Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 4, 1915, Page 19

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Celebrate Fourth Together—Gir Born on Fourth, Two the Day After Christmas. TWO0 OTHERS BORN ON MAY 2 "% Mr. and Mrs, South Eleventh the sixteenth birthday anniversary o M. street Basar of will their daughter, Frances, on July 4 will have a jollification of their own Twelve children live at home, the eldes being married. age of 1 year. of school age. According to the schoo ensus reports just received by Secretary Bourke of the Board of Education, children of school age 5 and 21 namely, botween A Bee reporter visited the Basar home | | Friday evening. Mr. Basar was busy a work extending a shed and Mrs. | a girl of 1 year of age. The older girls | | were helping their mother with the house ! work | When Mrs Basar was asked for the | names and ages and birthdays of her . tiock she had to refer to one of the girls | I'f’;]/zam \ | i who kept the family records. The record ]7" 1% f book showed several interesting features. | arnum The oldest of the family was 21 year A¢ the H of age December 2. 194, and the young- | est was 1 year of age on the same day Whe ' Mhird " Party " &' Tarce. | cerntdy Helen and Steven were 4 and 3, respec- tively, on the 16th day of last month, | hat President Wilson designated as the ) being exactly a year apart funniest play he ever saw, and which en- Michael and Lillian, 19 and 6, respec- |joyed long runs in New York and Chi- tively, observe their birthdays together|cago, and a piece absolutely new to on May 2 Omaha, having never befors been pre- | fiancee. The comeds Only one of the children was born on | July 4 1!140‘ observe and on Monday they will observe In dependence day with their thirteen children. i This happy family of fifteen members A daughter died at the | ine of the thirteen living children are this is the only home having as many as nine Basar was engaged in caring for her youngest, Four were born during the month 'HE EDWARD LYNCH COMPANY 1 f 5 t 1 n | | | ¢l | Is sustained at a sented in this city, will be the attraction | furious pitch until the very last moment ot May. at the Brandels theater for the third|©f the play, ang though on many ocea- Mr. and Mrs. Basar have lived here|Week of the all summer run of the Ed-|®lons discovery seems positive, the sit- twenty-seven years. All of the children|Ward Lynch Players, beginning tonight.| Uations are not untangled until just be- L g were born in Omaha. Mr. Basar s an| The first act of the play takes place in | fore the final curtain n | assistant foreman at the smelter. Six of |# fashionable restaurant which is con-| The. kcenic artists have prepared some | ) the children attend the St. Wenceslaus |ducted so properly that married people | Very beautiful sets for this production, parochial school. The parents are Croa- |9Ining with other wives or husbands|8nd the women of the company will dis- tians. |than their own are forced to dine in|Play some stunning new gowns. A spe- The names and respective ages of the |COmMpany with a man chaperon. A rich| clal hollday matinee will be given tomor- /I children are as follows: Marie, 21;|YOUng man about town, dlscovering that|FoW afternoon, and the regular matinees, Michael, 19; Anna, 17; Frances, 16; m,_‘a married friend of his is going to dine | 88 usual, on Tuesday, Thursday and Sat- bars, Margaret, 13; Joseph, 12; Kath- |there with w certain dancer, persuades| Urday erine, 10; Rose, 8; Lillian, 6; Helen, 4;|the restaurant manager to permit him —o— Steven, 8; Clare, 1 to chaperon his frienq and the young| Heading the bill at the Empress for | woman. Just us the dinner is served| Sunday and the first half is Creighton | the wife of the man_who Is dining clan- | brothers and Belmont in their comedy Bad Wea,ther H()lds immu-n enters, and to save the situa-| talking minstrel first part, “The Mud- [tion the chaperon introduces the dancer|town Minstrels.” An antiquated man Back the Work On University Club The long rainy spell has kept the Uni- versity club from occupying its new be lower than last year on account of | quarters t: ’": Independent Telephone Tax StI‘eet Ca,I‘ | competition from the fitneys. The com- exchange building as soon as expected. . | pany ‘admitted a taxable valuation of Much remodeling was necessary when Lines at Nearlv 7,250,000, the club bought this building at Twen- « ity tieth and Harney streets. and it was the plastering that was delayed by the weather. Then later the mill work did not come as expected ‘ A big gPening is tentatively planned for some time within four or six weeks, when as his wife. Later they the married counle’'s home, situation is further presence of the all return to and there the complicated by the | erstwhile chaperon’s | from the country as interlocutor and two end men nearly as old. The novelty four, exponents of quartet harmony, have won distinction as real quartet voice blenders. | Eight Millions Omaha Signs Along The board of equaitzation placed a Val- | uation for taxation of $7,70,000 on the Roads Into the Clty | pergonal property of the street rallway company. The board Incrensed the valua- | AN Omaha sign for every highway lead- ing to Omaha from western Iowa or east- the structure shall have been completed. | tion returned by the company $500,000, 3 The upstairs, where the dining rooms are | leaving it &t the same figure at which (¢" Nebraska is planned by the Omaha located, is complete, but-much work s |it was last year | Manufacturers’ association and the Auto- yet to be done to complete the rooms on| Harry Zimman appeared at the hearing |moblle club. The Commercial club is to the first floor. and made a request that the board as- |Purchase 20 signs, to be of wood, 15x22 A meeting of the board of directors is|sess the company on a valuation of $15,- |[Inches. in dimeneions. o word to be held next Thursday, when the mat- | (00,000, the amount of its capital stock “‘Omaha’ is to be printed upon them in ter of the formal opening will be| R Leussler, representing the com- |1arge letters and a red arrow is to point taken up. pany, declared that the valuation should |the direction of the city. sald to d this will be Hagenberk-Wallace Monday, J by w and ex lent resent ear by the Carl circus, which will exhibit ly 12 \ccord at Omaha € to the advance information the ot Pedini her ¢ the most enjoyable of because it shows the po education of a have almost hu f voman has taught horses many new steps in their dancing Nearly 4 performers are on the perform their acts cn th ang high in the air acrobatic and gymnasti the show are the Six dudys Gorman, the Fugene Cottrell-Fowell Trio, the Austrian Waltes, Sisters La Low and ners. The leading bareback rider is Oscar Lowande. Lowande is rated as the most acconiplished bareback rider in th act Wwith the entire bill, sibilities in the ippoats Mine to ma 11 and they ground, Among celabrities Wards Troups, the n a stage o wit® Many Noveltles with Carl Hagenbeck Wallace Circus This Year “SPEEDPICTURE™ oz CSCARTAVANDE tangoing ) £ MISS ZELDF circus profession. He juwps from the one of the new features of the show this ' She was putting her twelve Polar bears #roung to a speeding horse's baek, facing | season. These | ds were ht Ly through a course of truining recently, the opposite direction {rom which the el Wallace because he had induced when one of the tricky animals pounced horse is running. The Powells, the Cot- ' Mme, La Pearl, “the woman without on her and threw her to the ground trells, the Ledgett tinupe, Mme. Bedini fear,” tc return to her profession of | Her erms and shoulders were badly and others are in the long list of eques- | performing with trained leopards. me. |lacerated before she beat off the animal trian arti The cireus will come to |La Pearl was rtifed, but during last| but sbe has kept on with the work, and his city fresh from its wintsr quarters, | winter she visited her husband, who is|now has the unimal taed uch an where il of the equipment was prac-|one of the ammal trainers with the|extent they are like tame sittens in | " ucally made_aver intc new | show. at Cincinnatl, O., and Mr. Wallace | hands., She will show them S ihe per- A mew trope of performing leopards ix | engaged her to return Lo her profemsion. ' formunce he.w OM \HA SUNDAY BEE FIFTEEN MEMBERS | Omaha Summer Theaters Offer Varied BIHS ]N FAMILY AT HOME PLAYS THE LEADING ROLE IN PLAYS “CHARACTERS" WITH THE “THE PLUNDERERS."” ONE OF THE “MUDTOWN MINSTREL® " Bully ('r‘eiyhlon at the Emprase Maleta HBanconi, n violin virtuoso, and Niblo's birds, feathered pets, featuring Cookoo and lLora the two alking | birds, complete the vaudeville offering | “The Dream Dance is a short feature of merit, dealing with life In Paris, espe | elally In the Latin quarter An assort- ment of comedy and the Hearst-Selig | weekly completes the bill for the first | hatt. | For the lagt half of the week the Hurs-| f ley troupe of acrobats offer “fun, fast and furious,” with boys and girls of the | speed demon varfety | two funsters with a new line of laugh | Terry and Elmer, setters and sure-hit songs, with Art| Adair, the musical gloom chaser, hold up the musical end of the bill. Mott and | Maxfield close the vaudeville with their| eriginal comedy skit, “The Manicurlst and the Salesman “The Bondwoman short feature; “The Broken Pledge,” an | intense drama: the Hearst-Selig ‘vrk]\‘ | M and “‘Some in comedy, Romance, which some complete the bill For today, Monday and Tuesday (he | Hipp theater presents Willlam Farnum in “The Plunderer,” a real “Farnum play.” A pulse-stirring battie with bare tists, in which Farnum, in the role of Blg Bill, bests a score of drink-crazed miners | in a fight that for sheer thrills and heart- | catching excitement has pever been ex- | | celled on the screen, is one of the hig features. The play is on the order of ““The Spollers,” only “more so." On Wednesday and Thursday \mm1 | Moore, the well-known comedian, will be | | scen in the Lasky film version of E. W. | Townsend's play, “Chimmie Fadden | The film was produced under the direc- | tion of Cecil B. De Mille, whose produc- | tions have all been big successes | On Friday and Saturday the universal favorite, Mary Pickford, will appear in an unusual characterization, “Little Pal The play of primitive emotions |and primal passions and evidences a | hitherto unsuspected aspect of Mary Pick- [ ford's versatility is one NOVELTY FOUR— Quartette Harmonists NIBLO'S BIRDS— Feathered Talkers MALETA BANCON Violin Virtuoso CREIGHTON BROS. & BELMONT— “Mudtown Minstrels" “Assorted Pre pgram of Photo-Plays" “THE DREAM DANCE" | A 8 Part Feature “The Evolution of Cutey" “Hearst-Sellg Weekly" ! “Bud Resolves Not to Smoke" IOADI'HSSIONIO | KRUGPARK | The Largest Amusement Resort in the Middle West. Alwaze Cool Popularity Inoresstag. l Plnll Hon.\o Grounds in the State. Attractions Extraordinary Lamp's Orchestra Giant Coaster Frolic Wonderland Carry-Us-All il Rea Min Merry-Go-Round Mammoth Roller Rink Penny Arcade Ferris Wheel FRE 'X’.‘.’.‘ififil..,'[.'l"?i'.rl}'.'l"m& PIANO TUNING Motion Pictures { ROBT. G. BRANDON : | Recommended by Mary || Munchhoff, Millie Ryan, Martin Bush, Jean Duffield, Belle Robinson, Helen Sadi lek and Max Landow. Webster 4332, ; 4618 North 28th Avenue. Dancing | ‘ Children Under 13, 35 Ots. AMUSEMENTS BRANDEIS Phone D-600 THEATRE 2 & 2ehrind , Mi ) AND ALL TON |°“ THIS WEEK THE FUNNIEST PLAY EVER WRITTEN THE THIRD PARTY Special Moliday Mat. Monday All Next Week: “ONN DAY" PRICES NIGHTS- 25,35 50¢ MATINEE 'T‘lf\ fHURSI SAT ENTIRE BALCONY 15¢ LOWER HEOOR 263 HIPP THEATER TODAY, MONDAY AND TUBSDAY-— WILLIAM FARNUM “The PLUNDERER” Wednesday and Thursday, VIOTOR MOORE in *“ CHIMMIE FADDEN" W. Townsend's Known Comedy. E. Well Friday and Saturday, MARY PIOKFORD in “LITTLE PAL" ' | TENTS .\'I' 218T \Nli IA|'I, FTH. OMAHA |THURSDAY, JULY 8 Drug Co., Show Day. | FREE 2 MILE STRECE PA VERY NORNING ‘RAIN OR SHING AT ELLS 600 PeopLe CoNGRESS OF AuLNarions MENAGERIE Hippoparamus DBroooSweaning BEHEMOTH Lions TiGeRS 3 Herps oF LEOPARDS ELEPHANTS TRAINEOD BUT DAzzLING Untameo MASSIVE Two Giant MAGNIFICENT, s InsTiTuTiONS AT ONE PRICE RAIN ORNWBHINE W ibts LR 2 Adults, W ofil. PERFORM DOORS OriN 'MOOSEHEART| BOYS BAND and Vaudeville Troop Talented and Versatile Boys in & Genuinely Pleasing Fmtertainment. Enroute to the Two Fairs Auspices Loyal Order of Moose Lodges of Council Bluffs, Florence, Benson, South Omaha and Omaha OMAHA AUDITORIUM Saturday Evening, July 10th, 8:30 P. M ADMISSION: Children 25¢, Adults BOc; "B 6 ARENA AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS WHY PAY HALF A DOLLAR TO SEE A SMALL SHOW? When You v The Biggest Show in the World For 50¢ cp r I} ((BARNUM & BAILEY ) Moo LALLA ROOKH OMAHA, MONDAY, JULY 26 BARNUM & BAILEY HAVE 82 20ugis zmwors gARS RAILROAD SELLS.FLOTO HAVE 39 OARS; HAGENEBOK.WALLACE HAVE 48 (_All That's tho difference between thres shows for which you are n d to pay the same price of ad- mission Monday, July 26 you are to see The Cirous Surpri of the Century BARNUM & BAILEY CIRCUS OF ALL NATIONS 200 NEW FEATURES AND EUROPEAN SENSATIONS 1,000 WONDERS Fllling 3 Rin Hippodrome the Largest 'l'ont ln the World A Vast Array of Foreign Features Entirely New to Amerio: 110 CAGES wico'se WILD BEASTS 40 ELEPHANTS GLORIOUS NEW STREET PARADE Two Performances—2 and § P. M. One Cont Ticket Admits fo All The Barnum & Bailey Wondirland dren Under 12 Years, Half Price. -~ Barnam & Bailey will also exhiblt at Fremont, July 27; Norfolk, July 28; Columbus, July 20; York, July 30; Broken Bow, July 31; Grand Island, Aug 2; Kearney, Aug. #: Hastings, Aug. 4; Fairbury, Ang. 5; Lincoln, Aug. 6, and Atlantic, Ja., 7 MONDAY, I z | OMAHA, JULY TENTS AT 21st AND PAUL STS. OMAHA'S FAVORITE CIRCUS @ THE WONDER SHOW THE LIKE OF WHICH YOU NEVER SAW BEFORE All New Again! AIll Right Again! A CIROUS GATHERID FROM 18 NATIONS, mn ¥oR CAPITAL INVESTED rowsias. $3,000,000 3 RAILROAD TRAINS-—3. M TENTS--08, 8 BANDS—8, 400 PERFORMERB—400. Two performances dally, One tioket admits to lul wale olrous di at wtreey parade 10 A. -luu. o yeare: Iullo-lolhl' L) '. Doors v over d-:r..‘ under Store, Myers-! Including World’s Greatest | [ W % Collection of Trained Beasts | anr-ll. in & Massive Girded A ‘The Wid | clvmufl nA Unelvilized, { sacked_to Ausment g Com- : plete What is Now | BIGGESTZ00 ON HHTH i N criarWALLACE 50 CLOWNS 50 CIRCUS DE LUXE INCLUDING PIRO THE KINCSJESTER orld, Ban i & Spend a Safe and Sane Fourth at LAKEMANAWA Most Beautiful Park the Middle-west, BATHING, BOATING, DANCING And Many Other Att Both Old and Young FREE MOVING PICTURES EVERY EVENING. HBalloon Ascension July 4th and 5th (Weather Permitting) IDEAL PICNIC GROUNDS Reduced rate round trip street car tickets for sale at down town drug stores and cigar stores. Adults, 10c; Children, 16ec. ADMISSION TO PARK IS FREE. tions for BASE BALL Omaha vs. St. Joseph ROURKE FARK JULY 3,3,4, 4,5 R3] e sahed T % 3 JULY MOTORCYCLE RACES 3 EAST OMAHA 4 8P. M. 5 Take Sherman Ave, Car 100 MILES AN HOUR

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