TflE OMAFIA ILLUSTRATED BEE. February 10, If.- Talk About Plays, Players and Playhouses M 5 ,At"D ADAMS has won In New York a greater success, from a purely nrtlstlc point of view, In her new piny, " 'Op o' Me Thumb," tlinn sh- pff Kiiinrd as Hab- Me In "The Little Minister." ThU Is truo for several reasons, but chirfly because the nsrris book, wlien prepared for the Mage, discovered the fart that the fnro- hortenlns; of the rersprctlvs hail dis torted the outline of tho leading charac ter!", and mueh of what was most to be udmired In them, as created for the novel, had "jeen entirely omitted In the stage version. This reacted principally agaln.U Dabble, and the part was only to be ap preciated by those who were thoroughly familiar with the Kgyptlan as rhe whlsks-1 In and out through tin: tale of the dominie, and these were dl.inppointed by tho cur tailment enforced In arranginj the novel for the piny. Miss Adams ho been won derfully and deservedly successful In the role, but the Babble she gives us Is an Adams and not ft linrrle Egyptian. It fits perfectly Into the stage picture, and elicits the warmest and most sympathetic support, hut It Is never the Babble thnt won the heart of the Autd Mch minister against his Judgment, unseasoned though that wis. Mr. Dlshaxt perforce suffers In the estimation of those who first met hlni on the streets of Thrums when h is compelled to surrender, sans discretion, to the charms of tho llmrrior he meets In tTl play. This, too, is an expedient, wllly nllly, duo to the exigencies of making a passably good play out of a. corking; good book. Thank goodness, ioim books defy the dramatist "The Bight of Way." for example. In the new play Miss Adams embodies that peculiar something all have felt and few havo had tho ability to define that glorious capacity for lifting one's self above sordid surroundings and in the lim itless expanse of imagination revelling In the personal possession of all those things harsh circumstances have withheld. Tho capacity for building castles in the air has been tho salt that has savored many a life that would otherwlso lmve been hope lessly Insipid, and has given ft radiant nimbus to existence otherwise dull of the dullest. Hero Is tho story of the play as told by Mr. John Corhln In the New York gun, the enthusiastic pralso of Miss Adam's acting being omitted, but fully en dorsed: When Frederick Fenn and Richard Brlce wrote "Op O' Me Thumb," nothing was further trom their minds, no iloubt, than any idea thnt they wero deullng with a universal human table. Yet at the risk of alarming them and striding terror to the minds of the audiences that, at '"'J command of tho poignant art of Miss Maude Adums, are nightly alfcxoiving in sa'-'.y tears, It must be said that that is Juat waac they wei doingor at least that 13 wlir.t they cell it In Uunnany. On the face of It It is such ft simple and unpretenliuud story. Its millleu U a cock ney steam laundry, and Its heruinc, . Amr.nda. U the humblest, tho hom'.iest, and the most miserable of the girls that march and Iron the-e. A child of the wurn housc, sho has no fath? at all, and no mo'.hrr-at least to speak of. Worse thun this, while every other 'Airlef as 'cr 'Arry. sh has never so much as arrested for a moment tho roving eye. She thinks, end the oihors think, that this hi beeaus she Is plain una winched and stuirld. But in reality l Is bece.use she has a mind and hftart too rare and glorious for the com prehension of 'Arry. But she also has pride t-ven van.ty.' And, so to be able to hold her head up. she plants ar.d tends the garden of lies. 8ha makes believe to herself and makes the othen believe that she Is the heroine of a real life ronmnce. For the present h. yes! she is a laundry hand. But sho has a father wro, if not Just a king or po tentate, Is one of the mightiest in the land: and she has a lover, the handsomest of swains, who some day will come and claim her aa hU own. Ermine and Jewels are her birthright, ar.d some day she will come Into It. (All this in the language of the family herald, of course, as interpreted In the vernacular of the cockney.) The proof of It nil? From time to time they send hr gilts of diamonds and eiieralds and rubles. She has never show.i these to the other girls, and they look askance at her fables. But she sticks to her lies so well that the-V half believe her. espe cially as from time to time one of her rela tive dies she has Invented a large and