San Carlo Opera to Appear Here on December 3 ^Fortune Gallo, Director, to tPresent Company in Single Performance of La Boheme. Wh.it may be Omaha’s only grand ♦ opera performance of the season will M be- given Monday night, December 3, Whin the San .Carlo Grand Opera company will present ‘‘Da Boheme,” under the auspices of Mt Calvary . commandery No. 1, Knights Tem plar, at the Municipal auditorium. Fortune Gallo will direct. The companv, which has just closed a highly successful appearance In New York. Is on tour with two operas, 'La Boheme" and "Madame Butterfly." Members of the local committee In Charge are \Y. W. Kerr, D. A. John son and J. R. Van TuyL. The opera is sponsored for the purpose of rais ing funds to send the commandery band and drill corps to the trl-annual conclave at Seattle in June, 1925. Tickets for the one performance In Omaha will be placed on sale No vember 1. The Slstlne chapel choir, which began Its American tour in New York October 14, will appear at the Audi torium in Omaha the night of De cember 14. under the local manage ment of Claudio Delltala and Francis Matthews. Monsignor Antonio Rella, vice di rector of the Sistine chapel choir, and who, since the illness of Mon signor Perosi, is the actual director, will conduct. The American tour of the choir, which will last 10 weeks, has been underwritten by Archbishop Hanna of San Francisco and other Californ ians, and is conducted hy permission of the reigning pontiff, Pope Pius XI., ^^^Beethoven's "Egmont” overture J^^vlll be the piece de resistance in the musical program at the Rialto thea ter this week,- under the direction of Harry Brader, conductor. In 1810. Beethoven composed inci dental music for Goethe's play, "Eg mont,’' which Included this overture. It has a short, slow Introduction In F minor, written In 3-2 time, but the .body of the work la an. allegro in 3-4 time. The first theme is announced uy the strings. The second theme has : for its thesis a version of the. first ■ two measures of the saraband theme ;nf the introduction, fortissimo, also In ‘the strings. The coda, allegro con brio, In F major, 4-4 time, begins pianissimo, followed by a brilliant .fanfare figure by the full orchestra, ■which ends in a shouting climax, with a shrill piccolo passage against fan fares of bassoons and brase. A lighter number, “Somebody’s Wrong," by Erdman, will complement '.the overture. This is a popular ditty, just released for talking _*iachine. The orchestral arrangement Is by Jack Virgil. English lend* Itself to the singev’s art a* readily us Italian, French or German, In the opinion of Sigrld Onegin, contralto of the Metropolitan PH^ki'ra company, who will appear In concert at the Brandcis theater Sun day afternoon, November 4, under the auspices of ths Tuesday Musical club. Mme. Onegin believes It i* entirely {’unnecessary for the American who j aspires to opera or concert work to forsake his own tongue in order tu produce the quality and refinement of tono which Is demanded of great singers. “X do not agree with those who say that the English language Is a handi cap to a singer,” she declares. "First of all, a singer must master his own language. If he cannot do that he Is simply no singer. “It is only because there has not been sufficient persistent effort that English is not used more in opera. Itecently I heard Hamlet In English and It had some of the most heautl- J ful sounds I have ever heard." Memtiershlp seat sale for the con cert will open October 29 at the Brandeis box offlcj. Members of the Tuesday Musical club rnny reserve (Jve seals only In' addition to their own. Extra tickets may be pur chased at the same time. There will he no war tax. The public ticket gale will open November 1. Frances • Nash, pianist, and Mary Jordan, contralto, will appear in Joint concert Sunday afternoon, October 28, at 4, at the Brandels theater, un der the auspicee of the slumnae of ^ Sacred fteai't convent and Duchesne K^ollege, /or the benefit of their ^^molarship fund. Jean Duffleld will be accompanist fhr Miss Jordan, fine of Miss Nash's numl»ers, jpvocation by Alhcnlz, will have its first audition in Omaha. Ticekt sale for the concert will open Monday morning, October 22, «t the Brandeis box office. The program follows: Arts, ‘'Oerecter Uotl.” frMn Rienzi. . Wagner Alin* Jordan. Nof'turn®. Opus 27, No. 2, In D Flat Major . Chopin Ktpd*. »)puo 26. No. 6. in K Major.Chopin fctud**. No. 1. of ‘Thra© Kt vide*”. .Chopin ffeh»rxo. Opua 89. No. 8. In C Sharp Minor . Chopin Mina Najfi * '•Di k In June (dedicated to M an .Iordan) .key Foster *1 Hhvt a Ufndf/.voiiM" Jeanne Boyd "Come ITu. Corn© in With Str**nm«-r» . . Carl !>«!■ Mlna Jordan '•Son* of Pierrot”.Korngold i "N it lads in t h© Spring”.P*ul JuoU "V oi »•«. Arnbeakd arid Kn Kfiteau" . . . Debunay ^Toccata'■ Ha in t * Saena Min* M»>h. '"Av« Marta”. Egbert " Moturha f l ”. rir/Jhrn" "I,:i Vagabond©’. • *1 ,,, "Impreixlon Hmufu©”.•••• I- ourdrain Atimm Jordan. "Kvocation” •• .;;•Albenl* Alla* N»ell. „ .'•W« Invilita".Mary Fume. 8n ter "liuna” . Jo*«phlne McUlll e-Fha Time fur Making Sengs H®*„„ Come" . James Rogers . Mis* Jordan. ■ Two 13-year old girls, Edith Vic toria Robins, pianist, pupil of Edith J.otiise Wagoner, and Betty Zabriskie, Violinist, pupil of Idiulse Shsdduck Eubriskle, will appear In recital Frl *- --- Boyles College IFas Built With Aid of The Omaha Bee Want Ads . I President Boyles Started Busi ness School in One Room With One Student. Omaha Bee want ads gave him the start which enabled him to work up from a one-room Institution to the biggest strictly commercial college west of Chicago, declares H. B. Boyles, president of Boyles college. Twenty-seven years ago young Boyles decided to abandon his activi ties as cort reporter and turn him self into a buslrtats college president. His method of procedure was to rent a room in the old Bee building and to carry In his old typewriter from the court house for equipment. This nearly exhausted his capital, but he still had a couple of dollars left for want ads announcing the opening j>t Boyles college. First Student. "X remember Inadtng the first, stu dent who came to inquire about ilight classes," says Air. Boyles. "X couldn't tet him think he was going to be alone, so I brought down my wife and cousin and our hired girl, dis tributed tablets to them and consti tuted them my class. The student registered, and what was quite as much to the point, paid his fee. It wasn’t long before he had some com pany. "As fast as I had a couple of dol lars not absolutely needed to sustain life, I would take them down to the newspaper office and buy classified advertising. During the first three years I used no other advertising at all, and all of It wag In The Omaha Bee. Helped By Rosewater. "Edward Rosewater, who was -then editor of the paper, had a great deal of sympathy with a young fellow starting out. When the students were beginning to come, and I necd: ed another room but had no means of paying for it, he told me he would lend me one. As soon as I had paid for the loaned room, he let me take another. "At the end of three years I had 250 pupils, and the business was real ly beginning to pay. We moved out and took half the second floor of the New York Life Insurance building, which is now the Omaha National bank. At that time I began to use a little display advertising. Only Six. When Boyles college built Its pres ent building at Eighteenth and Har ney streets there were only six busi ness colleges In the United States that owned their own homes. Entry Into the new edifice was marked by an Immediate doubling of the number of students. Today, Boyles colege enrolls more Atlanta Prison Editor Released Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 20.—Th* gate* of the Atlanta federal prison were thrown open recently to Georg* C. Chatter ton, physician editor-prisoner, known throughout the nation as editor of "Good Word*." the official organ of prison Inmates, and he walked out to freedom. Chatterton, Oxford university stu dent and graduate in medicine, was sentenced to serve four years on each of four counts alleging forgery. The District'of Columbia Judge who passed sentence failed to specify the manner In wh'ch the four sentences should be served. ' If served separately th# total term would have been 16 years, but Judge Samuel H. Sibley of the Atlanta fed eral court, following decisions made many times in the past, ruled that in the absence of specific terms In the original sentence It must be construed that the four counts had been satisfied concurrently. Pawnee City Man Victim of Mysterious Attack Pawnee City. Neb.. Oct. 20—Joseph Eastwood, son of James Eastwood, of the Mission Creek vicinity, was slugged and Jeft unconscious on the road west of Summerfleld. He was on his'way to Summerfleld to visit friends and wits riding a horse. Near town he noticed a horse drawn up to the side of Gw road and two men standing on either side of the road. When he approached he was ordered to dismount and compiled with the request. The horse was then turned loose. The boy called to the horse to stop and /the second time he called to the animal he was struck on the hack of the head with a blunt instrument end was render ed unconscious. When he regained consciousness the men had left and he managed to reach his home still In a dazed con dition. Apparently Eastwood's us sallants were not bent on robbery, for his watch snd other valuables were not touched. The motive la a mystery. _ day night, October 26, at 8. at the Schmoller A Mueller auditorium. Edith Robins' numbers will Include ii Chopin waltz, •'Venetlenne" (Clod nrdl, "Notturno" (Grelgt, “To Spring" Grieg), "Clown” (McDowell), and the Mozart sonata in C. major, with sec ond piano by Grieg. Hatty Zabrlske will play the pre lude to "1* Deluge" (Halnt-Saensl, a scherzo by Goens, the andante trail qulllo from De Harlot's seventh con certo, and a Hungarian dance by Haesche. Edilh I.outae Wagoner, teacher of piano, will present 2b of her pup.Is in an Informal recltsl at her studio, 222 Park avenue, this afternoon st 4. Pupils who! will participate Include Dick Cooley. Margaret Maloney, Charles Richardson, Caroline Drake. Hilly Hamilton, Isiulse Wylie, Sammy Rees. Ruth Evarta, Jackson Walker, Hetty Megeath, Robert Whitmore, Betty Davis, Madeline Johnson, War ren Wallace, Elizabeth snd Barbara Johnston, T.llllan Holden, Eurllle Cote, Mae Hindman and Helen Cozad. * WHERE ARE YOU HEADING? To get more pleasure out of living, make It a habit ,,t aside a little on every pay day, depositing It with this Association, where your money will draw «'4. The feeling of SECURITY that will result Is sure to add to your happiness every day. 1024 DOUGl-A* STREET - than 1,600 students a yea r. This is a larger registration than is claimed by any strictly business College west of Chicago. Prizes Offered in Mill Company Guessing Contest Pillsbury. "Flour Competition Open to Omahans—Weight of Sack of Product Is Problem. Prizes totaling $1,000 will be dis tributed by the Pillsbury Flour Mills company, of which H. J. Patterson is local manager, in a contest to be conducted from October 22 t» Oc tober 27. The contest consists in guessing the weight of a sack of flour to be displayed In a window of the Bur gess-Nash store. Guessing coupons will be distributed by grocers, and estimates will be accepted only at the Pillsbury Flour Mills company booth at the Burgess-Nash store. The sack of. flour will be placed In the window Sunday. Only one estimate will be allowed to each person. In ease of a tie, the estimate first received will win. The contest will close Saturday after noon. October 27. at 6. Kstlmates re ceived after that time will not be entered. The first prize will be $300. Other " ' Autobiography of “Number If locomotives oould talk this some what antiquated but active engine, which is owned by the Union Stock yards company, might tell its story somewhat as follows: "I was born In the Baldwin loco motive works back in 1897. I wns the pride of the factory, for I was one of the biggest of all the engines which the factory had produced. "Before I was a year ol«f I was shipped to Omaha and placed on ex hibition at the Transmlsslsslppl ex position, which was held In north Omaha. There I received much ad mirat.on and was finnlly purchased by the Union Stockyards company. ' "T have been working for this com prizes include $200 in cash, $100, $50, $25, $20, five prinzes of $10, 20 prizes of $5, 25 prizes of #8 pounds of Pills bury flour, 25 prizes of 48 pounds of Pillsbury flour, and 50 prizes of 24 pounds of Pillsbury flour. Bee Want Ads Product Results. Return to Chicago. Mi. and Mrs. Hennan Van Wiser mil small son, Jutyn ot Chicago, who have been spending several weeks with Mrs. Can Velzer's father, J. F. Dafley, and Mrs. Dailey, at the Blaek stone, left Friday evening for' their home. * pany ever since, and I like it. I get good care and I’m not afflicted with rheumatism or any other ailments. And I can bump livestock cars around just as I did In my youth. In fact I can’t see where any of these newer engines have anything on me. They're a little heavier, but I've hnd more experience. There’s nothing to this old age talk. I'm just as good as 1 ever was.” K. Buckingham agrees with No. ", for that Is the number of the loco motive. He says the old engine holds up Its end of the work Just as well as the eight other switch engines used In the company yards. i vre 1,000 Canaries Arrive. More than 1,000 canaries have ar rived at Hayden Brothers’ store from Germany and will go on sale thi« week. No Dread of Gray Hair po NOT dread gray hair and the signs of advancing age t The sure, safe way to tint gray, streaked, faded or bleached balg instantly to any shade of brown or black is with the modern hair tint, "Brownatone.” Easily applied, cannot be detected and will not rub or wash off. Greaselesa. odorless, nothing to mix. no waiting, no disappoint ment. Guaranteed harmless to hair, scalp or skin. All dealers 5*c and *1.S«. Trial bottle sent direct for l#c. The Kenton Pharmacal Co., dll Cop pin Bug.. Covington, Ky. BROWN INE ••Tints Cray Hair Any Shade” For Monday Conant Hotel >ldg. For Monday --— -pa A Great Coat Feature 200 Exquisite Quality Coats Ultra Smart Styles— Jaunty New Sport Coats I 9 0 i - AS clever creations as you’ll find anywhere at a great saving. Newest fabrics in the wanted colors. Many with fur collars. Luxurious Fur Trimmings— % • ......... Finest Materials— Specially assembled groups which we be lieve offer the greatest coat values to be found in Omaha at these popular prices : $75and$95‘ 9 x ^ Luxurious in fabric and fur, flatteringly graceful in silhouette and line—Every one boasting of some un usual fashion charm— The Finest Materials Marvella— Gerona— Tarquina— Yellona— Oriona— Veldyne— WITHOUT a doubt this event features the most varied selec tion of authentic coat and wrap modes we have ever as sembled. Every smart fashion, every fabric, every trimming note sponsored by Paris, all the fashionable new shades and black —a most comprehensive collection, including models for misses, women and extra size models. * I Soft Pile Fabrics,,, 0/ Smart Style Distinction ^ NEW models just received have been added to our wonderful collection at this popular price. Wrap around styles with circular fronts or sides, also straight line effects. All have luxurious fur collars and the sleeves are of latest design. V .-- - , .. ■-.._—*