Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1920)
- ? TOE SUNDAY OREG ONI AX, PORTLAND, JUNE 13, 1020 ' ' r'- . 1 M 1; NEW BEDROOM BURLESQUE SKIDS VERY CLOSE TO LINE "Innocent Idea" by Martin Brown Makes Fun of Theme of Many Plays Such as "Up in Mabel's Room." 1 t .' :w i - rv r v, i-- i a I 4 r ? ? ? sup A ? &&f&-J&ir'?f 3 v rA v x- J I?T KI,lZABKTll LONERHAX. NEW YORK, June 12. (Special.) At last a burlesque on the bedroom farce that has played 't such an important part in Broadway ' theatricals during the past season or two has been offered. "An Innocent p Idea," Martin Brown's new play which came into the Fulton theater, makes fun of the bedroom farce and will be enjoyed by many who have tired long : ago of that sort of farce. Mr. Brown uses all the props of the bedroom , farce that were found in "Up in Mabel's Room," "Twin Beds," "Break ; fast in Bed" and many others. There i are many amusing incidents and the " burlesque on the farce comedy skids mighty close to the line at times. ; Robert Emmet Keane plays the hero, ; with Russell Fillmore a "misunder ' stood" dramatist. The women include ; Florence Gerald as a hotel detective j and Amy Ongley as a comedy cham ) bcrmald. t "39 East," which had a very suc- 1 cessful season at the Broadhurst last ". X year,' returned to town from its road J Ntour and took possession of the Shu- bert, which adjoins its former home. The show was to have closed its very i popular tour, but the new play sched i uled for the Khubert needed working ' over and "39 East" was put in to fill .1 in the time. It may run all summer. ; but at least will stay until a new ; tenant is ready. The cast is prac , tically unchanged, with Henry Hull and Constance Binney in the leads and Alison Skipworth, Lucia Moore. Edith ' Uresham and Mildred Arden in their old roles. This story by Rachel C'rothers tells of life in a boarding house and is full of comedy lines and GIRLS CAN ENJOY VACATION FOR WHOLE WEEK ON ONLY $12 Y, W. C. A. Camps Provide Opportunity for Outing That Is Pleasant and of Only Small Cost. W OULD you guess that a girl couldi spend a week in a wood sy place, swimming when she liked it, conoeing if she knew how, bacon-batting when she could up ealy enough, hiking across country when she felt particularly peppy, and lying around In cool, still places when she wanted to bo quiet that she could do all this to the tune of $12 a week? Just that has been done and is being done by thousands of girls (over 50,000, to be specific) this summer. The secret? Y. W. C. A. camps! No longer is the fainting heroine and the delicate girl popular in the United States. It's the healthy, fresh skinned, athletic girl with the "rouge that won't come off" on her cheeks because it's "painted from the in side," that is the ideal today and that is why the summer camps are popu lar. Every girl would rather have a natural bloom on her cheeks than the 6u-cents-a-box kind and she knows that the surest way to get it is by outdoor living, wholesome food and lots of exercise. She knows, too, that this is the keenest sort of fun. So when, summer comes and she has a week or two off from work she chooses a camp for her vacation trip. She does, that is, if she is wise, and bo many girls are growing "wise" lately that all the camps in the coun- ry have waiting lists and disappoint ed inquirers. Y. W. C. A. camps are run, primar ily, for girls who work the year around in factories, shops, stores or situations. The scenes are laid in a New York boarding house just east of Fifth avenue, but the characters are typical of boarding houses in all parts of the country. Hence its pop ularity; it is an absolute picture of a certain class of boarding house, and nothing succeeds like a play that shows familiar conditions. The announcement that S. L. Roth apfel would assume charge of the Capitol aid not cause the big surprise that was anticipated. It will be re celled that when the big theater first openea nis connection with it was rumored, but later denied. Mr. Roth apfel, well known in Portland, opened successfully the Strand, the Rialto and the Rivoli on Broadway, just few blocks from the Capitol. Later he resigned to go into the producing end of