TCT7 iTHE . OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. MAY 20. Hw. FOR THREE ODDFELLOWS Th city willbe filled "with Odd , Fel low and members of the allied order of - Keoekahs nrxt Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, During that time the .Orand loage of Odd Fellowa, the grand encamp ment of the aame' OTdor and the (rand aaaembly of Rebekah will be held In the city. The era nd encampment will meet Tuesday at 10 o'clock In Artisans' bait In the Ablngton building and at t uciock on -cue aame day tne Keoekanr aaaembly will convene In the Odd Fel lows' temple . at First and Alder W. H. Hobsoru:- -streets. The grand lodge of Odd Tel lows will convene Wednesday morning -at t o'clock in the Knights of Pythias ball at Eleventh and Alder streets. The seanions of these meetings "will be conducted by the officers who were elected one year ago. Officers will' be lecled lnjetch. oflb.e. three, jiiyisions jor Trt nffli" Hnbann. Btayton; D. O. M.. W, A. Carter, "Gold mttT grand -warden, Richard Scott, E0R6EfiERNiiBD7SHAWr DRAMATIST AND JESTER .. By Jules EckertGoodman. (Prom Tbe Journal's Owe Correepnadrnt.) -k t EW TORK. May Jt.There has IV I not been a single opening the T" "twttrTr- trrg-'Birrr-Tim . the dramatlo season of 106-04 Is in Its last gasps. In extremis. A few : weeks will see its close, and then the ""SirUItethirk Trtth ram ors and 'press stories" for awhile, with prom- Inrs never meant to be fulf""- 1 wrile- Arrmld ' t4y-tlh prleat jOf Uie Shaw cult, baa by way of "a 'final dainty - revived and added to- Ma performance of "Arms and the Man" that exquisite satlre,"How -He Lied to Her Husband,'' In which Mr. Shaw satirises hot only tils-audience but himself. -..This little nlar is in one way the epitome of Shaw, -the picket-fence upon" which this all too unsentimental Tommy baa hung nun sell for nubllo exhibition,--- -- The Shaw erase has lasted something over two years, and so has fairly paaaed -tha- limit of ft"f ad." Thera Is one --great point to be scored for George- Ber nard Shaw: he has lived down his pop ularity, and to do that he must have - the-elemente-iof. true greatness. For never was there a man who was such a mark for the faddlata aa tbls aame writer. They flocked to tha earlier per formances and with their sentimental " driver and ravings disgusted when they - did not amuse.- xnry were me isrgeai single force In keeping the main theatre going publlo away. .-. Plays Produced ThU Yeir, . this la cast however. George Bernard Shaw Is no longer a fad. "This I. at winter there have been produced - of hl plays the following: I"Caj)dida." -"Y-Ott-yever can 3 on. Arms ana ne - Man." Tha Man of Destiny,""How He " l,led to Her Husband.'L-'Ttfra1- Warren's Profesaion," "John Bull's Other Island," Tashel -Byron's Profession" (quaai .hawonlyl and "Man and Superman," . which eomeg back next"Monday,by th way, for a return engagement.