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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL'. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, ! JUNE 7, 1803. t I HEILIG THEATRE. 1 6e rn A n rr p thsi?::i: : Friday ILvening, June; 12th PORTLAND'S FASHIONABLE POPULAR PRICE PLAYHOU3X , -mm xoxm 0f tha Zaeompaxable Baker Stock Comsay. ,1HE three-act comedy i .our boy; 99 la. Week Ccnneoclng Sca2ay llstlste, Jzzs 7, 12SS, Iclzy Z mm fD9 ART : -. ; Preceded by the Trial Scena From i : t if J ; , f 4 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fltzslmmons,. at the Marquam Grand All This Week How the True Woman Will Rise "Older than th .'oldest : book; older than the oldest recorded j memory 01 man. On the rpqks of "language, on tne hard-baked day of ancient customs, now crumbling to decay,are found the marks of womtn'i , footsteps. Side by aide with him who stands by, her you may trace them and you may know : Ih.l aha whn Una hMlllll him. BBW B10 tlonless, with her neck stretched out In ma sand, bound to mm oy m -vf table band of necessity. . once wan dered rree over me rocne wn "'"';, t,.i have-in the first of "Tliif three- Dreams of the Desert." in Olive Bhrlner's beautiful allegorical tale tf the emancipation or woman irom n age of muscular force, an Illustration of the first of three Important periods In thevolutlon or woman, ommmnv in t,a nawhnlnelral relation to man, n-,t man nH woman be can life on an equal basis, science and the most ancient history prove also that - the pendulum In woman's evolution sonie- times swings away out beyond the high est reaches In the natural course of human progress, with the result that the baotcwara sweep Bomi"u very low, carrying down, as it Always . 1 1 1 wtnia human Tarn 11 v wit n ner. The earliest recorded history of Rome tells us that woman was nox only enthroned near the hearth, but that she shared with her husband in the administration of things, with the result that she became very tyrannical and delighted In the homage which she compelled men to renoer r. im m. n.,Hit Ufa- thare was " no seclusion. nothing snored to the home and fam 1 ily life. She otherwise exercised her freedom in leading in all sorts of eo- rial activities ana niriTnnncri. that, notwithstanding the previous ster ling elements of character . and pro gressive spirit of old Rome, with all her splendor and glory. f " D cause - of the " decadence 'of her home end fnrollv life, the enerdvatlng influ ence of which struck at tha very heart of the empire. " . ' , ' Our moral standard as a people is measured by the quality of our homes, therefore the hope of the world is de pendent upon the preservation of the borne with all Its sanctifying influences, -but-4hls -cannot be iad without the mothers maintain their distinctive quaU Itles of true womanliness. - Naturally enough, most women would bring sweet and tender influences from the quiet seclusion of the home which would elear up the moral atmosphere or pub' lie life in a degree, but what of its in finance unon her? It the men we send out from the homes are not brave and strong enough to stem the tide of debasing Influence that abound In the political arena 'what could be expected of us? woman s piace is oisiincny in mo subtle power her love, she a very old truism, so old that.it has become true again. All womankind Is feeling the loss of ' this power in a reflex if not a direct. way tnrougn a general iaca ox me ae - customed chivalry and deference on the part of men, which is -the outcome of the tendency of women to enoroach upon the rightful places : of men In the public domain in all too many cases In rude and coarse ways. We cannot hope to maintain the 're spect and good will of men unless we pay due regard to their rights In a self- ' respecting manner. Nothing has so cheapened women in the estimation of men as this clamor for political rights and the rage for usurping man's place In the business and industrial world, which also, it is claimed, has doubled : inebriety and fostered crime five times as fast as the population has grown. Who can foretell the chanae likelv to be wrought In a tender sensitive, ef feminate natural wnat or tne ."moral dignity, fine sentiment and 'self re spect as the result of her Inevitable contact with the coarser elements of the human race, also Its Influence upon posterity? '. The highest ambition of the ancient Greeks was to contribute worthy clt Isene to their national greatness which could only be accomplished through a nrooer regard for the far reaching law of prenatal Influence and heredity. They understood tnat tne giory or tneir na tion was dependent upon true mother hood, and that onlv in the sacred pre cincts of the home could (the prospective mother be protected. . ; America, in . the divine economy - of Cod's plnn. Is the promised land from whose soil will come .the new race, marking another period In the march of the human family toward perfection. Yet, this cannot be accomplished until woman has burst the last Band which Is the bondage of her own slave-ridden rornd. In the second of the three dreams "fe find her still lying on the ground wlth her neck stretched out. butvthe bands are burst, the burdens of her mis takes and follies have roiled away and, although her eves are open yet she does not see that she is free end could rise If she would,' Man, patient and faithful, still stands by her though, with averted eye. At last the body begins to quiver home and her main, strength lies in that subtle power with wntcn, y comrort os her love, sne rules over men. xnis is and evidence of struggle appears. Her companion was asked why he did not help her, he answered: . "I cannot.- she must help herself. Bhe must struggle until she is strong." , This, the second period : in 1 woman S unfoldment also Illustrates the true at titude -of man toward the aspirant for nolltical suffrage of today. Ever a true guardian of her highest and best Inter eats, with keen and far-reaching dis cernment, he" still stands faithfully by, though misunderstood because ne rore sees remoter Issues which reveal lurk liia- avild hahlnd this annarent aood. Bo, with a heart full of love and hope he waits, knowing that she will soon rise to her full ststure and take her place by htm where heaven Itself had put her until now though she does not know for she Is asleep on the very threshold of rreeaom. v The third and last of the "Three Dreams of the Desert" represents the wise and fully emancipated woman of today, and tne ruiitilment or man s highest ideal of true womanhood. Hap py , ln the consciousness of her God given rights and-strength, she realises "what a glorious thing it is to be a woman wnat' a powerful think. To be weak and overcome the strong, to be nothing in the battle of life, and yet overcome tne woria. : - Fortunate Indeed Is the woman who realises this, for the truth has made her free. ' To , her earth is crammed with heaven' and every common bush is a lire witn Ood power and glory. V- y MR8.iM.-E. SHAFFORD. "M)ESCEND FROM KING DAyiD." SAYS EMPEROE Berlin,'; June . An enemy of Prince Henckel von Donnersmarck sought to provoke a scandal by proving that he Almanach de Gotha's statements as to the Henckels noble descent . are erron eous, and that as a matter of fact, his oldest known ancestor' was a 'Jewish merchant, who received an - authorised title for money . lent to an Austrian arch duke. - The kaiser only smiled when the mat ter waa reported to mm. . - "Why," he said, "the Prussian Herald office knew all about that when I raised Henckel to the princely dignity. Why snouian i tne aescenaant oi a Jew be made a prince? I am descended from King David and so Is my uncle of Kng land. And neither of us la ashamed of the fact. That Henckel is not ashamed of his descent be has proved by nam ing his eldest son Lasarus." - . As a matter of fact, one Lasarus HencKel, a Vienna money,, broker, ac quired the title of count from Arch Duke Ferdinand Charles, Prlne of Tyrol, In the latter part of the seventeenth century, the arch duke thereby liquidat ing nis inaeDieaness to Laisarus, as ex pressly stated In the" decree of nobility. That that decree was -not worth the paper it was written on Iasarus learned when he submitted his patent nobility to the Vienna Herald office. However, to nrevent a scandal tha . Auntrinn am. peror finally consented to issue another in iasarua ravor. ana ever since tho Henckels have been -' reoocnlzed as counts Of Austria. :. Ouldo Henckel . von 'Donnersmarck was subsequently created prince by Wil liam. He Is the richest land owner In Prussia and a. financial genius. His counsel In matters of finances la 'offi cially sought by the German secretary of the treasury, by the leading Banking Institutions of the Fatherland anq by most of his arlstocratlo friends. . Tne prince married two- commoners Los Angeles vs. Portland SECBEATZOV lAJtr, COX. ' TATTOHS aUTO ; S4TK BT8. " ran s, a. 4. a, , t. Games begin - week days at 1:80 p. m., Sunday, I:S0 p. m. Artmlaalnn 1 m m.,.t,..a ---' - a. children, bleachers, 10c; grandstand, 26a. . ItABTES' DAT niSiT. ': - Rnvs ' under -: 11 fraa ' Klti.u Wednesday. .-,f..'i .' . NICKELODION In ' succession. His first wife was Therese Lachmann, of whom he had no issue. The present princess Is the di vorced wife of a Russian named Moura- VieW..'.,,4, " . slender; WOMAN IS DECREE OF FASHION London, June 6. Fashionable women who have any superfluous flesh must get rid of It by rigorous training. Buch is the decree that accompanies the sheath-like directolre fashions that re cently made such a stir in Paris and have already crossed the English chan nel. - Embonpoint In a directolre gown Is unthinkable, so women must reduce themselves to fit the ' gowns if they wish to .follow the mode. Massage, vapor baths and all the nos trums for reducing flesh are being called into olav. Including the new American system known as osteopathy bone maniouianng. xnis anu-iai re gime Is aided by special patterns of cor sets cut extremely long over the, hips, n which region there are three sets of lacings. A new woven material which tuoiu itself to the body like a akin Is also used for underclothing.- - ? x 'The ""Sargent neck" is a by-product of the present erase for slimness. To be fashionable one must have a neck a la ariraffe. or as in some nort raits by J oh n S. Bar gemt.- R; A,- - The -s wen-1 Ike effect Is heightened by the "Toby" col lar, 'pushed up under .the .ears and nursing the chin. In sleeves the length "motif" is carried out in long, tight sleeves that come well down over the wrist and nearly reach the fingers. I The Merchant of Venice : Presented by the Students' of Pacific Univenity Under tha Direction , 2 1 ' , of PROF.' P. WESLEY ORR., k The ptay is' a modern English comedy, gnd when first presented :,y in Londan ran 1,500 nights without a break. 'The characters . are 0 ' striking and distinct,' and the dialogue' fairly bristles with mirth- '. J.proroking witticisms. - It "is a high-lass comedy and one ; that all J t will enjoy. t-.-f -i f - : .: I ''-'Many of the students who :-were ao successful, in "The Bridge of ,1 . Jsa a. r L . . I a. . i , - ' ..- . xne voqi last year win. appear on inn mgnt. . : V't.V., y- ' " - . ; .:prices" , . Sry . ' Entire- Lower Floor ..... ... .... , . . , I . . . . . X ...... . , . . . t l-OO .- First four rows in Balcony,., ....... ..75 , Last ten rows in Balcony.... 0 Gallery ....... 2Sf Seats Reserved at Box Office, Wednesday, June 10 : . LAUGH' SEE THE Knights of ColumbusJI IN THE THREE-ACT COMEDY DRAMA 1TI t oily Myl'of f I TOMORROW NIGHT I AT THE HEIUIO ' PRICES ?1.00, 75 AND 50 Heilig Theatre fourteenth and Washington Bts. Phones Main .1 and A-112. ' . Tonight 8:15 . tew Doclcstader And his ; BIG MINSTRELS Prices EOc, 7 So. $1.00. 11.50. Seat sale at theatre. ; Monster Gymnastic Drill 4,600 School Children Under direction of INSTRUCTOR ROBERT KROHN, assisted by princl i f " . - ' pala and teachers. MULTNOMAH FIELD TtTISDAT, ZT3TTB VOX, t&O T. 1C. j , ' TnXJO BXKBAMAXi KOBTDAT, SJm 8th. 3:15 P. ML , AOmlsslott 88o s School Children XSo. Keserred Sets BSo Xixtra, Seats on sale at Sherman, Clay A Co., 8th and Morrison sts.- This drill Is given for the benefit of the Grammar School Athletlo I League, lyric 130 SUtH Street. Prografn Changed Every Day axxtGOOs rmaiCTB. , KEATING A F1000, Prtpt. Cor., rth and Alder Sta. 4688 ,r a loaa Week commencing Monday,' June 8, second week of the engagement of the famous Bhinkall-Atwood Stock Company in William Gillette's - , stirring drama of the Civil War - I " HELD BYsTHE W&N f e he "e popular-price Stock Company in America in a great bill. Matinees Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday; Prices, 10c and 20c. , . v, Every; evening at 8:30; Prices- 10c, 20c and 30c' NTTVT WTTT?Vi "TtTTT" r-.r-XTTTT l-nr .n a Kvnii ft t n . THE GRA-NiD VaudevlII do Luxe Week Beginning Monday June 8,' 1908 A BmiCIKT TAVSXT1XU uu KXASJTD BT The Hoted Xastem Stars GLEES0NS AND HOULIHAN ; Fotpourl of Bong and Janoe Witt - Soma Bright Oomadr. : vs.-v-' ; BFSOXAXi AS9S9 ATTBAOTZOV MISS FRANKLYN GALE AND COMPANY : : Pieeeattag Drama tie Retefc, j ' Xatlttod,' "The Seamstress" . ' . i, i Frank E. Tho.J. McNISH and TENFOLD Comedy Singing. Talking and ' :-. Panctng Act ' LEON and ADELINE ldy Juggler and kouse Wrecker. GEORGIE O'RAMEY . Singing Comedienne. - SHEEHAN & MONOIIAN Norelty Musical and Sin fine Act -.' - s' : .- - - '-!.'.. ' LI II l' "l II I I -' j I I I I FRED 0. BAUER Portland's Popular Balladlst. Rea , : " derlng the Latest .Success. " "v F. f. MONTRESSA The'l. A. T. 8. E. Epert.'Exhlblt . Ing the Latest Thing In Animated . ,.. . -. pjctares. -f - TIME AND PRICES REMAIN THE SAMS .' 111. f r. . ' BY CLYDE FITCH -: . Author of "The Climbers," ."The Girl With the Green Eyes," ' "The' Cowboy andthe Lady," and forty-seven other great American successes.-' ' . ' ' 1 ' - ' ' ' , A CHARMING STORY OP VILLAGE LIFE IN NEW "'-' ' ENGLAND.,,' -' A scenic triumoh throbbinc with heart interest. . " Bubbling with comedy and abounding in character studies. ""LETS WALK DOWN LOVERS LANE TOGETHER." J "V::v"'-- - : - y Every evening, 25c, 35c, 50c Matinee Saturday, 15c, 25c. Z NEXT WEEK Howard Russell's Play "THE SWINDLER" THE STA Portland.' Homm of Mat leal Comody ' , TWO SKdWB BTBBT BTBVnrQ rtrM at 730, ! second at il5 p. n. PRICES Entire lower floor J6o. Balcony and gallery 16 e. , ' MATINEES DAILT at 1:80 p. m.t 16c, except boxes. J ' J Week Beginning Sunday Matinee, June 7, 1908 THL ARMSTRONG, JIIJSICAL COMEDY COMPANY : Present - X THE FUNNIEST. OF MUSICAL FARCES, ENTITLED 9 I BROWN aV VACATION 1 IN THREE SCENES EVERYTHING ENTIRELY NEW DON'T FORGET . THE TIME SO A. IS. toU 18 1. M. i) , ' TBBBS! H r t v I Swings, Playhouses, Picnic Tables, Sheltered . Lnnch Placet for . Children and Ladies and .Recreation Parties DANCING Band 10 Pieces TOSAT AT t0 - Herr Lind The Tlolla Tlrtnoso Dlreotos With Mim SKATING LESSONS FREE in a I a f I a f X i r t i V Symphony Orchestra of "White and Gold SOMETHING ORIGINAL SOMETHING NEW-4 SOLOISTS f Jpree, Comfortable beats for Z.500 People in the New Airdome. i Toniflht and Sunday Mnhf, 8:30 1 "TAKEY. MIKEY AND IKEY; the lanirhinr Wehh-V.TrUM . musical farce, with Allen Curtis, Chas. Figg, Marguerite La Ponte, J Winnifred Green and a big cast of singing and dancing beauties. i Scenic Mill Figure Eight New Chutes jTotfclnff Imt wholesome, rs lined en tertainment in , Park Monday nlffht 99 OIRL, THE TICICLER The Oreat ' Laugh Maker Visit the Baby Incubator and see the babies. Wanda, the Seeress. Hi-Kl and his' Zulus. The Centodeon with a world of novelties. Giggle House. Electric Baseball - Roley-Poley. Snake Show. , . , , y- - ' 15 Minutes from Alder Gtrcct v-m ; MARQUAM THEATRE NEW WEEK'S DILL! DIQ PEATl!Dn BEST IX VAUDEVILLE J. J. JOHNSON, Rmttdont Mzr. Presntln& PANTAQES AUractions 'WTTXTOVt EKDIWOi Oothan Comedy Tonrj the Three Jarrllns rn. ;lJ?ow1httt, "S W BerVLiilSS i" For the NewlWeek, Cbmmencins Monday ROBERT FITZSIMtlONS I , v . - Oretest of Americas, rifhterm. j With .MRS.-FIT7SmMf.S in n Hrinel nr-m-f?r C I - " - ssMwii-ii'tvt kr Sta Ma - W "i Ku'i . Ku Tor i' The.." Fits Glres-Ills Celebrated Baf-Puachln Exhibition During the At, BAVITeTT BIOS. AXTD MISS , STLVXA World's Greatest Knockabout Comedy Act. . TZKOZS ABTO BUHIA!"- 'The News. Girt.-. , fZAM inUJOW Illustrated Bon-. Huubrette, 1a te Ot Hui g in,,) Company. " CSXSX SSOWIT IixT-'-rmmit tur., Matinees every afternoon st 2:S9 o-clock M?hf ' ' ' in prices Iownstlrand first el rows of tsrsti rlr-i. ' upstairs. 16c . Boxes, tic Any seat k wkoay !"-'" '' '