mortuarlly Inclined family of them and she wears ft band of crepo on her sleevo In token of her sorrow. As for the lover, he Is a handsome coster, who has left his shirt to ,be washed and failed to call for It. For months she has tended It with the most faithful care, wash lutf and Ironing it weekly, so as to have it In readiness when the hand of fato Is lifted and he calls to take her away to her own. It Is n very cockney shirt, with broad red strlf.es but all the more pluiiHible for that In the mlndn of the other girls as the em blem of tho hero lover who I to transform the drudge of the, Btcam luundry into a beautiful princess. How Is It that out of this sort of thing a spirit, enn be evoked that brings salt to the yes. and make It stream down to smart ati the Hps? Because It Is the artistic em bodiment, I take it, of the poverty of all our lives, and of the pathetic, eagerness with which we take refuge from them in tho flowering garden of art. If we were able to feel In o,ur own persons all the world hn'ds of the good and the true and the beautiful, who would ever snend his precious hours with the mrro works of tho Imagination? We nhould be too busv by far doing the grant deeds, thinking the high thoiiKhts, s'elnff the splendid visions. "I don't read books," said the literary fop of DuManrler. "I write them:" The saying Is funny because It is so much truer than he knew. The overman, when he comes, will not even write books. He will be far too d-eply absorbed in his own Illimitable life Only, of course. In n world hedged In by nil the ofcMenta of birth, the snares of tho devil and the limitation of death, such a thing ss tho overman 1st not possible. Whether we know It or not. we are all nnrtermen. Our parent Is ft clod, and we. are destined to spend our lives in this sordid steam laundry of society, washing our own soiled linen, and the soiled linen nf others. The happiest thing we know is the power of renins; In the ftrlpcd shirt the emblem of glorious hope of subliming It out of the workadny'world Into the region of the crea tive Imagination: And thie of us who know this power find life Itself the most pitifully Inadequate to our desires. There comes a time, of course, when It seems as If the vision of the srfrlped shirt were coming true. Mr. Horace Greensmlth tarns up In the steam luundry to claim It of Amanda. In her heart she knows thnt. handsome ss he I", Mr. Horace Oreensmlth Is not the vision she has Invited her friends to ndmtre with her. But she would so dearly love to believe thst he Is! For she Is terribly lonesome, having nn!v the vision nt which to warm her heart while the under men without Imnrrlnntlon are frolicking In the bravery of a holiday at Hamstcd Heath! fin Amanda lavs her heart, with all lt onulence of loving Imaginations, nt the feet of Mr. Horace Oreensmlth. Tt Is ft lucky chance for Amsnda thst Mr. Horace Oreenpmlth Is as dull as h Is honest. Borne gllmmerlrg of the nllshf of Amnnda penetrates his thick skull, nnd In Pity he agrees to take her out for the holi day on Hsmsted Heath. But he happens to think vnln buck thst bo what n moV-a he will look amonsr the gay throng with this 'Ittle runt on his nrm. So Instead of ngreelnr to come to the launrfrv to feth ber forth among the other rM. he tells her to meet him In the eecrecv of n ielr borlnr slier, snrl Instead of the public hill top of 'Apnv 'Arreted he proposes the seclu sion of s nook In Fpnln forest. This Is too much for the pride of Amnd. flh scorna him like a heroine of fsmllv hera'ldrv. and broken In heart turns bspv from him to live still alone In he tru'der of dr.,rna A tragedy? Far from It! Professor Bar rett Wendell used to shock his pupil rand perhaps still shocks 'tm!l bv asojrlng them that even the story of Romeo and Juliet has the hsppiest possible ending. If their marriage had prospered, as one terms It. those meetings on the balcony, lit hv the moon nnd set to mus'c by the nightingale, would hsve ended, he says. In the 'dull cntnlogue of common things." In winning her Horace Grefnsmlth. Amanda would have been more normally happy, perhaps but only by giving over her garden of dreams for sordid reality. The ws.shlng of that pink striped shirt would have be come a mere Monday encounter with soiled linen. In losing- Horace Oreensmlth. Amanda saved her garden of dreams. Man than that, she added a flower to It. tha most beautiful of all. For as Horace Oreensmlth leaves her he give her the two shilling