Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 10, 1882, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE PAY OF PLAYERS THE DAILY BEE-~OMAHA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10 can be relied upon, He said that sal- An nctor like Ollier, playing opposite STATH JOTTINGS, aries had advanced in the past five or | parts to John McOuliough, must dress - — L/ towide of Irom, Perwe: - ton years, but the incrense was not\well, and his wardrobe 6aNNOL| g cid fever alls o an alarmi .',";.Z'L'.'.",.‘;'J.“,""n'v'i"", g Idea of the Salaries Re-|m™er than sufficient to meet the in- |have ocost less than §1,200. | extent at Hastings, oot SRiy preparationofte, . ome oressnd expenses which the actor is | Common cotton tights cost from 3 75 o). Johneon, of Asbland, celebrated his Lecahe0 characierioste STROA/ G called upon to bear. In the days of |to 86 a pair; silk stockings $15; silk Y FACTS/ A great many people are asking what particular troubles BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is good for 1t will cure Heart Disease, Paral- ysis, Dropsy, Kidney Discase, Con sumption, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, and all similar discases. Tts wonderful curative power is simply because it purifies and en ceived by Actors and Actresses, First-Olass Companies and COrose-Road Concerns, The Earuings of Variety Peo- ple and Operatic Artists, Interesting Facts Concerning the Cash Profite of the Playerfolk Supes and Ballet-Girle, stock companies an actor or actress who had been engaged for a season by theater could secure good board at $6 and 87 a weok; now that ho must flit throngh the entire country, playing here one night and somewhere else the next night, there are heavy trav- eling expenses to be paid, amounting to $16 or $20 a week; sometimes he can live for 81.50 a day, at other times he may have to pay $2 50 or 83, He gets more salary now than he did ten years ago--probably 20 «r 30 por cent., more——but the excess goes to the hotel keepor,, the railwsy eating: house, ete. I'here is no more money in his work now than there was when he had a permanent home and his life tights 822 and $22; sandals 85 and $6 a pair; buskina $5 to £8; russet boots $9 to $16; wigs, from the inferior kind at $4 up to $50, 60, 875 and 8100; a xood blonde wig for & leading lady costsa 876 to $100; the average run of wigs is §15, and a common stock actor muat have a different wig for every part, Then there is armor; for the legitimate role it must often be made to order, and one suit will cost . Symmoetries that are used to make thin men stout, by padding the arms, breast, back and thighs, will cost 840 to case the whole body and from $15 to $20 to fix up the legs and thighs, There must be a large assort- ment of feathers, ranging in price 90th birthday last week, The people of Rising City saw David City in a mirage on the morning of the 3d, Nearly 2,200 car londs of eattle, averag- ing twenty to a car, have been shipped from Ogailala this year, Upon entering the jail the other evening the deputy sheriff of Butler county was nocked down v ith & club by a prisoner, who made his escape thereby. On the night of the 31st, Carlson’s tailor shop at North Platte, was burglarized, Two days later the thieves—three in num- ber—were arrested at Ogallala with some of the stolen clotting on their backs, The particulars of a_sad nccident comes from Macon.- A little son of Mr, Giray during the absence of his parents, at- tempted to burn off a stubble field. The clothing of his little sister, who was with ~ (\ ENTLEMEN hiod ComTion 01 Lhe bior, L pearioms baified some of m M in ference to any iron prepas e | - healthful tone to lqrnlm”flmk’fld | ey Powers ard Im tenee, D on of B years In medreine, 1 hiave found nothis THox Towic does. In cases of Nervous Prostration, Female Dis remedy has, in my hands, ot most erhinent physicians hate riekded 1o Wis Ereat sod incomparable remedy, 1 Dreser made. _In fi sach & componnd as Di, HARTER'S IRON ToNTO is & 1. i RORRT SAMUIKLS, 510t W ast = other iron preparation g 10 lvo the results, that 1 Dyspepeia, and im | ures. (ses LAk b thi ‘ade some wond: Ave. Bi Lou Mo, Nov. MANUFACTURED BY THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. 