- 2 ' TIIE SUNDAY OltEGOXIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 4, 1920 TICKETS NOW SELLING AT TICKET OFFICE FOR ENTIRE WEEK. HEILIG THEATER Broadway ut Taylor. tr hone Main 1. 7 begSS TONIGHT 8:15 Bargain Price MAT. - WED. Special Price MAT. - SAT. TC-2GDSG SEC3SATI0N Ah i i-J. mlt -v,S .-xji Hill . .- . v Y A r 4 ? - fC1.- - (? . - J r- - , - lull ; v - , r??L-r j tj 1 VI-ij -,.;r 11 ''V ?,v - " - 111 TK -v-ohiy" Jpi hw .SHA 1111k-,r--.-; j- .. ill lJ--;vv. . Mm LJSaHfe- v'f VW : 1 Jits It - . X 1 l'-r -w . - ik mlr 't , l! f-ic -.."' A .it - lull -.'! . f. - - UM '-' : i V-t'-- . -i K a kt . rit i r. iflllr ' - - y : c"'jjy.' I UJv s, 5 r . - ,1 AW v:? ' '-JA 'C'ir V - , a series of all-weeK I f' ?Ur' ' ' "t$'1 7J fLI K Ai ; 'iSS" W'l VRV will start tonight I t'-M U : W f A t . (t j A t - 1 f - A JAZZ OPERA FANCHON andMARCO HELSONakd chain W AN All STAB. CAST MEADCD BY ARTHUR WEST "BILLTDOOlEY BT LEONE mHE first of I engagements when Fanchon and Marco open a eoven-nirht bill at the Heilig the ater In their attractive dance revue. Th week's stay is made possible by the closing of the Orpheum sea son, and at various times during the summer similar week engagements will be booked. Fanchon and Marco are excellent dancers of original method, whose act a season ago on the Orpheum was a sensation. These two resourceful dancers have evolved an entire revue with an ex cellent supporting cast, which in cludes the comedians Nelson and Ciiain, the blackface funsters; Arthur West with Bill Dooley and Muriel Stryker. a group of dancers called the Wright Dancers, and a beauty chorus, besides other principals. Marco plays til violin and one of his specialties ! dance while playing the instru ment. . Their engagement opens tonight at 1 the Heillg and continues all' week with matinees on Wednesday and Saturday. The next attraction at the Heilig is the Yiddish Players, an organization devoted solely to presentation of dramas and comedies in the Yiddish language. They will put on "Adam and Eve," July 11. The Lyric this week is offering a farce set to music labeled "The Jolly Widow" with Ben Dillon and Al Frank carrying on in their famous roles of Mike and Ike. Long Tack Sam, prince of Chinese wonder workers, is to be topllned at Pantages with lis big company for the week commencing with to morrow's matinee. Long Tack Sam was a sensation on Broadway wien he first came from the orient. Then he amazedgthe people- in almost every metropolis of the world and now he has returned for a tour of Pantages circuit before going back to Broad way. There are a number of excel lent supporting features on the pro gramme which promise fine summer entertainment. HEILIG BILL CLAIMS LSTEREST Itcrue Costumes Are Designed by Dainty Fanchon Herself. Interest Is manifested in the forth Af t'SS r-mr ; JL? . XS" ivy r r- rL f a. jlS ' BEAUTIFUL GIRLS ON THE ILLUMINATED XUIiWA ' Mi EVES. Floor, $2.00. Balcony, $1.50 and $1X0. Gallery, 75c and 50c WED. MAT Floor, $1 Balcony, 75c and 50c SAT. MAT Floor $1.50. Balcony, $1 and 50c Mm 9 l rf ILIG THEATER Broadway t Taylor, i'hono Mailt 1 NEX SUNDAY NIGHT JULY 11 MAX a A. 'SI PRESEJTTS THE EMINENT YIDDISH PLATER SAM MORRIS Supported by Pearl Wlatcra mm Conpur in -Act " A T A A T T?r?" Drama. PRICKS i 10, fl.OO, 75e. TICKET SALE OPEX! FRIDAY, JVLY -Z?? yr? S'ci'jzr arsys- tZslvfJ-? &jsratfsT fj7j?-?j. coming engagement of those famous dancers and specialists, Fanchon-and Marco, whose revue opens a week's engagement at the Heilig commenc ing today. The costumes, as well as the pretty and comely girls who wear them, will be found a distinct and unusual fea ture. These costumes were designed by dainty Fanchon herself, who is noted throughout the United States aa one of the cleverest creators of fashionable and bizarre costumes. Comedy scenes of the unroarious sort follow the brightest of vaude ville turns. Dancing Is Interspersed throughout the entire evening's per-' formance, and one novelty fol lows another with almost breathless rapidity. Fanchon and Marco are seen at their best in their own revue, as cre ators of modern dances. They oc cupy a niche all their own. and the grace and ease of their movements brought forth three-ply superlatives from critics in