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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 12, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 12. 1003. HEILIG THEATRE 14th and Waihlngtoa Phones Main 1, A1122 "A ' ., '"'vr.- ;' By j. P. s. Tlast a noble deecfl" cries, Hedda Cabler. : "At something had really happened that was worthy of last a sensible woman," exclaimed I when I comment.' Those who didn't go must hare been iw, h.d'finl.herl tilkinir to an unknown subscriber lull interested. Those who did found this:- over the office 'phone the other morning. me Second Mrs. Tanqueray," a play so admirably Suited lor Mrs. wampoeu, ana wis. Campbell, ;an. actress so admirably auited for , the play that the real merita'and demerita of ! Mr. Pinero character drawing ,wd,re absolutely lost . aight of for the. time being. . II waa impossible to think of anything but Mra..Pat. She waa there; and she waa wonderfully 'gorgeouS.'and she filled the part of Paula to overflowing. When aha had left town and you were able to diagnoae the attack you ' realized that in spite; of the general effect of being auccessful. the play , waa bad in many dctaila. The elabo - rate and labored explanations in the " first act were as awkward as the pre .face-to a 'dance of the trained ele chanta. Nothing waa , distinct until h 'rallerf tin and exDliincd that ahe wished to take her twJ daughters to aee MrV Campbell. Di. The Jour nal think that either "The Second Mrs. TanqWay" or- "The Notorloua Mrs. Ebbsmith" tyat a fit play for ' ' two young women to see, and if so, , which one had they better attend? The answer waa by ail means go, anu by all. means see Mrs: Tanqueray. It is scarcely ."necessary to explain that.1 the woman was fortunate because' she called me up. It waa - probably a mere chance that she did ao. - She might hate asked some one else and in one case the reply would have been ."chloride of lime1 and its the other" "utterly impossible." , . I sincerely trust that the two young women went to aee Mra. Tanqueray, .. They probably didn't ,arry chloride of lime in their opera glass bags and ' they certainly, were not injured -by the performance. In the first place they were accorded the opportunity of aeeing Mra. Campbell, who is, -with the exception of Mra. Fiske, the most notable woman to be , aeen on the stage of the amaller American cities today. ' Show roe the woman who . haa nothing to - learn from, Mrs. . Campbell and I'll ahow you a prodigy that will make you gasp. , Pinero haa enough to answer for in the way of poor construction, extravagance of -charactera and misconception of life without being' lamely . charged witk - being unfit to see and 'bear. The Three Nights, Beginning Thursday, April 16 APDCIAU PRICn MATIINUU SATURDAY i Jules Murry Presents Portland'! Famous Theatre Phones Main 6 and A1C23 Mrs. Patrick Campbell Gives Remarkable In-, tcrpretation of , kThc Second Mrs. Tanqueray" In " Mrs. Ebb- smitb-She:: VanJcrs About in a Maze of -v Tedious" Dialogue 7- s In the Musical but still , extremely interesting. - Paula, who is rather ill-tempered and haa nothing of the "higher life" in her, finds that her step-daughter is en. 'gaged to marry a man whose dis carded mistress ahe herself is. The situation becomes critical .and all the characters give upr the fight I but Paula herself. Now is Paula'a chance to ahow that. ahe-ia a treat woman and hence Pinero's to reveal that he has drawn a master character. The husband draws, a picture of the step-daughter an unspeakably disagreeable but reasonably lifelike creature dilates upon her innocence Florence Gear k : ; at ...... y - .. ! THMIftHT and Remoinckr of Week I V11"" !'( Msllncc Saturday Only FRANK W. HEALY PRESENTS "(by special permission ;;;,;-' T .,'.' of John C FUher) tV-? " '' ; TIIE NEW YORK' CASINO SUCCESS ' ! Depicting the American College Girl v? ' J .... . . -.' ' . ' ' - iTuna nzoxs rr rioor, tint 10 rowg.fi. lAfwr tiuur, immi-m IOWI..11.I fer.v:::.a.?t.T..fi irxoTAX atarnm ; nuozs Bntlr lowr floor.... ....SI. 00 Balcony; . .75t &04 QtJXrr ....!... ......25 Paula herself came upon the atage. , ,r . . , , . . . ... w.jook Paul. a. w found ; ". ..6Erf SALE AT. THEATRE NEXT TUESDAY HUH Yf miUUJB VViUIUViiyaeiWf lill &rwn mm mm i mm uvin m I the Musical "comedy ; vvith the world's f RECORD-SPLENDID CASTMAGNIFICENT PRO ; DUCTION STAGE . DIRECTION, JOSEPH MILLER Prjut-g1 Parquat elrela.1 tiaioon7r iirsi row ' Haloonr. rmalnlnc rows. J 0Urr .2&i Parqnat ........TK4 Parquat lreU ......... ....r0 Plconr. first i rowa f0e) IlaJconjr. YamaJnlnr rowa..2&4 mm most unfit thing about Mrs. Tanqueray ia that tta very and purity and says: I know what you were at fciiean s strength, its cleverness, blinds one to the fact that at the age. You hadn't a thought that wasn't a wholesome vital point Paula'a character as drawn by Pinero one; you hadn't an impulse that didn't tend toward awenrea from the clumb line of truth and lite. And by irood: Yon never harbored a notion you couldn't have the same token Mrs. Ebbsmith's unfitness lies not in the fact that ehe haa what we are pleaaed to term "sinned, but that Mr. Pinero haa. drawn a woman too big for his point of view ao big that when Mrs. Campbell acta the part ahe literally, aa Bernard Shaw haa aaid, "plays Pinero off the stage." He doesn't know what to do with thia Frankenstein of his. He stumbles around a bit .and ends by having Jier ap peal to the aensationalism and prejudice of the more ig norant in the audience, by hurling the Bible into the atove and pulling it out again with a ecream, .'www Thia cry of indecency and unfitness is ' too ignorant, too narrow, to be accorded any respect whataoever. I confess that ao far aa I am concerned it ia beyond me to aee wnerein the evil of Mrs. Tanqueray and Mra. Ebbamhh liea. They have done what- is wrong. Granted. They suffer for it, and you have the plav, its theme and its plot in a nutshell But consider tor a minute their wrongdoing,, over which we are having such pious spasms of virtue. Is it portrayed in any marmef" in- a "way to induce 1 others, no ' matter how weak-minded they may be, to go and. do likewise? TheitJt4a aot sude a particularly happy one. Surely retribution comes swiftly enough to "satisfy the most orthodox. And does thia wrongdoing hold a tallow .'candle to the Crimea committed nightly on other atagea ia Portland, Crimea which are accepted without ao much aa a murmur, in spite of the fact that they are-presented, in the manner-best. calculated to play upon the imaginations of the simple people who see and evident ly enjoy them? Unfortunately not A nation of villagers" we haye been called. The cry ot tne ignorant is beard ia the land. It doea not con- sroasioed . about to a oarcel of children." And Paula drops upon the ottoman, clasps her hands, noda her head and crying out, "O God! A fewyeara agol" indulges in a paroxysm of weeping. In short, she simply coin-1 ri cides with the popular notion that up to a certain time every one is innocent in thought aa in deed. That moral fiber is not made until you reach the age of discretion. That people are constituted the same until they taste of the fruit of the tree, then to separate and go their individual ways. Feeling that all people were created free and equal, morally as well as every other way and that ahe has cast aside her opportunity of being equal, Paula givea up and commits suicide. It must be admitted that Mr. Pinero has revealed bis great skill aa a dramatist in many ways, not the least of theae being the avoidance of a suicide before the. au dience. But if Paula had been given her chancel If Pinero had allowed her to see that she was an individual and had the rights of the individual I If there ia wrong for the unsophisticated beholder of Mrs.-. Tanqueray it lies in this fact that Pinero permits her to apeak of her innocent childhood, draw a picture of it and then announce that she has changed so that she cannot face her pure and catlike steQ.-daughter. It is to be very strongly questioned that any such change occura. w w In The Notorious Mrs. Ebbsmith" we have another artificial woman, again, fortunately, played by Mra. Campbell Agnes Ebbsmith is the daughter of plat form orator and agitator. She marries and Uvea eight wretched years with her husband. At the end of that time she herself becomes a platform orator, loaea her voice, becomea a nurse and meets an unhappily mar ried man whom ahe nurses back to health. He and ahe agree to apend their lives preaching their new 3 5 The Rose City'i Greatest Amusement Enterprise In Preparation 'for Opening Saturday,M:ayl6 Fasaet Mala Saa4 a-UM- tverythinj New This Season 1 1 Muale of all nation and apoelal iota In tha naw aneltarod Alrdoma by a. chorua of 10 Tyrolean Slnrera and Dancera. Mid if at Clroua Human Incubator. Eleotrlo BaaabaJl. Tha Bralnatorm. Buddha's Tanipla. Bmon of Musical Corned r by a Naw Tork com pany, 'x'ha awaaoma ecenlo triumph, Johnatown Flood, and "THE TICKLER" .; ;;. , (Oopyrthtad) Extra!-Breton's flying Auto Extra! Maddart Xra-Sava Ao Is AjMirlet. rosTuurs omuiffaaraifBmTOAK ozTzasn csxxMmxvzon r AMD TXOXXO, 3C1.T IS, AT TXB OAXM. AJTS OTZEB - ;-; ,.V- SJTOCXAXi BATS. BAKE Tp THEATRE U Va I exm. ugw. I PORTLAND'S FASHIONABLE POPULAR PRICK PLAYHOUSE Bome 'ef tba Bake Tkantre Meek Ooaapany. ALL WMX COMMXNdNG Sunday HalinecApril I2,I908,Today A Magnificent and Splendid Production of THE POWERFUL AND INTENSE EMOTIONAL DRAMA i AT . I . OAH MISMjfff a completely renoratsd and under naw man airamant, aunnwitad nnalo and new akatea. Tha only "rink of quality ajjJj5U appeala to tha beat people, ',' ;Bld osTDaka , grllla raatanrant cloaa April II.' A faw mora proposition for-etrictly hlfb-claaa legitimate abowi oonalderad upon Immediate application. Nothing In tha park but clean, rertned entertainment, tarlo aapeclally to woman fcnd dhlldran. Addreea -"( - XX C. FREXMAN, Manarar. i First and Alder Streets. . Offloa at The Oaka, to I. Phone Sell wood J30. Tte fkmi BY HALL CAINS, AUTHOR OF "THE CHRISTIAN." A Story of Rome in the Future Intensely dramatic, awe-inspiring and thrilling. Beautiful scenery and settings. One of the grandest features of the entire year STAGE DIRECTION OF. WILLIAM DILLS V Matinee Saturday. Matinee -Curtain 2.05; Evenings 8:05 - - Evening Prices 25c, 35c, 50c ; Hatineesl 5c, 25c Nat ;Vcck-The Strafe Advcntir of ; Miss; Brown THE STAR Telephones Old M. 049O New A.M90 fi.n?..,t"lf t0" tge, but fnclndei eyery detail of.our found doctrine oh, superficial Pjnero-f anti-marriage. The man proves to be weak, excitable, egotistical, nope less, but Paula still believes in him. He insists that their partnership be something more than that of co workers in reform. he holds out tor the ideal, until ahe finds that he cares not a fig for her ideas. Then she decides that she will have her woman's one hour of triumph. - From this point the play descends rapidly. A clergy man offera her the Bible in the hope that it may re store her to "respectability." She - takes it up , and throwsvit into the stove. Why, in heaven's name, she does this I cannot comprehend. She says that, it haa made her eight years of married life accursed and that heart and her civilization, ine eame people not long ago rose in their wrath and put down Bret Harte because he wrote Tha Lock of Roaring Camp." Highly indecent workl Walt Whitman'! "Xeatee xf Grasa" raised a hue and cry that haa not yet downed. His name ia still anathema upon the lips of-insulted virtue. George Moore's me . moirs must needs be expurgated before they are allowed to land. What would have happened had Guy de Mau- Eassant written his tales and sought their, publication i ; thia , country? And - yet the most' exquisite word painting tfiat perhapa the world will ever read is bound up between the covers of. "Flaubert and Gautier." But are they to be found on the shelves of our resoectable : public library?. Perish the thought! Nietischel Faugh, come with the disinfectants. Wilde the name ia not to -trtin It ig probable that she takes the Bible as the be mentioned to the prim younar woman attendants. t.i t. a j.. ,. i. .... -u. 1,. ; 1 a . ,t . . . , ciuuicui ui wn uu uiuti. m mtij i sue jra&a 11 upua yua vi, iBiiiai cjctiiuu irom tne rooms 01 tne building. '-.f:': . :-. .' f ! Gertrude Atherton recently raised, her voice against thia and her 'protest waa received with a storm of dis approval' Thia .called forth a letter to the New York Sun in which Harris Merton Lyon said: , r r "Our young people, are trained to write via the mag azines, and that is all that need be - said. Even the 'good red blopd of J. London is nature faked at IS cents a word. Most of us are willing to sit. and write about Mercedes and her motor; and the rest of. ns are amiably content to read about her. If we do not men-. iion ncr iujji we arc saie. n we ao not take some tdeedl f hers and show ie bitter, sardonic worktrrir of any rate ahe yanks out with a howl of rain when it has been burning for a minute or two. The clap-trap trick met with the approbation; of the gallery. It astonished every one else in the audience. If she had decided that ahe must live her own life, beyond the offer suggested by the rector and his Bible, well and good. There were possi bilities of interesting development. But she destroyed them and subsided into an uninteresting person, bound for England and a life spent in penitence because she .had dared to be unconventional. In addition to the ultimate weakness of the principal character which was .made interesting again .by the characterization and semblance of importance lent it by Mrs. , .Campbell's acting the play waa wretchedly . con- .... L.. ,...., I,:.,. . a i irucicu. int tuuvcisauvnj ui inc jay ukuics i jftti irprn An7tnalrmff a livinir se nii A fn.i m.4... . . . ........ r .11 rC. rrL-TJ a ri."" "Ci?-:n r.:..r 'l','!5, tedioua beyond endurance and the too, too evident en- wwi! it" -'jo v""4" w"' rt Vx in,l planations,' the" constant scurrying to and from the all- i. ,t" . i t , irnporiant stove, aiun i ncip maitcra any. . - - tinrhin in it writino' a fiinnf1mi nimnnrtanri . w . t;; - ' i : i ..... ... - --..-r- --- --. --o- r ' r ,1 ruir. rincTO Diaye ore . iiuuuruin occause incv. arc The land of the tree" (freedom of the press), the words scfi0us and, particularly in the case of Mrs. Tanqueray, arc cininj. .., aie ure w awauuw. iiicrary . piiuuiug interesting attempts to portray vital phases of life, seen put of a decidedly tin spoon. .We are falsetto eunuchs from the Pinero standpoint., And such attempts; are . in a passionate world. - not going to hurt any young woman or old woman, or i, 1 ' young man or old man! If Pinero's detractors based ' If the two "Pinero ;playa seen iir Portland last week their attacks on the immorality which lies in. the lack of , had in any manner deserved such jndignant rebuke as verisimilitude of the characters, well and good. But to w otwi ucu. iutm in vis uiikih w "uure uuut iui liiciu. uranu incut wim tuc uuk vutigc .DCiug juucicill . To hear tne talk of , nastmess" one. would think that, is foolish and lazy. I THEATEICAL NOTES f Raymond Rltchoook has renewed hla atarrlna tour In tha successful mu alcal farce,' "A Yankee Tourist," by Meaara. Richard Harding; Davie, Wal lace Jrwln and Alfred O. Robyn. , Henry W. Savage'a Chicago "Morry Widow'?, company begins It elg-hteenth week at the -Colonial theatre tomorrow night.' . Tha alluring-... Vieneaa operetta la the bigg-eat success In Chicago' stage niaiory. v-. '".. .;;:,..; .!-,:,;.. 'The grandfather of Frana Lehar, the composer or "Tne Merry widow, was a poor husbandman. Hla father, preferred fiddling to farming-. However, and after ''studying muBlc In the small city of Sternbery became an army bandmaster. Frank C Payne,- one of the foremost ' and most able press agents in America, haa been selected from his staff ' by Henry JV. Savage to look after the pub licity promotion of ' "The- College Widow, when the Ade elassla is pro duced la Ixmdon, on April SO, ,t the Adelphl theatre, JS - When" Thomns ' MelRhan appears at Billy Bolton in Henry VV. Savanna rnrthcimlnK production Of "The College WMow" In Iondon, the well-known lend ing nian v. ..1 use es his third act cos-1 tume a football in)form which waa for merly worn by Carl Flanders, tha .fa mous center . rush of Tale. , - - In a dispatch to his partner, Daniel E. Edwards, of Renovt Nat C Ooodwln announces that he has canceled' his fur ther engagements for., the year on the stage, and after playing three weeks at umcago win go; to jteno to devote ail may attention to hla mining interests. ' Laurence Irvin has encMsted a trib ute to Count Leo Tolstoi In the nature of a pllgrlmag of Englishman of hlh standing to .Tolstoi's, home. The party win iravei on root, or inird-ciasa on the railroad, and loda-a. with the neonla - Carlott Nlllson Is soon to make her appearance under the management of Robertson or Chicago In aa adaptation of Giuseppe Olacosa's drama, "Falling lieaves." The Droduetlon will )m mAm about Kastor, probably In one of the Shubert houses. . .... ... . e - e e - H i-t. '. William Collier. besides aotlng In Caught in the Rain." la hard at work upon the manuscript of a new play, to be done In collaboration with Mm a Ann Chambers, and shortly due for final eon slderatton by Charles Frohman. , ' -'r Frank tanle1a rrobahtv will hav a new musical comedy next soason, wrlt- ieii vy narry uirara and I'aul west. I'm. Ivotrieri"HrT)''v.Vv. tha actress who recently Invaded New Tork with her company, . seemingly hoping to rival rxazimova, nas xoiaea ner tents and gone, 125,000 poorer and aome wiser. - . . - '.Ernestine "Bchumann-Helnk, 'the con tralto, sails at the end of June for Ger many, where ahe will go first to Bay reuth to sing In the festival .perform ances. She will also appear at the an nual Wagner festival In the Prlna-Rer. enten.theatre In Munich.". , , now that . the war .' In vaudeville Ja over there la llkelaato be an Increasing exodus from the variety to the No. 1 houses, because the competition which Sroduced the big salaries Is at an end. lay Irwin la reported to be on her way to London and Paris to find a comedy In wnicn to appear... - . , t ' - v . :"--J:.e., -. OA. . r" After tha termnlatlon of his season In1 "Classmates," Robert Edeson will go to Europe for a tOur of the continental cities. . , ' -v i The daughter of Eleanor .Duse,, Slg- norlta Manchette - Iuse-Checchl, was married recently to Edward Bullough, aa Englishman and an Oxford don. , ; tlAi.h, 1Att,iii ' thm Vn wit af a. Is negotiating for the British rights to "The Witching Hour,' which he wishes to produce In London. , . ,, -. - Harrison Qrv Fiske haa received I from Raberto Bra ceo. an Italian dram- latlst, a copy of the Italian version ofl T?Hco!"n I Mr. Flake s one-act trairedri "A LlSht! PANTTAdDES) Fourth and Starlc 8tt THB BEST Week of April 13 JOBN A. JOHNSON, lestdcat Maaajer IVnllfflf Tsajfatff aaf1r f trvMnerl wiaafaa A 4-V hIaIIa A WW smsbb vva asBM w - a uJ4 xn waaiuui S, liwavci Vs. UIO V IVaiJI AJl 3l A Heine. Pauley A Healey, Jean Wilson. Rose Buscb, Tehon & Spencer, The rtiograpn. . For the New Week Beginning Monday A bin et special merit Is offered as follows: DON FULAN0 The black beauty of Vaudeville, a horse of human Intelligence. THE O'BRIEN TROUPE Wonderful acrobats. "Naomi" the human eannonball. WU-DR0N BROS. II TARRA MAH0NEY DUTCH COMEDIANS WINMFRED SHWART WOMAN BARITONE THf BI0GRAPH NEW MOTION PICTURES IRISH 8TORT TELLER JEAN WILSON ILLUSTRATED SONd SPECIAL MATINEE NEXT SATURDAY Afternoons at I:S0 o'clock, nights at 7:80 and 9. No advance in price. Upstairs, ISo; downstairs. 26c; boxes, 60c. Any seat at weekly matinees, 16c. The R. E.' French Stoctt Company ' Will Present for the Entire Week .,'"" . ; THE CELEBRATED COMEDY-DRAMA - from St. Agnes." translated by him for use on the Italian stage. Anna Held end her "Parisian Model" company win go to London at tne end of tha t resent season for an extended engagement at the Drury Lane theatre. - Rugglero Leoncavallo, the Italian com poser, celebrated his rirtieth birthday on March 8. - He was born In Naples. His best-known opera, 'I Pagliaccl," was brought out In Milan In 1892. COLLEGE TO OFFICE. Commissioner Nays tne Latter la ' ' Poet-Graduate School. College men by the score finish Tip their education In the patent office at Washington, according to the commis sioner of patents. In an article la American Industries the commissioner calls hie department a post-graduate school. : Tn examiners in the patent office." says the commissioner, "are all gradu ates of colleges, and 80 per cent of them have been graduated In general and pat ent law. .With office experience they become Invaluable tn the service, but after almost- three years of experience In the patent office; when- they are most valuable in its work, they resign and ac cept outside positions. Thus thei office has become a post-graduate school for; the - tech nioal and legal . education of young college men who enter Its serv ice. . - -,.! ,'-.- v vv-.i-v:s.vji . "The General Electric company has In us patent department at least iz men formerly examiners In this office, and other corporations have taken hundreds. Out of a corps of J00 examiners 185 have resigned frem the patent office within a period of lees than flvv years. It is only necessary to remark that the ftrli' r-Mrt nr(niirnl frsmlni-rs In thia service arc the same today as when they were iixea in.iS4S. - "Patents In the craft of telegraphy were scrutinised by three examiners. whose progress In their task was inter rupted oy their successive- resignations, so that the net resulV w&a that $3,200 was ' paid for the acquirement ot the snowieage or tnis art, only to have that knowledge lost to this office through resignations because of Insufficient sal aries, u ne same tning is occurring to s areaier or less extent in an or the 41 examining divisions." . :. . , . BOOKS RETURNED., One Came Back to Philadelphia Li. brary After Being Out Century. '. F'rom the Philadelphia Record. 7 With the best systems and most care ful watching books go astray, but It js hard to write , them V'Of f ", as entirely "lost." since tue have a way of turn lng up that Is only paralleled, by, the eat of. lyric fame. ' The other day at the desk of one of the oldest cltv Institutions, the Phil. adelphia library at Locust and Juniper streets, mere was returned by a Xair unrniwir UUUA lUBV dHa D6n out I a the - horrAWAP ... nn .flnjn mr. ...aImI1 7 and after She 'had .gone tha question as to whether tne womajl bad nnt mtah. lished a record Was asked.' .i , "No, Indeed.", said the librarian.' We have in this library several volumes that were held ten, fifteen and twenty rears, ana one dock vast was returned o ua after being sone for over a cen tury! It is one of a valuable art for IN FOUR ACTS FIRST TIME IN PORTLAND This is positively one of the best comedy dramas ever offered the X ' Portland theatre-goers at popular pricea and will be , t sure to please every one who sees, it, ' J MATINEES SUNDAY," TUESDAY, THURSDAY AND SATUR- t ": DAY, AT 2:30 P. M. PRICES 10c AND 20c J EVERY EVENING AT 8:15. PRICES 15c 25o AND 35c . , "Next WcelciHow Baxter Butted In" ! Will be the last production of the French Stock Company at the Star e - -' - -v. .r--- t v ;- : ' " BEGINNING SUNDAY MATINEE, APRIL 26 The Armstrong MusIcgI Comedy Company f WILL OPEN: AN INDEFINITE' ENGAGEMENT I Lyric Theatre J CORNER SEVENTH AND ALDER STREETS. MAX 4888 SBATTNO FLOOD, Proprietors. sots neons SOX A-102S i Weeh 'Commencing Monday; April 13 .P. R. ALLEN present! MISS VERNA FELTON and " THE ALLEN STOCK COMPANY v In, Agnes Herndon'a Great Success I IT v I7v flfl mm I the classics and after succeeding in hid injr useir so long -naaily turned u Holland, where its label : declared lawful place -of abode and thA, honest finder lost no time in forwarding it io Philadelphia Y's, e'r. we have books out still longer wid I have not the lnst doubt that sonif' of tl.fn jft I nJ their wsv hurl- ! i (" i.-f. , , FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES ' Positively the Best Comedy-Drama Ever Written I' tyatinees Tuesday,-Thursday, Saturday and Sunday. Price 10c and "... -.it 20c. Evemns; Evening at 8:30. Prices 10c. 20c and 30c Rev; Cavina Picfercs Uo Lcrn 17:': Next Week. 'a Dramatization of Marie CorrKi's Cf ' !