the picture business and then went to iamornia. since nis return his name has been associated with many rumors or big things. Mr. Rothapfel has been called the "Belasco of motion pictures," for he it was who first introduced the ar tistic settings for pictures and insisted upon the appropriate musical accom paniment now an essential part of the up-to-date picture house. Mr. joowes, me airector. made the an nouncement from the Capitol the other day. A new form of entertain ment will be inaugurated by Mr. Rothapfel which will, include a lower admission rate (the top price has been $1.50) and more shows will be given. I ne Lapitol competes with the other three theaters for patronage and it is expected that many of the Rothapfel fans and their name is legion! will flock back to the Capitol. The house will be closd for a week to make necessary changes. otliccs and who have to cram into seven short days enough fresh air and sunshine, flower picking and hik ing to last 12 months. In location management, equipment and Dure fun these camps are quite as surprisingly delightful as those run for the "poor little rich girls" at several hun dred per. Number one on the list of delicious features of camp life is the fact that t.ie vacation girl can wear bloomers every day and all day. can swine along with freedom undreamed of in full dress days. No man (unless he has taken ladies' parts in plays) can understand what a joy that is to a girl, and no girl that hasn't stepped out of her bothersome short, tieht skirt or full, trammeling one, can ap preciate the delight, either. On Sun days, perhaps, and guest days, skirts are donned, but for the rest of the time never! Number two in the list is the easy chance for outdoor sports. There are "play leaders." or athletic directors, in all the camps, and planning with them a councilor for every group of ten or 20 girls. Amofcg them baseball matches are arranged, or cross-country hikes, or bird-hunting trips (with field glasses in lieu of guns); water sports are taught, water contests are planned; early morning bacon-bats, with wood fire, coffee and canned cream, and all the usual accessories, are indulged in, and moonlight marsh mallow roasts, or watermelon sprees are staged. For the girl who wants to be quiet and lazy, .there are such places as "crows' nests," built high in, the tree branches, . where reading or dreaming is the most natural sport to indulge or there's the sunny beach shore, a blanket spread on the sand makes the laziest sort of a "chaise longrue." Or there are queer, lonely places along the river's edge which the romantic soul can discover and keep as his sanctum. And of course a third Joy is the simple life one lives sleeping in tents or cabins with a wooden box for a dressing table and one eight-inch mirror for five or six girls, no ward robe space other than the suitcase under the cot and no private bath ex cept the basin on a stand. There is always a chance to pull your cot out into the open and sleep under the stars, and no one really knows the stars, so Stevenson says, "who has not slept a la belle etoile." The food? On always accepts good eats as a part of the camp game; perhaps because one is so hungry that anything tastes good! But things are good when there's a special cook to prepare the food and the whole co'intryside to choose from in the matter of straw berries, cream, newly-made butter and green vegetables. There are 153 Y. W. C. A. camps opening this month in all parts of the country from the Pacific to the Atlantic coast, accommodating over 50,000 girls during the season. In the New England states and New York 32 camps give vacations to 10.000 girls; in Ohio and West Vir ginia. 