eastern cities. Fanchon and Marco have seen to it that the supporting cast . is the best that could be secured. Among tnem are tne irresistibly funny Nel on and Chain; Arthur West, black face funster: Bill" Dooley, Muriel Stryker, v right dancers, Phil Har ris and Lucille Harmon. The chorus claims to be the "30 most beautiful girls in the world." TIDDISH PLAYERS AT HEILIG "Adam and Eve" Allegory in 4 Epi sodes to Be Shown. Max Ganz, starring Sam Morris, supported by Pearl Winters and com pany, will stage "Adam and Eve" at the Heilig theater Sunday, July 11. The play ta an allegory in four episodes. It practically duplicates on the speaking stage "Woman," shown In film at the different theaters re cently.. The Yiddish players, a unique coro-Mi)-, baa a record of IS .consecutive seasons in New York. The company is now touring the United States, coming here from Winnipeg. XOTED MAGICLAJf AT PAXTAGES Long: Tack Sam Presents Gorgeous 1 i Oriental Tricks of Magic. ! One of the most important engage ments in the summer vaudeville sea son is announced for Pantages for the week commencing with tomorrow's matinee when Long Tack Sam, the famous Chinese magicl.-n. and his own company of Far Eastern, stars present their spectacular offering. Long Tack Sam's appearance here follows a triumphal tour of the world when his aggregation played in every metropolis in all civilized countries. It is seldom that an act of this im portance comes westward in the sum mer season but before leaving on the world tour. Long Tack Sam agreed to appear exclusively on the Pantages circuit before accepting Broadway en gagements. The magician presents, bits of the mysticisms of the orient assisted by his company, and the latter present amazing tricks and acrobatic feats that have astounded millions. The act is gorgeously staged in rare tapes tries and costumes, making It a beau tiful attraction. Supplementing the principal offer ing is a programme of delightful en tertainment. Jessie Hayward and her own company appear in the Francis Hoyt playlet, "Air Castle Kate. a little drama of real life. Herta Corty and Edith Althoft are petite Parisiennes who offer their or iginal dances and their bright lnstru mental selections. The act is a breezy novelty. Pete Pinto and Boyle have a great laughing hit 'in "The Mysterious Trunk, in which the duo prove them' selves droll comedians of rare ability. Jack DeWinter and Ivy Dose have a dance offering that is tilled with unique terpslchorean offerings. The concluding dance, "The Indian Idyl," Is an exquisite creation. Margaret Strain is a happy little coiicortlna player whose selections have wide scope. A new Pantages Vitagraph comedy will make the. movie fans happy. The Haberdashery with Harring ton Reynolds and pretty girls con eludes its engagement with the con tinuous performance today, commenc ing at 1:30. In which heart throbs, humor and philosophy are aptly blended. Don Mullally, author of the sketch, has contributed many successful playlets to vaudeville, among them being Maggie LeClalre's "The Unfair Sex" and G. Gordon Swayne's "Off With the Old Love." They say nobody loves a fat man, but Fred Lewis and his 250 pounds seem to be very well liked. If pot loved, by everybody who sees and laughs at and with him. From the moment he brings his excess baggage on the (which the Oaks auditorium will tem tage at a gallop until he departs he porarily be dark. Two shows will is said to inspire gales of laughter, mark the Fourth of July programme. bongs, smiles ana. pianoiogue- are tne essentials in the entertainment promr ised by Driscoll and Westcott, an en gaging couple who are reputed to have something new to offer in their material. The Link os are a man and woman with a gymnastic novelty tn which tight-wire work is given prominence. A fast routine of thrilling feats Is capped by the man's performance white standing on his head on the wire. FINAL 'HIP' HAS HOLIDAY BILL Girls Dominate Festive Programme Beginning Today. Gay and festive as a holiday en tertainment should be, is the promise for the new bill which comes to th Hippodrome this afternoon. Girls will dominate the bill, six of them being -scheduled to appear tn colorful potpourri of melody and dance, described as the "Military Revue. They are heralded as pretty. petite and stunningly garbed. The make their first appearance In a mill tary song and dance ensemble an then prance through a jazz number, an Irish peasant revue, dainty French toe dance and Scotch and Spanish Kerns. ' The photoplay will be the Loew Metro production, "A Willow Tree, with Viola Dana as the star. Th picture is an Idealistic romance of Japan, in which the little daughter of an lmagemaker runs away to avoid marrying her father' choice and im nersonates an image carved from willow tree which the father had sold to an American. The Image turns to life and the American falls In love with it. The comedy playlet, "Anxious Mo ments." occupies a brignt spot on the bill, which will be produced' by Mul lally, Howell and McCarthy. The sketch is said to have a unique plot Biehle plays a "chorus girl role as Peggy Norton. Miss Biehle will sing "Wait Till You See." and will call in the chorus on the refrain. Bob Talbert and the chorus will sing "Rose Marie." "Peggy" will be sung by Miss Ureka and "Oh, You Betty," by George Rehn. Paul Locke and Jean Sheldon, a mem ber of the chorus, will offer a dancing specialty. The show continues throughout the week, closing Sunday night, after WEEK AT OAKS Adelphia Musical Comedy Com pany Put on Special Programme. For the final week of its season at the Oaks Amusement park the Adelphia Musical Comedy company ill present, starting Monday, "Cafe do Jazz," a lively musical revue. The programme Includes a series of inter esting dance numbers staged under the direction of Paul Locke. "Cafe de Jazz," arranged for the company s farewell by Oeorge Kenn, principal comedian for the company, and offers opportunity for the expres sion of the individual comedy concep tions of such of the company's stars as Minerva Ureka, Martha Biehle, Paul Locke and the Real trio. Rehn will take the part of Mike Hogan and Miss Ureka is Lillian Tussell, an actress, while Martha FORTUNE HUNTER GETS IDEA Lyric Theater Offers Comic" Tangle in "The Jolly Widow." "The Jolly Widow," In which a band of crooks set out to marry wealth and titles and mistake the persons. involving themselves in a tangle which makes one of them rich and another miserable, will be the attrac tion at the Lyrlo theater for the week beginning today. Ben Dillon and Al Franks, as Mike and Ike, will have a small share in the plot until the first half of the show is finished but they will have a chance to score several specialty num bers, one of which will include i comic scene In which a crook shows how a naughty wink may be a valua ble asset to the woman who knows how to make the best of it. The- story oencerns a fortune- hunter (Carleton Chase) who mis takes a poor widow (Dot Raymond) for a rich one and who sets out to win her only to find that the rich woman (Madelaine Matthews) has a face too homely to be looked at twice In the same day. Two more adventurers enter the arena and err in their se lection of mates. Then the fortune hunter get an idea which brings wealth to himself, a husband to the Portland vs. V Oakland homely widow and a $5000 check and a wife to Ike, who tried to be an in nocent bystander. A mock marriage is one of the fun specialties included in the production. Song hlt3 will include the "Argen tina" song over which Oscar Ham merstein is involved -in a lawsuit, along-with "Doo-Dee Blues," by Billie Bingham; "Dreamy Alabama, by Clarence Wurdig; "Whistle a Song." by Dot Raymond, and "Play My wed ding March in Ragtime, by Carleton Chase. BIG FIREWORKS TOMORROW Battle Scenes Will Be Depicted at Columbia Beach. Scenes depicting night encounters on the battle front in the world war will be reproduced at Columbia beach tomorrow night with an elaborate series of pyrotechnical display sets. All of the magnificent illumination effects of a battle will be depicted. The feature of the exhibition will v, th representation of an aerial fiirht showing machine-gun fire ac coropanied by flashes and reports that can be heard from three to four miles distant. The air. bombs and the trench lights used during the long night vio-ilK in "No Man's Land" during the world war also will be reproduced Just as they appeared on the battle lines. A vast amount of money has been expended in the preparation of of the display, the pyrotechnical sets alone costing hundreds of dollars. For the Fourth of July celebration today at the park there will be base ball games, sports of all kinds, picnics, dancing, swimming and a thousand other amusements. Children at all times are admitted to the park free when accompanied by their parents. The hydroplane at the beach this year already has set a record for the number of passengers carried. Last Sunday the big machine was kept busy from early in the day until late at night when a long waiting list was turned down because of the darkness. For picnics, there is every accom modation, even free gas for cooking. quired a new Curtlas plu.ne and after his course of Instruction under A. B. McKeniie, former army pilot, is com pleted he intends to be "high flying salesman" of the Pacific coast. He is the only salesman west of Chicago to use an aeroplane to call on his trade. He got his first experience and be came an aeroplane enthusiast in con nection with the Oregon, Washington & Idaho company, under the personal supervision of Victor Vernon. He later took further instruction with the O. K. Jeffrey Aeroplane company. He Is proud of his new plane and feels certain that he will be able to make every customer of his an en thusiastic follower of aeroplanes be fore he Is on the road six months. No naval man has ever held the presidency, while 14 of the presidents were at one time or another con nected with the army. SALESMAN TO USE PLANE Simmons Will Fly Over Roads for Portland Company. Flying to work via aeroplane is the latest thing tn up-to-date business methods. Rolla L. Simmons, Hazel wood company salesman, will go on the road, or above the road, through western Oregon and Washington by aeroplane In the near future. Simmons claims that travel by mo tor or train is too slow, so he has ac- Sunday Double-header at 1:30 P. M. s Monday 10:30 A. and 2:30 P.M. VAUGHN-ST. PARK ', ! ANTAGE Faelc4 Vaudeville Broadway a Alder. Matinee Dally 2i30. Twice Nightly T and . Popular Prices. WEEK COMMENCING TOMORROW MATINEE The Sensation of Two Hemispheres Long Tack Sam And His Original Company of - Oriental Wonder Workers Jessie Heyward & Co. In "Air Castle Kate" , Margaret Strairi The Concertina Star Pete Pinto & Boyle In "The Mysterious Trunk" De Winter & Rose In Dances Delightful Corty & Althoff The Petite Parisiennes Pantages Vitagraph A Cyclone of Laughter Continuous Performance Tomorrow, Commencing at 1:30 A Wonderful New Bill AND A WONDERFtJL NEW FEATURE TODAY TONIGHT THE HIPPODROME'S IMMENSE NEW Wurlitzer-Hope Jones UNIT ORCHESTRA with all of ' its wonderful vari ations will be dedicated to HIPPODROME patrons at Sunday's Matinee MILITARY REVUE Six pretty maidens in songs and dances and elaborate costumes. VIOLA DANA in "THE WILLOW TREE" mullally, howell and McCarthy "Anxious Moments" FRED LEWIS 250 Pounds of Fun DRISCOLL AND WESCOTT Musical Comedy Echoes THE LINKOS Upside Down. Jugglers CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE ON SUNDAY, MONDAY, SATURDAY FREE CONCERT Today in the Old Orchard fiicnic grounds. Bring your unch baskets and stay for a splendid musical programme by Nelsen's Crest Concert Or chestra. Monte Austin sings. HIBERXIAN PICXIC TOMORROW, Celebrate With the Llvest' Crowd in Town. DAWCIN'O AFTER !OOV A!VT EVKX l.NG. CO.HE EARLY. Council Crest GRAND FAREWELL REVIEW offered by THE ADELPHIA MUSICAL COMEDY CO. A galaxy of grace and gayety in 6C HP H M aUL all sLL Last Week of Big Girl Show at I? AAK AMUSEMENT PARK With Geo. Rehn, Paul Locke, Minerva Ureka and Marthe Biehle "On the Yukon," Last Times Sunday BIG JULY FOURTH PROGRAM Picnic Musical Comedy Outing Frolic for Everyone Cars at First and Alder Fare 6 Cents Admission to Park AIwa a ITrcc. LY MUSICAL COMEDY VWVWMW,V KEATING FI.OOD. Maoaaers. 'ffWtfWWV.' MIC Starting Sunday (Today) and All Week Those Funniest of Fun Makers MIKE and IKE (BEN DILLON) CAL FRANKS) In a Rare Roundup of Melody and Merriment The J oily W mow In which a band of crooks run afoul of a hook in a mad rush for a rich widow's money bag. The Rosebud Chorus New Songs Clever Dances Fancy Costumes. Tuesday Night Country Store. Friday Night Chorus Girls Contest. .. .. ' ' ;