pin from his neck clout. It Is a thing of rubles and emerald and diamonds, and one divines that It will not now be necessary for any more of Amanda's rela tives to die. Out of that pin how many absurd, vain dreams will she conjum up so much more beautiful than any of us Is permitted to live. i It Is objected that there Is no hint of this universal human significance In the story that the authors hitve given us nothing but the plain facts nf two verv humblo and realistic souls! Well and good, but what is It. then, that brings forth those nightly tributaries to the brine that puddles the floor of the playhouse? It can onlv be that the pathos in the live of these dreary cockneys sets us all swimming In the salt river of our own defeated aspirations. $ Comlnir Events, Andrew Mack's popularity in Omaha is something this rollicking young Irish sing ing comedian can always bank upon. To Irishmen and their descendants he is doubly dear and for that reason his friends and admirers are legion. Ho will be seen Tuesday and Wednesday .evenings and a Wednesday matinee at the Boyd theater. In "The Wy to Kenmare," his latest ro mantic Irish comedy, Mr. Mack Is un doubtedly scoring the greatest success of his career. He has a character In Dan Mugulre, the rollicking, warm hearted, heroic, silver voiced Irish gentleman, which fits him perfectly. .''The Way to Kenmare" presents a tale of the love, adventure and daring; of a young Irishman, , heir to an earldom, who, after making a fortune in the mines of Colorado, returns to Ireland to secure his legal rights, also the hand of the girl he lovej. He succeed in both, but not until he has had numerous excit ing and thrilling encounters and escapades, in which, of course, as tho hero (Dan Ma gulre) he Invariably triumphs. Mr. Mack has never acted better or sung with greater success than In his new play. His "Rose of Kenmare," "Dan, My Darlin' Dan," "She Just Suits Me," and "Tha Legend of tho Magulres," comlnsr in for no end of applause and encorer. The supporting cast It should be said, la an exceptionally strong one, including such wel known people as William Townsend, Oeorge Deyo, Edward Kennedy, Eddie Heron, Edward Brandt, Misa Annie Mack Berlyu, Miss Josephine Lovett and Miss Mae Stevenson. Crowded houses were the rule all last week and tho advanc'o Hale shows that they are bound to continue for tho balance of the engage ment. Tho Barrows-Lancaster company In a comedctto entitled, "When Georgina Was Eighteen," come first on the list of play ers of the new bill that opens the week with a niatincs today at the Orpheum. "When Georgina Wus Eighteen" is the work of Robert Burns Mantel, dramatic critic of the Chicago Inter Ocean. H Is described as a lively and refreshing little piece with some very humorous situations. The theme rests on the trials and troubles of eloping young lovers before an old Jus tice of the pesce. who. It Is discovered. Is the girl's father, which does not hinder the usual nnd desired beautiful ending. "A Daughter of the Gods," u quaint con celt, will bo the vehicle In which Harry Earle Godfrey and Miss Yeta Henderson will make their first local bid for favor. For Its theme It has tho strange doings, mannerisms und sentiments of a daughter of a god, who, like Galatea, comes forth after It.'"") years of dormancy In her mar ble form contrasting with those of an up-to-date American gentlema.i forming strange misunderstandings, from which delicate humor arises. The musical Avaios, two men and two women, constitute the musical tec. tures. They render cn xlophones a program of mixed selections. Including tuneful popular numbers and such classical numbers as the overtures from "William Tell." Harry V. FlUgerald is a kalledo senpic change artist, who In a very brief space of time depicts numerous types of character, making ft complete change of costumo and make-up with each as he drifts along with his talks. J. Roger West and Ida Van Siclen present a lively little musical comedy called, "The College Gym nasium." E. J. Flanagan furnishes some of his own unique entertainment, while J. W. Kurtls and his dogs provide one of those canine circuses that serve to Interest and amuse young and old. "An Impossible Voyage," a motion picture In thnrty-nlne scenes, will be projected by the, Klnodrome. An unusual red-letter event Is scheduled at the Orpheum for the week beginning Sunday matinee. February W. The Orpheum Road Fhow will be the specinl attraction. The