17 camps accommodate over 3000 industrial girls; in the west cer tain camps draw most of the mining districts. The cost of a week's stay at these camps varies from ?10 to J12. There's not much in the way of fun. health and outdoor medicine thit you can get for $12 these days! Yet. to sum up this is what the Y. W. C. A. camps offer: Bo ting, bathing and swimming under trained instructors; tramps through beauti ful secluded woods, picnics in the woods, bacon-bats, camp fires by the lake, baseball, basketball and all kinds of gimes; auto trips, sleeping- out parties. In unpleasant weather there are open fires In tne nails ana a place where stunts, concerts, dra matics, etc., are given. The trees and hills abound in bird and flow ers and you can learn to know and enjoy them. Increase in Population De clared to Be Menace. PtatlaMrlnn Auks Wbftlirr Medical Men In Future 'Will Knvor Birth Control That Earth Shall Be Provided Adequately. LONDON', June 12. The Bank of England is to be rebuilt. The governors and court of directors of the Institution for the last 25 years have considered the advisability of replacing the black, one-story "Old Lady of Threadneedle Street" with a more modern and commodious struc ture. The inadequacy of the vener able pile to meet present-day needs has necessitated the establishment, since the beginning of the war. of six outside branch offices in various parts of London. Established in 1691. the Bank of England is the oldest national bank in Europe. Millions of people throughout the world know the out side of the low, black building which for more than two centuries has been the empire's financial center. Its central part was erected in 1732-4, but the outer part, which one sees from adjacent streets, dates from 1788. The present building spreads o7er four acres of wnat is perhaps the most valuable real estate in the world, in the heart of London's world- trading center. At least once in De cember, 1825 it saved the country from bankruptcy. During the Lord George Gordon riots of June. 1780. it withstood a two days attack by a mob, which was driven off by sol diers stationed outside and clerks and bank officials who mounted the walls. Since that date the bank has been guarded every night by a detachment of 36 soldiers, who, commanded by an officer, march down from London Tower and take up their positions on the walls at sundown. A number of windows, which broke the blank solidity of the bank's outer walls, were closed with huge blocks of granite after the rioting. but their outline is traced by the re maining sills. EAGLES INSTALL OFFICERS Mar&hficld Aerie Owns Building and Is Prosperous. MARSH FIELD. Or.. June 12. (Spe cial.) Marshfield aerie No. 538. Fra ternal Order of Eagles, installed its new set of officers with an elabo rate banquet and an excellent pro gramme of general interest to the members. The local aerie is the only one in the county, but it is most prosperous, owning its own large building and being in the best of financial condition. Frank R. Kirk, who. among a number of others, was responsible for the large membership of the order, was re-elected presi dent, although he has served five yenrs in the same capacity. The new officers installed included G. F. Shanton. vice-preeident: E. M. Graham, chaplain: August Frizeen. secretary: M. C. Hoffman, conductor: James H. Pickett, inside guard; Fred Magnusson, M. J. Ostrow and R. E. Pinegor, trustees. STATE ARMORY DEDICATED Building Not Finished but In Shape for Occupancy. MARSHFIELD, Or.. June 1 (Spe cial.) The Marshfield state armory is In possession of the 2d company coast artillery, following its dedica tion June 4 with a grand military ball. The function was given by the 2d company as a free event in appre ciation of the gifts made towards se curing the armory by citizens of Marshfield and the county in general. The city of Marshfield donated the site and the county gave $20,000. The state made up the balance, sufficient to put the building into condition for occupancy, although it is not com pleted. The ladies of the Daughters of the American Revolution aided the coast artillery boys in the opening event at which nearly 1000 people were in at tendance. BULGARIA HAS NO ARMS Foreign Minister Makes Reply to Bolshevist Complaint. SOFIA, June 12. The Bulgarian government, has received a telegram from the minister of foreign affaire of the bolshevist government in Rus s;a protesting against the alleged de liverv to the forces opposing the bol shevik troops of arms and munitions by the Bulgarians. The Bulgarian foreign minister has replied that all Its arms and muni tions have been confiscated by the French and that therefore it is no in a position to furnish arms