-So It l may Justly be said that Shaw, while jirobably not the domlnatlnc figure of the past dramatlo season, baa been the most prominent one. He began the aca- " sun with a laugnmg success -or "Man -end Superman"; he provided the sensa tional episode with "Mrs. Warren's Pro fession." and the final weeks of the I year finds him still holding tha boards . with his comedies. Here 1 qnlts ft change' from ' those . days when tha Independent theatre was : experimenting more . or less succesv fully with his plays, and -when their productions by managers were under taken not without hesitation. For ex ample, the first presentation of "Arms and the Man" at the Avenue theatre, in London, ran from April II to July 7. "TO witness It," saya Shaw, -"the public paid precisely 11,777 6s d, an average . of til Is 6d per presentation (Including nine matinees): the average cost of each representation being about 80 " the loss to tha Avenue management was not far. from 16.000." - -Even the attitude of the critics has ' changed with that of the public, and not Infrequently the publlo has proved the critics wrong. Instead of the terse, pll- lorying criticism of the brilliant London reviewer: "Shawt Oh, pahal" we now have long articles with "great argument about it and about" and, for the most part, they come out by the same door w neTeTnW f--went." baw remalna 'almost as much" of a puixle today ea he was. five years ago, more so in many ways, for whenever he sees a chance clue straightway ha attempts jto tangle " the threads again. ''' The Views of Mr. Archer. William Archer, one of the best known . and authoritative of - English ' critics, wrote about ''Man and , Super- - man": "Regarded as a play, 'Man and . Superman' is, I repeat," primitive In in vention and second-rate in execution. The most disheartening thing about it Is that It contains not one of those scenes of really tense dramatic quality which redeemed the squalor of Mrs. " Warren'f Profession,'' and made Can dlda' something very much like a mae- , terpiece." - , j And James Huneker, wh quote the above In his brilliant book, thus sum marises the piece: "He started out to make a plX on Don Juan,, an old. and ever yrtnthful theme. He succeeded In 'turning Out an amorphous monster, part dreang, part - sermon that will haunt , DAYS THIS 4. - Milwaukee; grand t secretary, B. 'K, Sharon, Portland; treasurer, O. P. Doane, The .Dalles; representatives. Joseph Mlcelll and 'J. A. Mills; marshal. P.. A. Hani, Baker City conductor, George If. Riches, Sllverton; guardian, George W. ' Welch. Clatskanle; herald, C. W. Moor. Grass Valley;' chaplain. A. LeRoy, Portland. , . - "Grand encampment Patriarch. Claud Gatch. Salem; high priest, W. I. Vawter, Medford; senior warden, H. M. Beck- wlth. Portland; scribe, B. B. Sharon. Portland; treasurer. W. w. Francis, Al bany; Junior' warden, E. J. Seeley, Al bany: representatives, Thomas F. Ryan, Oregon City,, and W. M. Greene. Eugene; marshal, t. M. Haxarfl. cequllle; sen tliiel. R. -RobeHaon, itoaeburg outer grand sentinel, W. O. Gregg, Canyon City. . ... . . , ' Rebekahs President. Ella E. Fraser, Pendleton pvica-prealdenU Clementine Bullock, Portland; warden, Emma Gal lowav.' McMlnnvlIle, secretary, . Ora Cnsner, The Dallesl . treasurer, Ida TeiSTctt, cottage GroveJ conductor, JeO nl Arnold, . Toledo; :.'chaplaln, Mary BmUlv-Grants .Pas; Jnlde guard, 8u- Its creator as Frankenstein was haunted for the rest of bis days. Wan "and SU perman' Is a nightmare.1 Yet here is this same piece playing out the year to most enjoyable play of the season. Truly, It is hard to estimate this au thor. "'in" the "light ;of ."the 7 success "lie " has obtained It la worth . while' to recall "Three .iPlaira .for iPurttans:" "I first caught the ear of the . British, pumio on a cart In Hyde Park, to