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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1920)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, POTtTTjATCt), JUXE 13, 10"30 DARLING OFFERS TRENCHANT SLANTS ON POLITICAL HAPPENINGS. L I . I or r Kt4 ( I -s5?'-r aise sePOKTi AnEHiMftour. -"T yr" KUM( COT ABOUND THI SOiif -PEiOSe HN3 MKVCO AND WAS OUJY AJ4i MfD'CWB ' if -V OaM J60- DEVELOPMENTS JHOWfO THE GENTLEMAN A KGOfX JbO ' TOSE A &J,(,Y WHf SALESMAN FOM ST LOUIS (Vm tub THAT JCf-.VC: i"t vi:i Ty AAfff THAT &J'J9 4Vf THe htjtflv Hcee jttKxST seem to -Be yr 7-7-y ull l o - 4 r M P DOUBLE ROOMS pfnXSrC BATH fOR ?EVIEMBR THAT THE&G . "" CHICAGO A&E &KEIV -J&. J FOLLOW POLITICAL EVENTS' ySSnfc Y rj- PACRIMC OFF TMC 3J'- ' Cgnnl " TOR 3LEE1NO ACCOM MOTJA TIOMS " " tjV j 7mn EXHtBlTIOlsT JU5T 3EF0Re e - C MONDAY NIGHT Ax TH AtDiroQ" JT JDHW50N th WONDER H GAT.S? 3 JARANESE ENGLISH MN AND AN ITAUASJ EVERY .MORNING BEFORE - REAKTAST K fSLdA-r - JCT II MA V ' TO TAKE PMr ' IF ANYl'mCr WE&E WEEDED ' Complete the jlluSqkt - oa7 ar?cus zay 7-uas seen Supplied Ov the anuduacemen 7 OF THL 7RE LTXHlBfTOA" uujt before tue maa Sz-tovV &y tmb SsAWSary c&syyjj. NEW YORK IS INTERESTED IN CHICAGO OPERA PLANS Many Star Singers Already Engaged for Season That Will Be Opened November 17 Italian Revivals Are Scheduled. BY E.MILIE FRANCES BAUER. NEW YORK, June 12. (Special.) Announcement of the plans for the opening: of the Chicago Opera association are of as much in terest to the New York opera goers as to those of Chicago, because the plans for the next season of opera In New York by that organization with Herbert Johnson and Gino Marinuzzi are' of the most elaborate. Mr. Johnson, the executive director, has .announced that the tenth season of grand opera in Cnicago will open on Wednesday night, November 17, and continue for icn weeks. Prac tically allthe engagements fornext year have been made. The list of so pranos includes Yvonne Gall, Amellta Galli-Curci, who will be In Chicago the entire month of December: Mary Garden', who is expected to return for the last three weeks of the season; Rosa Ralsa, Florence Macbeth, Toto Dal Monte, a lyric soprano, and Irma Visrano, dramatic soprano whose con tracts were made by Mr. Campanini, and Olga Carrara, Margery Maxwell, Maria Santillan complete the roster of sopranos. (The mezzo-sopranos and contralto list is the strongest the company has yet had. including Gabriella Besan soni, with the Metropolitan Opera last yer. heard before that in Italy. Spain. South America and Mexico: Cyrena Van Gordon. Dorothy Francis, Rose Lutiger-GannoTi, Frances Paperte and Carmen Pasco i. The principal tenjrs who have been re-engaged are Alessandro Bonci. Ed ward Johnson, Forrest Lam ant and Tito Schipa. A newcomer is Joseph Hlslop. a Scotchman, who sings in French, Italian and English. For minor roles Ludovic Oliviero and Jose Mojica are both re-engaged. The remarkable list of baritones includes the names of George Bak lanoff. Desire Defrere. Hector Du franne. Carlo Galeffi. Giacomo Rimi ni. Titta Ruffo, who will come for eight performances during the first six weeks of the season, and a new comer for smaller roles, Sallustro Civai. The re-engaged basses are Edouard CotreuiL Constantin Nicolay, Virgilio Lazzari and Vittorio Trevisan. Three novelties will be presented: Serge Prokofieff's '"Love of the Three Oranges"; Mr. Marinuzzi's opera, "Jacquerie" and "Aphrodite" by Ca milla Erlanger, which is of course a novelty so far as Chicago Is con cerned, since the opera- organization presented It for the first time as one of last season's New York perform ances. Mr. Prokofieffs opera will be mounted by Boris Anisfeld. while Mr. Marinuzzi's work will be the opening attraction. Among the contemplated revivals In Italian are "Orfeo," "Othello, "Don .Giovanni 'Xa Favorita," and "The Jewels of the Madonna," and the remaining Italian works will be selected from the following: "The' Barber of Seville," "L.a Sonnambula," "Falstaff," "Rigoletto," La Giocon da," "Cavalleria Rusticana," "Mme. Butterfly," "Linda di Chamounix," "Don Pasquale," "Aida," "Masked Pall," "L'Amore dei Tre Re," "Tosca," "II Trovatore," "Lucia." "Norma," "Traviata," "L'Elsir d'Amore," "Pag- nacci, Boheme a:i Puccim s tryp-. tich "II Tabarro," "Suor Angelica," "Gianni Schicchi." The association plans to revive in French "Salome." "Lakme" and "The Tales of Hoffman," choosing from the following list .the remaining perform ances in French: "Faust." "Manon." "Carmen," "Thais." "R o m e o and Juliette," -. "Le Chemineau," "Monna Vanna," "Cleopatre," while in English will be given "Lohengrin," Valkyrie" and "iristan and Isolde. The ballet will again be entirely in charge of Messrs Pavley and Ouk ANCIENT FANS EXHIBITED Spanish Cities Intensely Interested in Coming- Exposition. MADRID, June 12. Spanish cities are intensely interested in an expo sition of fans to be held here this month. ' More than 400 beautiful specimens showing the development of the art of fan making In the last three centuries have been entered In the exposition. Queen Victoria was among the first to offer .her support for the exposi tion and to participate in it. Others of the royal house, including the queen mother, the infantas Isabel and Luisa, the dutchess of Talavera and nearly every titled woman in Spain followed her example. SCIENTIFIC RULES FOR DIET OF CHILDREN FLOUTED BY NATURE Temperamental Bernetta May Warnock, of Seattle. With "Best Bite" at Clinic, Lives on Pickles, Wienies and Dancing.' ' BULKY volumes,-, compiled by scientists, filled with solemn rules for the guidance of par ents, containing numerous preclusions regarding the diet of the child as well as the regulation of its exercise, have been flouted by nature. Bernetta May Warnock, aged three years.and nine months, the most perfect child. exam ined at the child welfare clinic in the Bon Marche by the Seattle.'federation of Women's Clubs, is not, a product of a dietitian's routine. s . "If the doctor' who examined' Ber7 netta had known what' she eats he would have been horrified.": Mrs. Amy Warnock, the baby's mother, chuckled triumphantly. "Shje eats candy and pickles and, anything else that she wants. She always has'. It obviously hasn't' hurt her, for she only regis tered 98Vs per. cent when she was taken; to the clinic for examination on her f irijt birthday. 1 wonder what the doctor would have said if he had known that Bernetta's beautiful be havior at the clinic', was the result oi a promise that sne might have a Wienerwurst?" . ; v ' Bernetta Warnock not only has the measurements set by. the children's bureau, department of labor, as the standard for a child of her years, but ferred, to by dentitrta &s a . "perfect bite." The term is one by which they designate the mouth in which every tooth is set in perfect alignment upon a Jawbone that has no flaw. 'Other babies brought to the clinic were de clared to have perfect bodies. " but Bernetta's bite stands unrivaled. . "Bernetta's physical perfection may be explained by the fact that she has danced since her second birthday." the mother said. "Shortly after that time she was placed under a dancing teacher and has studied with him ever since. Her interest has. been so un usual' that she practices for hours without any suggestion that she do so and- will sit for hours quietly en tranced watching dancers." ' . But Bernetta's .star performance is a handspring which she dees with evident Joy and little effort. It is an accomplishment she worked, out unassisted and with all the pattene of a premiere danseuse who studies a new step. Like a. true artist, the baby" has a temperament and no amq,unt of coax ing, no bribes, either of weinerwursts or ice cream, will induce her to per form if she is disinclined. When the mood is upon her she whips over and over like a tiny cartwheel. At the laying of the corner stone when the capitol of Rome was rebuilt a procession of vestal virgins, robed in white. . surrounded the atone and consecrated it with libations of living water. A prayer to the gods followed, and then the magistrates, priests, sen ators and Unights laid hold of the ropes and moved the mighty stone to its proper position. In a hollow cut in the stone were placed ingots of gold, silver and other metals which had. not been melted in any furnace. With the Jews the corner stone was considered an emblem of power and the'y also performed ceremonies at its laying. In medieval times the rite Was . taken up by the Order of Free Masons and has by them been brought down to modern days, the Masonic ceremony of laying a corner stone be ing symbolical. J proaching nightfall compelled them to ceaso their labors and make their catch secure. When the men came back they were given the task of stripping the pelts and rendering the oil. Lift Off Corns! Doesn't hurt I Lift , touchy corns and calluses right o'ff with fingers )HiMtor7' ef Corner Stone. Detroit tMich). News. The custom of laying the corner tone of a public building with cere monies was practiced by the ancients. Women of " Newfoundland Capture Seal Herd. .Men Go Kar From Land While Main Patch Cornea C'loae In to Shore. BAY OF EXPLOITS. N. F.. June 12. ": The women of Tilt Cove are the pride and the envy of the bay. In a. season of failure in the sealing in dustry they have scored a catch and kill of size. "Wives and daughters succeeded 'where'the men of the bay had failed. - '.. ,- . They went, in boats, armed with clubs and gaffs, and climbing vto the ice Cakes, . set - out to round up a catch. - ' They found the -, seals sprawled on all sides, and learned later that, they had struck the main patch, the hope of all seal hunters. . The women went about their, work with vim. and had captured or killed 100 seals when exhaustion and ap- 'J . . n Ml - V. .V 0 Apply a few drops of "Freezone" upon that old. bothersome corn. Instantly that corn stops hurting. Then shortly you lift it right off. root and all, without pain or soreness. Hard corns, soft corns, corns between the toes, and the bard skin calluses on bottom of feet lift right off no bum bug! Tiny bottles f " Freeztne" cost but a Jew cents at drug sttres