to any one. He added that the Bulgarian government has no knowledge of the present disposition of these arms and that it will not be responsible if they are in us . MISS MINTER, FILM STAR, IS VERY SERIOUS ABOUT FUTURE Performer Who Achieved Distinction Almost Before She Entered Her Teens Said to Be One of the Level-Headed Ambitious Ones. 7- V 7" V' - r Jv '5?. :" ' - '" " v S- - . n w IT - l Mary Miles Mlnter. that delightful child-woman, today tell how her dirty face and inquisitive manner started her on the road to success. She ftrpeaks mod estly of her past, hopefully of her future and thankfully of her audiences. Miss Minter is Just starting "on her own. but she achieved stardom almost before she entered her teens. BY RAY W. FROHMAN. (Copyright. 1919. by Evening Herald Pub lishing Co.) THIS is the self-revealed "fact" story of a motion picture "STAR." according to the pub lic's conception of that term, who insists that she is NOT a star and never has been YET. That "YET" is important, for Mary Miles Minter, unassuming as she is regarding her present film niche, heedless as she is concerning her brilliant past achievements on the spoken stage, is mighty serious about her FUTURE. And it is a future woven of pride in her profession, earnestness, desire for service, a sense of obligation to the public a future shot through ! with idealism. Millions Know Iter. Millions of picturcgoers know, like and admire the Mary Miles Minter of the screen as a sweet, pretty little girl with an abundance of blonde curls, a picture actress slightly big ger than a faint recollection, a little queen with delicate features and "en dearing young charms." Few know the intense, level-head ed, appreciative, ambitious REAL- reel-star-to-be it was my privilege to question as to her past, present and future. Not even other picture stars know her, for she has been dubbed, she tells me. "the hermit girl of the screen." and says she "doesn't know them." It was In Mary's own limousine. with her chauf feur-wlth-a-life-job. Jack Filtzer, on the bridge, that I was whirled to meet the young Realart star "on location." En route I enjoyed the delightful company of her young mother, Mrs. Charlotte Shelby, who has hair like Mary's only a trifling shade darker. Here's a ConfesnloB. I was also in the clutches of Harry L. ("Buck") Massie. her special pub licity director, a reformed circus ad vance agent, as earnest as Mary. J'approche. 'Tls on the Lasky ranch, the "old Universal ranch," amid woodsy coun try, with muddy roads, saplings, a young brook, Los Angeles sunshine. fairy hills in the background, "'n' everything." We pass a big circle of men, look ing like a bunch of gypsies gathered about their campfire. They are "the bolsheviki" in Mary's current picture. With the bright sunshine playing in its rival, her hair. Mary Miles Minter Is in action In "exteriors," under the artistic direction of a keen looking gentleman of distinguished appearance, William Desmond Taylor. And that stringy-haired girl with watery blue eyes whom Mary is clutching is breezy Fritzie Ridgway playing a character without a char acter." In a lull between "close-ups" Mary Miles Minter greets me with a shy little smile. Eye Mild. Voire Snhdned. A pretty maid with blue eyes, fea tures of static beauty, and a quiet composure of countenance betokening that she has lived much during her 17 Vi years that's Mary. A refined looking little LADY, whose subdued tone of voice, reserve and cultured manner makes it no news at all when she tells me she was born in the south. She looks like your anybody's "best girl." She is wearing a little old fashioned frock of violent-tint, with fluffy lace elbow, and fluffy ruffles at the south ern exposure. I note that she is kind and demo cratic toward her servants a sign of true gentility. But after all. I had to follow Mary back to her studio dressing room to get my interview. There she talked quietly, with restraint. In a detached way she bestows blame and praise, where either seems due. upon her spoken stage achieve ments. Depreciatingly she mentions her past screen accomplishments. Ecstatically she gushes about the "nest of darlings" she is now in. "from Adolph Zukor," who