The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, April 19, 1908, Page 21, Image 21

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    THE' OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL' ' 10, 1908.
i
1
PESSIMIST MRS HIS
&m OPINIONS 3N? MUSIC
: 1
, ! ThliiksiSome Little Jim Might Profitably De Devoted to' Afternoon Symphonies Baton
-Vi
1. "J
HEY' meet rxtai
astonally -at dinner quite by chance
fT and discuss -various thing! from,. President
"Eliot'a view! on early. marriage to 'the aeven re
tnaininsr dramas'of ' Sophocjea, with, all the fine
, egotism, of. youth, ;i 7'.;',- ', . -fV'T ' A
To .youth; the, mysteries of life "are still in truth
mysteries and are to be talked. of boldly and objective
ly.' If , 1' only to agef that-they appear shorn .of their
divinity and stand - forth as., the actual. And as the
, actual they lose their charm as topics of conversation,
Butjhl shabby, little dining room; is especially con
ducive, to idle chatter..,'.. It is reached by an out-of-the-
waywalk and pops up' suddenly when you least .expect
to. discover It- The steps are rickety they ' bend , as
you.' go, up or down them as though long exposure to
Oregon's rains had weakened their will beyond hope of
redemption., but the door stands hospitably open and
you grope jrour way inrougn ine narrow mwe.oiu
falhioned' halls. until youVhand finds a door knob and
you tII fall into the lighted room. It is a miracle .of a
room andcombines the excellent quality of being Im
maculately eiean wttn tne comiortabi appearance-of
being imidiy dirty.- - y - . . . , , ,
Many cafes are painfully radiant their windows and
silver shlnt like the face of a child that has been called
in from play and .' mercilessly- tubbed -and scrubbed.
The tableware is 'lamentably tinny, it is true, and the
dishes are ot tne concrete variety, but .- the , aoup is
aromatic with vegetablea. and seasoning, while the fish
is served with a sauce' the secret of, which the pro
prietress Drought who ner trom oascony. ine daugh
ter of the house is neat and quick as are most French
peasant girls, and when you have drained you pint of
harmless California claret there is a grate fire burning
on these cold spring evenings and you can sit and drink
black coffee 'and smoke and dream into the noisy
flames.
The aVrival of the demi tasse was, as usual, the signal
. ... ! 'a. - Jl! If
tor me pessimist to aenver nunscii 01 nis groucn.
.www
"I've been waiting for years," said he, "to discover
whether or not the business man, Mr. Ordinary , Busi
ness Man, takes any real interest in good music or good
literature, or any of the tine- arts, l ve aooui aeciacu
that he doesn't. And that is not troubling me half so
much as the reason why he doesn't. It must be that,
as Bernard Shaw says, he concentrates his efforts to
ward the accumulation of as much money as possible,
With the idea that his comfort demands that he be rich.
He sees, possibly quite correctly, that he cannot waste
his time on the secondary things of life. .Assuming that
his standard is correct and that what he terms the sec
ondary things are in truth such, he quite' naturally
looks upon those who devote much time to the pursuit
of them as fools or idle dreamers. It is against this
stupid attitude which they assume that I protest.
"A few weeks ago the Portland Symphony society
gave its 3rst concert. The theatre was filled with
women who were evidently representative of the lead
ing families of the town. They were well dressed and
intelligent appearing women. They apparently enjoyed
the excellent work of the orchestra, not alone .because
they thought it was proper to do so, but because of the
intrinsic value of the performance.
"Bnt where were the men? I looked around the
parquet and saw here and there a few piano salesmen
and anaemic persons in male attire. The business men,
the intelligent men. if you will, of the city, where
were thev? I confess I don't kiTow. I saw two as I
left the theatre.- They were talkingover the perform-
ance earnestly ana naa apparently enioyca it. wren
I hurried to overtake them and learn who they were I
saw that they were not Americans at all, but Germans.
, They were m,en of apparently more than average intel
ligence, but tney were uermans. It nejpcd to con
firm in my mind the statement we hear so frequently
that we are not a music-loving people and that what
taste we have for music is artificial. It is not found in
Americans au naturel."
"But New York spent $4,000,000 for opera alone last
year,' interposed the oldest and presumably most sen
' aible member of the party. "Surely that is expensive
artificiality."
