- lesaue world as Lucille le Jambon, they proceed to put some new lire into ine village. Their methods are subtle, for music by an unseen player instills them with a desire to keep pace witn tne melody. . Then they are told the dance is easy to learn and soon the craze for the tango has firm noia on tnem. And the village under Inspiration of the social element of the dance broad ens and brightens and Is happier than ever before in all Its history. That is the lesson which Miss Stahl In A per fect Lady" brings to many small com munities and it is a lesson which, if learned, will make for the upllftment and advancement of the people of the community which tries the plan. Stage Settloa; la of Town. Stage places generally assumed to be just stage places, so far as locality Is concerned they have no direct bearing as a rule, but in Rose Stahl's new comedy. "A Perfect Lady," Channlng Pollock and Rennold AVolf have put i real nlac-R on the staare. Sycamore. Kan sas. is a real place, as any one can ten you who nas been compeuea to wan over there for the combination passen ger and freighter familiar to that part nf thu. world. The spontaneous applause wnicn c-reets the scene on the rising ot tne first curtain is usually led by tne traveling men in the audience. l ne scene Is pnotograpnic in us imencw and. while this happens to be Sycamore, Kan., there are thousands of similar junction points scattered through the length and oreaatn or me lanu wuitu resemble it In every aetan. Company Is Waiting; for Train. As the curtain rises the company of burlesaue players Is reveaiea waning A PERFECT LADY BY CHANMNO POLLOCK AND RESOLD WOLF. THE TANGO CRAZE DRAMATIZED Evenings Lower Floor, 11 Rows, 2.00; 7 Rows. $1.50. Balcony, $1, 76c, 60c Gallery, 60c Special Saturday Matinee, $1.60, 1, 75c, 50c. BOX OFFICE SALE OPENS TOMORROW 7 Nights Beginning SUNDAY, MARCH 28 Bargain Price Matinee, Wednesday Special Price Matinee Saturday. ' Oliver Moroseo Presents the Comedy PEG 0' MY HEART w ,TH PEGGY O'NEIL NEW YORK, CHICAUO CAST German Girl Wins Mr. Dieck to Side of Irish. Donghty Commissioner Resents Ap proach to Bay Shamrock Tag, but Yields to Countrywoman. -T N St. Patrick's Day Commissioner J Dieck. who is of German descent. was approached by a young woman. who asked him to buy a shamrock tag. "You've got a nerve to ask a German to buy an Irish tag," Dieck told her. "Oh. it's all right" replied the girl Tm German, too." Dieck purchased. Bill Warren, secretary to Mayor AV bee, went in to see City Attorney La- Koche. Reaching, the office, he was informed that Mr. LaRoche was bu3y In his private office. "I just want to see him a moment,'' Bill explained; "Is his business in his office Important?" "Yes." explained the doorkeeper, "he is meeting with a Jitney driver and i member of the Safety First Commission." "Please don't disturb them," said Warren as he hurried out. a The Council was hearing arguments for and against the proposed jitney or dinance. One speaker declared that he represented the streetcar strap-hanger. "You've pot to give the jitney credit for one thing." said this man. "It has eliminated the strap-hanger." A streetcar conductor Jumped up and declared that if the women passengers in streetcars would sit in mens laps. like they do in jitneys, there would be no such thing as streetcar strap-hangers. A woman living in Laurelhurst tele phoned to Mayor Albee that there was a vacant lot next to her home which needed cleaning up badly. The Mayor reported the case to the Public Works Department and C. K. Atlas, secretary to Commissioner Dieck started pro ceedings to force the owner of the properly to clean the lot. All the red tape and lingo necessary in such pro ceedings was gone through in careful order after the name of the property owner was ascertained. The city notified the owner that if the lot was not cleaned by a certain date the city would do the work and assess the cost against the owner. After the lengthy proceedings were gone through with the city sent out men to do the work. The workmen came back and reported that the work had been done. The woman next door, who made the original complaint, an nounced that she had got tired of -watting for Use city and had done the work herself. Commissioner Daly received a nice newspaper writeup. The story was ac companied by bis latest photograph. Comment was made that Mr. Daly showed his remarkable will power by quitting smoking. One of the most noticeable features in the photograph is a smoking cigar In Mr. Daly's band, . , WOMANLY WOMAN HELD TO BE GREATEST HELP Peggy CNeiL, Who Is to Come to Heilig, Says Old-Fashioned Lady Is One She Admires and One Who Does Most Good. w-s? ! Irs? A' 'v U ,Pe??y O'feY "jw" FTER all, it is the womanly i a woman wno is 01 me greuieai aid in the present day," sayt Peggy O'Nell who comes to the Heilig next Sunday tn "Peg O' My Heart." "In the war in Europe, for example. it Is the nurses on the battlefield and the girls they left behind them who are doing the feminine work or tne world. I am not necessarily alluding to the ballot for woman, for I, personally, have not followed it up closely enough to really know Just what my position would be on that. But the women who are at home caring for and comforting motherless babies, the dainty or old fafhtoned as the stone age woman is the one I admire. 'In case of storm and stress, as well as peace and calm the womanly woman shines when the so-called new woman, with her fads and fancies is shown a thing of artifice. livery evening in watching the characters In "Peg O' My Heart." I think of one of the lines of Peg. 'That thing could never be the President of the United States, but if you had a baby it might grow up to be.' This prompts the idea that a woman Is most beautiful when she is looking down, at baby in her arms. If you haven t a baby of your own. why Just borrow your neighbors' baby; or if you live in flat borrow the janitor's or the cook's, babies are not snobs. They will cuddle up to yon Just as comfortably as though you were their mother. God created dogs and other animals with four feet so they could stand alone, but little helpless baby has to be sup ported, and" when you are holding a Pomerenian in your lap you might bet ter have twins. "The sum total of being attractive is Kvenlnirs Lover Floor. 11 Rows. $2.00 75c 50c. Gallerv. 50c Wednesday Matinee. $1 oaiunjtty mttuneQ, i.ov u Due. MAIL ORDERS NOW. BOX OFFICE SALE OPENS NEXT TJHCRSDAY Rows. J 1.60. Balcony, tl. IOC, bUC, 39C. Z3C for their connection train. Of course. the train does not connect and there are various delays calmly announced. as is quite the customary thing, by the station agent.' And if there is any more dreary. desolate, abandoned place in all the world than one of these junction points Just before daybreak or shortly after dark, it must be in i class entirely by Itself. The far North could not be so deso late, for there at least you know you are away from all the creature com forts of the world, but here they are and are not. Probably if the truth were known it Is not the scene alone which makes the applause of the trav elers out front. It is more than likely they want to express their sympathy and fellowship for the weary waiting ones who are looking anxiously for the coming of No 27. A "Perfect Lady" will be at the Hel lisr for four nig-hts, beginning Wednes day, with a matinee Saturday. News Gossip fo Plays and and Players Edited by Leoae Caes Baer. BY LEONE CASS BAER. Now it Is Catherine Countlss who has gone to Los Angeles, following 8 trail of stars of the legitimate into mo tion pictures. Miss Countiss has gained unique distinction In silent drama. Recruits from the legitimate usually act for a feature film or so and then are seen no more. Miss Countlss has been starred in four photo-dramas within the past five months. One of these, Haddo'n Chambers' "A Modern Magdalen," is Just released. Last week Miss Countiss left New York for Los Angeles to act in a five-reel picture for