Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1915)
v- . i THE OREGON SUNpAY JOURNAL, -PORTLAND, - SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY 10. 1915. ytageland OEPTKMBEU MORN" will hot J D forth at the Helllg tbls week. In this case "September Morn" la a musi cal comedy with a company of 60 that Include a tango chorus. The piece is a. Rowland and I Clifford production from the Chicago Opera houae. "Sep tember Morn," about the flrat musical comedy of the season, will remain at the HelUg all week with Wednesday and Saturday matinees. From the moral preachment of "The1 Blindness of Virtue" the Baker play era will Jump to a rousing;, comedy, -Officer ." Austin MacHugb's farce of -cops'? and burglars. The story is woven around a. young burglar of un limited nerve who establishes himself in the bachelor apartments of a rich globe trotter and even becomes en- ' gaged to a young society girl under the name of the millionaire. The piece is being presented for the first time In 'stock-and offers no end of splendid comedy situations for the Baker play ers, who have proved themselves to be comedians of no mean ability.. At the Lyric "Hunnlng for Office" . Is the new Keating A Flood' musical comedy Jtiat features Al Franks as Tlmothy -O'Brlen. Tuesday night 4s amateur night at the Lyric and Friday evening the. chorus girls hold their regular contest AH children under 10 - years of age are admitted free at the Lyric when they are accompanieed by an adult. " ..-.- . . -.. 'THK small and intimate playhouse ' X is no more in line with develop ments of the drama .today - than the , huge auditorium,"- says' an editorial in , Colliers. "The younger - generation hardly realises how much progress ' there has been in theatre architecture. - The old demand for seats In the 'cen ter , is, less heard at the box office nowadays. I It has been found that a fan-shaped arrangement of seats -is . better than the old horseshoe audito rium, even if it does not hold so many. Another step forward .cama with the banishment of view obstructing posts. Now that galleries are built on the cantilever system, no posts are needed. This means less to the matinee girl ' than to j her father and mother, who ' can remember the days when they were as likely sm not to be behind a post. 'Then, to follow doings oa the stage, you had to wag your -head back and forth like i a living metronome. In surroundings ana in mechanjpal aids to . the . imagination the theatre goer never fared better than today, Drama Is all jthat Is tieeded' 1 ;. . !i 1 J-'-r .. " ! ..! QPND ;your money while you've ' H got It," muttered the pessimist : .when told that James K. llackett nad cutne into Another fortune. This latest one amounts to 1197,858 and is in addition to the $1,600,000 which he recently, received from the estate of "his aunt, Mrs. Minnie llackett Trow bridge, who did not like her nephew. Mrs. Trowbridge was the ' sole benefi ciary of her husband and as she passed' away shortly after! his demise, ' his estate reverts to Mr. Hackett, the , next of aim .M BILLIE BpRKK who always has an animal pet of some kind, usually a dog, has transferred her affections to a monkey; Chiqalta,-wh comes -from - tbe.Ilagenbetik animal gardens at Ham. burg. A year ago last- summer, Miss Burke passed through Hamburg on her way to Carlsbad and paid a visit to the gardens; The superintendent was Very attentive to her, and when she said she'd like to have a monkey he aald-he'd see what - he -could do. .A '' Week later the expressman left a cage with Chiqalta. But Chiqulta no longer travels with her .mistress, imu li . : "V. .'