"Just my point exactly," said the pessimist. "New
Yorkers are not raw Americans by any manner of
means. They are subjected to a thousand modifying
treatments every time they stick their heads out of
doors. They have forgotten what it is to be Ameri
cans in our sense of the term. And this affectation of
music is merely one phase of their artificial life."
www
THEATRE
14th and Waihlngtoa
Phones Main 1, Aim
Tfee
Y7
ill j
Cart of Principals
Bthel Dorey
lre4 O. TNNdiU
Tera XasaUtea
Prank WmI
Albert Sealer
MBS BCaaley
Grustav rill
Bellies Waiters
War. Z wolf
Oeo. W. Wandllnf
Bea.0. Ooearaae
aad IbnbU of
tautest Oowae4
Olrli
BTzznra man
Lower floor
balcony ...
Gallery ....
Boxes .....
11.00.
....11.60
TOO, log.
.au
EZZZXEKZEIXaiinSKXSU&KSa
fhoaes M
2 and A-S363
"But how about the Chicago Symphonies last week?
Surely they were well attended by men who could not
in any way be called anaemic."
"Yes," continued the pessimist, "and how did they
act? They had evidently been roped in to see the per
formance and were bored to death. They vented their
feelings On the rest of the audience by behaving in as
noisy and boorish a fashion as possible."
"Again you're wrong,", chimed in the -sensible one.
"I attended most of the concerts myself and noted par
ticularly how the' various people in the house took the
music; which to tell the truth, was much of it poorly
played. The men may have been bored in fact many,
of them composed themselves to sleep as long as the
intervals between the Wagnerian selections would let
them, but they did not keep others from enjoying the
concerts.".
k "Well, as much could not be said for the women,"
rejoined the pessimist;' pitching , into hie favorite sub
ject with, keen, relish. i"They. chattered Incessantly and
drove the lew who were lett between tne cnanerera ana
the deepen to1 the verge of-madness. At one of the
concerts I aat near a gentlemen: who was. like me, en
deavoring to pick out a strain' now and then, through
the din. that surrounded us my neighbor by the way,
was evidently a' German merchant. ' Beyond ui sat two
women and behind us were any number of them. And
the great? majority was talking, as fast and as loud as
possible. . Two immediately behind me;, won my espe
cially delighted attention. They kept up a running fire
of ' mane remarks-i-discussed ' everything ' from Merry
Widow sailors to what they thought of Anna Gould and
De Sagart and only stopped to comment now -and then
on the playing ot the orchestra and to connae mar. u
was ''rotten.1. Perhaps 4t waa. I'm quite willing to ad
mit that it might have been. But to speak from my own
knowledge was , impossible. . And yet I was every bit
as ranch entitled to pass' judgment upon the character
of the i playing as were they. ' . . '
But what do you think we lose by our failure to
listen and to appreciate music?" . . , ,
"We lose our ability to sympathize. ' sympathy, it is
true, is a feminine instinct- largely, but to us who are
following the paths of the secondary' motifs of life it is
indispensable. Does the man who resolutely follows
the. sole aim of acquiring bis desired competence ever
tasta the supreme joys that are to be had from the un
derstanding sympathy with which The Divine Comedy'
is read, the Mona Lisa is viewed or a Chopin nocturne
is heard?
"Dn f nr rosl! mn l!v mnff while I hear the
immolation of Rrunnhilde from 'Die Gotterdammerung' j
than does yonder successful whatever-he-may-be in all
the actual experiences of his life? In those strains I
can hear the sacrificial note of the -ages of centuries
that have gone by and centuries that are to come. I
can listen to a sonata by Johann Brahms and feel my
intellect sparkle in response to the austere intellectuality
of his music-Mhe virtues of limitless worlds are mine.
Let them play Motart'i 'Don Juan' and I am a creature
ot flesh 1 iee tne DJooa oi iucius larquinius in my
veins. The Venusburg music awakens m me loves
that I have riot dreamed of. When I hear Chopin 1
understand Swinburne's:
J'The low flown lean to the sea; the stream, ,
T'VOne lolet thin, pulseless, tremulous vein,
Rapid and- vivid and dumb as a dream,
Works downward, sick of the sun and the rain;
No wind is rough with the rank, raw flowers;
The sweet sea, mother of laws and hours,
Shudders and shimmers as the gray wind gleam,
Turning her smile tQ a fugitive pain.'