the Oz Company. All this is significant of her popularity on the screen. Margaret Illlngton wears men's socks and defends her half-hosed position thusly: "I like them because I won't wear garters and because a silk sock costs exactly half as much as a silk stocking. The perfect principle of art in dress, to my -mind, is not wasting money and In wearing what gives one the most comfort. Margaret Illlngton, by the way, is nearing the one-hundredth performance of "The Lie," Henry Arthur Jones new est play, at the Harris Theater, in New York. a a H. B. Warner is featured in "Under Cover," which is coming to this Coast soon. "Under Cover should not be confused with "Twin Beds." Oliver Morosco recently invited young playwrights to submit their plays to him. To give every contestant a fair deal he organized a play-reading bureau conducted on. business prlncl- ples. It promised to read every play and pass an opinion on it In writing with the return of the manuscript. A number of plays have already been se lected and these will be tried out With Jane Cowl as the leading woman. If there is a hit among the selected plays Miss Cowl will be sent to New York In It to ooen early In the Fall. Miss Cowl was the original Mary Turner In "Within the Law." In private life she Is Mrs. Adolf Klauber. Her husband, who was for many years dramatic critic on the New York Times, Is now Identi fied with a theatrical producing firm. ''"The Dickey Bird." which Harvey O'HIggins and Harriet Ford wrote as a curtain raiser to their drama of Mor m on Ism. "Polygamy," has not merely afforded a vast deal of amusement to the Park Theater audiences. It has add ed a new phase to the current slang of Broadway. "The Dickey Bird" in the playlet is a man who was Just born to be hen pecked who extricates himself from the toils of one dominating woman, only to fall into the hands of another, of a different method, but no less effi cacy, and who does not even know. In the second case, that he Is being hen pecked. So sucessfuly did the authors con vey their ideas concerning the man who was born to be some woman's vic tim, that one hears from every quarter, "Oh, he can't do anything with her he's a Dickey Bird." The name arose from the fact that the man of the playlet was called Rich ard Bowen, and that both his first wife and his second called him "The Dickey Bird" with only thinly veiled contempt. In the most dramatic moment of the piece, when by an amusing- complica tion, both women confront him at once, he says that the reason he revolted, from his first wife, and deserted her was that she had dragged him to see Ibsen's "Doll House," and that a real ization of his true position had come over him there. I saw that all my lire I had been a male Nora." he says. "I had been bul lied and exploited, and disregarded. So when Nora went out into tne nignt, j. went out after her." a . a According to a gossipy letter in an exchange: a little bit of Inside infor mation is that Mrs. Leslie Carter will acaln be seen in a play next season un der entirely new management. She Is at present appearing in vaudeville In an abbreviated version or "z;aa." unose who have seen her say her Iigure is as slender as that of a girl of 18, ana age has made very little impression on her. From all accounts Harrison Grey riaka will be her manager, wniie jvirs. riflkn will orobably appear- under en tirelv new management as the result of her husband's financial misfortunes. Por some time past there nave Deen aulet rumors that Mrs. Carter might be reconciled witn jBeiasco. ana mere were those who were positive in their decla ration that ere long the Titian-haired actress would again be under the man agement of "The Wizard." This now seems doubtful, if there was ever any real ground for the report, it is true Mrs. Carter speaks In most respectrui not the question of birth, or breed, or clan. It Is being the best of what we should be. It is womanly women who are helpful. Helpful hands are more attractive than manicured ones, but it is easy to have both with little extra trouble and no extra expense." "Peg O" My Heart come to the Heilig March 28 with a matinee Wednesday and Saturday. AKE THEATER Main 2 A 5360 Geo. L. Baker. Manager HOME OF THE FAMOUS BAKER PLAYERS TOLD IN THE HILLS Week Opening Sunday Matinee, March 21, 1915 Today TOLD IN THE HILLS First and only dramatization of Marah Ellis Ryan's famous and widely read romantic novel ever seen in this city. GENESEE of the HILLS The true American romance. Scenes laid in Northwest ern Montana. A Western play that is different. A story that appeals to lovers of the wild country. .As played in New York by Edwin Arden. Staged under the direction of Walter B. Gilbert. TOLD EN THE HILLS ' Evening Prices, 25c, BOc and 75c. Box Seats, l-OO. Sat. nnd San. Matinees, 25e nnd Cve. Box Seats, 75c. TOLD IN THE HILLS And the two special bargain performances MONDAY WEDNESDAY NIGHT All Seats (Except Box), 25 MATINEE Next Week, Starting Sunday Matinee, March 28, Most Startling Dramatic Sensation Ever Staged. DAMAGED GOODS By Eugene Brienx, of the French Academy. A sociological medical thesis, delivering a terrible warning against the most dreadful scourge of the human race. Special matinees for women only. No children under 16 admitted unless accom panied by parent or guardian. No advance in prices. Mail and "phone orders promptly attended to. Seats now selling. MUSICAL COMEDVS FAVORITE PRIMA UONW, The GREEN BEETLE IMibj. A TrrnifidDM hit 4 I an V 1 t A V f Y aakBa Chinatown. Most Imiwrtant and IK-ltlu-atf lrmafi Offrrluc of Srmmmm. THE SEVEN COLONIAL BELLES flrrina- THE KERVILLE FAMILY TRICK BILLIARUISTS. GALLON AID HIS LUNATIC STICKS. CHARLEY MAY BROWN and NEWMAN OSes AND PATTKR. MAX LAUBE THH HUM 111 HI). 50c Nights-Matinees 25c Beginning Monday, March 22 UCED PRICES Will Go Into Effect at the ORPH EUM For both Night and Matinee .50c NIGHT PRICES Any seat on lower floor. Balcony First eight rows 25c Last nine rows 15c Boxes and loges 75c Performances, us Follows: MATINEES Any seat, except last nine rows in balcony 25c Last nine rows in balcony. .. ,15c Boxes and loges 50c MATINEES SATURDAY, SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS. " First 15 rows, lower floor 50 cents Last 19 rows 25 cents Balcony, first eight rows.., 25 cents Last nine rows 15 cents Boxes and Loges 75 cents 50 CENTS NIGHTS MATINEES 23 CENTS uaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa terms of the man who brought her out Meanwhile Mis. Carter Is hiiKrly enjoy before the footlights when she dls- lnfr herself In vaudeville, hc Is said cuBses her affairs with friends: but to be- happier than she has been for many think that the original cause of years. Surely, sho lias had her share of the rupture is too deep to be mended, sorrows and dlnnpntntmonts. LTnequaled Vaudeville Broadway at Alder Week Beginning Monday Matinee, March 22 Oh, You Little Stars, Go Hide Your Hrads la Ike Prearaee of This Monster Afeareicatlon of Vaudeville Artists. Here's the BIr; Kill Topper That Yon Ort W hen You Slip Five JKnrra Aero a the Marble Slab In Front of the llox Offlrei The Six Tasmanian Van Diemans They Do Thinas In Midair That Yon Couldn't Io on the Ground. This Is a Knockout Green & Parker These Chaps Have Lightning; Cheated, The Juggling Barretts Whlrh Are Your THE DEVIL, THE SERVANT AND THE MAN Italy's l.oxa l America's Gain, The Bernivici Brothers Have Yon Ever Listened to That Mttle Still Yolret If Yon Have Then Listen to THE GREAT LESTER Who Alexander rantaaes Offers to Yon to Fill Your Cnp of Gladness to the Overflow. BOXES AND FIRST ROW BAtCOVV SEATS RKSERVF.D BY I'IIOK. MAl.t -MUll, A iiail. aSn&rrlSS BROADWAY AT YAMHILL Afternoons 10-1 5c Nights. . . 15,25c Week Commencing Monday Matinee. Mar. 22 "!Ft",HrJSP"" V!"-"1." -'"i1-1 J. . ,v -r. -, ;' .- . J n H 'Vis' u l , a r jr id 7 I y. V I B-? lrrlir' rn'Tlil 'iluli - - - - ' r. 1 ' liJziL,jK Aat -m f. ..-,t"i .V.' V'. '-v. - " " till 3 - S r.-rwnpe ,,y.--rWs- t a A Bf S .a. II Milt'