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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1920)
WILL THEDA BARA SECRET? IT TELL, of course, we can't say as to that, but from Miss A Bara's make-up it does look as though she might be in v on some of the innermost mysteries of the mystics,' doesn't it? Miss Bara, by the way, following her New York appearance on the spoken stage in "The Blue Flame," has lately sailed for Europe, where, her, representative says, she will dec orate the graves of her brother's regiment in France. MisssBara was honorary colonel of. the regiment. v.-vvr : ? if! if i $ I 11 o, jf IS V- r - ill . ' i ... . j ' ttnv I, mi i.mri in I, ,.m ... - , J ' I ' t-y- f f Great White Way Is All Ablaze "15 Men on a Dead Man's Chest" By Sam Raddon Jr. i All ahined up for th Shrinera. i .. . . . .. r -' - Th new Jensen & Von Herberg houm at Taklma, opened Tuesday, is the Lib erty. - : : ' . -. .;. I . - . " "; i -" The Heiligr has no regular road abow booked for the week. ' . i t ' i'm -' ' -'.'-' One more week of Orpheum after' this week. Opens again September L - A. A. Bruce, formerly manager of the Victory theatre, Tacoma, has been ln stalled as house manager at the Peoples. Portland. Before he came away he was truest at a party, written up as follows In the Tacoma Tribune: -'. j "Honoring Alvin A. Bruce, manager of the Victory theatre, who will shortly leave for PorUand to take charge of "the Peoples theatre. H. Moore, gen eral manager of the Jensen-Voa Her- berg theatres iiere, and one of; the heaviest stockholders In this organisa tion, entertained Thursday night at the Tea House on the Mount Tacoma bign- "Geaeral ' Manager Moore" &nd : his guests departed from Tacoma at 11 o'clock, arriving at the Tea. 'House 19 14 minutes later. If there had been! any lynx-eyed cops nearr-they probably , would have thought the mountain road wag being used as a speedway. (- - "Six years ago Bruce started as a doorman when J. G. Von Herberg and C. S. Jensen took over the Alhambra theatre in Seattle, and his rise with them has been rapid. It was not long until he received recognition for his natural ability in the theatrical field and today he is considered one of the most alert and competent executives in the' rapidly expanding Jensen-Von Herberg-Moore organization." 1 :V"V- f-'-i .-'-. H "Romance is a walled garden and when people grow old they lose the key" says Mis Nelly of iN'Orleans" in the comedy triumph which Mra . Fiske brings to the Ueilig for an engagement of three nights, starting, - Thursday, July tv;':v.---i.-:- , .j As -the guardian spirit of "rbman-'e, Mrs. Fiske In the tiUe role unlocks the gate to this garden i of youth and en chantment and revives a . romance of 20 .years ago when all the world was Just 18 and love thrilled to the music of the Mardi Gras and the fragrance of jasmine and honeysuckle.. Mrs. Fiske brings an excellent cast In her support Including Hamilton Revelle, Victor Bea oit. Joseph .Greene,; Kzra Walck, Doro thy Xay( Gertrude Chase, Eva Bent an and Clarissa Stem, j The play is under the direction of Harrison- Grey Fiske. . " ' . ; .' ' " A "song without I words." composed by Ttev. J. Blessington of Raymond, Wash., and dedicated to the City of Port land and Miacha Gutereon. , conductor of the Rivoli orchestra, will be given its premier today at the noon concert at the Rivoli theatre. Blessington ! has named his composition ,"To an Oregon Rose." and it is fittmg that its public introduction should be made this Week. The piece is pronounced by those who have heard It to be a gem. Following are. the .concert numbers for the . Sunday concert. The' first .and last will be played all week during the afternoon, and evening concerts which accompany the picture, program at ' the Rivoli: "Hungarian Rhapsodic No.'2," F. Lisst! "Wedding of the Winds," Hall : To' an Oregon Rose," Rev. J. Blessington ; "Barcarolle," J. Offenbach : Meditation "Thaia," Massenet; solo by Mr.' Guterson, ,Dardenella, F. Bernard. Nobles visiting Portland during the week will probably , think that Paul ?s the t noblest Noble of them - ail. for he has fixed his Liberty theatre . up In wonderful shape for the big week, and hasarranged an 'elaborate Shrine pro logue, and a special midnight matinee of vaudeville, amateur and professional, for Thursday night. - The Bowery theatre. New . York city, st up a box office record in 1835 when "The Last Days of Pompeii" played to $10,000 the first week of its production. "Treasure" Island." ; Stevenson's thrlll tng gee atory. in film version, has final ly been-1 passed favorably by the local censor board and is due for a week's showing at the Columbia, and just because- we believe you've forgotten most ,of the pirate's "rum baflad," If you re member it at all, refresh your memory herewith i : , To-bo-bo snd a bottle of tub Fifteen men on tbe ded msa's chert Yo-ho-ho and s bottle of nun. - Drink tad the dcril bad done with the. net Te-I)o-ha and a bottle of rum. The mat u fixed by the bosun pike The buiun brained by the marluupiae And cooker ' throat was marked beuke It had been gripped By (infer ten And there they lay - All aood deaa eat Like break o" day in a booshut kea Xe-oo-bc and a bottle of rum, : . -, Fifteen . mea of then stiff and stark Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum. Tea of the crrw bad the mnrder mark ' Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of ram. Twaa a cot lata nripe or an ounce of lead Or a yawn in e hole in a battered head And the scuppers glut with a rotting red; . And there they lay. - Aye, damn my eyes, -Their .lookouts clapped : On peredua. . . , Their eoais just bound the eontra-wisa Yo-ho-be and a bottle of ram, - Fifteen men on a dead man's cheat 1 To-bo-ho and a bottle, of ram. Drink and the deril had done with the rest ' Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of ram. We wrapped 'em all ia a aminx'i tiht With thrice ten tnrna of a hawser's bicht And we heaved 'em over and out of siaht . With a yo-heaye-ho. And a fare-re-weU. i ' And a sullen plance In a sullen swell. Ten fathoms of the road to hell. Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of mm. In- "Treasure Island," th pirates sing only four lines of this ballad. Many people think that these ' lines are all uiere are 01 me poem. 7 il K -Ulr- II ' 'I MX 3 So.ihis is Paris J FOR THIS ENTIRE WEEK PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDA Y- I i " ' I' i ."' ; : 5- i : ,:t; ' X " J - : i -11- vv ' -.mm I Vat alb MORNING, JUNE 20, 1920. OS "4. V f 00 MASTER ORGANISTv And Our 550,000 .Giant .Orgari T Selections from "The Ginger Bread Man". . Sloan Two Favorite Songs: 1. Calm as the Night. .;.,J ..l.l..,l.r.1.J...Bohm ' 2.' Love's Old Sweet Song , f .; . . . r;, . i ., . . . Malloy Nola A Silhouette for the Piano. . .Felix Arndt Mile. Modiste. . ;.v.i.-ii-itii-v.i.t. Victor Herbert . -PROMPTLY "A Potentate Pilgrimage, to Mecca" A Tiineful Colorful Musical' Operetta Given in Honor of , Visiting Shrincrs. Featuring Dorothy . Davenport, Casey Jones, the! . Beef Trust Trio . (1000 Lbs. of -Harmony), and the Oriental Jazz Dandnff Ballet. THE LIBERTY'S MYSTIC. frpT?Q WITW MIDNIGHT JAZZ MATINEE U ittf v V Lu Tickets on Sale at Checkroom General Adm'n $1 ResLojes $1.C0 HENRY A. CQNCER AT 12:30 TODAY JUNE UBI ae Wau.,