thought of Mary and then conceived Realart, "down to 'Daddy" Byce," pooh-bah of the studio. Girl Has Serlona Views. And oh-so-Beriously. she discourses upon the big things of life which she holds dear: Domestic ideals which are real to her. freedom from commer cialism and her dawning future what (by.1 "Buck" Masste would call "the ripen ing of her matured artistry," but what Mary calls "giving the public my best, now that I have served my ap prenticeship; for the public has given me Its best." Her name in private life is Juliet Shelby, but she says: "All my family believe that I am Mary Miles Minter. It was the real name of my first cousin, who died as a child. We were about the same age, and I looked, acted and talked the way she did. and had the same likes and dislikes. "When did I get my first 'job' on the stage? It wasn't a 'Job.' It was an accident. It was when I was not quite five, with the late Nat Goodwin in the original production of 'Cameo Kirby.' It was a dismal failure, which Dustin Farnum later played with great success. Maude Fealy was in the company. Klrat Play Recalled. "I was a tiny little girl, 'Toinette. I remember my first line." There was joy in Maly's voice as she chanted this: " 'Sister Adele. Sister Adele, catch me I'm turning!" "I rushed gleefully downstairs cry ing that, and they caught me, and I enjoyed it. "I was born at Shreveport, La. My mother was a southern girl, tied down by the bonds of the south: 'You can't do this' and 'You can't do that." fane longed with all her soul to go on the stage, but she had two babies. Margaret and me. "Mother really did understudy Billie Burke in 'Love Watches' in New York at the Lyceum theater in 1906, and played the part of the sister in it. She looked like Billie. While mother was on the stage I sat on the table one night in that wonderful green room. Charles Frohman walked In. "Child" Is Indignant. '"Hello, child.- ne said. "Whose child are you?' " 'My mother's," I replied, faintly annoyed at being called "child." No one had ever called me that, and was ' " 'Who is your mother?" " "Tarlotte." "My mother, Charlotte Shelby he thought she was 18 and didn't know she had any children walked in from the stage. " 'When are you going to put these children on the stage?" he asked. " 'Stage? My children on the stage? Heaven forbid! mother replied. 'My children must be educated and reared as I was." "Children were being engaged then JOHN Auditorium, June 17 ONE APPEARANCE ONLY Direction Steers & Coman PRICES: Floor $2.50, 2.00. Side Bal. $2, $1.50, $1. Rear Bal. $2.50, $1.50. Plus 10 War Tax. Box Office seat sale opens at Sherman, Clay & Co., tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. McCDRMACK i;- v W - :- ..'(; :v. j 7:1 . :4 3MT f 4 as? V W , 1 , y -rj I at Wallack's theater for 'Cameo Kir- Not announcing it to motner. my grandmother detcrminea a um Margaret, all dreesed up in a Big oiue ! serge, all fluffy ruffles, down there, t But when she came out of the house I I was playing in the street. I was filthy dirty!" Yet I insisted and so there was nothing to do but take me along. "There were millions, eimply mil lions of kids in a great room with toes out. sashes, bows and things. r-their mammas poking them to sit up straight. ' Arnold Daly Comes In. "Grandmother found a chair In a corner, took Margaret on her lap and told me to crouch down in the corner and not show myself. I was a "dis grace," 'a pig." "My dress was filthy, and I still had my ball. All the kids had 'snipped' at me when I came tn. "There was a beautiful little girl there who looked like a French dolL I thought she was a Fiench doll. I begged grandmother to let me go kiss her. "Her mother looked at me and said: "'Oh. these little waifs how do they let them in? And It wants to touch my daughter!" "Arnold Daly, who was playing there in "The Irishman," came in. made up as "The Irishman' big red nose green eyes. I gazed at him fascinat ed. All the kids curtseyed, their mammas telling them. "Now look at the gentleman, dearie be nice." " O-oh, grandma, look at his funny noe!" I screamed, sitting on my haunches hidden behind that chair in the corner. Come here, little one I'd like to talk to you." said