DAILY CAPITA! JOURNAL, SALEM. OREGOX, MOXDAV, MAY 8, 1811. DO HOT FAIL TO SEE THE SPENDTHRIFT AT THE GRAND TO.MGHT IT IS A HEAL MAY OF THE EEAL LIFE OF TODAY PRESENTED BY A STKOXG COMPANY. The high cost of living has been taken up and discussed In a most In teresting way by Porter Emerson Browne In his great drama "The Spendthrift," which comes here for its long run at the Chicago Opera House which followed a five months' engagement at the Hudson Theater, New York. This subject of such vital Interest to practically everyone Is given new twists and turns by Mr. Browne and they strike him forcibly. When the summer heat In New York was near the boiling point, theater goers flocked to see this play. Its situations date to our very existence. It Is a real play of real life of today. Grand Opera House, Monday, May 8. Prices $1.60, $1.00, 75c, 50c. HETHERSOLE WEDNESDAY IN A DOUBLE ROLE SALEM PEOPLE MILL HATE A CHANCE TO SEE ONE OF THE WORLD'S MOST FAMOUS ACT BESSES WEDNESDAY NIGHT AT THE GRAND. A more than ordinarily Interesting event to thoughtful play-goers will occur on Wednesday, May 10, when Olga Nethersole -will present Mau rice Maeterlinck's "Sister Beatrice" at the Grand Opera House. It will also mark the first occasion when this play has been seen away from New York. "Sister Beatrice" was perhaps the most unqualified success of the new theater during Its first season. Edith Wynne Matthieson created the role In encomiums from the press. It will be highly interesting, therefore, to see Nethersole's Interpretation, and doubly so from the fact that Bern hardt also Includes the play In her repertoire. "Sister Beatrice" Is a modern "mir acle play" In which a love-called nun leaves her duties In the convent to follow her lover. The pitiful Vir gin assumes her robes and per forms her offices for years. When the nun returns, sin-hardened and sorrow-broken the Virgin steps back on her pedestal and the sisters gath er about Beatrice's death-bed, hail ing her as a saint. Both In concep tion and treatment It is highly poe tic and impressive. At the New Theater recently Miss Nethersole gave Maeterlinck's "Mary Magdalen," and it was through the connections thus established that Copyright SCHLOSS BROS. & CO Fine Clothe Maker Baltimore and New York Call in and see our New t v , l&r- ""'' 1 f j r4 I f ' I H ' J V i v . : jf : "i - h ' ' ' m'C. i i : I : ' J - : 1 ' M':' I'; tiJ , . H i M : V.:. WMSkM Doris Mitchell In she was able to secure the rights to "Sister Beatrice." In connection with this play, which docs not fill out an entire evening, she will also offer Paul Hervleu's "The Enigma" a two-act drama by one of the fore most playwrights of modern France. n FISH AND GAME COMMISSION IS ORGANIZED The Fish and Game Commission completed its organization! Saturday afternoon by electing George H. Kel ley, of Eugene, as the fifth member, and it is now ready to assume its du ties when the law creating it goes In to effect on May 20. Under this law the board will have complete jurisdiction of all matters pertaining to the enforcement of the fish and game laws, and also the appointing power of all officers. Scores of applications for the offices had already been filed with Gover nor West, and these were turned over to the board for its consideration, and at Its next meeting the appointments will be made. Master Fish Warden Clanton is a candidate for the place he now occupies, and, since he ia a man of experience in the fish busi ness, and has given the state an ad ministration that is above criticism, and is thoroughly familiar with the work, he Is likely to be reappointed to the position. Game warden Steph Gents' Furnishings THey are in town. I 'ft. ' ..""CI Y - J j 1 1 V "The Spendthrift" enson is also a candidate for reap pointment to his position, and his chances of securing it are understood to be good. The members now comprising the board, besides Mr. Kell, are: C. K. Cranston, of Pendleton; William L. Flnley, of Jennings Lodge. C. F. Stone, of Klamath Falls, and L. M. McKInriey, of Portland. MODK1IX FOOD SUPPLANTS HARDTACK ON THE MEXICAN IIOKDEK The government has shown that the army can be quickly mobilized In any part of the country, fully arm ed and equipped and supplied with the proper food rations. This is a strong contrast to the conditions that existed when the Spanish-American war broke out. It was frequently difficult to obtain the supplies for a proper diet even for the sick in the hospitals. Wellington Is reported to have said that "an army marched on Its stomach." Whether he said so or not our army officials, appreciating the sentiment, have for many years been experimenting In the line of an "emergency ration." which should be pure, wholesome, satisfying the needs of nutrition, convenient and portable. As a representative of this class of foods. Horllck's Malted Milk has the front rank on account of its con centrated nutrition, proved digesti bility portability and great conveni ence. Try a Journal want ad. t's Acknowledged By the best dressed men in Sa lem that the Clothes we sell are the standard by which to measure ready to-put-on garments, There's fit, grace and char acter about them, There should be no doubt in your mind that they merit your pat-ronge, At from $10 to $30 They will attract your attention G. ' Johnson & Company 141 N, Commercial Street Phone 47 the nobbiest yet shown Electric Rubber Hose is not only the most durable anJ econ omical garden hose made, but it is the only hose in the world that is self measuring. Every foot of Electric Hose you buy is numbered. The figures are moulded in the corrugated outer tube. ou can use yotir Eecnic Hose to meas ure your garden, to help lay out flower beds and regulate the distances between plants or shrubbery. Don't buy ordinary hose before you let us explain the extraordinaryqualitiesof Electric DANCES OF THE WORLD'S YOUNG DAYS MISS RUTH ST. DE.MS IX IIEK WONDERFUL ORIEXTAL ASD EGYPTIAN DANCES AT THE GRASD TUESDAY NIGHT. The dancing craze, for it can bo fairly termed that, which swept across the country last season, has gone, and In its train many dancers of many dances. Like all crazes which seem to possess the pleasure seekers of the land, this has had Its aftermath, for it has served good purpose in bringing to the present generation a Just appreciation of the art of dancing the expression of thought by motion. Of course there are many who had temporary call for notice who have gone down in the deluge, but the genuine artists, the dancers who were sincere and had a definite plan' f entertainment, have survived. But you can number them on the fingers of one hand. There is Genee for the school of bal let dancing, Pavlowa and Mordkln for the peculiar Slavic gyrations which are almost acrobatic In their moods, Ruth St. Denis as a pantoni ne dancer (for want of a better word), and possibly three or four others. This revival of the art of dancing really began, Insofar as we are con cerned with the serpentine dance of a decade ago. Those ' dances were the first to excite the Interest of the present generation. Of course, in the continental opera houses the ballet has always held Its own, but with the great general- public the art had sunk Into the limbo of forgotten things. The serpentine dance was succeeded by the fire dance and the high kicking dancs of which Lottie Collins and her Ilk were the great exponents. But gradually out of the depths of the art of real dancing was appearing. Occasionally an artist appeared who did work for the re generation of the art, and for this conspicuous credit is due mainly to the women of the stage. Among the number to whom credit is due is Ruth St. Denis. At a time when dancing as an art was at Its lowest ebb she conceived and devel oped the Hindu dances which have won fame fir her. She was poor and unknown and yet with a determina tion which comes of surety in the ultimate triumph she clung to the belief that some day the art of danc ing would return to public recogni tion once more. Finally Henry B. Harris saw her dances, and he too was convinced that Miss St. Denis had, in these dances an entertain ment so unique and unusual that the public would be sure to appreciate them. He put her under contract and Introduced her to the public at a series of special matinees at the Hudson Theater in New York. The Instantaneous success which they achieved Is now a matter of theatrl cal history. But Miss St. Denis was only at the commencement of her work. She has no desire to be known as a one part artist and Immediately the suc cess was had she began to develop her plans for the cycle of Oriental numbers which she will bring out. Miss St. Denis is more than a dancer, she la a pantominlst of rare talent, one who expresses thought without words. Her Hindu creations ex pounded without a spoken word the theological theories of the Hindus. It made evident the basis of their religious belief and the manner in which it was followed by the believ ers. The second of the series of Or iental numbers, are of ancient Egypt, its people and Its religion. The dances go back to the time when the world was young and the Sphinx was still entirely above the sands of the deserts. In them she seeks to bring to life again the ways of the priests and their acolytes the dances of the people and the splendour of the era. The ceremonies of the ancient Egyp- tians have had great bearing on the civilization of the present day, and In this phase they are of peculiar in terest Miss St. Denis Is assisted by a large company, there are elaborate scenes for each dance, and a special augmented orchestra is required to Interpret the descriptive music writ ten for the numbers by Walter Mey rowitz. At the Grand Opera House, Tues day, May 9. Prices $2.00, J1.50, 11.00, 75c and 50c. o SCHOOL BOARD BUYS ANOTHER SCHOOL SITE Chairman Babcock and Clerk John son were authorized at the meeting of the school board Saturday evening to close the option which the board holds on certain property facing Church street and abutting upon the property upon which the present high school building is located and upon which it is proposed to erect a school building. The property is 66 by 165 feet in dimension and the price named in the option is $3,000. As the board views it, the time is not far distant when It will be needed for an addi tional school building and the pur chase is being made now as property situated in that section is destined to advance materially and rapidly.. The purchase price will be Included In the next budget. In view of the expense that has been made necessary this year In the construction of an addition to the present high school building, the board decided not to grant the peti tions for new school buildings at East and North Salem. Next year, however favorable action will prob ably be taken and the buildings erected. Mrs. J. S. Starnes, Hickory, N. C, seaks to those who have a similar trouble. "I have been bothered a great deal with throat and lung trouble, and find Foley's Honey and Tar Compound gives me Immediate satisfaction and relief." Take Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for coughs colds and hoarseness, for. children and grown people. Accept no subj stltutes. Red Cross Pharmacy. Gold Dust Hour Made by the SVDNEY l'OWIH .COMPANY, SjrUey, Oregom. M4e ft-r Family Use. Aak your grocer for it. Bra and tthorta Always oa luut. P. B. WALLACE, Agt. Salem's most poular res taurant THE WHITE HOUSE We cater to the public who demand a good meal for a small price. Wm. McGilchrist & Sons. ill patent medicines or medicines ad vertlsed in this paper are for sale ai DR. STONE'S Drug Store The only cash arug store In Oregon owes no one, and no one owes It; carries large stock; Its shelve counters and show cases are loaded with drugs, medicines, notions, toi let articles, wines and liquors of al1 Rl'Sda for medicinal purposes. Dr Stone Is a regular graduate In medi cine and has had many years ot ex perience in the) practice. Consulta tions are free. Prescriptions art free, and only regular price for med icine. Dr. Stone can be found at bis drag store, Salem, Or., from f m the morning until 9 at night. Oregen. i ! never before seen to man thrills crowded IpiAjhe brief apace of 360 aec ond ar Subtful If they will lor many, v ri rj i . Tpme. C.rrl RolMUHiJj'A th 105-pound Pa rislan A claim to distinction rests as an operator of the tiny DemoUolle monoplane, went up at f.ii o'clock In an exhibition flight, hi roe to a height of nearly 1500 feel an wepHout over the auburban country for I iitar of nearly two mlle be fore J Imlng back to earth. Garros, a In KJ fifhls predecessor In the "',yilnment. perated a fTrVi 5f u trainer 1 1 vain. marked the 1 Wl Hi it. taii'st stages MitMMMIMMMWMttiMiMI&IH ot his atteniDt o "iJirsday, when the crowd laughed It self hoarse. The yellow-planed Demoi selle bounced and careened and rocked and Jumped and then did It all over again. lAudemars stuck heroically (3 his post; for It did take a hero to op erate the dangerous invention of M't Santos Dumont, and all .flying men know" It Around the course bounc"d the. Swiss and back to the point .' Etaxllog. .Hcm- an acclQent overtook ' GRAY HAIRS BANISHED. The old Idea of using sage for darken ing the hair is again coming in vogue. Our grandmothers used to have dark, glossy hair at the age of seventy-five. while our mothers have white hair before they are fifty. Our grandmothers used to make a "sage tea" and apply it to their hair. The tea made their hair soft and glossy and gradually restored the natural color. One objection to using such a preparation was the trouble of making it, especially as It had to bs made every two or three dajs on account of it souring quickly, This objection has been overcome and by asking almost any first-class druggist for Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur the public can get a su perior preparation of sage,, with the ad mixture of sulphur, another valuable rem edy for hair and scalp troubles. Daily use of this preparation will nbt only quickly restore the color of the hair but will also stop the hair from falling out and'mnko it grow. It is sold by all druggists for GOc. and $1.00 a bottle, or is sent direct by the Wyeth Chemical Company,- 74 Cortlandt St., New iork City, upon receipt of price. ' J. a PERRY, Saiem Oregon. o In the Wake of the tfenslcs. The lltle son of Mrs. O. B. Palmer, Little Rock, Ark., had the measles. The result was a severe cough which grew worse and was so severe he could not sleep. She says: "One bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound completely cured him and he has never been bothered since." Croup, whooping cough, measles cough, all yield to Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. The genuine is in the yellow package. Refuse any substitute. Red Cross Pharmacy. A lot of men of big pretense are so narrow that the minute you open their front door you are In the back yard. Bulked nt Cold Steel. "I wouldn't let a doctor cut my foot off," said H. D. Ely, Bantam Ohio, "although a horrible ulcer has been the plague of my life for four years. Instead I used Bucklen's Arni ca Salve, and my foot was soon com pletely cured." Heals burns, bolls, sores, bruises, Eczema Pimples, corns, surest pile cure, 25c at J. C. Perry's. V XcrafL Oarro X s and forty- cllmbe . . V Ms ft7;J Viegan to- air SsV course. S Portland's Popular Fire-Proof Hotel The House of Comfort Combined With iElegance Our Rathskeller Grill finest dining service in city, with Hawaiian orchestra from 6 to u d. m, , , Most perfectly furnished, moderate priced, modem hostelry in tha metropolis of trie Northwest WRIGHT & DICKINSON HOTEL CO. Owners and Managers. Also Operating Seattle Hotel, Seattle. 1 -diri Jt to mom i I1" distress, fl fhlna -V "ut his tt, vaia, arf talningl quarter when f Tltlanl t htt:. ni Bui, l11 son , et h. of tt, ao6cnt mcc through the on. It was with this imnres. Inn 4ta4 m mon, who had been out of the runnS for in hfnir nr , "mi long Interim for the riyer" by the way lu trusty Blerlot and headf1 stock ejhlblt building cliU rescue. Simon went fnV-- tn mllos niif hot .i,i."-.J the curious object which badMda The splendid work of Chamber lain's Stomach and Liver Tablet! It daily coming to light No such grand remedy for liver and bowel troubles was ever known before. Thousands bless them for curtagcoi stlpation, sick headache biliousness. Jaundice and Indigestion. Sold by all dealers. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTO RIA Saved the People of Salem by the Manufacture in This City of Cement Sewer Pipe. Less than one year ago, before the manufacture of cement sewer pipe was begun In Salem by the Salea Sewer Pipe Co., salt glazed clay ill Inch sewer pipe retailed to consum ers at 30 cents per foot, today Is soli at 22 cents. The reduction In price Is due entirely to the establishment of the Salem Sewer Pipe do. In Si lem. It has been estimated that to Salem in the next two years there will be at least 2000 homes to be con nected with sewers, with an avenge of 100 feet per house. Now at the saving of 8 cents per foot, $8.00 per hundred feet, would make a saving of 116,000 ts the peo ple or saiem, tr tney were go us " use the six-inch salt glazed clay pipe, but all the people are not going to do It. This is proven by the sals made by the Salem Sewer Pipe Co, who sell both clay and cement. Their sale sare miore than ten of cement to one of clay. We solicit your pat ronage, will save you still more mon ey and will give you just as service able pipe, stronger and last longer. Salem factory; Salem men, and em ploy Salem labor at best wagei. Your money is paid back to your own citizens. We are glad to make tests for you at any time. Call and see our plant. Salem Sewer Pipe Co,, 805 SOUTH LIBERTV STREET PHOXE 14. 'J J f vii f in ji & machined W Ho happens! In the nrninV5r " i . i. 11 l'"eT X l6 LNWJ..i' -Tt- ;i"Ri 'Mf0li v.v the long-l03k.d-foriii,i.K, ffonaMf THE OREGON