213 N. MAIN ST, 8T. LOU — FALIL 1882, WHOLESALE MILLINERY & NOTIONS riches the blood, thus beginning at N ith the hazards and | from §2 to § s b pom ki h‘|""§f‘ Lyt Dl o N - —_— was not "beset with the hazards an m to $6; swords of ferent | ing manner, resulting in death at about 10 e Zu o S L e et temptations of incessant travel, periods that cost from §5 to $16 eaoh, | ©'clock the same evening. Zephyrs, Germantown, Etc, the system, drives out all discase. A Lady Cured of Rheumatism, Baltimore, Md,, Ma: My health was miich Rheamatism when 1 tend to my Tamno am regain There are 40,000 people in this country who are wage-workers, and whose ua by day and night, outside of enriching about 4,600 other indi- viduals, is meant ouly to fill the rest of mankind with delight, and repre- sents no result more permanent or tangible than the fleeting sunshine of a smile or_the golden vapor of & joy ““What does the salary list of a first- claes dramatic company amount to?” the reporter asked; ‘‘saya company like John McCullough’s? ™ “John McCallough, I think,” said Mr, Berrell, “‘pays his company from £500 to $600 a week., I do not know the exact amounts paid to individuals, but: Fred Warde, when he was Me- and cloaks, caps, hats, etc., that are correspondingly costly. Stage jewels, too, must not be overlooked. They are of glass and some composite metal and an actor or actress with a plethor- ic purse oan pay as much as $150 for a sot; crown, tiara, bracelets, necklaces and joweled belt and cestus can be had, however, for $40 to $60. For society A little two year old son of Mr, and Mrs, John Anderson, of Waucapona, came to its death from strangulation last Mon- day forenoon. The mother who was wash- inf had placed a tub of water partially filled with clothes on the floor and went out of the room, leaving the little one alone, On her return she found her child in the tub where it had fallen and died in ashort time, —Cedar Connty Nonpareil, STOCK LARGER THAN Aug 20 tt me EVER. { 1308341310 Dooglas 8 I. OBERFELDER & CO. Porntiineis Bootiveritiizsy Cheerfully iRHLE AN 5 b heart, Yet, | Callough's leading support, got §150a | dramas the actor must sometimos have | Never too Late to Mend. BOOK:-KEEPING, BUSINESS KORMS, ol canmot sy o ;;mfi:“’ufn;‘(lc:"'“::‘ml:";“b“”h‘e d | week. Edmund Oollier, T suppose, | a suit of clothes for each act, and his| Thos. J. Arden, William Street, st BANKING COMMEROIAL LAW, ina Now York dramatic paper, the work of this small_army calls for the gets from $100 to 8160, Joe Haworth 850 or §60, John Lane about 850, and Barton, the old man, about $40. A wardrobe can cost him from $300 up- ward, according to the kind of tailor he patronizes, Buffalo, writes: **Your SriiNe BLossoy bas worked on me splendid, 1 had no ap- petite; used to sleep badly and_vet up in PENMANS {117, COMMERCIAL A (1THAMET POLITICAL ECONOMY, 10, ENGLISH LANGUAGE ayment of at least $32,000,000 % the morning unrefreshed; my breath was| Taught by gentlemen of business exrerienc d i oL En!unlly Ty T?"y’ labor | heavy man, like Harry Langdon, is FROM OTHER SOURCES very offenaive and I suffored from severe LR R Bl LR E T B g o ok ao” | paid all the way from $35 to $50 a | tho Globe-Demoorat roporter learned | heatiches since using your Spring Blossom W N wied Brown's Jron shd dfirinu this t{mut SR Iy)riuu‘ woek, and the utility corps have sala- | that the average traveling opera com- | all these symptoms have vanished, and 1 cured me cir eff rien ranging from $20 to 835—-an actor pany pays its principal people at feel quite well.” Price 50 cents, trial bot- mine, reco? millions of dollars to the pockets of | . s Y tlo 10 cents. A now institution based on the highest standard “of excellence. Day and had 1o a | like J. H. SBhewell gots over $30; Miss | about the same rate the same kind of oot Speen t b -~ D8y pagzarmtie TS | tho gontlomen who employ thom. Tho [ e % RbhencilEo over S0 Eh Ll T and evening sossions are now tn aucosnsful operation, Bitters with the happiest results, J. KyLk MONTAGUR: Heart Disease. Vine St., Harrisburg, Pa, Dec. 2, 1881 After trying different phy: " and many remedies for palpitation of the heart without receiving an benefit, I was advised wus Brown's Tron Bitters. 