roster of the famous ag gregation of vaudeville stars this season embraces Mclntyre and Heath, the .noted black-fare comedians; Ppessardy's bears and ponies: the four Madcaps, terpslcho rran artifts; Clarice Vance, the southern fUngor: Frank and Jen Lalona, musical comedians; Smlrl and Kessler. presenting "The Bell Boy and the Maid." and the Bard brothers, sensational acrobats. "Tho Fatal Wedding." a play full of heart Interest, by Theodore Kremer, and under the management of Sullivan, Harris & Woods, will begin an engagement lit the Krug theater for five nights and two matinees starting with a matinee today. One of the most Important characters In "The Fatal Wedding." Is that of "Jessie." a child of 8 years, who is known as "The Little Mother." This part Is enacted by the Misses Cora Qulnten and Baby Keefe, each alternating with the other at the various performances. Tills character Is of such great Importance, that Sullivan, Harris Woods have spent much time In securing children competent to play It. In the Misses Qulnten and Keefe they think they have secured the very best talent available. The part is a great strain on the physical powers of any child actress. The scenic effects are very vivid and realistic, and show a number of reproductions of well known New York scenes, among them being the criminal court, while In session and the Interior of the famous Grace church, while a wedding ceremony is In progress. Another scene which hns attracted widespread at tention Is the Palisades of the Hudson on Music and Musical Notes Music Calendar for the Week. WEDNESDAY' Omaha Opera company. Crelghton College Auditorium. "Pinafore," 8:15 p. m.: High School Boys' Glee Club, Unity church, 8:15 p. m. THURSDAY Ysaye, Auditorium, 8:15 p. m. i . fflF70ffCY0ffIfm The most palatable malt extract ou the market Gives strength to the weak energy to the ex hausted. Greatest Strength Builder Known To Medical Science. M BEST TONIC FOR NURSING MOTHERS. til ingiTTAr.t Inrlfol' NTnthlna- hut PI Parsifal::! After all the exclte I mAnt ft honncfnflr no foe the Oer- man production, along comes the announcement that Henry W. Savage's English-speaking company will givo tho great festival drama at Boyd'4 March 14 and 15. Surely Omaha ought to know "Parsifal" when It gets through with various versions. The next thins on the pro gram should be a Cook's excursion to Bay rcutli. Then the various stages would be complete. With all the German opera talk "Lucia" has been rather lost Bight of. After tho strenuous, difficult stretches of Wagner's masterpiece It will come like a breath of aprlng over a misty landscape. It is eo tuneful, so spontaneous. $ Donizett! was about 88 when he conceived the idea of weaving an opera about "The Bride of Lammcrmoor." He was much more of a reader than most composers and was deeply devoted to Scott. Of all his operas "Lucia" remains perenlally young and pop ular; all tho great prima donnas have found in It an opportunity to show what they could do. "The Mad Scene," In the third act furnishes material for phenomenal woik, and a master chance for applause. The Cavatina in the first act is most ex quisito where Lucy, Btanding by the foun dation, tells Allsa of her anxiety for Ed gardo. How one of his house of Ravens wood, dist.-ated by his Jealousy murdered his plightci mistress nnd threw her body Into this very fount; then In terror she con fesses that once In the waning moon the phantom of the dead lady rose before her with soundless, white lips and warned her of disaster. Then suddenly her mood changes, and the pure, Joyous love song which follows is one of the gems of the opera. The duet In the first act, between Lucia and Edgardo, always arouses the great est enthusiasm. There Is In It a chance for pure lyric singing, gradually working to a great climax. With Sembrlch and Caruso It ought to set a good many people to cheering. Sembrlch has a way of plumb- Ing the depths of even quiet, conservative listeners. I was once sitting next to what seemed to bo a calm, peaceful business man at the Auditorium In Chicago. Som brich was Binging. When she finished he leaped to his feet and fairly roared, "Brava! brava!" Such a demonstration Is not usual in this country, with our con trolled emotions. All music lovers are familiar with the sextet. The choruses In "Lucia" are so tuneful that it is hard to keep the stage hands from Joining In. There Is a cer tain finale in tho second act, where It Is