Mr. Daly. . "Grandmother, mortified, almost wept. Daly Makes Discovery. "Proudly I stepped forth, and looked him up and down, from his funny feet to his funny head. " "Come this way, little girl," he said. '"May I play with these?" I asked, looking at his make-up table from a high chair in his dressing room. 1 didn't know what grease paint was, but I was fond of color. I emeared paint over my hands and face. " 'What do you like to play?" he asked me. " 'Hide and Go Seek. Pussy in Corner, Ring Around the Rosey." " 'What have you done, played on the stage?" he asked, annoyed. " "The child seems intelligent, but she can't tell me what she's played he told grandmother. She answers "Pussy in a Corner." "'My child on the stage?" gasped grandmother. 'Oh, no Margaret is talented not Juliet.' ""Why not?" asked Mr. Daly. 'She's engaged!" "It was a pure freak. The family did not intend it. Mother didn't know it until a week before I played. She was horrified. "Salary? Fifty dollars a week, and In two months it was J55. I still have the first $50 bill I earned. "I never realized I was acting it never occurred to me to play a part. It Was -Steady Job." From then on I was on the stage, winter and summer except for lay-off of one or two months at the outside. "I have never sought a contract. "Except for playing with Robert Hilliard In 'A Fool There Was" unti my own engagement started. I orig lnated all the parts I played during my ten years on the stage. Between the ages of 5 and 1 played with every star of importance on the American stage except John Drew, Including Mrs. Flske. Leo Dit rlchstein, Maude Adams, Ethel Bar rymore. Bertha Balich and Ellen Terry, who came over one season. My next engagement was at 85 week with Madame Kalich In "What It Means to a Woman." In 1910-11, with Dustin and Will iam Farnum, I played the title par The Littlest Rebel," first in vaude ville. then on the stage. We opene in Chicago when I was 8. but was supposed to be 16. according to th law. I received 1100 a week. i First Film Accident. She played "The Littlest Rebel" for four years. Her last stage appearance was in a child part in 1914-15, in an all-star production, at the Forty-eighth-street theater. New York, of "The Woman of Today," with Rita Jolivet, Frank Mills. Alice John and Joseph Kilgbre "another triumphant failure." Her first picture appearance, with Mary playing her last child part in pictures came about accidentally, de spite her mother's demurring. Gustave Frohman wanted a child to play the fairy in "The Fairy and the Waif." the first production of the Frohman Amusement company with Director George Irvine, all the ex legltimate actors, producers, and even cameramen absolutely green! Daniel Frohman. friend and ad visor of Mary, brought Gustave and his wife to tea at her house. Screen Studio Attracts. "I wanted to get into a studio and see it," says Mary. "I thought the actors got behind the screen to act! When Gustave Frohman took me to a studio. 1 was fascinated. " 'I've got to play the picture want to I love it!" I cried. "I was the child actress of the day got the largest salary, played the biggest parts, had things my own way. Percy Helton, the boy actor of BIG EW BILL Today Tonight Commodore BlacWton'a Convulsing Society Comedy Respectable by Proxy" The story of a tow-brow wife who gets a high-brow society girl to "sub" for her. "Frolics of Youth" A Juvenile frivolity of fun featuring Uw Gleason and a bevy of BEAUTIFUL GIRLS EL ROY SISTERS Frolic and Fash ion. BROWS! AND EVANS Some breezy smiles. . "WAITERS WASTED" Something hu morous. t.EE ASH Just laughs. THEY SAT THIL.S SHOW IS A HUMDINGER TQ)ANTAGE I f fnennled Vaadevttte Broadway mt Alder. Matinee Dally 2iSO. Twiee Nightly 7 and H. Popular Prices Boxes and Luges Reserved. i WEEK COMMENCING TOMORROW MATINEE VAUDEVILLE'S CLASSIEST MCSICAX OFFERI5Q 7 BELLE TONES- IX A HARMOMOIS DIVERSITY The Riding: Lloyds Sensational Sioux Indians Early & Laight In "On the Water Wagon" Upside Down Millettes Amazing Trapeze Stars Continuous Performance Today Commencing at 1:30 Welcome Kiwanis the time, who played original parts with David Warfield and ether Be lasco stars, was 'the waif." "How did it go? It's still