THE .OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAU PORTLAND. SUNDAY , MORNING, JANUARY 5, 1008. PORTLAND GIRL WINS PLACE ON ; STAGE AFTER YEARS OF HARD WORK . . , . " - , - i ; . i fc . ; ? K t - - ( " ., ; 5 " i - ? y , . ' - v v.. J 1 i ! " HHf y 4 ,i ! ; Ml. nv . lm f V ' " 1 .f ; x J - ' ' ' i 1 .V J 1 ' ' - t 1 r.- ; ; .-it NUW yr - - mmmmmmamam LX . I WWW"' nris Cecil kenM "Jut bard work nd study and love of my firofeHnion," Ji th way Tablthe Cecil Kern explains how she won her flrit poaitlon on th professional stage with Eelasro's "Sfan of tha Hour," com pany; 1 ' . MIrh Kern is th dauahtfr of J. J. Kcrn tli oldest; German editor In Port land and her prother and sister nave the Deutsche ZlDtunr or ttils oily, l ney are exceed' agly proud of Gielr "little girl," aa thev affectionately terra her, and all . of , MJxs Kern's ' frtenda are a watt hi jf with Tloannt expectations her appearance at the Heillg next week. "My alsler has been prern.rlnB; for the at a ire, for years she seemed to be born for It," said Miss Meta Kern In tipeuklnir of Cecil's work. - "Khehad a remarkable memory when a chila of but three years old and never tired of -mlm-ickinir and recltlnr. 8ho must hnve in herited some of my father's qualities ot- application and ability, for study She attended school In Portland, later studied draniatk) art with- Paul Gerson In San FranrJsco, , had a term at the Morgan school In Chicago and then In New York. While In New . York she met Mr. Belaaco and he ennasad her to co out with the western 'Man or tne Hour" romnanv.' Miss Kern s part is mat or ino stea ocTunher to Mavor Bennett, the man of the hour, end she has received very favorable notices throutrneut tne tour, which began early last fall in Atlantic C)ty -'Unlike many actresses Miss Kern has kept iri close touch with her family In iortiani ana tne rrequem letters re ceived by them here testify to the pride ana interest tney taice in ner worn. 'A grat play of American lire today that is what theiHon. T. L. Bulllvan Democratic leader of New York City and one of the most potential politicians of the., day. called "The, Man of. the Hour." Yet, "Tim" Sullivan Is looked Upon by many as the very typo of "practical" politician against whom the morals of "The Man of the Hour"' waa directed , by George -Broadhurst, Its author. Another New York city politi cian who praised the play as a stirring picture of American life was Magistrate Finn, famous In the literature of pol ities as "Battery, Dan." It is queer to think that these two rowv '"Big Tim" Sullivan and "Battery Dan" Flnrf, are regarded by many as the originals of two of the chief char acters in the,, play. "Boss" Ilorrigan and Alderman Phelan. ,-,, THEATRICAL NOTES. u ' "7',v.f -- 5 MU&I hfU.fy MMIVIL.tzJ "Last year, , while abroad," Louis Mann relate, "Mm. Munn and 1 had the pleaHiire of visiting .Germany near wnere isarn was oorn, aiso me piace wiiere Outlier rewrote tno ibies in met. there were a number of historical lo calities near by, and we utopped over niniuy ai m miie inn in , Aisenacn. where the, landlord greeted ua In broken English." ; i. . J v "Ah, you are American becblcs, yesT Once I'was.in Amerlca-once in . Ave nue A, yes? You .hat nice time, year We ware amused at his efforts to bo sociable, and asked to be taken to our looms. . . , The, host Informed us that there wis an elevator.' tie whistled and shouted down the shaft for' "August." then Jn vlted ua to atep in the cage, himself running the,' elevator. We were half way up the .first floor." when: with- a rattletv clank the caee stuck. After mucn effort we gained the of fice floor once more, and the landlord mm: - . ' -' - t . "It is a sten out Please: the Juice is out, Kever, never, this happen befo.-e, please, up to tonight Is not possible; out aown is it.- r- An-' old friend asked Mrs. ! George Gould (who osed to be dlth King- don) if she ever Yell a return Of her old Impulse toward the stage,. "Oh. well." ahe said, "when you have rubbd against, the scenes you can. never get rid of the emeu or paint." A stage version of the novel "Three Weeks," written by Elinor Glyn, is, be ing maae. ume, rsaiimova is enaeavor ing to secure the rights for American presentation. .. -i Penman Thompson ' celebrated . his 75tU birthday Jast. Week. - James CNell has announced that this year he will confine his. efforts to pro' auctions ; or ' "juuus uaeear, "virgin lu," and "The Count of Monte Crlsto' Ml art Christie MacDnnald has been engaged by Charles Frohman for his productlpn ' of a new musical comedy. entitled "Miss Hook of Holland." a Lrfm don. success of the first order. Sometimes there Is fun on the stage Which persons in the audience do not suspect. At a recent performance of Tom Jones ' the mem hern of the com pany were convulsed with merriment over a trick John Bunny played on Henry Norman. Mr. Norman in the character of Squire Western Is a hard riding, hard drinking country gentle man, who. tosses orr glass after glass of wine at a hunt breakfast. The scene calls for the 'drinking of six bumpers of .wine in rapid succession. Keai isur- gundy is used, but for stage purposes only a little is placed in eacn glass, as ni human 'Stomach could hold six- tlg glasses. At the performance in ques tion Mr.. Bunny slyly filled the glasses to the brim, ana as Mr. jNorman downed the wine in plain sight of the audience his face assumed a look of consternation at sight of the quantity. Everybody on the stage saw the trlcK and watched to see how Mr. Norman would handle the plight He drank two glasses, tackled a third, gasped, and then turning half aside from the u die nee. made pretense or getting away bwlthithe others. No one in front sus pected tne tries: wnicn mr.-uran cii- loyed as geemy as anyooay. i - , -!". Miss lEthel Jackson who Plays the title role with Henry W. Savage's New York "The Merry widow" company. and Mme. Llna Aharbanell, who plays the same part In Mr. savage s Chicago company of "The Merry Widow' are exactly the same age. They were both born on February S, 188. ' 1 - '1"; ' 4, ' " ' ., V '' " i ' ". Venn the New Vftrlr World.' Hamlet's soliloquy, as E. Fpy Fits light give It: .'-' . - -''-.. . ... f' "WWWWlilitMii'l'r"r--W?'N:v.v Hully gee. That's gerald might To be or not To be? . the aut-stlon: Whether .'tis nobler, bo, not to set up . a tan scream . t- . J : When you're stungr or put up a scrap , against a sea or troubles. To croak; to , pound the feathers- or 1umn la .v . , - V .- At the sound of the gong and go to It, . ' SKIOT).. J. '- - And so forget your troubles, see? A , guy is . sum up . against it in this . . world .' V . " ."'i And If yon jump, off the dock, where 1 do-ye4i come in: A. lot of boobs put' up with it because . they don't v v- . i. Know where they get off. , It's a bard - luck storv. bo. For most of us; so many things put on . , the cheese,: ' , . Our .best friends pan us, a skirt Will throw us down: Bulls in "harness pinch us, what's the , ueeT , : "Mr. 'E. Foy Fltxgerald will, present himself as Hamlet.1' So the bill will read In springtime. V ' a. TB . . L 141 kill Lla.t4 jar, rvy, vr im win uiii uuincii thon.vhavlng taken up his- family, name for dignity reasons. "E. ' Foy Fits- The Massachusetts Federation of State. City and Town Employes' unions. at the annual convention held recently Maiden, extended its scope to tnat a- national body. Application has been made for a national charter from the American Federation or LAOor. geraldr assured us of this in all sin cerity In his manager's office at the Iyric theatre last Monday arternoon. ' "I have as much right to play Ham let as . anyone else," said ' the great actor. "I paid 56 cents for a copy of tne piece, ana mars an 11 cost anyooay else. , . , - , "Yes. I used to sing Hamlet was a Melancholy Dane,' but I did not state It as a fact, and even If It were, so, that has no bearing on the case. Tt Ian' at fnlra althnlirh I VAffarrl this, the greatest of all Shakespeare's works, aa a comedy and not a tragedy. I don't Intend to gag It, although I will play It for the laughs, and there are a lot of 'laughs In it. 'T .win put 'Marnier on in tne spring right here In New York. I can't repeat too often that I will give It a respwtful handling. The book will not be re written, for. with all due resnect to our modern librettists, Shakespeare Is good enough for me. "I will hot interpolate any songs. The Pony ballet will positively not be fea tured. I nave never played tne part or Ham let right out on the stage, but for 20 years I have read and rehearsed it. I do a turn wun it every aay i am home in New Rochelle, in my barn. Mr wife and children think it does me good. and then, some men drink, you know. So they don't Interfere. " or rive years I nave practiced it in my stables, so. you see. I can say l have barnstormed In the part. AS I said. I win have my premier right here In New York. I will not open In New Haven and then go on the road for aweek while we rix over tne piece. I have tried it on the dog. My dog' sloens In the barn. He can't sleep while I'm rehearsing, tnougn. Decause I act the part; I doh t read 1U I'll play It as a young man. Hamlet was a young man. Yes, I know he says he was fat and scarce of breath,' and that In one Dlace he alludes to- 1U4 beard, but I'll play It without either pad or bushes. And I will not pick up Yorlck's skull and say, 'Tls a pretty thing! ............. What Is my conception of the part? Hamlet, In my opinion, was a nut. Just a nut. I've seen all the great actors In the part Booth, Tom Keene. : Forbes Robertson all of them. In nay opfnlon, though. Booth' Interpretation was the best Robertson made him a wise guy not that Hamlet wasn't skilly, at that: but he was a daff. There's nothing to It; the prince of Denmark was a star gater. all right,1 all right. - - "I'll play It made up Juvenile, a Scandinavian Gnorgle Cohan who took himself seriously. Of coarse I frxpeet a lot of people to think I'll mug and gag and do a dunce In the solilkiuy. i . r "None of tkat In mine.' I'm going to play it straight, and tne oniy runny thing about It Is that nobody but actors will believe I'm In earnest In this mat ter. I meet a dosen crushed tragedians very day, who come saver" from the lunch counter and give me advice. I don't need any advice. I've seen James Owen O'Conor, Charles Leonard Fletcher ana Kdmund Russell piay . liamiei know what I'm up against. - I'll pli without. tha alii of a net. too. ' "No, I don't .expect anything' to be thrown at me except bouquets." . I re member once out In a sleepy little town In the west Shakespeare, Montana, so called because "Only a little Hamlet slept.' A bund of bad sheepherders threw eggs and vegetables and even old pans- and kettlea , at .. James )wen O'Conor. "He caught a counle of the eggs and some of the vegetables, .and Picked up vnu ui me pans ami took nimneij. m tomato omelet over tne rootngms. " "I will come' t a- the theatre when I play Hamlet, however, after I dine, and no ivor win oe aone me oy lowing ino eggs, vegetables or kltchenware. Be sides, footlights In New York are incan descent lamps. ' ;; owen uuonor, tne tragedian, I would not have any one infer that my pro duction of Hamlet will be anything In the nature of a revival. ' "I'm going to; use E. H. Sothern's acenery, most likely, and I will have a competent support. I want to be careful or tnat. Nat Goodwin wants to play the- First Grave Digger, nut could I trust him to stick to his lines when I say, 'How long will a man He In the ground ere ne rotr Nothing would keeD Nat Good w n from saying, 'Not long. If he's as rotten as you are in tnis part.' "Hown I dress the partr wen, not tn a pad ana a brush, as I told you. Nor as a Joey with a red nose and a bald wig. "I'll wear. a hawbuck for the usual black and maroon. And I'll get away with the part. It's ail sure rire hokum. It may be stated right here that a "hawbuck" Is the stage slang for the conventional doublet and hose worn In all costume plays of the time of Hamlet or the era of Elisabeth. "Sure fire hokum" Is actoreae for lines that are always applauded, such aa 'Rags are royal raiment when worn for virtue's sake!" "He who lays his hand upon a woman, save In the way of Kindness, is unworthy tne name or an American gentleman!' "Get It down right." concluded E. Foy Fitzgerald, erstwhile Eddie Foy. "I ll be in this burg In the spring to play 'Hamlet.' and I'll be. here with chimes on my clothes!" ,- When Mrs. Foy, who was present, was a Wed what she thought of it. she said she would rather Eddie played "Ham let than the horses. Whereat Mr. Foy Fltxgerald senten tlously std: "It's enough." " , - Among America's foremost comedians who will be seen In Portland within the next few weeks are Frank Daniels In "The Tattooed Man." and De Wolf Hop per In "Happy Land." An early attraction at the Heillg theatre will be the rollicking college play from the pen of Rlda " Johnson Ycung, "Brown of Harvard," in which Henry Woodruff is starring. lli.it ' I ft . sMsMsvilHMMi V Charles AyerB, With tlje Allen Stock Company at the Lyric. LONDON" SCATS' ELYSIUM The Door of Doom. From the Reader. Many old houses In- Holland have a special door which Is never opened save on special occasions when there is a marriage or a death In the family. The bride and bridegroom enter by mis door, ana it is tnen nailed or barred up until a death occurs. When it Is I opened and the body Is removed by this Metager fits glasses for tl. Von Can Tell It by the Cats You Meet In the Street. A lover of cats once said that .he summed ' up the general character bf the Inhabitants of a city by the way the stray cats received his overtures of friendship, aay s a iondon dlsputch to tne New rorg nun. In Paris the cat literally walks alone. as Kinling prophesied It always would. It is Impossible to get near enough to one to stroke It. , French cats are only " 1, uai linn , (ill 1 1 v. n. . J kf niiu.nii. and apparently always in a' state or panic. This arises from the fact that the French are not lovers of animals. In London It is oulte different. Lon don is an eslyslum for cats. The cats you meet In the street are always sleek and happy and are most friendly. A cat is really a sort of necessary finish to a London home. Just as she poor little wild bird in a three-frano cage gives prestige to a French menage, so a large, well-groqmed, well-fed cat eems to give respectability to an English household. Stray cats are always well treated here. Of course, the day comes when they are gently picked up by a man in uniform and placed In a cart and taken to the cats' home. Here they are kept a few days, well looked after and fed. Then if no one claims them they are sold, if valuable, or else pain lessly translated into whatever sort of angel a cat becomes. Such being the situation it was nat ural that the nineteenth show of .the National Cat club of England should have been an event of importance. Some 430 cats, accompanied by adoring own ers, competed for prises. . The Countess of Strafford is president of the league, and Louis Wain., the cat portrait painter, is the chairman. There were six Judges, and they had their bands full in keeping peace, not among the cats but among the cats' owners who did not win prises.. The cata themselves were haughtily Indif ferent as to results. . They were divided Into 104 classes. There were two main sections and these were subdivided Into open, novice, kit ten, team, brace and breeders' t lasses, according to sex and . colors.'. white, black, blue. - chinchilla, ' smoke, silver gray, brown tabby, red tabby, silver tabby, orange, cream, tortoise shell and any other color. -' The shorthalred . varieties Included Siamese. Abyssinian, Manx, Dutch and British mousers.. The longhaired were the Persians. Angoras, etc. The great- , est price ever known to have been paid for a cat waa secured in London. It was f 5,000. .1 Just as every dog has his - day so does every cat. ' This year the Siamese reigned supreme as being fashionable and most successful. A Elgber Health, level. ' "I have reached a higher health level since I began using Dr. King's New Life Pius." writes Jacob Springer, of West Franklin, Maine. "They keep my stomach, liver and bowels working Just right." It these pills disappoint yon on trial, money will be refunded at Skid- more Drug Co.'s drug storei- J5c. ADVENTUEES OF AN 1 ENGLISH PUDDING " From the Billboard. Twenty per cent of nothing equals whatr . . : Is a genuine English plum pudding ifactured- from metal?" vThese w ouestkwis- spoiled the CraiBtmas dinner of, Miss Olga Nether J.Ala lK. tTlm.ll.U MIho Nethernole is Datrlotlc. and she decided tnat she would nave a real pium pudding, made in "dear old jungiana, sent to her here for her Christmas din ner..';:,; -- . '.. ''';.' But she forgot all about uncle sam's red tape. Misn Nethersole Is here, the pudding is there, the dinner has bean arranged, but the customs officers aie lira mmndaryrand it may be necessary to refer the matter for decision to tha secretary of the treasury, in which case Miss Nethersble'k pudding will have to remain Iny the custody of the officials untfl .'most everybody has recovered from the attacks' of dvsoepsla and Is already "looking forward to Christmas a year hence. -- . The Budding reached Cleveland, where jMlas Nethersole was playing, last Week The trouble began at once. ; . Punzled to classify the Pudding, the officials de clared that It would be subject to an ad valorem duty of 20 ner cent, and ipassed the case up to the assessor. The Hatter refused the; responsibility and promptly returned an- official ruling that the pudding "had no commercial value." - The .collector sent a reauest at once to anuw now- no s jswiig w cuuqc 2Q per. cent or noiniug. , jie- was toic that , the matter did not come-under the scone or any oiner aoDariment. and he would have to settle it himself. Then he appealed once more to the superior officers for a classification of the "Importation." Again he met with no success. . - If it is anything like tne plum pud ding I , ate last, Christmas It ought to be classified as 'manufactured from metal.' ".declared the head of the classi fication, department When the office closed at night the officials were still undecided. And the pudding Is being carefully guarded. In the custody of the United States gov- ernmeni. i. iTils XakM Five Ille to School Trim the" Philadelphia Record, t i While tha ordinary boy. is spending s out of school hours Dlavlng. William Harris, 9-year-oldflad. who lives on Whiskey road," half a mile tout of Mer chantville,, 6pends three hours every day walkinr to. and from school. The Harris family are -Catholics, and as there is -.no Jiarbchlal school in Mer chantville the boy, trudges to Camden. It Is five" miles each 'way. and the bos walks the 10 miles In three hours. This morning the snow Interfered with bis cuKtom, and -he used a trolley car. "l : There is . not enough money allowed William to , pay his carfare jind keep some for himself.; so -he. would -rather walk and savjp 60 cents a week.T -. The lad has made- many friends along' tha route of his dally journey, who urge him along with .cheery gteetlngs v . v ; v i a . h m m H S 1 . V (1 .Ill VT ' I V- 11 A II A Yf4Jil ': II II rwJI II 15 II K IC1 . fc-J-f- iir i.-w -- i rh in fA" 171 . . ft - Hi H 1,11 I Ll l.-J i 1BW . :.tfl 1 h m Mil xtemmmsmm ';iy'! tj iifeife','y? M 1- ismwmmm- r- B -4 'l a iiiiiliiiwi'i'"" . t i; ;ni -" "I " , , , . , . .- i jHOMEiOF tJOODll Tt-JT TT I f LET IJ FII OF 11 -TO M It is a simple problem during this clearance sale with our well bought stock. We are making room for heavy shipments of fur niture, carpets and stoves expected next month. Do Not Forge! That Cur January Clearance Sale Prices Extend to Everything in the Store Having just completed stock taking, we find we are over stocked with Steel Ranges, and are offering our famous Stewart Steiel fanoe Warranted the best made AT SPECIAL PRICES Headqnarlers for January Shopping Heater Special THE STEWART CHARM HEATER like' tut made of the best gray iron, with Heavy iron linings, cast top and bottom re duced-from $13.00 ' to $8.50 This that is a big bargain can't be beaten. 25PerCenl Reduction on the entire line of McPpugall Kitchen Cabinets We invite inspec tion. Largest selec tion, i Practical kitchen device for saving time, labor, worry and Health. Headqnarlers for January Shopping NN NO (j&S tow M A Jtk . '. .-. . . - a f'-sBk - : I ' ' j ' - I 'aosJiie teee .ll'f.'j.u is; " : j - . . - ' T...: r- .ri-:..' . M .-. ,--(r,r..sl.,7V"i It i ' i ' 7: