Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 15, 1903, Page 23

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He follows me, and follows me. Save the mark! Think of the power of “Lovers' Lane” to move the hoary sinner | Alone, or in the laughing crowd, to tears! The man wpo could ru‘h\eul.\'fxl"" e that ey ,:"7";",";, his, break every law of God or man, who robbed T fejL 1t a8 m¥ trofh LIer S for a livelibood and killed for a pastime, | My heart stood still, then beat aloud. weeps profusely over the maudlin, mawkish lines of an alleged “‘pastoral,” and ex- presses regret that cannot become an Christ! Jet me end this deadly fear, End the mad terror of this chase Mine Enemy! If thou canst hear he Those That voice like some soft meiody. passion for anything or anybody except e with pity himself. What a loss it is to dramatic art that the bloodstained Missouri outlaw can- pot round out his active life by adding new glories to the profession that has been honored by the gentlest and bravest brimming o'er! He emooths my brow with gentleness And wipes the t His touch is chill, yet ne'ertheless 1 have found something that 1 seek To dull all pain and cure distress. Seattle lawyer, is an excellent example of the star who is made while you wait. As Miss Tittle she gained some little local prominence on the Pacific coast, playing in stock companies, chiefly as “support.” / Her personal charms, which are not to be denied, drew to her Mr. Brune, who, after marriage, became imbued with the idea that his wjfe possessed talent which ought not to be hidden longer from the world He had money, and was willing to part with some of it, so be made an arrange- ment with Frederick Warde, and the latter left the Wagenhals & Kemper management Jong enmough to put in one season as & co-star with Mrs. Minnie Tittle-Brune. Two or three classic pieces were played, but the principal play of their repertory was “The Lion's Mouth,” in which Mrs. Brune was cast for a part that very well suited her limited capacity as an actress. Just st the end of this season the bibulous habits of Melbourne MacDowell resulted in the aissolution of his arrangement with Miss Walsh, and Mr. Brune closed a deal with . MacDowell, becoming owner of the Sardofl productions; a deal which has since been overturned by the courts, & hand- some judgment for damages having been awarded MacDowell. It didn't take a long time to develop the fact that Cleopatra, LaTosca, Gismonda and Fedora were all beyond Mrs. Brune's powers, so the lesser Drive them all stricken to my doo: Where 1 but comfort, soothe and heal. ““These are the {lis of life—not mine— After the turmoll of the world, Defeat and victory, storm and shine, The battle o'er, the banner furl'd, Drink of my grateful anodyne.” And so he folds me to his breast, My arme about his shoulders steal And thankfully 1 sink to rest Where all my wounds forev: ‘With this dear foe, T heal, ho loves me best. Coniing Events. “Our New Minister, George W. Homesteat today. Ryer, authors of tomorrow night. lages of the state of New Hampshire. minded, liberal fellow. in & neat fitting business suit, evidence of his calling apparent. people. The mew minister quotes scriptural passage which ends with: came back to us as Theodora. take & very bad actress to entirely spoil this play, but Mrs. Brune only succeeded in creating the impression that she might have talent. recovered possession of his Sardou prop- |and finally wins them. erties, Mr. Brune cast about for & new vehicle for his wife's ability, and was | minister. “The Strollers, book not enly devold of intrinsic literary merit, but most unpromising as material for a play. It permits of the use of rich | and slmost gorgeous scenery and stage settings, but desls with highly improbable combinations of circumstances, and is put together 80 cru that its incongruities are emphasized ther - than diminished. With this plece fn bhand, Mr. Brune van- ished from the play bills Another step was taken on the stellar highway, and “Wallace Monfdh ‘presents Mrs. Brune” is now the legend. Individual designation has been sbamdioned. It s not thought necessary that she should be identified by Teference to the Tittle sisters, of whom she was one, or that she should be more spe- cifically described as Mrs. Clarence M Brune. She is now a fixed star, and her orbit has been determined, her periodicity fixed, and about everything has been settled for her. Yet, somehow or other, the people do Dot seem to have found it ouc. and night. and attractive. George Boniface principal comedian companion to change clothing. off s the genulne prince. tions that follow the mctions of the ing. Two Nebr: Sylva. They are the Misses Milton. being provided with a sumptuous array of stage settings and adornments; more than being “‘presented” by Mr. So-and-So is | necessary to establish a star. Stars must shine by their own light, and the amount of light they give off is the basis of de- termination of their value. In Mrs. Brune' case, the light is reflected. Here in Omaha last week it was the calcium light. Her stage director has the execrable taste to have her followed by the spot light durirg “Sally in Our Alley, musical comedy, the Boyd Thursday, Frida inee and night in pretty lyrics. sented by this company. Englander and v Hobart George stains from my cheek; " a pastoral drama from the pens of Denman Thompson and “The Old is the offering at the Boyd It will be given its intial perform- ance this afternoon and will continue until The play s & satire on the narrow-minded people of the inner vil- T such a villige a new minister has been appointed, so the play goes, as a broad- He arrives attired with no Co’n- cident with his coming arrives an ex-con- vict, & former resident of the village, who returns to begin li.e anew. He is shunned by the former minister and, the towns- th “Ani of the Sardou quintet was chosen to give |I was in prison and ye visited me” to his her & chance to spread her wings, and she | prospective parishioners, takes the convict It would by the hand mnd promises him his uid and then introduces himself as their new Such action causes everybody to | cordially dislike him. He starts with such ‘When MacDowell sued and |a discouraging outlook to minister to them with Marguerita Sylva pleased to mccept a Aramatization of & |of “Princess Chic" fame, will be seen at the Boyd Tuesday and Wednesday matinee The company is very large and the women of it said to be very handsome is the Others of note in the cast are: Neill McNeill, D. L. Don, Duvid Torrence, Louise Middleton, Dorothy Hunt- ing, Lester Brown, Harry Wigley, Gilbert Warfleld, Matthew Hanley and A¥ce Daven- port. The story of “Tke Strollers” deal with the adventures of two traveling show people who find a diamond necklace eud a great guantity of money lost by & prince They capture the prince, force him and his In their borrowed plumes the two palm themselves The complica- tw, masqueraders form the burden of the offer- ka girls are with Miss They are known in Omaha as the Nebraska Sis- ters and under that mame gave a concert the latest Lederer will be the attraction at , Saturday ma The piece is said to abound “Under the Bamboo Tree,"” & song which many have stolen, le a part of this production and was originally pre- The plece is the joint efforts of George W. Lederer, Ludwig Th: first act is in turn divided into two scenes, | is said to be brimful of fun. Commencing Thursday matinee for the remainder of the @ plaved in | Omaha last summer. Forbes Robertson and Gertrude Ellott, the latter a sister of Maxine, with their en- tire company, are coming over next fall to play “The Light that Failed. The estate of Willlam H. West itself to me, could not get to such an extent, that the late away from a discussion of The Whitewashing of Julia” is the title - 9 Siane Thost Sis-dneet e Thoe i faew! of Henry Arthur Jones' latest play, now a | abuse. actor. Tsn't that & triumph for the dra- | e FEnl O CTCt ers, I am here!” | Success at the Garrick theater in London. matist? How proud Clyde Fitch will feel it is promised an American production next |y pup oo L I L when he learns that he has f8one what 100 | And now he stretches forth his hand season. { m- consideration of humanity or dread of the | I brace myself to meet the blow— Richard Harding Davie had the satisfac- | Perament displayed in the musical exploits . " 4 to | With damp and quaking fear unmann'd— | tion of seeing two of his piays, “The Sol. | of a man, who, to cooler minds, simply Jaw's majesty could do! He has moved to | “yin €GB BB A et and low, diers of Fortune” and ‘The Taming of | jooked as though he were making an effort tears & bandit who never, before his long | Says *‘Look on me and understand.” Helen,” done in the same week in his home e s term of imprisonment for participation | town, Philadeiphia. e e i 4 its attendant murders, had | I Taise my eves! And this is he? Talk of an Australian tour for Miss Julia | 1 have heard ‘“feminine ladies” (no, not in a robbery an h Mine enemy! whom I abhor Mariowe is now being heard. A of | women, if you please) sigh about the sing- been known to exhibit & spark of com- | Those lipe that smile such love at me! people between Chicago and the Pacific . Toast wish she could be induced to ing of & persop who lecked a make ready given up her vaudeviile tour. the impression, to yourself at you are « connoisseur. “Technique” is too common now for reg- ular use, and “climax” 16 being overworked, rletta. Crosman's loss at the fire In Cincin- S P nati two weeks ago. The insurance com- pany was ready to settie the day after the theater burned. Stuart Robson celebrated his birtbday on | March 4 and cheerfully owns up that he is T.. He was the reciplent of a number of congratulatory telegram: Trom other youngsters in the show business, including Willlam H. Crane, Joseph Jefferson, Mark Twain and Grover Cleveland. While Richard Mansfield's revival of “Jullus Caesar”’ has brought down upoa his head no end of adverse criticism it does not seem to have affected his business much. In Baltimore last week he appeared in only seven performances and the receipts totalled up $17,000 on the week. Andrew C. Wheeler, better known as “Nym Crinle.” died at_his_home in Mon- sey, Rockiand county, N. Y., on Tuesday. Mr' Wheeler was 6 years of age and had beén engaged all his active life in news- paper work, and was regarded as a drama- tic critic of exceptional brilllance &nd ability. The case of Henrfetta Crosman and David Belasco is drawing much fire. Mr. Maurice Campbell, who happens to be the lady's husband, announ: a tour for next season which will cover “all the principal citles.” James MacArthur, who was under to write a play for Miss n, & has been informed that she would have a play bullt under \irection of David Belasco on “The Bath Comedy.” And that is the end of the definite information. Much ad- vertising is being secured in the meantime. The talk of Helen Redmond, the hand- some Dolores of “Fiorodora,” becoming & etar is again going the rounds. it is sald that the Bires hue complessd all arrange- ments for Miss Kedmond to star this sea- son, but eventually put Miss Mabelle Gill- the repertoire of & cl may be found in almost all cities, merous as they are benighted. It is an amusing class. Its members, having picked up here and there a few transitory phrases, and never having given the matter any deep study, or careful reading (except in superficial magazines) will undertake to en- lghten the musician who has spent bun- dreds of dollars, and years of time in study- ing and solving part of the problems so fippantly discussed. Now, a8 to the word temperament itselt, the meanings given in the various diction- aries are very much akin. So, let me quote Webster: “The peculiar physical and men- tal character of 'an individual, in olden times erroneously supposed to be due to individual variation in the. relations and proportions of the constituent parts of the body, especially of the fluids, as the bile, blood, lymph, ete. Hente the phrases, bil- ious or choleric ‘temperament,’ ‘temperament,’ ete., lmplylng & predomi- nance of one of these fluids and a corre- sponding influence on the temperament.” The word is of course related to temper, 0 e man forward instead. Now that Miss Gill- | 803 I will quote the following from Arch- man is & sucoes h bishop Trench's tamous book “On the Study been turned to 1t is eaiC | of Words,” page 169: *Theories, too, which that she has a comic opera in readine: that was written for her immediately after ner big hit in “Florodora.” ‘When a second “Resurrection” company long since were utterly renounced, have yet left their traces behind them. Thus ‘good o 3 bumour,’ ‘bad bhumour,’ ‘bumours,’ and, is ment out this spring the part of Malova, | strangest contradiction of all, ‘dry humour, in which Blanche Walsh has made a pro- | y o nounced hit in New York, will be looked | TSt altogether on a now exploded, but a after by Miss Beverly Bitgreaves, who at|very old and largely accepted theory of e Al- l:m)’lfll lh;;fllr !t:l llk.n h::un:t) | medicine: according to which there were rincess in this same dramatization. Eariier o gy e Sitgreaves was nere | [0UT Principal moistures or humours in the With ‘Ben Hur,” playing tne part of Am- | Dtural body, on the due proportion and Ish, the nurse of the house of Hur. Miss | combination of which the disposition alike tgreaves is an American, but was force < to 80 abroad before her talents were Tecos- | O P00 and mind depended. Our present She plaved for quite & while in Lon. | USe Of ‘temper’ has ite origin in the same don and Paris and afterward gave drawing- | theory; the due admixture, or right tem- room entertainments in England, the pri - Cipal part of which was her remarkabje | PeiE Of these humours gave what was fmitatlons of Sarah Bernhardt. Miss Sit. | called the happy temper, or mixture, which, greaves’ elevation to the principal part in | thus existing inwardly, manifested itself “Resurrection” practically amounts to her | also outwardly; while ‘distemper,’ which we still employ in the semse of sickness, was that evil frame either of a man's body or of his mind (for it was used of both) which being made a star. It has been definitely decided to postpone bad its rise in an umsuitable mingling of these humours.” Miss Maude Adams’ Dext appearance until at least the fall. She salled for Europe this woek and remains abroad until it is time for her to return for rehearsal. She will epend much of her season in London, where the plans for her new play are under way, and the more important details will be settled while she is in that city. The balance of her summer will be spent on the continent. This is the official announce- | ment about Miss Adame, but the sad fact remains that her phy: cont on s most T ety 11 had Becs neacd v it | word, I am convinced that it 1s & good word P himen tha: she woull be able to make & | to drop, and I will endeavor to do so in the short tour this spring, if for no other pur- | future. It is senseless because it needs one pose than to stop the gomsip that it may be [ of these words to go with it: The fact of the matter is that there is positively no sense in the use of the word, nd though I have sometimes (at rare in- tervals, I can truthfully say,) used the “Bilious,” before she returns t t o 3 — at the Boyd a year ago. Thelr home I8 &t | hee g & winter of absolute Tam spot | “SenEulne,” “Iymphatic” or “nervou More than the mere abandonment of | Plattsmouth, Neb under the constant watchful care of emi- | In this connection I can do no better than given mames or martial titles; more than nent physicians, but her health has not im- | quote Willlam J. Henderson, musical critic, who wrote these words in his column in the New York Times last year in an article entitled “Technics and Temperament:™ ‘The lymphatic temperament, for examplé, is fhe result of constitutionel anaemia, which gives one ‘water on the soul’ while the direct opposite is & sanguine tempera- ment, which makes the scts and thoughts of a man full-blooded. The true intellectual | temperament is the nervous, perceptions are switt proved, and all hope of & spring tour had to be abandoned. The sale of Ada Rehan's coliection of art treasures and mementoes of the late Augus tin Daly, which was Leld during all of last week at the Knickerbocker auction rooms, netted in all $35,421.70, a smaller sum than was expected would accrue from the sale | of puck a collection. Many persons prom- inent in the world of letterr, moclety, art and the stage attended during the six dave that the sale lasted, bui in spite of this the bidding throughou! was low. Objects of antiquity art curios brought the large amounts. as shown by the eale of a Carrara people did not often confuse the terms, I took the question seriously, and many times times since has the interrogation presented | 1 strel, hae been settled. ‘It amounted to | the word “temperament” in this column 860080, and is divided ually between his Witot. Bt Beoters aad a: doles today. Temperament is & word whose use is frequently; in fact, almost generally an though he 80 ‘temperament’ s a welcome addition to s of persons which and whose representatives in Omaha are as nu- sanguine in which the | the impulses quick | rforms. Therefore the first the sonata or the operatic part which wil From what I hear in the way of comment by local planists on the Hambourg recital last Monday evening, Mr. Hambourg was not as great an artist as he was an advertising medium for a certain make of plano. Aft all, the billboard advertising all over town exploited tbe commercial side more than the artistic, so, “Was ist los? THOMAS J. KELLY. 4 {{| ECHOES OF THE ANTE ROOM Masone of the Scottish Rite are making arrangements for the annual reunion which another real American tour. were trying to disgorge an egg, after the ;;l” ;" held in Omaba in “‘v”l e e was at the Orpheum early in the winter o ¥ a and divided her time beiween singing r;‘r:‘d‘ ":’n{"':r“:"".:‘ say, between sighs, “Oh, the | . er been in spite of the fact that & new Scolding the audience, is very ill at her ; 3 home in Bensonhurst, N. Y. She had af- | Yes; it is a mighty nlce word that! And | COFstory hae been established at Lincoln. This the thirty-second than the lower degrees, which will be something unusual, due to the fact that the degrees below the four- teenth have been conferred both at Hast- ings and Lincoln and it may be that a number will come to Omaha to receive the higher degrees, especlally from Hastings. The great success of Vesta chapter, Or- der of the Easterp Star, in its masquerade ball Friday night has set some of the other lodges of Masonry to thinking of some similar affair. The chief success of the Friday evening was due to its secrecy, and there were persons on the floor who at- tributed the ball to several orders other then the one responsible. One of the de- ceptive features was that the examining committee was taken from a list of Masons who are not connected with the Eastern Star. To John D. Howe, of the quarter- master's department of the Department of the Missourl, is due in a greater degree than to any other individual, the success of the ball and the figures ard designs upon invitation and ticket was & hit which had the majority guessing. This guess was not so much due to the fact that they were mysterious as to the fact that there has been organized in Omaha recently a consistory or lodge of the Order of Constantine, an order of Masonry new to this part of the United States, and in the cabalistic figures several thought they saw & sign of the new order. The thirty-sixth anniversary of State lodge No. 10, Independent Order of 0dé Fellows will be celebrated at its hall on Fourteenth and Dodge streets Monday even- ing, March 23, with appropriate exercises. State lodge is one of the oldest lodges in the state and containe on its rolls some of the most prominent 0dd Fellows in the city. The celebration of the enniversary will make an epoch in the history of the lodge, which promises to take on some un- accustomed activity. - Triangle lodge No. 54, Knights of Pythias, devoted the session last Thursday even- ing to the tramsaction of lodge business and this week will work the third rank upon two candidates. Pacific council No. 684, Fraternal Ald as- sociation, will give a mask ball at Ancient Order United Workmen temple Friday evening. The next Worley Cup competitive drill of the Ancient Order United Workmen will be held at Lincoln on April 16, and much enthusissm is being displayed in the ar- rangements for the event. The Lincoln members have engaged the Auditorium, s band and an orchestra for the occasion, and are advertising the drill extensively not only in Lincoln and Omabe, but in the smaller towns. It is believed that at least & dozen degree teams will compete, ut least four going from Omaha. Four prizes will be awarded, and the Omaha crews say that all four will come to Omaha when the train returns on the morning of the 17Tth. A special train will likely be obtained, leav- ing Omaha about § p. m. and returning | about 1 & m At the upion meeting with Ak-Sar-Ben lodge No. 222 on Thureday evening, & mon- every moment sho 18 visible to the audi- | street in New York snd the interior of & | Bust of Miss Kehan for 5. This work, by | and powerful, the emotions vivid and | ument fund was suggested and favorably ence. This is ot only & cheap and tawdry | metropalitan department store. The wec- e ey cost the late My Daly $L6%. A | changeful 1f a musical performer is to | discussed by several of the brothers. A device, but i actually & detriment to the | and act s & reception hall in & Fifth ave- | brought $8 and a Royal Kirmansha car. | D8ve & distinct type of temperament, the | number of short, spirited addresses were woman, for it mot only does not enhance [ nue mansion. The heroine of the story is | bet 330 A Chippendale aining room sulte | NeTVOUS 16 best for him, for it will the most | made and the meeting was well attended ] Dor porformance, but detracts from It. be- | a young New York Eirl of today and nives | SrieiFht, Pie®s 2010 for 2 and un old | bappily afiect his art. ‘But there fo & finer cause it promises 50 much and reveals 80| on the east side or poorer section of | with lion head arms and Beausvais tapes- | stronger and more desirable tempera Last Wednesday evening the members of little. Nrs. Brune has some ability, but | Gotham. She i pretty, vivacious and un- | &5 with two chairs to match, was bid in ) ment than any of the marked types. This | Omaha Tent No. 75, of the Maccabees gath- she s not by mature intended for Berolc | conventional. and has in some way beed | prioer prevalled A SOtOKFATE letier of | bont deen ool Cmperament, in which the | ered at the residence of George A. Ostrom, parts, and the sooner she abandons them | given the name from which the plece takes | Alexander Dumas brought but 3650 while | e \doag e of temperament in gencral | the record keeper of the tent, the occasion , and turgs her attention to characters sbe | jts title. Her father, lszy, keeps a shop | 9n¢, of G H. Couldock went for $i50. "~ 4 | s blended 1t s meediens to add that| peing the birthday of Mr. Ostrom and the can achieve the sooner she will be in line | where one can buy and sell anything and | horivait Tor i an oid Englieh brace hen | "B temperament s rare event being & complete surprise. The mem- 3 to win the recognition she aspires to. everything. Into this establishment troop |ald's trumpet for T cents, a hammered | yyo oo =2 bers of the tent as & token of their ap- ! the various characters from tte Bowery | Drass Antwerp jug for 816, a harp. in Delft | en asked many times about cer- | preciation of the good work of Mr. Ostrom 4 - . ¥ | blue and white ware, for 365, and many | tain uneducated emotional performers as to | - . ¥ Liebler & Co. announce the all-star cast | and Fifth avenue who are concerned in [ other similarly valusble articles went for a | whether 1 did not consier that they had | P connection with the Maccabees, pre ! for their “Romeo and Juliet" company, the plot, and who incidentally furnish [ mere song. Al the theatrical costumes | much temperament Y Bad | gonted him with & cut glass berry dish. H which 1s tosmake & short spring tour. | plenty of variety to the stage scenen | BRICH YOG uRE I "The Rehool for Scan. | Tproiion iy mot temperament, neither fg | TR JTesentation was made by Sir Kaight § Omabha is not included in the list of cities { Here the fashionable contingent of the cast, | “Much Ado About Nothing” wepe offered | temperament exclusively emotion | Mastry, whe expeessed the sppracietise of J to be visited, & fact much to be regretted, | headed by Mrs. Marigold o the “Smart s & single lot. After some spiritéd bIdding | The very word itself suggests . | the tent for the grest work Mr. Ostrom has ] for the production and the people promise | Set,” throng in search of a green silk | befween W 4 Beady and Nicholas Lorits. | oo oronorion Temperament and ters. | been doing in ite bebalf. Mr, Ostrom re- i one of the rarest of Shakespearean treats. | dress, which Mrs. Marigold gave to ber | talned the Jot for the sum of SH.00 a8 we pest are two widely differing things. " | sponded briefly after which several other H Following are the people and their parts: | maid, who sold it to the second-hand |&s three sets of scenery for §76 | "'The truc temperament ofttimes it to be | Members apoke, all acknowledging the sur- g Jhoresie| ahncater, By, a0 o presmt. 226 B ag| O™ SO Suoss o Wawtend. § | St atic o sterm. end the wing wnd. che | S5 200 ST Tl ints 10 the oves- ; e 3 ent whirlwind—t . - dwin Arden ‘sris | which the matron would not have anyone | o - p @ Benyolio | T00a for the world. There. are over sev, | Bas boen closed at 145 oents per Dound. | yurmiice: cmmmieac "ok b Jrastormer | oyt ADELPHIA KNOWS WRIGHT W e . Gameser | enty-five people in the company, the most | This was the first sale of sugar for Burope | ne temperamen shows o ¥ C. Ban L1ILIL00L Moutague | prominent being Junie MoCree, Richard | ib twenty-five yeurs, with the exception or‘ Mr. Hendersen in the article Wanted in England Had Brief Edmund 1{'«--«_ - Yads acalu® | Carroll, Trixie Frigansa, George Schilier, | § per cent out of the output which formerly | gnove gives us this very p-rtln‘s‘:‘:“::n:: Finsncial Carcer in the P o N ly Capalel | prank Barrington, Caroline Heustis, Prauk | Went to Spain, but which ceased at the time | which those who can really discern will Miss Elanor Robson Juliet | Bernard and Tessie Mooney of the war between Spain and'the United | gppreciate Suaker Clty. States. This new European demand is con- | Now. where does the emotion operate? E H. Sothern has already won fame &8 | The Orpheum bill for the week com- | Sidered to be due to poor crops in Europe m;\;{m i5 the question which troubles the | PHILADELPHIA, March 14 —Whitaker an actor, n suthor and an artist. During | mencing with & matinee today will in-|and o the abolition of Buropean bounties | (UNNET: 8 © 1 The emetion besine oL | Wright, the director of the London & Globe the past few months he has surprised even | clude a trinity of headline features with e S———— He at once enters the domain of the com. | Finance corporation, who is alleged to have those whe best know the studious and | established reputatioms. First come the | A " peele. e e yoon. | He undermands. and, | sbeconded from London, had a brief career poetic bent of his mind by the success be | Russell brothers, who made quite & fa- | NEW YORK. March 14—Benedict Fisher, | {Re7eiore, focls what is in the work He|in gpancial circles in this has gained as & poet. Of late Mr. Sothern bas written Dumber of poems which he bas sent to leading magnzines under «om-de-plume. These, without exceplion, week they will present a new sketch titled “A Romance of New Jersey, vorsble impression when they were here three years ago. For the first half of the president of the Encaustic Tiling company, throbs with it. and in his first resding of who was stricken with paralysis in an ele- & new composition, or a new part, he may vuted train yesterday, was reported i be overcame by his own emotions, melted yuted train ¥ y riss oy X 10 tears, whaken 1o the foundations of his Quftered from heart trevble for yenrs and | “HUt he cannct be in that state whes he city sbout £f- teen years age. While here Wright lived in elegant style, and from 1887 to 1891 re- sided at Haverford, & fashionable suburb. About 1585 he renied an office in the old purpose of ds study 18 how to construct a reading of is due to the fact that for a year | when you do not know how ¢ . - of men and women. And what a card for | i During the two days Henrietta Crosman | o i © CXpress YOUT | the blue lodges of the state have been . Come:" and T feel his cooling breath, A ] selt intelligently, or to analyze what makes Lovers' Lane” that it has awakened ; el ooliny spent in New York after the Cincinnati working upon many more candidates than .. g gy om of Cole | e "hile he takes me in his arms, fire replenishing her wardrobe she practic- | & performance either good or bad, mediocre | ese regrel bos: ‘Come where no mortal sorroweth ally 1ived in her carriage and at the dress. | or superior, just say -he lacks tempera. | USual and the people have more money Younger! Faugh! Far flnm‘lh’.'uhor and al its b ";:‘.lh . | makers. The consequence is th: her new ment, or, “but h B s 80 bt which they can spend in these things. Work Peace dwells with me—my name ie Dea gowns are said to be particularly stunning b 1 hunky dorey, | Will be done from the fourth to the thirty- nee M. Brune, who was Minnle | - Maurice Campbell last week received a (Ment.” and there you are, all hunky-dorey el et he wite of 8| E e T ont v war " | check for §10,0l0 from the Columbia Fire | and no one is the wiser, and you have giyen | 00000 degree probably a large number Tittle before she became aFamine and plague and Iust and war, | fneurance company in payment of Hen- taking the degrees from the fourteenth to week they will be seen in “Our Irish Berv convey to the audience its entire artistic ot Girls in which they have achieved “”‘l tent AV\:‘I(I;‘F‘.L intellectual and emo- e Sessil, Lot G 4 mal. And this process is purely mental much succes: Lotty l"h""‘n k:"‘:‘ ; | _When the reading is formed, then in the o ttle magnet,” is the second of the ¥ 5 4 | presentation of it to the hearer, the per io. Her chic and winsome ways have won | The following translation forms the | former may—nay, must—endeavor to il the Omaba drew almost a blank last week,)have been accepte | her thie sobriquet, and for that same rea- | #€VeNth link in the chain Potiie Gue | FRITETIRNISS SE TEoYon ut 1t St b ng &t the Socal thesters, anl thatVhbuing | This Be BiC Gone to Seowre prefer her to almost ans singer in vaudesille | [? (his column lately. The translation is | emotion must never disturb the conception & good bill was on ap ali week. Better { because of his personal prom she bas & popular repertoire. W. C. Fields, | HeiDe poem entitled “Diamanten hast du | Gp'Crder? Not at all. It simply mesns that | things are in prospect, though, for the end | poems are said o be much like all else | ypo onp POT0 L0 R AT he third | 904 Perlen.” music by Francie Alliteen; | he has found in a certatn work the embodi of the month and the month of April will | that emanates from the man—breathing 8| gince last here he has made a tour of Bu. | Publishers, the well known firm of Robert | Mment of certaln emotions, and thal, being bring some of the most notable eugage- |bigh spirit of thought and feeling. The | rone [iaving in the leading music halls | COCkS & Co., London emotions himelf, he endeavors to hresent ments of the season. The announcement | following poem was written by Sothern| o1y o5 much success as he met with at | the work to the hearer as an expression of . c ceess L 1 Diamonde hast thou, and pearis, { the “he h joes not fi e e tions that Mrs. Campbell had consented 10 give a | during the recent successtul run of “Ham- | pome The remainder includes well-ad- And all by which men set store 10"the work. e comnor Shp s them and matinee performance was welcome .news, | let” at the Garden theater, New York, and | yueieq variety. Joe Maxwell and company And of eves hast thou the finest. e W6 803 CRAL B¢ Bod Re “SeIDECamIGRT for it assures Omaha people an opportunity | appeared in the New York Herald of Sun- | wi nave s musical sketch somewhat on arling, what would'st thou more' Yet, you.see the act of expressing feel to see this great actress in three of ber ac- | day, February It was suggested the novel order. The quintet in the uni-| Upon those eyes so lovely ing'in & aTt-work is largely intellectual knowledged triumphs. Several spring tours | Sothern by certain psychological studies of | tormy of fire laddies do their singing in the fave 1 a whole corps. g ¥ of well known stars are now being made up | Hamlet's character and motives and Was | chier's office, for which v oo Of undying songe - constructed, Mr. Kratz gave his second pupils' recital | B s e, for which appropriate a Darling, what would st thou more of the season at the residence of Mr. ard it is pot at all unlikely that Omaha will | also given a color to by hie mishap of TWO | gpeiig) geenery is carried. Esmeralda, the Beecher Higby last Tuesday ht. Songe see one or two of the first magnitude who | years ago, when, from a sword thrust, Be | uccomplished instrumentalist, will contrib- And witn, those ever 8o lovels oo ‘,,,‘,;',; M.,.,,...em.,m “Clark 4t oty Sl S o bu tortured me very sore, y ¥, have not yet been announced. Manager | came perflously near losing hie 1if | ute to the harmony, while Anderson and And hast ruin'd me altogether, Forbee, Mrs. L H. Johnson, Mrs. Peters Burgess ‘s watching the booking list with MINE ENEMY, Wallace's specialty ie constituted of trav- Darling what would'st thou more? and Messrs. Sturdevant and Brewster. The much eare. By day, by night, by land and sea, esty. Entirely new moving pictures will — ” the! treg Here is @ bulletin sent out by the Wil- |1 and my awful enemy, =~ - . the worg “temperament.” and 1 suppase | pi L0 T O T e s Mam A. Brady press agent, who works in | wNUhO QOfR i0¢ OV FOCE KOO et waip from Stageland. there is no word in the mouths of the di- |, tae 9 - e rten e g Moo fled fac 3, 3. Coleman has secured “The Profes- | lettant which sounds 8o well and means T of these recitals is a | Cole Younger, the eminent and respected | His glance and mine have never met sor's Love Story” for Harry Berestord fo ( 1y je ten-minute musical catechism ex-bandit recently rele from the Min- | No word has pnec aound. and vet . | Kathryn Kidder has been fll in the south. | In the foyer of the theater the other night | nesota penitentiafy. occupied a box &t a ma o sign. no sound. and but s W reported as convalescent. HeF | s musician asked me If 1 thought thuat| .1 DSVe received motices which indicate Kansas ' City performance of “Lovers | A sudden stilineis fally and he tour has been s success vt sl oz ! | that Mr. J. A. Wallerstedt, baritone, form- Lane " He wept profusely and expres ed | Breathes in my heart, “Do not forg Camille D'Arville has returned to vaude- | !Pest and temperament meant the same | .\ o0 1310 oity, is making & strenuous hit himeeit us much refreshed in spirit by the | o\ qay and night, by land and sea vile, opening her round with an engage- | thing. I said thet 1 could not understand | T8 T [ES 0. It MORIE ophcor i e e erma et hie pardon do not permit | Through meadow and through market | ment at Hyde & Beaman's Washington. the drift of the question, but when he ex- hat B 'y > i him to become an actor and has contented | place, Y Dick Ferris 1s down in New York. trving | plained to me that he had himselt been | i That Be 1 Plenning a trip to Parls in himself by purchasing as intereat in Buck- Olgr, valley, mountatn top and lea, |to urrange for a production of “Graustark, | congidering the question whether or not | U2® DA future, where he intends to study AMUSEMENTS, BOYD'STHEATRE ey W Woodward & B_u»rzeu. _Mlmxgm This Afternoon, Tonight, Monday Night Miller & Conyer's beautifal production of the greatest of all pastoral plays By Denman Thompson and Geo. W. Ryer, Authors of ‘The Old Homestead.” The Kiggest Hit Ever Knowm in the History of the Stage THE ORIGINAL ALL STAR CAS on ever Fiven a Tustor PRICES -~ Matinee, 25¢ and 50. ngl}t 25¢, S0c, 75;7'.7$I.00. Tuesday-Wednesday Nights—Wednesday Matinee. Messrs. Nixon & Zimmerman Preseat The Marguerita Sylva Comic Opera Co. OF 76 PEOPLE head. brilliant and talonte Pro- duction Play d by the tiste In Geo. W. Lederer's Marguerita Sylva 35505 W, 2o “THE STROLLERS” Under the Personal Direction of W. D. MANN. ORIGINALLY PRODUCED AT THE KNICKERBOCKER THEATRE, NEW YORK. JUNE 24, 1901, FOR TEN WEEKS. PRICES—Matinee, 25c to $1; Night, 25c to $1.50. Seats on sale. Four Performances, Starting Thursday—Matinee Saturday Musicar Frivoity || Geo. W, Lederer's and Fascinating IN OUR Musical Revel Music by A Y Ludwin Englander, || I I E Book by i George V, Hovart Direct from ite Broadway Theatre, New York, Triumph, With == AND CAST OF 75 ngers £ Deaities Jur Costumes Junie McCree. Mr. Richard F. Carroll. Mr. Geo. A. Schil- Fairleigh, Mr. Frank Bernard, Mr. Frank Farrington, Miss Miss Catherine Lewis, Miss Carolihe Heustis, Miss Tes- = I Quaintest i Brightest [ Sweetest Jolliest | Most Melodious 1tu) Scenery Including Mr. Mr. Harry Friganza, ler. e Moar e Mooney PRICES—Night, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00and $1.50; Matinee, 2Sc, 50c¢, 75c and $1.00. Seats on sale Monday. NOTICE—SPECIAL. The management announces that mail orders contagning remittances will now be received and filled in the order of thelr arrival for the performances of Mre. Patrick Campbell Wednesday and Thurs., March 25-26 —Special Mat, Thursday ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY-—The Eminent English Actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell AND HER LONDON COMPANY: Direction of Charles Frohman. ed. Night—“THE JOY OF LIVING" Thursday Night—-*‘MAGDA'® HE SECOND MRS. TANQUERAY” Free list absolutely suspended. General sale of Thurs. Matinee~ PRICES—50c to $2.00. . March 21 One Concert Only—Menday Evening, March 23. KOCIA PRICES—50c, Tic, $1.00, $1.50. The Celebrated Bohemian Violin Virtuoso Seats on sale Thursday. We will serve for Sunday, March 15, | Roast Wild Duck [ CALUMET COFFEE_HOUSE | AND LADIES' CAFE w 1411 Douglas Bt | OMAHA'S LEADING RESTAURANT WESTERN BOWLING ALLEYS. Everything new and up-to-date. Special attention to private parties. BENGELE & GIBBS, Props., Tel, L2626. 1510 Howard, OMAHA. Telephone 1531, Week Commencing Sun, Mat,, March 15 Today 2:15. Tonight 8:15. Russell Brothers Presenting “A Romance of New Jersey” First Half of Week and “An Irish Servant Girl” Commencing Thursday Matinee. Lottie Gilson The Little Magnet. W. C. Fields The Juggling Comedian. | Joe Maxwell and Co. In Their Musical Novelty, “The Fire Chief." Esmeralda Instrumentalist. Mr. Kelly . TEACHER OF Singing, Tone Production Interpretation Davidge Block, i18th and Farnam 'BOY EVANGELIST Anderson & Wallace Travesty Sturs. Kinodrome New Moving Scenes. Prices, 10c, 25¢, 50c HOTELS. «HE CAME BACK." Rosms clean, light and warm— wexim heated Our guests are our best recommendation The Hotel Dellone $2.00 wp ** Absolitely Fireproof.” “THE ONLY ONE" 14th and Capitol Ave. H. F Cady, Propristor. R W. Jobuson, Mgr J;\om}i;yr Night Lonnie L. Dennis will talk for two orphans from Omahs to enter Ambidexter Institute at Springfield . An industrial school for colored chil- dren Major John R. Lynch will also speak on the same evening. Several white and col- ored aninisters will also address the moet- ing. See further abnouncements. B — Merchants’ Exchange building now the stock exchange, &nd began business as a broker in cotton, grain snd petroleum. He was not & member of the stock exchange. Wright during his stey here is said to bave been identified with various “get-rich- quick” concerns. He disappeared from Philadelphia in 1891 A bite to eat “'afior-the-thester makes & pleamnt evening compete. 500 Broiled Black Kass Broiled Uysters on Toast.. 350 216 Se. ITth. Bee Bidg.

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