going. Percy saw it in France, where he was decorated by General Pershing. "It was a fine story, was produced beautifully and the director had a spark of genius. I was the only bad thing I don't see why I didn't ruin it." "I haven't made any big pictures I don't consider that I've made any pictures!" declaims Mary, earnestly. All my long stage engagements were In heavy dramatic plays with renowned, artistic stars. They have given something, produced something. don t consider that my playing in a few pictures makes me a star! So, public, since you should "hitch your wagon to the star," why not to this wonderfully earnest one, who says that she regards it aa her sacred trust to give the public my very best"? Canny Scotch See Advan tages of Leap Year. Old Scotrh I.avr F.narted In 12S8 tiare "Mayden Ladyes Right to Woo." IT took the canny Scotch to see the advantages of having a year come along every so often in which the girls could officially pop the question without being regarded as either reckless or indiscreet. It was monny a lang year ago. 1188 to be exact, that the Scotch put the Lady's Proposal into their constitution or by-laws. It appears the Scotch were particu lar about this, for the matrimonial magistrates were authorized to clap a line ot a pound or five beans in the old days on any bird who ran out and refused the faire dame who asked him for his heart and hand. The old Scotch law on the subject says: "It is a statut and ordaint that dur Girls Gayety Melody Merriment ILOOK! BIG SPECIAL ATTRACTION ADELPHIA MUSICAL COMEDY COMPANY Featuring Geo. Rehn and Minerva "THE WRONG MR. WRIGHT By Krank Wakefield STARTS MONDAY MATINEE "OUT ON THE PLAINS" LAST TIMES SUNDAY th: AMUSEMENT PARK YRIC , KEATIXO 4: Matinee Daily at 2 Evenings at 7 and 9. Starting Sunday (Today) and All Week. Those Joy-Provoking Merry-Makers MIKE and IKE BEN DILLON AL FRANKS In a screaming comedy of adventure, "His Royal Nobs" In which a King of a Cannibal Island tries to save his head and wins a wife. Every member of the company has a part ' with "kick." The Rosebud Chorus New Songs Newer Steps Fancy Costumes Tuesday Night, Country Store Friday Night, Chorus Girls' Contest "The Camouflage Taxi With Jennings and Mack; Del-a-Phone The Amiable Mlmto Jack Dempsey In "Daredevil Jack," final episode Welcome T. P. A. ing the rein of hir maist blissit mag este, for ilk yeare knowne as lepe yearo, ilk mayden ladye of bothe highe and low estait shall hae liberte to bespeake ye man she likes, albeit he refuses to taik hir to be his lawful wyfe, he shall be mulcted in ye sum aane pundis or less, as his estait may be, except and awis gif he can make It appears that he is bethrothit ane Ither woman he then shall be free." This demonstrates apparently that the Scotch must have been rather fair and square with their early statutes, and also that they must have been bad spellers from a modern viewpoint. Still, they were first over the bars with it, and not long after that Johnny Walker was elected the first mayor of Dumfriesboro on a wet ticket. Of the origin of the custom for women to woo instead of being wooed there is no satisfactory explanation, says an authority, so the Scotch can not claim that. Following the lead of the Scotch in this important matter the French passed a similar law and in the 15th century the custom was legalized in Genoa and Florence. Leap year has been growing in popularity ever since with ye faire dames. Also it is set forth that the term "leap year" Is more or less a nickname (more properly known as bissextile) and has nothing to do with the matri monial jump the girls take when they ask Harry or Hector to become their wedded husbands. Liquor Tax Noted. OTTAWA, Out. The 7 Vi rer cent customs war tax levied by the Do minion on imported commodities yielded I40.5S0.316 during the 12 months ended March 31. 1920. Liquor duties collected during this period I amounted to $3, 461. 289 and tobacco duties to $21,510,249. It is also esti mated that during the year $5,838. 000 was received in revenue derived from the war tax of 1 cent each on letters and post cards. Urcka MUSICAL COMEDY FLOOD, Uuucn., 74 . : i . ' - . . 7 I :: !,( o AKS r -r i.. i ' : ll 1 'I v - - ' -