the blaring or braaa Danos, ana tnis not at au as a reluctant-sacrifice - of. my instinct of privacy to political necessity., but, be cause like all dramatists and mimes of genuine vocation, I am a natural-born mountebank. la England as elaewhsre the spontaneous recognition -of really original work begins with" a mere hand ful of people and - propagatea . Itself so slowly that It haa become' tha com monplace to say that genius demanding bread- ta given a stone after the.pos sessor's death. The remedy for this-is sedulous advertisement. Accordingly I have advertised myself so well that I find myself, whilst In middle life, al most as legendary a person a the Flying Dutchman." Hta Franknest'Deceptfire. ' - - Nothing could be more typical, noth ing more deceptive than this apparent frankness, for Shaw is -never so subtle as when be is apparently frank. Ab normally . clever .he boasts about . his normality. A physician tested , his eye sight on evening and Informed "htm ihatLJtjgaultninter!tintoJ"n beoatuat it. wa'BormaL''I naturally . . . .... , - , M , flt. Illh.i it was Hire avervbodv'a elae: rait ha re- Jeeted - this 'Construction . a paradoxical and hastened to explain to me that I was an exceptional and highly fprtun ate person optically, 'normal' alght con ferring The powerof seeing things a curately, and being enjoyed by only 10 per cent of the population, the remain ing -0 -per cent being .abnormal l-lm mediately perceived the explanation of my want of success In . fiction. My jnTnd'i m my budjrg, wag "Trors mal': It saw things - differently from other people's eyes, and saw them bet ter." Here then you have ShaWs ex tenuation for his underlying principle that the minority is always right: it la niads-uporth"ncjrftlSJ. ", For a long time, many have taken Bernard Shaw as something of a Jes ter and have read waggery Into those delightful prefaces even. Other have found him mere Intellectual clownery, tha inventor of the Intellectual farce. Still other have found in him subtle tie and a sertousneea Of purpose which would rob him of all sens of humor. Finally there are some -who - hav weighed the man carefully, have esti mated tare and have reduced the reald- lum to a net weight, ae they think. But who shai; aay which of these Is right? Who shall say that any are right? thai aU ar not rlghtt - There are certain very obvious things. however, for which Shaw stands and these can fairly clearly be seen in al most every play. "It annoys m to see people-comfortable when they ought to be uncomfortable, and I Insist upon making them think In order to bring them to a conviction of sin." Thre you have a clue at least. - Bernard Shaw Is question. mark slipped subtly into the dally commonplace. He is . Ibsen with the cap and bells on. - Hammers Hjrpocrigyv . It is the hypocrisy which hat com to find shelter under the name of con vention that Shaw hammers at In .every play. It is not so much the apparent hypocrisy but that inner unconscious hypocrisy which lies snug In-the dicta of Mrs. Grundy. Life has become con ventionalised until we have slipped Into a universal hypocrisy of cant and men tal code. . Even our high-sounding term have become meaningless. "Ideal Ism, which Is only a flattering nama for romance In politic and moral, la as obnoxious to me aa romance In ethics and religion. A for romance Itself, It 1 to him the ."great heresy to t wtpt off from art and life as tha food of modecn pessimism and the ban of modem self-respect." The deception which Ilea behind vague terms goes farther than these mere gen eralities, however. Ths pecial Instance "" H " " ' Ella E. Fraier,' V. ., - i , , , : ; . .I ''i ' - WEEK WILL FILL GITY ale A. Bradley, Portland:, outsld guard. Fannie Carney, Pendleton. . There are 4 it representative, to the grand lodge In the state and a greater part Of thee are expected to be present next week. A large number of the delegate to the grand encampment will be Composed of the same people. It is expected that about 600 visitors will at. tend the meetings.- The Grand Lodge of Oregon contains 171 working lodges and has a membership of 12,161 and shows a gain of 82 during the past year. The Claud Gatch. total" lodge Income ; last ' 'year' was f K9.6S6.R0. The total amount paid- out for relief was 152,114. During the year no lodges have-sur-renderedlhelr .charters and no calls for aid were made. Local members of the Odd Fellows and I Wehpfcahs rt jnniilrkf preparations to give m w tw tww-rertii mil m m viil ors. many of whom will remain In the city the entire week and vielt the "Made In Oregon" exposition. --- . - ' - Is Mverwantihif tn- 7haw.H whetKer1 the ..', V . . fifv,. ...quawt.iiS-'i,..,'' " ' : ' ...y ' . K r-X ' -t u 14 " i'Yi 4 y .;.. A -jfty .I'T'iftlftn iMi ont vt pglUlrs nr Tttil-s vr""- mauaantr sociology or morals. . Just as the broad terms of "idealism" and "romanticism" have been used to. long that they have Liost any .real meaning, just so. have cer tain relations been' sentimentalised' Into what- are- Hula short of Immoral condi tioner Of social relations th on which "he ha attacked the oftenest and tha most ftercetjrand wrthalnh most humorous ly - is that existing between the sexes. Woman has always been a favorite sub- 4-W ft If I- ul-esi ITsHitstsa 1 x "tr wtn 'e fiBViiiti fi'vnrM the stage for long year In highly ideal ised and - rose-colored situations .which varied little, 'ho seems, to have. grown nauseated at Jh sight. ndth Stupid ity ,of It all. r-rT -v-.. -. What" He Thlnkrdf VVoman. I ln""mot""plays, as fn Ihe"mfnis of many, people, woman Is looked upon as a passive agent, a creature about whom a great-deal of fusa is made, but withal a helpless sort of Individual, bound by nature on one side and by foolish cus tom on thi other. Woman aa a domi- natlng aggrasalva forcawomaa aa 4 creature splendidly equipped to gain her way under all ctrcumBtanoea and doing It; this has been known long but-few have dared to express iU With Shaw the woman question does not ston thus but has inner1 slgnlf lcance7-The-popu- lar success or " Man and Superman, . It Is safe to say, came more from not understanding what Shaw was driving at than from catching his point of drift. I And It would be Interesting, were it possible to get a canvass from any typ- leal, audience as to the meaning of eve-n- theterm8TiprTnRn:" KletiaehfTc1f1c-Becd company, by H.q.Mc would turn In his grave. - They are a queer crowd, these women of the Shaw plays. Think of a few of them Ohlyr-Blanche 8artoriu"ln that most unpleasant, probably, of all the "unpleasant'! plays, -"Widowers' Houses"; Julia ' Craven; Mrs. JWarren and her "charming" daughter Yiv'ie:" Ralna Pet- koff an Lfta -of Attn same playr - Can - atna'Una Pronsy""," Gtorla Ciandon and her"l"mpTsh slterTSIlFrih wle ofTh minister in "Th Devil' Desclple": the laJy in "A-Maa of DeaUny":. Cleopatra (what a Cleopatra!), and that consum mation of them all, Ann Whitfield I Surely these women can take care of themaeTvea1TairoC"casIona and"xanbe trusted -to look at llfe-wlth eyee un clouded by 'those trait which we have ueually ttrlbutK-to th 1 eye 1 of woman. Woman in Her Variety. And there unusual characteristic of these women ar not exhibited merely in th love chase, but are seen in other relations, especially In that which ex- lstsbelwee.n parent audchHd.FniaTa,f fectlon and the family bond, the regard of iarent for their children and vice versa have been given a new angle of vision by haw. A the heroic of th tags aoldler had alckened him- so had evidently th maudlin sentiment of the stag mothers and stage children: and hi made his soldier go into battle with chocolate creama rather than car tridges, so does he make a Glorja and Dolly and a Philip talk "common sense" to their father. It is to all appearances a typsy-turvy land that he paints; in reality he is placing his finger point upon a very Important and real condi tion of aft'ra.. This brings us to on great contribu tion which Shaw has made and on that I too often overlooked, and that Is-his Influence upon the stage, an; Influence which' Is bound to be felt. Technically there ar dosen of flaw that can. be picked Ja Shaw's play aa oramae. in nia cnarcienaiinn an nm cnaracieri iia , i uiifufin miaw. and th servant a are the cleverest of the lot at it. Construction hr pay lit tle) attention to at tiroes; for example. th Introduction of the long Don Juan scene In "Man and Superman." But with everything that can . be urged against them they do amus and Inter est. " ' BASEBALL-J.tt . ; MAT II. it. 17, It, l. SS. PORTLAND VS. ' OAKLAND Oatled I N 1. a. Safly. asM Called !:M . m. Saadaya, j ,i Laaiea' Say rriday. f ADtalsilOs, te, SSarSSTASD, Me, CU1LPSKX, 10c; BOXT SEATS, JTx, ' VOMAN SUFFRAGE - A MENACE " Portland Business Men Recog , . nize Danger ' to Commercial interests. v.:;. ,"".'.,? : . More Than Two: Hundred Lad Ing Firms Join In Protest. -' In these days when the . spirit . of greater Oregon la in the atr th statei can 111 afford to assume the handicap of-woman suffrage. Portland's business men are alive to the danger, as will ap pear from the following protest: We, the undersigned, believe that It would be lnjurloua to the general wel fare and development of Oregon and therefor vnwlae adopt woman suf frage at this time; . We believe further Tthai a large: majority of tn women "of means of recording our opposition to the proposed amendment to be voted upon June 4, 10: E. B. Lytle. ' ' : Theo. B. Wilcox, R. tilvlngatone.. . ... W. F. BufrelL - . ' J. C. Alnsworth. . ' " J. Frank Wataon. W. Mackintosh. William D. Wheelwright, H. W. Oooda..: l ? t :i W. J. Burna. - Allen Lewis, by I A. Lewis, presl dent. The Gauld company';' Paclflo Paper company, by Hugh Mo- Gutre. - , . ' ' Crescent Paper company. . 7 Union Printing company. ' "Security Abstract A. Trust company, " Portland Fuel company. Willamette Tent & Awning company, by H. Wemme. Drlscoll aV Gray. Char lea Coopey A Son by W. B. Ayer. president. Portland Iron works, by H, T. Clarke, president. Archer aV Schxans Co.. 8am JB." Archer, secretary. -- . portlanoaakeTaVTrandlfompany, W. B. Cochran, president. Portland Safe company,. O. B. -Cellar. president. : " " ' - Western Electrio work, O. B. Stubba, president. , Watarhousa- Ae Lester, VV H.T.homp: Holman Transfer company, 8. W. Her man, president. Northrop tt Sturgi Co., par John JX Carson, manager. Mason. Ehrman - de Co.. -r.- Tha . George Lawrence .compnrLPT George Lawreoc Jrecretarv Paslflo Coast Rubber company, by C. W. Lynde, manager." ; The Adamant company. . , . 8. B. Hicks Bon. by F. B. Mallory. . New York Life Insuranoe company. - !TtiKpKro-i; California Powder work, O. E, Will- man, -agent. The Bosenfeld-8mlth company.. : Pnclflo Kxport - Irtimber company, by Dudley L. Blodgett. -JrItaeltln""trKrhr a. ttaseTrf tine. TheodoreBerah"efmi" Co." Grlndstaff Schalk, --"J.-F. Shea.;-- ,; Weatera -Electrical Works, by. O,- Stubbs, president. R. F. Prael. Zimmerman-W ells-Brown Co., by L,- Zimmerman. , ' f. h. stow. -' ' J. H. Thatcher. C. F. Adama. . Kerr,. Glf ford 4 Cot W. H. Beharrell. Round" Lumber company. by D. C. O'Reilly. -" Portland Railway company, by Fuller, president. . , George H. Hill. ' . Harris Ice Machine Work, by H. E. Harris, president. Fred Cooper. " Aowin North Coast Cooperative Lumber com pany. American flteel ft Wire compnny, by E. R, Kldridge. Wadbama A Co. lying aV Co. ' Prael, Hegel Co., Inc., by R, F. - Prael -ABalttn,- TTKrTCingom: C. L. Seaquest. W.- B. - Chaao. N. W. Rountrea, Eugene Shelby. J. F. Daly. W. B. OmfBeaTrC M. SeUer & Co. W. H. Hurlburt. Charles . Gauld, W. R. Mackenzie. r. a. Nitchy. JffracEeit Frasler. Harvey fyBrvan. L. W. Whiting. ' i.' -'- F. A. Jones. A, C. Feldenhelmer. A. H. Potter. ' .. " L. H. Round. Carl Spuhn. " F. O. Wheeler. ' ... Donald Mackay. ' L. D. Cola. W. T. Adam. ' - Qeorg A. Cooper. J. D. Meyer. Goodyear Rubber company, by R. H. Pease, president: - F. 8. West, manager. Paclflo Coast Rubber company, C. W. Lynoe, manager. John D. Carson. Thomas Gray. P. 8. Malcolm A Co, . J. M. Hodson. A. O. Long. 3. Thorbum Ross. R. Lea Barnes. Anderson Brother. Balfour. Guthrie A Co. W. D. Deaver. "H. T. Hendryx. " Northern Box Manufacturing agency," by A. A. Courtenay.-- rx nmj R. Q. Jubltx. Central Lumber" company, by M.. B. Rankin. "" : George F. Hensuer company. The Charles F. Bee be company. H. C Brown. . Closset A Devers. t J. B. From, manager Fairbanks, Mors It Co. Th J. A. Reed company. Tattirn A Bowen. - , ".'''' M. K. MacRa. - -Coweeman Driving -A Rafting" com pany, by Mollis Alger, treasurer. ( - 1 H. 8. Irwin, manager Oils Elevator company. ... ' W. C Morris. . -v - . E. E Gilmer. "' . "." , Toll Thompson, .'Portland General Electric company. - Oregon Water Power and Railway company. American Trust Investment company. , Waterhous A Price company. . jaw orvn , , - The Benson Igging and Lumber cona pany. by 8. Benaon. - Meyer, Wliton A Co., by A. Tucker. General Electrio company, by J. A. Cranston. Wakefield Jacobean. Albera Bros. Milling . company, by Henry Albera, manage, i C M. Wood. ; t . ' W. M. Kllllngsworth. ' . J. W.'Cruthera. . . . - - T. N. Stoppenbach. R.-L. Durham. - - ' M. C Harrison A Co., by J. W. Mat the. - - - - - -W. C. Barnett H. A. Heppner A Co. ' ' Zan Brothers; by Dom J. Zan, presi dent. Ames-Hania-Neville "; company,' . by Everett Am. . - " Win. C. 8aundr. I . Thanhaueer Hat company. - John A. Robllng'a.4pna company, per L. H. Parker. "T Portland Mattress and Upholstering company, by C. Spencer. ... Dougherty-Fltbian Sho company. " Gelser-Hendryx Investment company. ' Clarence True Wllcon. -A. S. Pattullo.--; r--i.i..., R. P. A. O'ReUly. . " The A, H. Averlll Machinery com pany, by A." H. Averlll, president and treasurer. . . -v, . John Deer' Plow . company,, by. R. L. Ayi'g-Th':w.b.er coi Jttumphrey, manager. "ATTremrr Arson. Buffalo Pitt confpany. . Gaar. Scott as Co., by -X ..B. .Greeny, manager, J. 8. Sullivan. ' , .'. The Aultman A , Taylor .Machinery company, by W; B. McFaifl. manager. -., Phoenix Iron Works, by J. E. Wolff. W. H. Moaer, manager Portland Pul ley company. i ,1 . Blake-McFatl eompgny. 1 - Portland Bridge A Building company, by . A.-C. U.- Berry; - - - . Pacific Coaat Construction - company, lir H. 8. Huson. 1 .. ... r J.'E. Schoolfleld. .' R.' L. B racket t.- :-,'.. ' ' " ..Charles R. Fralert . " ' ' ' H. A. Wei. .'.".. ' ; L. A. Bailey. ' -' W. N.' Patterson, " - . I WV J. Clemens. . , . . . ' Charles Fr Beb. 1 1 ' L. Bono. J. L. Hartmani ' E.C..fear. Jk-fUojfx, M. M. Ashley, Phil Metschsn. K. B. McFurland. Frank Nau. . -K." 8. Irvln. " ' Willamette I W. H. Corbett. president A. R. Diamond. rTdwetl. John R. Bwlnton. A. C". Sheldon. -""' C. X. Rumelin. Franl;,A..Beufrt. - A. M. Haradon. Lazarus Ackerraan. - Th Imperial Hotel company. ;.T. T. Burkhard. F. M. Anderson. R. W. Blackwood. , . W." C Cameron. "'" T.L Fred Tnpfcen Charla Barenstecher. Ed L. Este. Xharles E, Lytle. J. O. Thomas. . " "North Paclflo Lumber company. Z:TocJfe'ntsttrnjp.BT. fcxJ Lt. t urner jr., manager. . . . Pacific Transfer company, by H. J. nanaen. Artas. Campbell - A Gault, by F. -W, Arts. Diamond. Band C0mpanj Howard, secretary. Columbia Logger comoanv. b M A. Uackett. prealdenf. Johnson Lumber company," by W. C. Cochran, manager. t . Ashley &. Rumelin.- M. A. M. Ashley A Co.. by R. G. Ashley.. - J. W.-Caaey.- r - Neuatadter Brother, C. E. Orelle. - - "- - Frit Strobel. TT1""" Joseph A. Boyc. .. ' . W. H.. Raymond. - A. N. Smith. E." 8.- Ferguson:-" T"-" -'- -.' Alaska Oil A Guano company. ' 'Loawenberg A Going com Dan v. br 8. B. Loewenberg, president. XL C. Atkln tt Co.. incornoratad.-h A. H. Potter, manager. Hlrachberger A Sweeney. Han Hlrachberger. Berket. ' .- Joseph Jarobberger. Frank Terhyden. J- K. Courtney. J O. Summer.' And other. LYRIC THEATRE ginning Monday, May 21st r iver Afternoon and jsvening ForUacd's Fopulag Stock - , mouse. Roaring Fare Comedy MR. BAKER'S 1 IN THREE ACTS Lsnfhs Laagb Laughs FOLLOW - THE CHOW l t'ON T1NUOC8 PERFORMANCE. Ap ADMISSION IAp 1U t Reserved Sato. 20c 1UC E. O. SPITZNER'S Philharmonic Society Redtal at the : Heilig Theatre May 25th Orchestra of 80 Pieces, Quar tettes, Trios and Violin Solos Tickets 25c Loges and Box Seats $1 Tickets for sale - at Graves Music Store. Empire Theatre-YSrs;: aflltea W.- artataa, Ugr. BfATTjrn TOSAT AJTD TOsTZOST. Mack 'Spain Present th Famoua Emo " tlonal Drama, EAST LYNN E A Modern Version, New and Beautiful, . With All th Great Emotional Atmosphere A Splendid Com. " py. Matinee tfricea 10. IB. 2S Evening price.. 15 A, 25, 85, 60 San Franclstco Dlsctt rini,nnTln4e1ctare and aneV riWi f Baa ' MnWar are an4 arUiiiake tnr rhe. !( rlbt gratia Nrtaii i IA, rtctur Macalae Us. 1H luu, t-oruaaa, vt. . 4 . I ron A Steel Vorks. b v 4- LU rtrtetMk a4 WihlniotJu. THE HEILIG THEATRE vv-. T. Pangle, Manager. - Direction N. W. Theatrical Association, - -' :. C Helllg. . President. FOUR NIGHTS. BEGINNING SUPPORTED BT AN EXCELLENT - - .COMEDT 1,000 VighU , la Xtoadoa. DAVID PROCTOR mom BOO mights PRICES ' Seat now selling for entire engagement at box oUc the HUIT .th atre. Box; offlc open, today (Sunday),,,: j-'.., . .,;''. aJrzxxxxixxsxiiBaTsaxaKxgii I9H0MM ' Mala 1W I EaXXllf THIaTBB COMPAMT, 1HRER The House of High-CIais Stock Production Second Week of the Popalar BaKer Theatre Company IIP A. DltABfAf lHAflUH U .BAHKiHB FAMUl'H NOl'BL, ALL BCENERT AND THE FULL BTKENGTH O Matinees Sunday and Saturday, E VENINO-PRtCES. .V. . a a ri rvrrnn -- iirn MATINEE PRICES , , .. . tmtWeeknHMDS ACROSS THFSEX WEEK OF MAY 21 PANT AGES Popular Family Theatre v' Positively ihe Season's Greatest Bill Four Georges in-,Ooggtle-Oe tfp to Date." First aa Only reat MOVING JCTURE$: 4 Of tk Oreat -r San Francisco Disaster - .Tl Original : 1,000 feet of THRILLING- FILMS. Monologlst. jofljr0( at .-- Arthur Elwell ZT. Popular Baritone. "T ot Moving- Ftetare of A0- trual Sea to FKaVFOXatAsTOSa . dally at 2:10, aa centa; reserved neat a 20 cents: from I p. m. to 10:45 p.- m. Ladlea week day matinee for tern cent. Week of May 21st, 1906 Star Theatre THIRD WEEK CONTINUED, SUCCESS OF THE STAR STOCK COMPANY EST Tata SCaVBAaaVw atTPSXOAX. FABOX, The Twin's - All th favorite. Including Will A Collins, J. W. Clifford, Mildred Eddy. Dick Mack. Manollta Stetson and th balance of th company. Th abov In connqtion with a. fine vaudevill show. '.... ......... j , .. ., WnX OF MAY SS, "TOO SCAVT niSFM,11 T STAB STOOX OOHFAJTr. JOY PROVOKING VAUDEVILLE- Another Unprecedented BUI! Beaded by tka j xzvarars or oombot, - the BOHEMIAN COMEDY FOUR rSICEA Bveatage sad ginutays, to, SO aed - oars, lot to All .' Tk XTaklaAewt OaA Frea tka OelaiaiMie DUaetrk. TfcU trarf," rwaarked yoanf Wlrty at the hr..kr--t.hl, "la eorklng like the kread ar a- f ' , "Ant t vilt tfHm lira. WdVr1y. "are ao. . hkt tbe aiaa mj UUwt waa." ORAND nMc-'4 MONDAY, MAY 21, 1$0S COMPANY OF PLATERS, M TH' - DRAMA, ' : " Tk - ' BrasaatU - Treat .of ta txwr floor; xceprtsr-ww777TSl.HI uower noor, inst s rows.'. Balcony, first f row. .gl-00 Balcony, next S. rowe ,T Balcony, last f rows. .BOe Gallery Reserved. S8o., balance, BS. ' ; Boxes f 100)0 " Yamhill and Third Sts. 0E0B0B U BAKBB, Maaagai, SETTINGS PERFECT, PANV. - .fc.;r.T..."...".T.T. .25. 354. 50 ' . 1T. FOURTHzANty STARK STS. J. A. Johnson, Resident Manager TECHAU TAVERN QUARTET- Famous operatic singers retained for another week. Mickey Feeley Eccentric Acrobat. a tremendtT' coal sltrtea - , bnt- traction of City. ... r... Society Sketch . Artists T:10 and p. m. General admission "boxes 25 Cents.-Oontteuou Bnaday and children admitted to any seat at. Cor. W.Park O Wash. Sts. Christening' Week of May 21st BOXAXO BBOTBBaa, . . Roman acrobats. - - sab; Bowurr. -Tb Htfl man witn the big vole. SfABOO BBOTB-BB8. . Hlgh-clase gymnasts and comedians. .-, TBB BBAWABB8, . - Comedy sketch artist. - , MB. BBBBT BATBS, , . . King of th Banjo. BTASTBB BVABOtA SOFT, "When the Evening Urees Is glghlsg." -. BABBOeOOFB, , . i jtest Path mm. - Baa aVeta ao reta. Matlae, ea!l . Saata, Iivt Bmm. : - r , t- u r - . WTit tm tM n- i." tk utIdm'T t"Jm tm pat to t t- A "." li ra lae front rc ,