1 have used two bot- New York paper already referred to has the following anent thils subject: “A gulde published last ‘year gives o total of about 4,500 theaters that kept open their doors for an average of forty weeks, Taking the poor at- traction with the star that fills the theater to overflowing, the average re- ceipts would be about $150 for each total for one week of $,050,000, or, A leading lady; like Miss Forayth, can command $76 to $100 per week, and an *‘old woman,” like Mrs. Fos- ter, from $35 to $60. The legitimate companies are the costlieat. A com- bination for comedy or society plays has a much lighter salary list. Now, I suppose Joe Emmot does not pay in a first-class dramatic company may people are paid in dramatic companies of equal standing. The small fry are not as well treated as thetr brethren and sisters of the dramatic stage., A chorus girl is doing well if she gets 816 a week, and some can not get more than $8 or $10. Variety per- formera are as a class well paid, but traveling expenses are heavy with who were paid only $40 or $50 a week Westirn Agriculturalist It is the privilege of every western farmer to supply his family with plenty of fruit, snd this blessed privilege should not be neglected As our soil and climate will produce such a great variety of fruits for the whole year that can be raised with reasonable generally is not _financially profitable, For circulars or special information apply to or address A. T, WYMAN PERFECTION HEATING AND BAKING, 1s only attained by using ! tles and never found anything that N 4 his company more than $300 per|(them, ~and their savings can|gare no farmer is excusable for not i e T Hass, for e °.'m’.?.‘§i;.‘li]°‘i.":§,"m‘.’,1‘fi.':'€}.‘§ iy R s bl Sketoh _ artists| haying plenty of fruit for his famlly, e GH ARTER 0 AK | Yot the pioliat boubles o shioh Unitod_ States, This would make a | C08t8 him about 8400, ~A leading man |like Charles and Ella Jerome, [ While fruit growing may not be and % ladies are subject, BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is invaluable, Try it. for the entire season of forty weeks, $162,000,000, not counting matinees, get, like Charley Thorne, $250, or, like Frederick de Belleville, $175 a week, and from that all the way down five years ago, now receive $80 jointly; Master Arthur Dunn, the rising Bobby Newcomb, who is not more yet every farmer can and sheuld have an abundant supply of small fruits 8toves and Ranges. WITH B d et the Genui :‘;‘k‘““; ':‘1’36 &D’%’ntinqrz:?db;rrfl to 875, Thefigures for leading ladies |than = 17 years old, is paid :{,‘g h:fi{ffin,}’ ;‘-;éir?;:c:le ;’i;&f:'l’“-fi;' WIRE GAUZE OVER DOORS, e sure and get the Genuine, lbe nvz Uittt headiogditsgmlian go throagh the same wide range, | probably 5 a week; his|fe can’t afford to 2o to town and bay For sale by drensed e bt e vald th ‘Tan | from Sara Jewett at the bichest salary |sister, * Jennie, may ~get 825. |ihom when he oan so easily have them MILTOH ROCERS & SONS § Do 1 ::‘ns ‘ra"" Ul' n & n“eg down to the 875 class. A good low (A fow years ago Arthur's talents | g ogh and fine at home for the grow- ;Ir:nwnanh'; l;}s‘“thc n_Ee:‘& 4% ;}mtmi comedian who has made his mark can | would not bring more than $15 a woek. ing. OIVE A XA '8 or pull the wiros and set the machinery command from $40 to $75, the latter [ Society sketoh artists, like Jeppo and | “A1most every farmer has some ex- Jull-maely BALL'S in motion, These figures are, after all, but approximate, and neither in- cludes matinees, which in themselves would count $1,000,000, nor does it include the circus world, which is not represented on the Rialto.” The “‘neatly dressed men” who are seen ‘‘on the Square” in the summer months are managers and actors, and figare if he is of any prominence; the ‘““old man” will be paid from $40 to $60, and he who plays THE GENTEEL, POLISHED VILLAIN, from $40 to §60, and possibly as much as §75. , A soubrette, playing cham- bermaid parts, gets a salary ranging from $30 to §60, and the small fry of a company are included in the num- er of those who ask and receive from Fanny Delano, are paid $100 a week. Belle Clifton and Louise Deluist, for- merly ballet dancers, now do a ekip- ping rope dance, and their act is worth aboul $50 a week, with rifie song and dance throwa in. A banjoist like Billy Carter or Billy Carroll gets 8§75 Irish comedians of the Murphy and Mack caliber obtain $100 to $125 a week for the team, and German come- team of artists can not afford to get plenty of fruit, many others have none, timply for the lack of a little care and attention,. Now is a good time to prepare a plat of ground for orchartl and smsll fruite; well plowed ly spring planting. Buy what you want of your local nurseryman, or send to some reliable cuse of an orchard and while many | w and manured now, it is ready for ear-|! VER WARE. CLOCKS, t from th trous fi f es it ¢ nurseryman; : the above kind that are published now | 820 0§40 @ wesk. In melo-dramatic An %:;s;l;yul}dhbnhag:lgn about | don't bo swindled by tho travoling | LeuiAileddi j 3 Ahbinainis 1 knowl- | companies of the real old blood-and- . Jo nd Louis | tree peddler. SRR 2 = f edgo of bheir mothod_ of business, or | thunder kind, good_ salaries are paid. ‘ng:":s;rmngv And_dsnco men, get| Huvo a patch of strawborrios; they The Oldest Wholesale and LOELBARL } th ds they obiai the mis- |James H. Wallack, of the Jesee |80 O a Wweek; Valjean, the Jug-|come early when we most need and . fortanas ChAL £ th ‘thate At while | Taines. combination, that will ‘appear g}l::"fili’f’.‘:.t:go;n:i"nd.ggfd.?o]::m:é'&d.' aporociato thom, Thon o patch_of Retail JEWELRY HOUSE } theil ki lasts. Occasion. | 8t the People’s next week, is a good (et raspberries and blackberries will give | ; T oy ally an Htom appears i print_ o tho |aotor, ud is probably paid §75 o Week, Varioty shows' like Eshers(a succession of berrios through tho| i1t Omaha. Visitorscan here lndan o i ® |effect that Patti received $5,000 a |Week, certainly not less than §60. The | °F the Cry‘lhlh Palace lh‘:f 0| geason. Then we get grapes, apples, find all novelties in SIL- _Genera.l Agent§ for the b § % concert from Abbey during last season, | cross-roaders and fly-by-night com. (P#y some of their people salaries|plums, peachee, pears, etc., that Finest and Best Pianos and ‘ ! which she didn’t, and that Chrlistine | panies, that play in one-night towns, | &8 high as first-cliss houses. A |when once we have them on the tarm 1 g [ E— d PRICES, by Mall, Postage Pald: * Health Prescrving, $1.50. Scif-Adjusting, $1.50 00. Nursing, $1.50 RSET CO,, Chicago, Il ul2end&sow y HEAT YOUR HOUSES B [Wrought or Cast Tron.] [Po0M 20 1900 204] MOST POWERFUL Nilsson will get $4,000 for each even- ing's singing during the American tour she is about to enter upon, which she won't get, and people immediate- ly jump at the conclusion that there is | ibg organizations can go into s village | however, at $8, $10, $18 and $20.|year round. i ™ X and Dealer. 7 woriin wur atoutous ouroms |14, make money if they get 8 840 | eey oD o eh omat BT~ and Choicest Selections in| Pianos and Organs sold onch af 3 P for the portion of every player in the in‘:le.mon'“' ‘h’[;s:.fmn;o..dxi;h for this kind of t'.t; there are|- Mrs. Wallace, Buffalo, N. Y,, writes:| PRECIQUS STONES and for cash Or, Ins ents at iy land, and untold wealth and volumes | hoard, railrond fares, bill-posting, ail. | Dumerous companfis™organizing, all | I have used Bunvock BLoob Birrkss for Bottom Prices. . of fame In stors for all who set their trembliog feet upon the stage, In this they sre mistaken. There are princely salaries only for the few; the great army of histrions—those who fill the lower ranks—are scarcely bet- ter rewarded than people in other pro- fessions who are mnot subject to so much public sorutiny or compelled to put up with the hardships and perils of constant travel If there is any difference in the amounts earned by the average player and the average book-keeper and newspaper reporter, the excess in favor of the stage does not begin to make up for the loat pleasures of home and the missing satisfaction there is in having and knowing a permanent place of abode and a wide circle of friends, whose very greeting has always been a joy as welcome as the morning. Abbey paid Pattl $3,600 a concert, and will pay Nilson $2,000 and all her ex- penses; he will pay Mrs. Langtry 81,000 a night and a per sentage over & certain amount; Jobn E. Owens usually give a leading man or leading lady 820 a week and board, and the lighter peoole get aa little as $8 a week and board, One of these barn-storm- vnrth[ng, rent, license, eto., and have o few dollara left over for the man. ager.” “‘What is called a good house for an average show?’ ““Well, we estimate a good opening, Sanday night, here at the Grand Opera House or Olympic, at $1,200 to $1,600; a good house will foot up about $800, a fair house $450, and when there is only $250 or §300 the house is & bad one, The receipts must go up to §350 at least to make the show pay expenses,” ““What percentage is allowed com- anieal” “‘Some companies get as high as 70 per cent of the receipts; others, but very few, as low as 45 per cent; average percentage is about 62} Mapleson gets as high as 90 per cent at the Olympic. An attraction like John MoCQullough or Joe Emmet gets about 70 per cent.” "‘Whnt does it cost to run a thea- tert” ‘‘We figure it down-at $150 a night, come here from Kansas Oity or Chicago for less than $50 a week. There is plenty of talent to be had, wanting good performers, and when good ones can not be had, the medi- ocre and even the bad are taken and fairly pald. Minstrel men get from 810 a week and ‘expenses, the salary paid to the soprano-voiced gentleman who sings ‘A flower from my angel mother’s grave,” up to 875 for a Cush- man or Kersands, and $125 for a man with Billy Rice's reputation. Some- times a big reputation and a big sal- ary do not go together, as in case of Barry Maxwell, to whom Haverly puid 816 a week and expenses. The average in burnt cork companies is $20 and $30 a week al' around, which is exclusive of traveling expenses and ‘we wonder how anybody can get along without them. We hope every reader of the Agriculturist will provide plenty of fruit and to spare the whole nervous and bilious headaches, and have recommended them to my friends; I be- lieve them to be superior to any other medicine I have used. and can recommend them to any one requiring a cure for bil- fousness.” Price $L. GRATEFUL-COMFORTING & EPPS’S COGOA. BREAKFAST. “By n thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and putrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-s locied Cocos, Mr. Eppa has provided our breakfast tables with o delloately Bavored beverago which may save as y beavy doctors' bilis 1t is by the judicl-us of uch articles of diet that a constitution bosrd, the manager usually assuming | mey be gradually bullt up untl strong enoueh o | this burden himself, FROM THESE FIGURES Tesish every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtla maladios aro floating around us ready to abtack wherever there is a weak polnt, We ‘many o fatal shatt by keeping our- the reader can glean some idea of the | G SUeRortiio with pure blood and o prop. amount of money earned by individual na;onrlmd tram actors and actresses each week; indi- vidual expensés can be set down at from $10 to $20 a week for board and traveling, and when the deduction is made and other contingent outlays Divil Bervice Gazette. de simply with bolling water or milk. Bold tn tins only (4-1b and Ib), labeled JAMES EPPS & CO., Homaopathic Chemists, fucedsat-wly London, Engian are | — | (¥ vots $350 a weok from the Madison | A Jaader of orchestra get: 35 to | footed up there will be no reason left ALL TRUE FELL[]WS | Square theator peoplo of Now York, | 875 s wook, . Waldaues ,:::‘{,'::".1& for astonishment when the performer FUR"AGES I“ THE WOHI.D. for playing Old Rogers In Esmeralda; | 3 week at the Opera House for several |18 found at the beginning of the sum- Worthily polnt to the MADE BY 0. W. Couldock 1s paid about the|,easons, A stage carpenter is paid as |mer vacation with barely enough RIOCHARDS)N,BOYNTON & 00 | %22 figure for playing Dunstan in ), oy 815 a week by some mean man. | money ir his pockets to help him in CHICAGO, 1LLS, Embody mew 18892 lmpravements, Mor, uI a eos; Gout Lows to keop in ] Sold by PIERCEY & BRADFORD, Omana, Neb Iy21-d8m 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHIOLES NOW IN USE. * od durability Thoy are for sule by all Leading Oar {ago Buildors and Dealers throughout he country SPRINGS, G5ARY & BODIER Hazel Kirke; Charles R. Thorne, lerding man of the Union Square company, gets $260 a week; John Gil- bert, the veteran comedian, is paid a like amount. James Lewis, at Daly' Theater, aud Stoddard, the comedian of the Union Square Company, have each over 200 a week, These people are all well-known, their names stand out prominently in the every day his- tory of the world’s amusements, and their pay is commensurate with the advertising draught there is in their reputations; but take the cases of peo- p'e with smaller names, and see what they are paid and what they must pay out in return; then balance up the ac- counta and compare the result with the financial outcome of a year's toil in any other direction-—the player has not saved any more than has the man of another profeasion, although he has not indulged in any extravagant ex- penses, and neither himself nor any member of his family has as fully en- joyed the froits of his labor as the fruits of the non-theatrical man's agers and as high as $30; first.class stage carpenters in Boston and New York get from 876 to $100; scenic art- sts, here and elsewhere, from $35 to $70, and some are paid extraordinary prices for spectal work, The individ- ual musiclans in an orchestra get from $12 to $20; a good solo player, $2. The property man, who must be a Jack-of-all-trades—a carpenter, pain- ter, sculptor, machinist, etc , and have a good practical knowledge of chemis- try—got $40 IN THE OLDEN TIMES, but he now receives from $15 to $25. Stage managers command from $35 to 00, & treasurer from §30 to §75, and his assistant from $12.60 to $25. Doorkeepers are paid from $10 to §20; gas men the eame, and night and day watchmen from §45 to $60 a month,” Mr. Berrell did not say whether the 8t. Louis managers paid the large or wmall figures given, The chances are that they lean to the lightest salar: Mr. Berrell said further concerning the attaches and their pay that ballet weatkering through the short-grass period that lies betweea him and the opening of the following season. e THE BAD AND WORTHLESS Are never imitated or counterfeited. This is especially true of a family medlcine, and it is positive proof that the remedy imitated is of the highest value. As soon as it had been tested and proved by the whole world thut Hop Bitters was the purest, best and most valuable family medicine on earth, many imitations sprung up and began to steal tho notices in which the press and people of the country had expressed the merits of H. B., and in every way trying to induce suf. fering invalids o use their stuff in- stead, expecting to make money on the credit and good name of H. B, Many others started nostrums put up |- in similar stylo to H, B., with vari- ously devised names in which the word “Hop” or *‘Hops' were used in away to induce people to believe they wero the same as Hop Bitters, All “HUB PUNCH" As an article of such rare and exceeding merit & deserve a place on every sideboard, A Social Glass of Hub Punch is & most welcome accessory of friendly intercourse peculiarly acceptable at partics. Uncork, an tis ready. Punches brewed at request are fa behind it in flavor. Rick and Stylish Jewelry, the Latest, Most Artistic, all descripuions of FINE WATCHES at as Low Pri- ces as 18 compatible with nonorable dealers, Call and see our Elegant New Store, Tower Building, corner 11th and Farnham Streets. MANUFACTURERS A Large 8tock N O. Organs manufactured. ur prices are as Low as any Eastern Manufacturer A SPLENDID stock of Bteinway Chickering, Knabe, Vose & Son’s Pi anos, and other makes, Also Clough & Warren, Sterling, Imperial, Smith American Organs, &c. Do not fail to see us before pur- chasing. MAX MEYER & BRO, OF SHOW GCASES always on Hand. B.NEWMAN&GO WILL OPEN AT 1216 WO hAvVe Pen enjoyes g f vorm b am;hl\:,.::,.;;)“"ll‘l‘li:::’:‘y‘:':‘l ll:’)“l:::;:{x\:nifl girls—who make the awkward pages |such pretended rewedies or cures, noj . 00 Hen ry TI Mm@, |sny branch of the amusement vrofes: | 244 ridiculous court ladics in the play matter what their style or RAGACLy | alpoen vy ivion L L d 3 | sion, nowadays, who are not circum- | —%°t from 0 to $8 a woek; the Olym- | and *,“,“‘“‘u{ these: ¥ith the wor comes, after dinner or lunch, Fllentee vu 1 Bullder of Fiae Carrlac.s, epect in their modes of living and try | Pid abd Grand Gpera houss puy their | “Hop" or *Hops" in theix naue ¥ i & bowl of GRAVES' HUB PUNCH BT LOOIS, = = MO, | bo very careful with et dollue, | girls 86; gicls who are employed for |any Way connected with them or their T 1 title— “HUB PUNCH" is adop- e |and dimes, seeming always to be on|¢Xtr8 oooasions get $1 for each per- name, are imitations or counterfeits, | The name and titlo—UHUB FUNCH s adop, A THE CITY STEAM | the lookout for a threatoned rainy | formance. Tie Kiraliys pay their ex. [Beware of ~them. Toueh noue of | i e mark vill be prowmptly prosecutad. LAUNDRY makes » specialty of day, 50 that the fact that they do not grow rich with any greater rapidity than their fellow wage-workers can be attributed only to the other fact that they are tra ballet girls fifty cents performance; ‘‘supes,” as the male supernumeraries are oalled for short, get twenty-five cents. “You must recollect, ‘‘sald Mr, them. Use nothlng but genuine Hop G, H. GRAVES & SONS, BOSTON, MASE, Bitters, with a bunch or cluster of green Hops on the white label, Trust nothing Druggists and dealers are warned against dealing In imita- Sold by Grocers and ;Wine Merchants everywhere, Trade supplied at Manufacturer's by M, lg o i Namars; families sup) by " ] Mr, Berrell, *‘that actors and actress- | tions or counterfeits. £ M. Gladstove. Omaba Neb CO ars & cufis, The ::b:.; umu: “"’r" o8 are obliged m;'l.ho:ll, to pay their i ~Democrat reporter yea- | expenses out o r 3 3 = i AT THE RATE OF tonday interviowsd Br. Cisomse’ 1. | coiet have aciste variara bt oy ot Rocomoda of delims s et EUROPE:N HOTEL, ! Thre O t‘ E h , stage manager of the Grand | the case of & leading lady like Mrs. Mm.'m town to oure i e en @CIL, |opera house and Olympia, upon the | Forsyth in a legitimate company, her | the 1lls that our poor hi is beir to. A s matelly Jossted botel ';‘,m “. f W subject of actors’ salaries and theatri- robe will cost from Why will the public not learn common A Raataiiats” Ganested wikn the f orlk solicited from all over the country, the from dys- | ¥irsh Clase Restauran The charges and return mnu» cal expenses, Mr. Berrell is an actor | way up to $1,600; the leading man's | "ense. ““ niat. fnvests dollar iu | botel: v company the package. Tates to|and of many years experi- | wardrobe is almost as costly. He must mqfibwm ) and HURSE. - ¥ ? iarge clubs or ayencies, ence, and statements co: have one dress at least for every play, | endorsed by the 7. Se i Gosaes Doustb and Losend a¥-tfme WILKINS & EVA N, 1the stage and its people and its people | and sometimes he must have several. |als, Price 50 cents, trial bottle 0cents, | BT, X.OUXSS

Other pages from this issue: