Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BEE: OMAHA HURSDA NOVEMBER 25, 1915 5 IS JOB SOON TO BR | e coumer Moot orremmets, o | v, e whon an merian srwier! (atohor Weaver is : ho cannot see” Stcher iaht now ‘ay | Veaches down o rasp them by the ewe All of Dodge County 'Fulton May Fight for the Thankoeiving. game (o be played MAN OUT OF A JOB? £ siiis s ¥y Lt piihi s ¥ B0 Probably Fatally - to Move to Lincoln Willard and Moran {557 . ot £ s side who stood a has-beens. chance with Btecher, outside possibly of : " ' '{ the hardest workouts of the year, SOEL S B Injured at Denver t0 8ee Big Matoh| witwaukes, Wi, sov. s—atches | Keeping s men on the $0b saill dathe Should Stecher Win at Lincoln on: Pe that as it may, Stecher is winning, | Thursday. He put himself first, natur with both Jess Willard and Frank Moran |ness called a halt to the practice. and winning decisively, by falr means. |ally, as world's champlon, and then| DENVER, Colo Nov 2.~ Arthur \ Most of the male Inhabitants of Dod Are in sight for Fred Fulton, the Min v e Thursday There Will Be Few He is a legitimate champlon, there is lit-| hamed Yousouf Mahmout and the elder (Buck) Weaver, formerly catcher for the |county will b8 in Lincoln today nesota giant, whose nt ring sue \I‘:'“"'m‘ p ,lm\"" e m”:a" Left to Meet. tle doubt of that, and admitted to be such Z¥bysko, should the latter ever again| Denver and Wichita Western league b watch the Btecher - Hussane wrostling| C68iee have attracted attention. oo *v"vr‘n(rfl aulckly and cheaply by a - through his defeat of C r,| take up the mat game, which is not at ball clubs, was probably fatally injured | ypatch. Stecher being a favorite son « Tom Andrews, the Milwaukee promoter ee “For Rent BOTH ARE IN FI ) who was acknowledged up to July 3 last, | a1l likely. He s a prisoner of war in today in an explosion and fire that dam- | fyqge county the people are falling ¢ ®ald today he had received from Ful R ,,NE CONDITION to be the American champion, sans| Cracow and will be held there till the laged the plant of the Mountaln Motor | gye another to so tickets for (hc|'OM's manager, Mike Collins, an optior g o yugaboo o yoldt. Stecher | termination of the war Fuel company, of which he was super! that Fulton would sign articles to meet M Is Joe S _ res Goteh, the bugabe of Humboldt. Stecher " ch b iperin tiain that will start from Dodge. Stech.r techer, wrestling chammi-|iymmed Cutler In Jig time, wadin tendent. Chares Peters, a driver, also | jome town Willard before a New Orleans club dur- | pion of America, 800n to be a man | through the Chicagoan much as he might Turke ShOOt at was serfously injured. An electric spark | e Northwestern traln that will carry | INE Mardi Gras week and to meet Moran | out of a job? through the verlest tyro at the game y v Is belleved to have caused the explosion. | (1e Stecher rooters will have fifteen « | before the same club some stirge befo:e < | Marc ndrews 18 ac o ¢ \ taggage car will be attached to carey | March. Andrews is acting for Burns and Is the ‘boy in overalls so good in |, They ail look alike to Stecher. The Carter G Club : R s de arter Gun Clu A baggage car will be attached to carey | NATCH, Andrews b acting for Burng an Ha chosen profession that he will | ' 4PPeATs 10 be o formidable barrier v .| Dodge County Plans | moner that the Stecher men win oet| Triiot, the e, Orjoans promoters ay 3 find himself without opposition? ago, he wouldn't have looked nearly as on Tha,nksg]vu]g 3 Antet “m Omaha 18 Just about as keen| Y€t A8 he 18 at Rochester, Minn., for a ; TRACH Wik NUBF LS RERTotic Taby [y e esheirt BAvy. lieked aatiy & 0 SUpPOrt Stecher| .t in Gmaha s ust sbout as keei| sl oparation, Wt Andrews satd. i | Store Closed All Day scem to think is going to happen, | the o man from Deodg fgnature was expected shortly The te e Gun club will stage a ereatio here sportsme the It 1t . polisha ot s The Carter Lak n club will sta ation wh portsmen gather Turk, who and If the champion trims the Turk second turkey. shoot the club's traps pRE . 1ow looks as if th | ' ' * | will be the next one? Gotch seems to be | "¢€ONd turkey. shc : E FREMONT, Neb., Nov. ¥.—(Special D . A Y ussif Huscane, Thursday afternoon, | out or the question, for in Chicago & few | | PANKsgiving cay, starting at 10 o'clock Fremont and Dodge county will send a | <'8i. which leaves here at 1 o'clock, will| etl Olt mel’lca-ns ] th. ia their big match at Lincoln, there |days ago he said Stecher had been of-;'" the morning and continuing all day. | big delegation to Lincoln Thanksgiving | "¢ filled . P . erg (,. 0O lng will remain but a couple of men ford fered the chance and having turned it - Kevs, gee and ducks in plentiful 'day to' see the match between J Slgn a,t M()T]gue Merchants hotel spe v e at ald opportu numbers will be hung up as prizes. The | Stecher, the Nebraska boy, and Hussane, . him 10 face, only Sws s Wnietton'of | S0 WOUl! tind that qld opportualty | o g s, titteen targets, 1h ad- | the T e : THORPEIAN CLUB MOVES TROIP - 3 would not knock on his door ago. n wil L3 the Turk A special train will be run INTO ITS NEw OUARTERS DETROIT, Mich Nov. M Pud" M | any prominence that he hasn't beaten | mpay about exhausts the poesible op- | 01:1on to these fifteen-target events the |over the Northwestern, leaving Fremont Tigue, a left-handed pitcher, who made . Frank Gotch of Humboldt, Ia., and | ponents for Stecher, outside of the for- | (f!cbratec game leck shooting will | at 12,90 p. m., returning after the match 9 a fine showing with the Toronto club 5 Ed Lewis, the Kentuck ' Stecher's future seems to furnish o | MUch. The foreign | the New York tc ament are tlally Graeco-Roman perform know little or nothing about gr trangler.” | elan stars, and they do not look like !¢1d the boards part of the time. Hot It {s estimated a crowd of 30 fans will The Thorpelan Athletlc club has moved | o¢ 1ho now wrestling in | coffee, soup and eats will be provided for | take In the sport. There will be plenty | int) tts new club rooms at 2608 Franklin — was signed today by the Detroit Amer | street. The new quarters are much big- | m ! icans | » ger than old ones and will be com i tomach.waeats et smive bouc | by oot abic ‘o™ arine | OWAHA UNI TO PLAY WAYNE | A pictiitely Removes International league last season. en: he shooters. f money to back Stech: and | The Omaha Gun club wil' also hold a ppling | shoot. If it is found imposs more Interesting study than his imme diate present. His present is interesting ble to sta enough because of the fact that many,! below the walst line. For years they, the event at the grounds a s the riv bowel ecessary an club, many people still are unconvinced of his | have had a scare thrown into them by | on account of the injunction the Omaha | regular and banish billousness, sick | tubin, who has been acting as wecretary | NORMALS TURKEY DAY ot 5 ' prowess and incline to the belief that he| the Gotch toe hold, which has been rep- | shooters will go to Carter lake. headaches, sour stomach. Stout persons | f the club, has resigned his position, and Wiapta AR i [ndlgestlon' Onepackage ele e lig o g givy e hra 01 s electe s his suc nivi ty of Omaha foo ha Ny " is a great man because of the weneral|resented' to them as a bone crusher of — welcome the light, free feeling they give. | Ben Abrahamson was elected as his su he Unlvers ! P decay that seems to have set in all at| the worst type, Most of them scream, Bee Wanr. Ads Produce Results Sold everywhere.—Advertisement. cessor team had its final serimmage Tuesday . proves lt.,25(:at nlldmgglsts. Omaha Theaters Offering Excellent Bills for Thanksgiving---Better Phone Your Reservation ACUES Bessdetss | emaitest detail. Griffith's “The Birth [upon Thomas Dixon's “The Clansman.” elght months continuous toll to make a “movig" basis, mamely. most seain at |the world's greatest character {mporaon- |ensical Juseiing r:‘l:':‘v,m::‘ ..:;.uv"::llolr‘l\ “The Birth of a Nation,” D. W. Grif- [of a Nation™ is the first two-dollar ple- | consequently it is rather warm and sen- |and is freely acknowledged to be the s, A few At 2% conta and w “Jitney’ [ator, in his two best known cha k pleted fith's wonderful photo spectacle, now | ture show. Whether or not it will ever [sational of incident and rather gripping 'mightiest spectacle ever accomplished by | “The Dope Fiend” and “The Old ol- [Musical MacLarens in a “Iig Musical playing at the Brandeis theater, remains [ have a successor depends upon whether |of narrative, but it goes back much [man. 1t consists of nearly three houra e dier.” “The Parls Fashion Bhop” 18 the |Surprise.” : indefinitel | or not another like presentation can ever [farther than that and extends much |of historic tableaux, nearly three hours enn. | tecond headline offering. Pretty girls, The Prfall” & moders folfeiies beyond the end of the Dixon work of smiles and tears and warm heart strong show has heen ar- |new songs and dances, and the latest [drama, Is the photo-production for the Tt is being presented here in all its | come up to ita exceptional precedent. It musical and electrical glory, the same attraction that is being seen on Broad- |scribed in all the magazines and dis- l In it 18,000 persons compose the acting |throbs and gripping panks of sadness, a [ranged for at the Empress for Taanks- [dress creations from Paris, with apecial |last half of the week. This play features way and at the Panama-Pacific exposi- | cussed in the press of every city where lmmo scenes. It cost-a round half mil ast and 3,000 horses are at oné time in |Panorame of life and love that preceded |giving day. A double headline bill is of- [ scenery, will make one of the best vau- |Kalem's best talent, including Marin Sals 2 {the first shot on Sumter, and then tne [fered. Headlining the bill for the last |deville novelties to bo seen th's season. [and Framk Jonasson. A big assorted |break, the south declaring for state [half of the week In ge Rosener, |\|-.»n Wiggin & Co. present their non- |program completes the picture program. {rights and secession. the morth as one —e e lwan rallying to the flag, that is Grif- = fith's inconcelvable “‘Birth of a Nation." A great phony orchestra furnishes all the aplendid musical score, which 1y has been reviewed and pictured and de tion in San Francisco, down to the \’myln has been shown. It Is based in part lion dollars to produce, required over . so Important a part of the big show, and ) all the sound and wonderful color and N | mechanical effects are given. Thousands | of people have already gone across the | country to witness its presentation in | the Liberty theater in New York and at the Illinois theater in Chicags. The en tire lower floors and most of the balcony | of both the above theaters are held at §2 | per seat, and seats are now selling for four or more weeks in advance in both | Instances. BRANDEIS Theater The Most Beautiful Theater In America NEVER OFFERED A THANKSGIVING ATTRACTION OF BETTER WORTH NOW PLAYING ;s fne Sroaet INITELY Barnum & Bailey Outdone---The Sensation of the Age! * D. W. Griffith’s "4, SrecTActe axb Elgurs Last Time Wednesday Chas.Chaplin The World’s Great- est Comedian in his Latest 2-Reel Riot 14 . r [ | [ A€ the orphenm. | Thanksgiving and the Last Half “Paris Fashion Shop” A Bevy of Pretty Girls—Latest Gowns - Bert Wiggins & Co. “On Joy Street” 5 Macl.arens Musical Surprise GEO. ROSNER The World's Greatest Character Impersonator in His Two Best Characters “THE DOPE FIEND” “THE OLD SOLDIER” “The Pitfall” All Star Cast in a Modern 4-Act Drama. Marin Sais and Frank Jonasson. BIG ASSORTED PROGRAM An air of gratefulness pervades the | Orpheum this Thanksgiving day. While changes have taken place in,most thea- | ters, and few indced for the better, the | only changes that have reached the | Orpheum have been for the better. The | attendance this season is larger than last season and just abowt the only | complaints the management receives are | because it ia always difficult ta get good scats, so great is the attendance. | The standard of excellence has Im- | proved steadily at the Orpheum and greater energy than ever 1s going to be applied by Director General Martin | Beck, to improve still further, Not sat- isfied with the constituents of what might be termed the old vaudeville, Mr i Beck is creating a new vaudeville, Mr. Hgek has invaded the dramatic, grand |opera and concert- stage for talent just |at a time when most of the stars of | these fields are seeking a place, and as vaudeville seems to be the one big i branch of the theater business that is |open to most of the blg artists and | | stars, the Orpheum circuit has been | enabled to contract for the services of I not only all that is best in vaudeville, but it has enrolled on its roster such a {large number of the stars from the dramatic, opera and concert stage that | the Orpheum theater here and in other | citica represent the highest standard of ADMISSION | class, ana are not only the providers of 1 oe | staple amusement for the masses, but | they are the favorite resorts of the more !‘ s 10e | refined people and the scenes of the most . $ flh Extra | brilllant soclal gatherings. Phone Doug. 9 | Press reviewers and musical ecritics | have expressed amazement at the war- |ink of the Orpheum ecircult in booking | the greatest stars. But everybody joins | in this amazement when prices of ad- | ‘mlnnl(m are announced, because the regu- |lar Orpheum economical admission prices, | which are about one-third of the amount | theater patrons have been accustomed to | pay for these stars always obtain. The { Orpheum roster In retrospect is indeed | most impressive. It 4ncludes Nazimova, | Mary Shaw, Mrs. Leslie Carter, Blanche | Bates, Bertha Kalish, Sarah Bernhardt, | William Morris, Arnold Daly, Joan Baw- | Jomel, Elsie Ruger and scores of |other big artists. Scheduled here are Gertrude Hoffman, Eddie Foy, Rosha- ! nara, Laura Nelson Hall, Mofly Mcintyre and many others. Thanksgiving day will be appropriately observed at the Orpheum. For peace, | for prosperity, for the joyousness that | emanates from clean, wholesome, artistic and entertaining stage creations, the Or- | pheum management offers thanks, s ST e | 5,000 { Scenes 18,000 . Charac- ters Shown With Every Performance 3,000 Horses !3 Matineg ¢ || Daily . 2:15 Cost $500,000 Evenings 8:15 — THA‘NKS GIVING GREETINGS All This Week to Crowded Houses Matinee and Night Daily EVELYN NESBIT AND JACK CLIFFORD 3 Facts About the Greatest Entertainment Ever Offered: There are over 5,000 distinet scenes in ““The Birth of a Nation.”” Kighteen thou- Cole Re ris Busy Week at Krug. North Bros. Stock company, in play- ing ““The Great John Ganton,” which | |opened at the Krug theater last Sat-| & sand people and 3,000 horses were utilized in making the narrative. Mr. Griffith worked J|vrdsy avd continuing ail week, seoms | "; eight months without a let up to complete the picture, The production cost X 1“’q-:.':\:,..::'.‘.“..:H,l,..".:.';".:'{":T.'.I-“ }?:,\::“;:Ian QHARLLE'OWABQ &“c,o_' . CHAS. &,FAN.NlE%VA“N_ ’1 The women’s dresses of the period of 1860 used up 12,000 yards of cloth. Over 25,000 | et g JED & ETHEL DOOLEY ARNOLDÐYL GRAZER yards of white material were used in the costumes of the Ku Klux Klan. Two hundred seamstresses worked for two months to make these costumes. Five thousand works and reports on history of the Civil war searched for authentic data. Ford’s Theater, Wash- ington, reproduced to the smallest detail. Ten thousand dollars a day was paid for the use of an entire county in order to reproduce the wild rides of the Klansmen. A ¢fmmis- sary and two hospital corps were maintained while the pictures were being taken. Not a human life was lost. A musical score of twenty-five pieces synchronized to several thousand individual scenes. Nearly 200,000 feet of film was originally taken. The per- formance lasts two hours and forty-five minutes, with one six-minute intermission. "BROWN & McCORMICK | & IICK | CORRIGAN & VIVIAN THE ORPHEUM TRAVEL WEEKLY MATINEE --PRICES-- NIGHT t Week Days, Entire Bal- Seats. ... BDC o owribie"" 25g served Seats . . ..... Except Saturday and Sunday-- First Floor, 50¢c & 75¢ A few at 50¢ Gallery, 10¢c - Box Seats, 75¢ Gallery, 10c-Box, 50c¢; Except Sunday Sunday Balcony, 25¢ & 50¢ Sunday Prices Prevail Holidays STAGE CELEBRITIES SEEN ELSEWHERE at $2.00 a Seat Are PRESENTED AT THE ORPHEUM At The ECONOMICAL PRICES ABOVE QUOTED, Such Stars As NAZIMOVA, ETHEL BARRYMORE, MARY SHAW, BLANCHE BATES, BERTHA KALISH, OLGA NETHERSOLE and Other FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE WORLD INCLUDED. { THANKSGIVING | KRug e RESPECTABLE | TODAY — TONIGHT | DINNER | 'n'e ' The Great { n John Ganton | All Seats, Matines Today, 10 Ceuty North Bros. ! Stock Co. Daily Matinees, 25¢, 50¢, 75¢, $1 Evenings, 50c, 75¢, $1, $1.50, $2 Standard Plays—'Movie Prices” o SENE® 1] y_Gallery” EOX OFFICE NOW OPEN. | Next Week, “The Third Degres "