"When I listen to some music I feel that my life is
limitless that I can experience all the struggles and
passions and joys and triumphs of the composer him
self. That is because I have sympathy."
The sensible one had been waiting impatiently for
the diatribe to stop. !
"Your reasoning is as bad as your poetry," he said, !
"and. there is as much lefgic in the one as the other.'
It was impossible for Swinburne to string sense to- j
gether he was swept away by a mad desire to sensual '
instead of Intelligent verse. He appeals to the emo-1
tions of surprise rather than the emotions of recogni-,
tion in Henry James' classification of taste in the ap- j
preciation of imaginative literature. It is like one of
Arthur Davies'r impressionistic canvases, all color and ;
Deauty so mat you minx 11 must De teeming wttn great
thoughts. But somehow the thoughts are lost in the
form.
4 Nights tt! April li i ll
BPECIAL-PBICH MATINEE SATURDAY
THE MUSICAL TREAT OF THE SEASON
-naurr J. aadam"
f ' j' 'OFFERS THB BIO MUSXCAI COMEDT-IUCCESS
X
BSirict
Words, 'book and muale by1
Joa, B. Howard
A Rollicking,
Rhymctul, Musical
Play with a . '
Reason
An SYIEKBU or -axAaTxrr
ooimo oxblb
Tiie Song Nlu
iraaa Tea o Oa
. . to Sine
- ' to
Xau-t to Xt
Way Xows is Jtntf
WoV Tou My
CMrlla
Blag ainf Sammy
, aa
ometlUiii' Doing
Aronnd My ImjI
Wait'! tho Cm ot
Pr mln a
lu Old atory
. Borne la Soma
Final
Brxcxix aunrBDAT ataTiaia
yrnxoaa
Lower floor 11.00
Ualnnn ..... 7Bc BOO
00 " O.H.r . tSfl
$10.00 . Boxen 4 $7.60
MAT BAM OFXVS XXT XOVSAT AT tKXATai
Portland'g Famoui Theatre Phones4 Main 0 and A1020 J
l I UHIUI 1 1 PERFORMANCE
166
FLOliP
i a 1 r
TONIGHT
Mm
6 SffiS MONDAlRII? 20
THE BELLE 0P1
sssssxssszzzixznRim
Introducing
ROBERT LETT
Famous Broadway
Comedian
EVININGS 25C, 50c 75c, $1-EIATIrEES 35cf;5Pc75c:
DARrO THEATRE
Om. X Baker, Oea. Mp.
PORTLAND'8 FASHION A CLE POPULAR PRICE PLAYHOUSE
Home of the Baker Theatre Block Company.
Week Commencing Sunday Matinee
. April 19, 1908. Today
The Rollicking Comedy of Modern English Life
The Strange Adven
tures of Miss Brown
One of the Cleanest and Best
Laughing Plays of the Century
LIFE IN A SELECT YOUNG LADIES' SEMINARY
A Comical Collection of Merry Mixups A Pretty Love
Story Another "Charley's Aunt" for Fun and Laughter
Stage Under Direction WILLIAM DILLS
EVENING PRICES, 25c. 35c, 50c. MATINEE, 15c, 25c
MATINEE SATURDAY
NEXT WEEK: SHERLOCK HOLMES
THE STAR IS
phonos
M. 549o
A. U90
HOW
BAXTER:
4 i
Beginning Sunday Matinee. April 19, 1908
THE R. L FRENCH STOCK COMPANY
OFFER THE CELEBRATED COMEDY. DRAMA ,
BUTTDEP 'IN?, -
IN FOUR'ACTS-BY OWEN DAVIS
THIS WILL BE THE FAREWELL PRODUCTION
OF THE FRENCH COMPANY 7 ; V
Matinees Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 2:30
P. M.; Prices 10c and 20c Every Evening at 8:15 V
P. M.; Prices-15c, 25c and 35c
BEGINNING NEXT SUNDAY EVENINO, APRIL 88,'.
The Armstrong Musical Comedy Co.
will open an indefinite engagement at the-Star, their open-
ing production to be "A SCOTH HIGHBALL
WATCH DAILY PAPERS FOR SCALE OF PRICES
"Why can't a man listen to music and enjoy it com
fortably and sensibly? According to your own con
fession, if the mere listening to. a Chopin nocturne or
Tschaikowski's 'Symphony Pathetique' makes you boih
a criminal and a saint in one short afternoon why
shouldn't the police step in and stop the performance?