. .' - Sne s too much trouble' the actress told some one -who inquired about her I 11Z71; --""i"' "ie;aeepers . vwjmui l lir.M DUO UKBS)40 OumD Up andldbWn the. window cijrtalna, espe cially lace -ones,; and really .saeMtlmes they Ure aatt worth : much; ag curtains after she had made two er three trips on thenv- JS I've left her at home to fight with the dogs." Miss Burke used to have two little white Pomeranians which she carried everyfhere with her. They are super annuated now and live ai life of ease in the big garage at Burkeley Crest, Miss Burke's place on (the Hudson, along wltbj a couple of other little dogs. r T TNCLEj RUBE" is the title of the - J play ! chosen by the Portland Amateur Dramatic club as the offering to be given this winter. It is a rural drama .written, by Charles Townsend, a well known writer of amateur plays. Rehearsals! are progressing under the . direction of the president, Herbert Pippy. Fern Schmalzei nd niann. Lewis will) be presented In the leading roles. Others in the cast are Florence jiiu,. aipn wood; Johnl Lee, Helen Ptppy, Herbert Pippy, Loyal Blinco and Clarence Wood. The date of the play's vxnuwuvn naa not . yet been set. THE laat of December was actually subscr: a large sum bed for the erection in New York city of the Toy tueaire ior cniiaren. unei building will be erected tn Forty-seventh street Just . west of Fifth avenue. ( The theatre will, be in Tudor style of architecture and will have a seating capacity of 600V The cost is to be about $200,000. The theatre is not to be educational In any sense of the word. I In the after noons plays will be grven for young children. Most of them will be fairy Plays or plays of folk lbre or myth- ' oiogy. I r ..' ' . SELWYN and compan have made arrangements to present Irvin S. Cobb, star newspaper waiter, man of the world, humorist and author, on a lec ture tour throughout the! country. His subject will be his recent experiences In the war sons, where Mr. Cobb hur ried soon sifter hostilities began. He will deliver hut first talk in the ball room of the Waldorf -Astoria, New York, for the benefit of the European war relief 'fund of the American Red Cross. His lectu re will I extend to all the principal citiea oif the United States. . - . r CHRISTMAS is becoming a time of many anniversaries at Sir John- wu . urMw-nuuMiioB i, nt nas re cently received word of the birth . fourth daughter who made her advent on last vnnsimas nay at his London nome. - i-ay. . if oroes-Robertson is known oa the stage as Gertrude Elli ott, . who was -seen the i last tim n Pqrtland as Glad in "The Dawn of a Tomorrow." Sir Johnston has been quoted as saying that the happiest Christmas of his life was 14 years ago when he spent -his honeymoon at Biar- ritsj m the pyrinees with his bride, mm x oroes-KODertsons were marriA December. 23,100, and went at' once xo spam. ; . N . A DOZEN pounds or duck feathers have been ordered for use In the second act of Marie Dresslers latest starring ventele, The Mix-Up," now running n New Yor During the fi nals of one scene. Evelyn Vaus-han. in a burst of temper, tears and rips half a dosen sofa pillows to ' pieces and caiiers tneir contents, XRS. JEAN SNOWDEN LUTHER, , or ew xoric, Decame the bride of Burr Mcintosh, actor, author, publish- -r .pnowgrapner.ana. lecturer, on NOTED FRENCH DRAMATIST A . T-c, . If i i 0 : n Eugene Eugeie- Brleux, the French play wright,' who is now in America as the official representative of the French Academy, to the sixth annual meeting of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, has strongly defined views of tho-duty of those who make use of the drama as their means of expres sion, according to ayrecent interview in the Christian Science Monitor. "To me there is little essential dif ference between the church " and the drama when It ' comes to matters of preachment," said JH. Brieux to a writer for the Monitor. "In the be ginning they were one and the same institution. Both the Greeks and the Egyptian's used the play as an expres sion for the advancement of ethical ideals, and as late as the fifteenth century In France the miracle play was almost a common form of re ligious didacticism. "I naturally do not attempt to con fute dogma or doctrine or even secta rianism with the stage when I say this, for with varying conceptions of primal fact I cannot deal.. In the broad sense the stage should, and I think when ' properly used, does add greatly to the betterment of the whole people. Playwrights -have a duty to society as well a -do..others of , ca pacity who use great world weapons to see that they use their weapon well. ! " Xne work Wl linwc .mra ,.3- Ik. ii..ario. with it resnnnsibil- "The work of those who write ne- lty- To a rreat extent the author Is entrusts entrusted, unofficially, of course, with a vast Dart of the education or nu manity, and he needs, therefore. to Post Mortems Over Opera Now in Order I" allure of Century Company la Chi cago Brings Comment on Subject Trom Former Xmpressario. New York, Jan. 9. Post mortems over the failure of the Century Opera company are now In order. The clos ing of the company in Chicago last Saturday occasioned no great amount of surprise, although many felt re gretful to think that music of a high Standard of excellence should be such a decided frost In this country both In New York and in Chicago. Oscar Hammerstein, who knows as much as anyone else in this country about the situation, thinks that the fault lies" in the inability of the Cen, tury Opera company to give any bet ter than a $2 show for $2. People want philanthropy when they go to the opera, Hammerstein declares, iand a $2 opera is not real philanthropy. To quote, the cynical Oscar: "As I have often said, grand opera Is not a business, afld never was. At the Manhattan I gave $10 opera for $6; the Metropolitan gives its patrons J10 opera for J6 and the public goes. And for $2 you must give 4 to tl opera to persuade your patrons you are doing something for their benefit. That is real philanthropy. The public In this ' city Is too much educated In music and you cannot fool them. . The former Impresario has another theory which fla more plausible, per haps than the' foregoing one. He be lieves that the public, is prejudiced against translated opera and that the opera-goer has an Indefinable feeling that the vernacular is inferior to the original work. On the other hand, the public is willing to patronize Ameri can opera. It s a queer riddle. . French People Are Natural Born Actors They Xave Voses and Motions Hot round Among Other nationalities ., Except on Stage. v, "The French are born actors, from the first to the last; they have from early childhood poses and motions that are not to be found Outside of France, except on the stage," is the assertion of Max Nordau. "Their bearing is the atrical, their language declamation, their whole manner recalling scenery and footlights and precisely, the French produce fewer great tragedians than -any other nation in the world. They are rich in talents for social drama and the comedy; they have the good fortune of seeing a - Got and a Coquelin, a St. Germain and a Dleu donne, a Geoffroy, Hyacinthe, l'Heri tier.V Lassaache, act on the stage contemporaneously, but they -produce no tragical talents or the first order, geniuses who could bear comparison with a Devrtent, a Dawlson. a Kean, Booth, Irving, Rossi or SalvinL" - Christmas night. Mr. Mcintosh was ins original . xarry in "Trilby." pro duced in 1895. Since then he has been a war I correspondent, written several plays and traveled and lectured. NOW VISITING AMERICA Brleux. look well to what he does and how he does it. "I can conceive that the drama may play even a greater part in the spirit- uau aeveiopmem ox mamuna man ao i many of the accepted channels through I which such instruction may be sup-1 posed to proceed, and It seems to me I that a well constructed plan having I a high -ethical purpose Is noti lnrre-1 quently likely to leave a more lasting impression upon the mind than does a J preachment from what is allowed to i De a more autnoritaave source. I PhAtnflPTsinh from TliPa tr Maffiizlnis 1 1 At the conclusion of his New Torklliams; Mile. Maryon Vadie and com engagement Brleux will tour this 1 country, visiting, and possibly ad- I dressing, the greater universities. All I of the Brleux plays have been written I with a purpose. "Blanchette, pro-1 duced 22 years ago, showed what might happen, when a girl of the working classes drinks a sip or two from the Pierian spring. "Monsieur de Reboval" unmasks hypocrisy; '.'L'Engrenage" shows the corruption of politicians; "L'Evasion" assails the doctrine of heredity; "La Robe Rouge- Is an exposition of how justice may err; "Les Remplacantes" shows forth the evils of a French institution, the putting out to nurse of very young children; "Le Resuttat de Courses' at tacks gambling, and "Les Avarles" ("Damaged Goods") deals plainly with dubious physical conditnon and mar- rlage. "Maternity". Is the latest of the Brleux plays,- which Is even now being given very quietly to the public in New York. Broadway Play Has Premier in Prison W. A. Brady Produced "Sinners" at Slug; Sing on Christmas Day Event Considered Without Precedent. Christmas day was probably the first time in history that the premier of a Broadway play was given in prison. On that day William A. Brady gave the first performance of his new pro duction, "Sinners," at Sing Sing. Among those In the cast were Alice Brady, Irene Komame, jean Aaair, uer trude Dallas, John Cromwell and Al bert Brown, CHIT-CHAT James Forbes new comedy, presentee New Year's eve In New York, with an all American cast, has for its title, "The Show Shop." David Warf ield played to more than $27,000 during his 10 days' engagement In Los Angeles. - - Owing to the illness of Henry Wood ruff tils part will be played in the film version of "The Country Boy' by Wallace Eddinger. Arrangements are being made by Keith's Palace theatre, in New York, for its own taxlcab service to and irom tne theatre at a rate 60 per cent lower than the present tariff. "On Desert Sands" Is a. two ? reel Universal subject,- the. first to be di rected and played In : under the "Big U" banner by Sydney Ayrea. - , , Wilton Lackaye has opened in a new vaudeville playet. "The Bomb." Mr. LacXaye plays the part of. an Italian laborer. "Sis Hopkins" is out again and Rose Melville is repeating her earlier suc cesses In the part that has made her independently wealthy. : . ..- ; '" . Word has been received of the death of "Rube" (Walter) Dickinson, famous In vaudeville for "The Country Judge.' He passed away in Kansas City, where he was struck by a falling scaffolding as he was passing a building in course of construction. Vaudeville Is soon to have an elab orate act in which Harry Fox will ap pear with the Dolly twins. - Joe Welch,' the Hebrew comedian. Is now being presented, in a Six reel film feature by Hal Reed, "Tims lock Num ber 776." , e .-v. Andrew Mack Is to make a tour Of Marcus Loew's vaudeville houses. ."When., the Angelus Is Ringing" is the name of a new play as well as the title of a recent song hit. Lloyd Lonergan," - who wrote-phe Million Dollar Mystery" into film ver sion, has resigned as producing mana ger of the Thaahouser to write fea tures for the UnlversaL. Dry cell fed incandescent - lamps feature a recently invented spirit level for use in dark places. - .i- - CALENDAR OF THIS WEEK'S ATTRACTIONS : IIKILIG Broadway at Tay lor. 'September Morn, music-, al comedy for the week begin ning tonight, with Wednesday and Saturday matinees. , - - . BAKER Broadway and Sixth. Baker players In "Of- . fleer 666." LTRIC Fourth at Stark. Keating & Flood Musical - com-; edy company In "Running for Office." ORPHEUM Broadway - a t Stark. . Vaudeville. Feature, Mercedes and Mile. Stanhope. PANT AGES Broadway at Alder. Vaudeville. Feature, American Whirlwind Beauties. LOKWS EMPRESS Broad way at TamhllL Vaudeville, Feature, James Grady in "The Tall Bridge." PEOPLE'S West Park at Alder, . Motion pictures. COLUMBIA Sixth between Washington -and Stark. Motion pictures. - NATIONAL Park and Stark. Motion pictures. STAR Washington at Park. Motion pictures. SUNSET Washington at Broadway. - Motion pictures. MAJESTIC Washington and Park, i Motion pictures. .? . CIRCLE Fourth at , Wash ington. Motion pictures. - Attractions of the past week: ' HEILIG May s Robson- in Martha-by-the-Day." .Barnum.v Le . Roy, Talma and Bosco, magic.- v. ,-..,...,.. BAKER "The Blindness of Virtue." - . ... -. LYRIC "The Girl and tha Photo." ' r ORPHEUM Vaudeville. LOEWS EMPRESS Vaude ville. PANT AGES Vaudeville. PEOPLE'S, MAJESTIC, CO LUMBIA, STAR, CIRCLE, SUNSET, NATIONAL Motion pictures. ' ' ; IN VAUDEVILLE HE MUSICAL ENIGMA," pre sen.ted by Mercedes and Mile. Stanhope, la the' headline feature at act Is an exposition of mental telep- atny carried on by members of the au dience whispering the names of mus leal selections to Mercedes, the selec- tions then being played by Mile. Stan hope. Of greater Importance is the lirst vaudeville appearance or Aiaa lame Jeanne Jomelll, soprano of the Metropolitan Grand Opera company, un tne supporting mn are Kate Elinor, me ismiKen woman, ana earn wii pany of dancing girls; Schwartx Broth- es. In "The Broken Mirror": George Austin Moore and Cordelia Haager, songs and dances; Soltl Duo, acrobatic dances. At Loew's . Empress, James Grady and company in "The Toll Bridge," by Jimmy Barry, will be the headline feature. Other acts on the bill are the Ward sisters, presenting the doll of vaudeville in an act defying the laws of gravity; Russel's minstrel comedians, - five comedians, singers and dancers; Lacey Sampson and Ma bel Douglas, nonsense oddity; El CI eve. Scot xylophonlst; Les Casados, Spanish acrobats. Pantages will - top its bill wltn the Eleven Whirlwind Beauties . in a spec- taciUar vsinglng revue, -with . acrobatic dancing! Besides the beauties the bill will offer Cora Sampson and company in a comedy playlet, "We Want Our Riehts": O'Neil and Walmsley, two lightening bugs; .Madame Rel and Big. Ballingeri, in operatic duets. Nazimova Tells ; Her Ideal Woman Affectation of XaseoUas Traits and Masculine Attire Declared to Have Nothing to Do With Intelligence. "My Ideal type of woman Is one who combines a masculine brain with the feminine charm," confesses Nazimova. "I see a great many women who af fect certain masculine traits, who wear high boots and queer mannish looking hats, but such things have nothing to do with the development of intelli gence. They, are all wrong. "Baroness Bertba von Sutner, to me. Is ideal. She was the winner of the Noble prise, you remember, and wrote TUay Down, Your Arms.' when she first appeared in society it was her great physical beauty which first im pressed people; then her charm, ber brain, her high and unfaltering pur pose made her one of the most fasci nating women of her time. Age does not exist for such a woman. No one thinks about it." Nazimova will not' use at presnt the Catherine Chisholm Cusing sketch. Instead, she will appear' late this month in a timely war piece drama tized from a story that will appear in the February Century magazine. Nazi mova can not play the sketch until the magazine has been put on sale. ' - Broadway at Stark V Week Conimencing Sunday Matinee. Jan. 10 i TBS FSTCH1C Accompanied ty the BUVralorui . Mystlo LULL STANTONE Xa ..- r" " The ' Ilorical- EmgmaT9 MARYON . VADIE IEGEDES ELBaORE & WILUAIiIS SCHWARZ BROS. i:0OIlE&HM(H SALTI DUO DID YOU IMAGINE MAY ROBSON A GRANDMOTHER? 1 , ' - y - ' V t , . l , x , I f ' "V -v x si. ' 'P'J 'f' - - mmm. May KODSon ana ner sranason. Master Kobson liore - By W.'Iif I met May Robson during her en gagement here last .week in "Martha-by-the-Day" with some misgivings. Her Incomparable "Martha," lion hearted in her sorrow, turning heart aches" into jests and radiating a love that embraces the .whole world, could have no other personality; but. May Robson once met, is no longer the in comparable Martha, but the incompar able May. ' She iacks some of the grand airs of .marry of the big ac BAKER Soma of Portland's Famous Baker Flayers. ' , Week Starting Today, Sunday Matinee, Jan, 10, 1915 i o 3 w r lie, unicago XNews. This is the premier chance to see "Officer 666" at popular prices. Im mense east. Stage under direction of Walter B. Gilbert. Evening Prices 25c, 60c 76c. Boxes $1.00. Sunday and Saturday Matinees 25c. 50c Boxes 75c GET TEB TWO BIG BAJtOAXH FBBFOm H 4 BOBS Monday Night AU SEATS (EXCEPT BOX), 25 Wed. Matinee AXtSO Two Special Portland Police Bifhts, Tuesday and W eases day. Next Week THE VIRGINIAN - Baker Theatre tickets good in The Journal Trade and (Circulation Con test for one vote every cent of value. " EXTRA Matinee Tuesday, Jan. 12 EXTRA By urgent request of hundreds who were unable to see the play, Manager Baker announces a Special Bargaia Matinee of The Kindness of Virtue XTBXT TUESDAY AFTEB.KOOB, 8:15 . AU SEATS 25 (EXCEPT BOX) Positively the Last Chance to See This Greatest Stock Sensation in Years. BE8EBTE TOXTB. SEATS BOW. Phones Main 6 A-1020 1305 Matinee Seats at 25c ItllilL JEANNE J01E Prima Donna of .. Metropolitan. Opera Co. & CO. a a Series of -r Lyric Dances,. Photograph by Busbnell tresses; she doesn't even seem temper amental, just adorably unaffected, gracious and likable. And I forgot to say pretty. She is the prettiest grand mother I ever hope to lay eyes on. That grandmother side is a little temperamental, for she admits spend ing all her spare time In New York spoiling 3-year-old Robson Gore, ber son's boy. From her description of him. however, she Is exonerated from all blame: "He has the biggest brown eyes I ever saw. flaxen hair and 1 ii THEATRE ' Hain 8. A-83M Oeo. X. Bakes, Kaaage BROADWAY AND MORRISON STS. FXJL8T root nr stock The Great Melodramatic Farce Officer (B(B8 By Anrustns XaoKngh A whirlwind mixup of cops, burglars and victims. One of the biggest successes of the past dozen "years. "A scream all tne way through." Alan. Dale. "More honest, laughs than at any per formance this season." New York Press. "One long cackle from end to end." Chi cago Inter. Ocean. "Peachy beyond expression." Amy Les Week Commencing -Monday Matinee, Jan. 1 1 THE BIG 20TH CENTURY REVUE! - - t 12-American tA7innRa!iiitiacs,17 vy Offering Seasatloaal AerobaUs Paacing and tne Iatest sonar successes - Cora Simpson & Co The Baker Troupe 5 and The; Boxes And lt-Row Balcony Seats peaches and cream akin, but a man for that.'? "Turn on. May, let's beat It. ' Papa's goin's to spank me," said he. address ing his grandmother on one occasion last falL "But what did you do. lad die?" she asked. "Don't ast; dust beat FBXCB TIB BBS teiwjjA'-'' nit 'to SBhsS ssTaS' WSV ask A a M S M Afrry -wr w -r, i t 1 1 - - - A POPULAR PRICES Evenings: Lower Floor. $1.00; Balcony, 76c and 60o; -' Gallery, 36c and S5c. Wed. and Sat. Mats.; Lower Floor, 76 e; Balconv, 60o: Gallery, 36c and 26c. SEATS NOW SELLING FOB ENTIRE ENGAGEMENT, . 4SL,ght3M0NDAY,JAN.18 FORBES-ROBERTSON'S FAREWELL wSLi!!lht Ham!etS"r.. The LightThat Failed "The Passing & Third Floor Back" Evenings: Lower Floor. $2: last t rows, $1.60. Balcony, 6 rows. $1.60: 4 rows, $1; 6 rows, 76c; 8 rows, 60c Gallery, reserved, 76c; admission 60c Special Price Wednesday Matinee: - 9 rows, $l; 6 rows, 75c; 8 rows. BtAXZs OBD Address letters, make checks and seu-aaaressea siampea envelope; neip insure sare return. ' MARCUS LOEW'S Ft r vv &rr,tm broadvay at yamhill Week Commencing MONDAY MATINEE, January 11 TSfl OBBAT CXABACTXB, STAB. JAMES GRADY& CO. Xa the Comedy A Pussle to Scientists "A Corkologlcal Conglomeration" The Ward Sisters C RssseSs Minstrel Comedians C The 98-pound Doll Girl ThaeNo Man ) Biagrnn, CesMdiaas sad Seaeen si Can Lift. Every One Invited to Try ' Scotland Famous Xylophonlst SampSOIl & DoUglaS JLsl VleVe in Their Original Nonsensical ? Late Feature of the Kilties Band OddiOes i . ' , ? First Western Appearance of rr . n . . w f- j Front Portion of Orchestra "J" reserved f or lt night. how The Quaint Spanish Acrobats . KATXBBB SAZXiT ....... SUB-DATS I XOXZBATSX Unequaled YandeYiHe Broadway at Alder vhirl - Mile. Remi & Sis. Ballingeri PANTAGESCOPE Special Added Attraction O'Neal Walmsley Lightning Bugs j Reserved by Phone, M. 4635, A-2236 he replied. And she said "W beaf It." : - -m?: - ' ' , The future of this little Chap. Is a s matter of much speculation In :' the family. Dr. Qustave Brown; the hus band of the actress, who is a well known surgeon in New York, thinks he H, will surely make a doctor, " V K f i TONIGHTS WX9BZSOAT ABO SATTTBS AT i i t r 1 1 .-X-A ,.iN SPECIAL FBXCB BCATXBBB WZOIZI9AT Entire Lower Floor, $1.60. ! Balcony. 60c Entire Gallery, 60c. BOW BOX OFFZCa SAZJB TBTUBSSAT, JAB, 14. money orders to W. T. Pangle. Inclose 9 ramstlc Snooees. ... SOS BIOKTS. TWO IXOWf, TOMdlflO . . . . AFTEBBOOHS, OOHTXBVOT78, 100 to AOO . . . BiaXTS, TH BZB IZOWB, Beglaalns; - aOO. ILYMC! THEATRE -Corner 4th and Stark Sts. Where Musical Comedy Reigns Supreme " Week Commencing To morrow Matinee KEATING & FLOOD Present Their Popular ' Company In ii ing for Office,, ; Featuring; AL PRANKS as TIMOTHY O'BRIEN Two Performances Nightly . . 15c and 25c Matinees paily Any seat ISc Tuesday , Night AMATEURS Friday Night - CHORUS GIRLS' CONTEST Children Under 10 Years Ad mitted Free When Accom oanied bv an Arfnlf