Just about impossible for anybody with a rag of music about them to remain dumb. When Madame Sembrlch was last. In Omaha she sang In "Don PasqualF." This opera was written while Donizetti wus living In Paris; he changed his nutlve Idea of fun to suit the light, gay humor of ths French. Not long ago, In an article on the great melodists of Italian opera (Verdi, Ro9slnl, Donizetti and Bellini), I came upon a para graph which Is well worth quoting, as It seems to answer entirely numerous ques tionings of "The Barber of Seville," "Don Pusquale" and other of the "old-fashioned" so-called "thin" operas (even "Lucia"). Clifford Cox says: "In writing of the four great melodists of Italian 'opera, I feel reluctant to Invite my reader to the contemplation of such delicate and beautiful art without having ascertained his susceptibility to the re fined nnd subtle In music. The palate vitiated by strong spirits, Is Indifferent ti the soft wines of Burgundy, the mentality which finds Its pabulum in the coarse realism of Zola, experiences only ennui at the perusal of 'Paul and Virginia' or 'The Vicar of Wakefield." It Is popular to call tho music of today the music of ths future. What folly! The present of today Is the past of tomorrow, and so on for ever. How Inapt it Is to call any art, perfectly developed, 'old-fashioned. "Let us be broad minded, and thus bring ourselves to at sympathetic understanding of the art of Qther days. Ws shall then perceive its wondrous beauties and be humble In our appreciation of them." No more radical contrast can be Im agined than "Parsifal" and "Lucia." Ths first opera is the incarnation of modernism In music; deep, complicated; requiring all one's brain power to grasp. "Lucia" Is like a whiff of lavendsr from some old chest. After we have done the festival drama, with every nerve on the alert, what a rellf to sink lazily back the next night and listen to Donizetti's melodies will) a Joyful spirit. Somebody has said that the ubject of Italian opera was primarily "to please." When Sembrlch sings one can well believe It. Her art belongs to the palmy days of the Italian me)' dlsts, before the shadow of the music drama fell upon Verdi. Her vocalization Is sparkling, delicate, und entrancing. Among tho prims-donnas which ws Ameri cans know so well, she shines as a bright particular star. Her voice Is delicious be yond Imagining; the artistic temperament Is hers to a marvellous degree, and she has also great perioral beauty and a rudlunt, gracious, personality. Besides being u greut sinner, she Is a pluulHt of marked ability. She parti cularly delight in Chopin, and is said to play his music exquisitely. This fact alone speaks volumes for her temperament. Not content with these colossal accom plishments, she also plays the violin. In St. Petersburg she once gave a concert for the poor students' fun, In which her genius supplied Uie entire program of vocal, piano and violin numbers. The receipts were 9,000 roubles, and tremendoun excitement prevailed. The Russians are wild enthusiast, and twenty or thirty recalls are often given a great artist, and not Infrequently her carriage Is drawn home by a frantic; populace. The "Trilby" story In connection with' Mme. Sembrlch Is romantic and perhaps true, but one who has watched Herr Sten gel with his talented wife rather resents the Svengal! part ot It. Herr Stengel was her teacher when she was studying tho piano. They were al ready married when the Journey to Vienna was made for the "finishing" with Franz Liszt; Lampertl, tho younger, gave her first singing lessons. With Sembrlch In memory stand PattI, with whoso wondrous career we are all fa miliar; Gerster, the brilliant soprano, who mysteriously lost her lovely voice; lima dl Mui'Bka, the auburn-haired Hungarian she of the picturesque golden belt and the elc tric F sharp above high C; and Albani who might almost bo claimed as an American. However, all these singers are past their prime. Dl Murska Is dead and the rest be long practically to a bygone era. Sembrlch Is the last one of the old Italian school, and yet we read that even her voice of lale years has grown dramatic in its timbre. A special spring tour will be made by the Pittsburg orchestra, beginning April 24. Mr. Paur, besides being a famous conductor, is also a phenomenal pianist. He has been doing a good deal of playing this season. Ho will alternate as soloist with Mme. Gadskl. The tour will be booked by Mr. Loudan Charlton from New York and Omaha is to be included In the itinerary. It Is rather a pity that the Omaha Opera company with "Pinafore" and the high school boys with their Glee club concert have chosen ths same date, February 2", for preservation. A wag asked his friend the other day "Whut is the most popular song now sung In Omaha?" The friend being dense as a guesser, pleaded for the answer. The reply wus, "Com)& Where the Lindens Bloom!" In the midst of an ultra-clvlllzed, exotic frenzy for "Parsifal" what a tonic to run slap-bang without warning upon Kllping's "Song of the Banjo." All you need to have done to understand that, is to have lived. It is music with the poetry left out, and the hard, brutal facts of life stripped naked; a desperate heart-racking song with no moonlight and no soft breezes, but a certain exultant, martial almost Pagan spirit for a background. a IVoadwood half "You couldn't pack a nine You mustn't leave damr fiddle In the You eouidu t raft an organ up the Nile And play it in an equatorial swamp. I travel with the cooking pots and pails. I'm sandwiched 'tween the coffee and the pork And when tho dusty Column checks and trails, You snuuld hear me spur the rear guard to a walk; With my "Plily-wlily-wlnky-wlnky-popp;" (O it's any tune that conies into my head.i; So I see them, moving forward, 'til they dro; So 1 play 'em up to water and to bed. And tha tunes that mean so much to you alone, . Common tunes that make you choke and blow your nose. Vulgar tunes that bring tho laugh that brings the groan, I can rip your very heart strings out with thoso; With the feasting, and the folly, and the fun And the lying, and the lusting, and the drink, And the locrrv play that drops you, when you're done. To thought that burn 'Ike irons If you think. With my Plunka-iunka, lunka-Iunkn-lunk ! Here's a trifle on account ot pleasures rast. Era tus wit that made you win, gives you eyes to see your sin, Ann the healthier repentance at tho last! I, the Joy of life unquestioned I, the Greek I, the everlasting Wonder Song of Youth! The eight stanzas are an inspiration. Many's the man I'll warrant who can repeat them. MARY LEARNED. Xotes and Personals. Mr. Cuscsden's second Philharmonic club concert will be given February 28 at the First Christian church. The postponed Tuesdav Morning Musical club recital was held Friday at the resi dence of Mrs. K F. Crofoot. Members of the Concert Promoters may renerve their seats on Monday morning for Ysaye. Membership curds must positively be presented. Mr. Bchiotterheck of Pittsburg, the man ager of the trunsiontinental tour of the Metropolitan Opera company, was In the city Friday making aome final arrange ments. The Tuesday Morning Musical club gave up its progrum at Mrs. Koumse s 1 Hl week on uccount of the norm. Mia. Hagcuow, the violinist, was unable to cume up from Lincoln. Mr. Borgluin and Mr. Cuscaden had a small private violin recital to test the ucou st.es of the Auditorium. With I lie aid of the shell, which was built for the band, every tone was clearly heard, both up and dowustulr.i. On Friday night In Council Bluffs the Maslcal Art piciity. Mr. Lima, leader, guve Us second concert. The coIoIhIb were Franz Wllcztk. violin: Frank H.i'1.l.-l( flute ami Frank Oscar Newlean baritone. The enter tainment watt given to the Uachi-rs by the Board of EUuiulloa. a winter's night. In this scene a great snow storm is in progress. In which original and novel effects are Introduced, making It most striking snd picturesque. . . Gossip from Stag land. Blanche Walsh's success fn the Clyde Fitch melodrama Is as remarkable ss it Is deserved. Julie and Crystal Heme nre to be starred under the direction of their mother. Bleth ers "Wife" will be their main play. Henry Miller closed his season Saturday night at Washington, presenting "Joseph Entangled." He will soon open a spring tour In a New York production, not yet announced. Richard Mansfield will present seven plavs during his four weeks' engagement at the New Amsterdam In New York. Tills will be the last of his long engagements before his Hnnual tour. Thompson & Dundy will open their New York Hippodrome next Saturday night. Plans are made for making the affair a show that will cause Father Knicker bocker to alt up and notice it. The fire at the Casino not only knocked Lillian Russell out of her closing week in New York, but it settled temporarily the revival of ''Florodora." It was the Snuhert plan to send "Lady Tessle" on the road, and now they can do it without compunc tion. Grace George Is said to be successful In her new play of "Abigail." It deals with an orphaned New England girl, who makes her own way In the world, and shows scenes from "Bohemia" It Is to be hoped that Mlsss George will have the courage to break away from this sort of thing some day and try a play that is worth while. Another nice little chapter of the war is about to be written. When Author Mc Lellan offered "Leah Kleschna" to Charles Frohman it was declined. Harrison Urey Flake took it up, and it is a success. Now comes Mr. Frohman with the announce ment that he has setured the English rights and Mr. Flake with the counter assertion that he owns the English rights. A law suit In the English courts seems next in order. All theaters suffered from poor attend ance during the recent cold spell, the re ports from every city In the country being of the same tenor. In Chicago one night James K. Hackett, while thanking his scanty audience for the Interest shown in attendance, said he couldn't help thinking them foolish to turn out In such weather to attend a play. Most people were of Mr. Hackett's mind, apparently, for they didn't go out to the theaters In any great num bers. EDUCATIONAL, SOTE9. President Roosevelt will speak on Wash ington's birthday at the University of Penn sylvania on the subject, "Home Maxims of Washington." A course in meteorology Is the latest ad dition to the curriculum of the University of Wisconsin. The course will be under the direction of James L. Bartlett of the United States weather bureau. Columbia is expecting a great many teachers who will attend the annual meet ing of the National Educational association at Asbury Park to attend the summer school Immediately after tho close of the convention, ss New York Is within auch a short distance. Andrew Carnegie has given the Rensse laer polytechnic Institute of Troy, N. Y., $126,000 to rebuild the main . building, de stroyed by fire last June. As Is usual with Carnegie gifts, the new building will be called in honor of the donor, Carnegie hall. The sum of money which it Is proposed to raise for Harvard before commence ment day Is 83,5uO,0O, and the class of Jsu. the one with wnich President Roosevelt was graduated, will give Independently the sum of tioo.oco. The Central Board of Education of Pitts burg has appropriated $5,0"0 for this year's work In the children's playgrounds and va cation schools, and the joint committee of the playgrounds and women's clubs is much elated over the result of their efforts. Ijisi year the amount appropriated was only 13,600. The University of Iowa has Just com pleted a new gymnasium, which will be formally dedicated on Wednesday, Febru ary 12. The building Is rapidly nearlng completion and will ha occupied as soon aa dedicated. It Is a commodious building and up-to-date in every way. Union Theological seminary has been made the recipient of a gitt of tl,ouO,000 by someone who does not wish his name known. Tne seminary will have a new site next to Columblu, and us it can afilllate wttn tne university, tne sum given wm no douut prove altogether adequate for the purely theological needs of the seminary. RELIGIOUS NOTES. The American Bible society last year sent forth nearly 2,000,000 scriptures. There are 100 Christian Endeavor societies In France, one-fifth of which are Metho dist Rev. John B. Mancebo (colored) of Co lumbia, S. C, has sailed for Cuba, his old home, to enter upon episcopal work there. A boulder with a tablet of bronze is to be placed in the village of Cromwell, Conn., on the site where tne first two churches Stood, 1715-1840. The latest authentic figures It Is said give the number of Catholics in the world us 230,000,100; of Protestants of all denomina tions, 140,0u0,0u0, and Greek or Russian Catholics, luO,0W),(W0. Miss Grace A. Hughes, In writing of her work in the hospitals of Osaka, Japan, says that men from all ports of the coun try are in these hospitals, and most of them who have been visited and given the gOKjiol, "have never heard a sermon or seen a portion of God's word." The cathedral In the City of Mexico, which stands upon the site of the famous Aztec temple, is one of the largest and most elaborate cathedrals in America The cost of the exterior was about $2,000,000, while the decorations of the choir alone cost $1,600,000, Its wonderful railings having been made In Macao. The cathedral was built under the auxplces of Charles V and Pooe Clement VII. Over G2,0eO wretched men sought shelter, food and help at the old Jerry McAuley mission, in New York, last year. Forty thousand nights' lodgings and 60,000 meals wore given. It is said that lUjout 90 per. cent of the applicants were once Sunday school scholars, and In jne eroujv of forty six, twelve were college graduates. The mission Is almost directly under the end of Brooklyn bridge, and Is open from early morning till lute at night. AMI F.MKT. A MI'KKMEST. KRUG PRICES, 15c, 25c, 50c and 75c. MATINEE, ALL SEATS, 25c. Sunday Matinee. 10c, 25c, 50 EZ NICHTS AND TWO MATINEES, Starting TODAY with a Matinee SULLIVAN, HARRIS & WOODS, PRESENT The FATAL WEDDING GKHTUUDK IIAYNES AND CHOIR CELESTIAL. The Original Cast -Specially Engaged INCLUDING Julula Ralph, Baby Zena Kelse ani Little Cora Qulnton will alternate during the week as THE LITTLE MOTHER. Friday and Saturday, Why Women Sin. Next Sunday, The Princess Chlo boyd's yassaa lvigrs. TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY MATINEE WEDNESDAY 25c-30o-73o 5S.tSLa.AN DREW-MACK 1!S THE WAY TO KENMARE. by Cdward E. Rose Management Rich and Harris HEAR MUCK SING KfriffiOT-SVa - .. . ' : ( Trig RUSE OF KENMARE AGUIRES CREAT COMPANY SPLENDID SCENERY CRCIOHTON AgoocI show good t lunch Agoodbeer JfYOUOMEA OMAHA'S FAV0RJTE BR JtesuretoSegood Ih goocjiomeorcaZ 'Phone 4. Week Commencing Sunday Matinee, Feb. 19 TOPAV, 2:15-TONIGHT, :15 MODERN VAUDEVILLE Barrows, Lancaster & Co. In tho Dramatic Comedy, "When doors; .'ana Was Eighteen." Godfrey 6V Henderson Presenting, "A Daughter of the Gods." Musical Arolos Instrumentalists. Harry V. Fitzgerald The World's Greatest Change Artist. j. Roger Wgst St Van Siclen In Their Musical Comedy, "Tho College Gymnasium." E J. Flanagan Novel Entertainer. J. W. Kurtis and Dogs Kinodrome New Moving Scenes. Prices Kc, 25c, 50c COMING FEB. 26, "The Orpheum Show." Direction MARTIN BECK. "YSAYE" pronunced as If spelled Lb WORLD'S GREATEST VIOLINIST nnd Jules DeHofvp. Pianist. Dlrecllim Concert Prumotprs. AUDITORIUM Thursday Evening, Feb. 25 HESEHVH1I SEATS, 7Kc, l(ll.O, l.BO. Box Seats, ia.. Admission OOr. Sale opens ut Box Office Tuesday morn tntf at 10. i DEPUTY STATE VETERINARIAN, H. L. RAMACCI0TTI, D. V. S. CITY VETERIXARIAX. Office and Infirmary, 28th and Mason Sts. OMAHA, NEB. Telephone 639. TABLE D'HOTE DINNER 40c-50c Sunday, Feb. 19, 1905. MENU Blue Tolnts in Half Shell Newport Flakes Ollvea Celery Cream of Chicken Soup Boast Turkey, Cranberry Sauc or Roast Capon Stuffed Whipped Tota toes Cabbage In Cream String Beans Oyster rattles, America Salad a la Toklo Tapioca Pudding Ice Cream Cake Coffee A "vuR.f AVISR" thst arrows tn popularity ING!! GONEIU WILL tiEPlCIDE G-O JAVE1T EERPICIDE WILL SATE IT TOO LATE FOR EmriOIE HE NEEDS A GUAKDIAN Tba buatnoM mas whs Is too bur to look rir tl( hMtth sua ptrsoaal oomfort ntodt s fusrdrtn To ncrtlo dandruff od tailing hair la txmMth His Ida ot bualnaaa. Laur whm inourabla balt- saas comta ba will waau monay rring 10 0Tr soma tua raault ut kta own mglnot. some ana as noma itiould look altar blm. At Orat ildht ot dandruff which la s MDtacioua dlaaaaa Naw. bro'a Harplclda ihould ba uaad. It curaa dand ruff and atopa falling hair by doatrorlns tha dandruff ira. A dallahtful taur draaalas. STOPS ITIMINU ins 1 An iii. Drue Storti. Sl.tO. Scsa Mc. lUapa, to HEIPICIDE CO., Dcat I, DatrsH. Mich, for s Miapls. NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE THE ORIGIXAL renaady that "kills tha Dandruff Germ." SHERMAN & McCONINELL DRUG CO.. Special A rent a, APPLICATIONS AT PROMINENT BARBER eHOPS. These Rates Are Low Grand Junction, Colo., Salt Lake and Og-den, rtHh, I'ocatello, Ida., lielenn, Butte, Ana conda, Missoula, Kalinpell, Mont. Spokane, Kllensburg, AVenatche, Wash., 1'endleton aud HuiiUiiKton, Ore. , Portland, Tacoma, Seattle, Wash.. Van couver, Victoria, B. C, Ashland, Astoria, Ore. San Francisco, Sacramento, Hoinbrook, Fresno, I,os Angeles, Sau Diego, Cal., Phoe nix, Yuma, Benson, Tuscon, Ariz., El I'aso, Tox. $20,00 I $22.50 $25.00 $25.00 Abore rates apply from Missouri Ulvor points aud will be In effect dally March 1st to May IMh. Rock Island System offers choice of two routes to California-via El I'no and via CoWado with through Tourist Cur service. For further information call or write, F. P. RUTHERFORD, D. P. A, 1323 Firnain St,, Omaha, Keb BEE WANT ADS PRODUCE RESULTS , k : -JP ' ' " ' ! : " ' "