We went to the symphony and you sinned all the dead
ly sins and came out to take your place with a non
suspecting, Hcney-fearing public once again. And the
same night we went to a boxing match, which I am
sure roused no other feelings except those of interest
and admiration for perfect physical development, and
tne law was invoked to stop the proceedings and turn
us away from our entertainment. Mr. Dicrke and his ;
baton are infinitely more dangerous instruments of evil
fhan Stranglcr Smith and his famous throat hold." ,
Instruments of evil -and of good, replied the pessi- j
mist. ' But all this is beside the point I started out to
make and that , is that there are not enough of the
business men, the substantial citizens of Fortland, who !
are willing to attend an afternoon symphony to war-1
rant their continuance' excepting in the evening. They
will not leave their offices at .1 in the afternoon no
matter what the provocation. There's no such thing
as an entirely leisure class in Portland, and perhaps it
is just as well that there is not. But why must we go
to extremes and why cannot we devote some time to
the secondary issues, at the expense perhaps of an
hour or so from our offices?",
"You're- both mad," declared the night city editor,
scraping his chair remorselessly across the hearth.
And they, followed him down the crazy,' steps and into
the sanity of the night, quite unwilling to. argue his
assertion.
ME HEEALD
WINS NOTICE
Ilackenschmldt'a Press Agent Givea
Lovely Account of Beauty
.of Employer.
Chicago, April 18. The sporting ed
itor waa grouchlly humped over a bum
presa agent cigar.
"Dere'i anodder presa agent what
wants to se yer outside,"' said the copy
boy, '
"Tell him to go to the dickens. If lt'a
the duck that gave me this cigar, show
him In. but if it Is any on else tell
him tn ak'ddoo."
i "Is this the sporting editor?" Inquired
a silvery feminine voice.
' "Oh eh hum, yessum," eagerly said
the sporting editor, scenting a romance
and dromon his cigar, likewise his
grouch. "What' can I do for you,
madam?"
'v - .... al Vawa. . .
' "I am representing Mr. Hacken
chmldL thn world's champion wrest
ler." conceded the charminK damsel
with a grande dame manner. "I have
here a little truthful news about Mr.
Hackenschmidt whicn may or vame
as well as of Interest to your readers
scattered over this large country," she
firocialmed, carefully adjusting a stray
ock of hair wblchhad Just emerged
from the marcel undulation waves.
I should be delighted to publish any
thing you may . have my dear young
'Woman' replied the regenerated S. K.
The following, written on pink pa
per; heavily -scented with ;. something
worth 1 about 95 cents an ounce, waa
handed out This Is what she wrote:---
'Hackenschmidt. the mighty Russian
, Lion, much pampered and petted by the
bluest blooded, ladies of London, gave
- Imitations In Philadelphia on Thursday
nfght of air the ancient statuary that
has ever been exhibited in the art mu
seums of,- the . world. - His audience,
composed mainly of society women and
4the members of Ibsen-i-and- Bernard
Shaw ..clubs, .went Into ecstatic rap
tures over his apollo-like beauty and
fell lhto wondering awe at his Hercu
lean strength. -Could Atlas' shoulders
have been more superb than these? No,
cried the ladles. Could the winged grace
of Mercury coual the afeillty and viril
ity of thisT No, cried the ladies, and so
on from pose to pose amidst the 'oh'
and 'ahs' of delighted femininity, Mr.
Hackenschmidt bowed himself on to the
platform a Russian Hon and bowed him
self out of the building the lion of
Philadelphia lions.
Delightful for Hon. ,
"Mr. Hackenschmidt takes great de
light In exhibitions of this sort, ilus
t rating '.as It does, the classical devel
opment of the body. His development
is not the ordinary conception of a well
trained set of muscles, but his whole
body and every action is a physical ex
pression of an unusually well trained
mind. In Boston, where the art of
Physical culture is carried to Its high
est degree, and' there are nearly 100
training schools where physical cul
ture is taught as an art. Instead of a
pastime, Hacxenscnmidt caused a sen
sation. Physicians, well-known club
women, ana teacnersMsr physical cul.
ture proclaimed him the most superbly
developed man ever seen in that section.
The combination Of skill, strength and
agility astonished the thousand people
who witnessed his exhibition. He picked
up a'Uerman weighing more than 2(0
pounds, and. lifting him from the floor,
threw htm about the ring with the most
apparent ease. "
VESPERS A FAILURE.
University of Michigan Student
Wouldn't Attend Services.
There has been a debate at. the Uni
versity of Michigan over the advlsabll
Ity of resuming vesper service. Prea
Ident Angell gave this . opinion about
tne services after telling about the be
ginning of them: ' ' u .
"The audience were m&e up chiefly
of the ladles from the town, who came
to hear the music. Even the members
of the students' Christian association
took so more Interest than the rest . ,
- ii i.uuo students were to come regu
larly. It would- be worth while to re
sumo the services, hut T rinn't .think thin
would be the case. The Ideas waa all
right, but nobody ever went.' u -
CARUSO SIGNED A
SHYLOCK CONTRACT
P0
Wednesday Cvening-SECOND CONCERT May 6th
RTIAWD SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Soloists
CM AS. DURKE, Conductor
MRS. WALTER REED
HENRY BETTMAN (Violinist)
Soloists
Tickets Now on Sale at Eifcrs and Graves & Co., 50c to $1.50
Wednesday Eve.
HEILIG THEATRE
May 6th
PRINCE OF WALES
SETS NEW FASHION
Womanlcss Dinners Are Given for
Twenty-four Persons by
Royal Host.
Tenor Bound Himself to Pay
Per Cent for 1,823 Performances.
23
Naples, .April 18. The prospective re
turn of Caruso causes a leading musical
critic to tell a story of a "Shylock con
tract," which the tenor unwittingly en
tered into with his old singing master.
The latter, Berglne by name, did not
noia a nign opinion or caruso s voice,
and used to sat that Enrico would never
e2En. more than 400 franca, per month
(180). As Caruso had no means to pay
his master, the latter took him on a
percentage -ine lenor was to pay
him J6 per cent of his earnings during
iu iirsi urn can oi nis stage career.
The master drew ud a contract aim-
posedlv to that effect and Caruso signed
without reading it. A year later he
was engaged Dy tne manager of the
Naples Opera, and like an honest fellow
sent, nis io per cent regularly to Berglne.
Thla little matter ha haDDened tn
tion to his Impresario one day. and the
Naples theatrical man, who knows
Berglne, said: "Let me look at your
- "When the contract was examined It
was found that Berglne had secured
Cameo's signature to a promise of pay
ing him IS per cent of his earnings for
fiveyears of tnglng," that la for Ave
times 166 performances.
- "Accordlna: to this naner then. Rere-ln
has a mortgage on me for life," ex
claimed Caruso. "I am a ruined man."
"Since Berglne - bunkoed you, you
needn't pay him a cent," . said the Im
presario. And Caruso stopped payment
rem that hour on.
Bere-ine went to law. and the tudo-e
decided that the contract eouldn t hold.
In the end Berglne accepted 8,000 francs
In settlement.
Wfiere Happiness Lies. 1
Why will men weep and rail at Fate,
whom they s'er call contrary
For happiness can still be found r
In , Webster's dictionary, , . '
-F. B. Ih Detroit
London, April 17. The Prince of
Wales Is setting "a new fashion In stag
dinners and the idea is not finding fa
vor with- the women ljflk, who consider
themselves neglected by the arrange
ment. But the prince is not at all wor
ried at the attitude of the women, and
he has no difficulty In finding guests
readv to enjoy the privilege of a seat
at his mahogany.
The idea is a 24-cover male dinner.
The prince sits In the center and the
conversation Is general and compare
tivelv unourbed. The catering is ex
iremely well done. The menus are not
n hr-lof bm thnnn at Kin AT Edwards din
ners, but they are shorter than those
of the ordinary banquet. There is plen
ty of champagne of a brand the prince
i particularly rona oi, ana no gener
ullv follows this with claret
After dinner the guests break up into
groups and pass Into tne womaniess
rirawins- room, where they regale each
other with stories and the prince proves
Ma Malm in ha regarded as an animated
anecdotallst. About 11 o'clock whiskies
and sodas are handed round, and then
the- function closes and the guests dis
appear. , 'j
DRUNKS, SICK MEN, TO '
BE LED GENTLY HOME
Harrisburg's Medical Mayor Tells
, Police to Aid All Ail
ing Jags.
Harrlsburg, Pa.. April 18. On the
theory that merely getting fflrunk Is not
a crime.- the new mayor of Harrlsburg,
Dr. Exra 8. Meals, announced today that
"drunks", will be sent home Instead of
beina; locked up. ,
"DrunkmnMn uM he. "Is a disease.
The man who Is intoxicated but not dis-
I 1-. . L 1 , .a ft. I kAm.
require the saloonkeeper at whose place
he got the liquor to take care of him un
til he Is fit to be sent home. ,
"Habitual drunkards, who make nuis
ances of themselves, will of course be
locked up until they're sober, and then
P A N T A G E S
AVsjek of April 30
Fourth and Stark St.
TBS BEST XJT TIOSITILLII.
J. A. JOnrsOsT, Besides aegx.
wssk EHDnft? BTtTBDATi DON FtTLANO. The Black Beauty' of Vaude
ville"; THE3 O'BRIEN TROUPE, WALDRON ' BROTHERS, TOM MAHO
NEY, WINNIFRJED STEWART, JEAN WILSON, THB BIOORAPH.
FOR THE NEW WEEK BEGINNIQ MONDAY
GBXAT erSCTXOUULM XOTXX.TT
The Neillson Aeriel Ballcl
Beautifully Staged Elaborately Produced A Daxxling Spectacle!
A KBOOBB nSATITBJi
LAURRAINE BUCHANAN & TROUPE
IN A BRILLIANT NEW COMEDY SUCCESS.
CONLON AND RIDER
LIVELY COMEDIANS.
THB BIOORAPH
NEW MOTION PICTURES.
THE SOUTHERN BELLES
BANJOISTS.
FRANK n. CLARK
MONOLOGIST AND DRAMATIC
SONQSTER.
JEAN WILSON
ILLUSTRATED BONO.
PANTA0E5 ORCHESTRA
DIRECTION H. K. EVENSON.
Matinees dally at 2:30, 7:30 and 9 p. m. Nights at 7:80 and s o'clock.
Prices: Upstairs. 15c; downstairs, 2Bo; boxes, 60c Any seat at week-day
matinees 15o. , !..-;
LYRIC THEATRE
Corner Seventh and Alder. Both PhonesA-1026; Main 4685.
Commtncins
Monday, April 20
P. R. ALLEN Presents MISS VERNA FELTON and THE ALLEN
STOCK COMPANY in Charles W.: Chaae'g Dramatization of
Marie Corellis Celebrated Novel
Matinees Tuesday, Thursday,. Saturday and Sunday. Pricea H
and 20. Every evening, at 8:30. ? Prices lOf, 20jt and 30 ;f
: NEW MOVING PICTURES BETWEEN THE ACTS NO
LQNO, WAITS. "';,,'
ril take them In hand " - I election, had the hearty support of the
Mayor' Meals, la hi campaign, for J liquor selling element.
TIicGraiffl
tzltWe it luxe ,
ITeek Ceslssba "
EIOHDAY. APRIlt 29, 1SS9,
A WONDERFUL .
VAUDEVILIE PROGRAMME
Headed by ttii Wen-Known .
Eaatem Stars, ' '
Halleo & Fuller Co.
Presenting - 1 ,
Geo. M. Cohan's Great Comedy,
"ELECTION BETS"
tnOAJs JLBSBS ATTBACTXOir '
MR. LEO COOPER
AKD COMPANY
Presenting ,
worn or vo-vrsm"
TWO ROSES
High-Class Musical Offering;
ffESSOU, WALTERS :
& WESSON .
OOMXST XITOH ABTXSTt 1
ao. m, niouio
WHITMAN & DAVIS
a -km smnuB qmxx '
A Pretean Comedy . fiketch ot
Varied Novelty and Interest
NAOMI ETHARDO
European EauillbrisL
FRED BAUER
Tha Popular Illustrated BaTladlst
Tm Araid to Come Home in
-,the Dara." . -
F. F. MONTRESSA
Tha Dean of the t. A. T. 8. I
uperiiom win mninii
Tha Latest Motion J'lctures
NEXT VVnGIC .
TheGreatlfenriFrcr.:!
Mimic Actor and Impersona t .-.
TX3CB
AST . EIC1
kiaxar Tsa ba;
t o r.: