TTIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 5, 1909. tOIE FILLER IS A CHURCH Practicing New Dances for Her American Tour. PERFORMS IN PRIVATE IN PARIS Work of the Band of Yoinf Glrla Maa Rrn Tralnlaa; lor Two Inn Mlii Feller's IMaaa and aspirations. v PA HI.-. An. U. The differences be tween church and state In France have resulted In some rather peculiar changes and chanct-a In Paris, among the rest the possibility of obtaining: for a moderate rent, or noii at all, edlflcea formerly used for purely religious purposes. The Jesuit Church of Bt. Pierre la occupied aa a talon by an American woman, another church contains a moving picture com Vany; one or two convents, It la rumored, make very attractive pensions for Ameri can tourlsta, and several churches are tenanted by artists. To one of these, the Church of the Sacred Heart, a reporter accompanied Mlsa Lole Fuller and her band of coryphees, who are rehearsing for the American tour about to begin In Mon U eul. The start la made from the Hotel Bed ford, where extra rehearsals are held SU'dpImk Into Its court from the Itue do 1' Arcade und making for the plash of a nearby fountain you forget the heat and discomfort of the August day. There Is u sound of tinkling notes and of un sandatlrd feet In a salon near by and your ye catches the float and fling of draperies which puss and repass the opened door, but, disregarding for the moment, you watch a departing guest. ' Composer I'laya Hla Own Dances. He Is a man of a certain age, not very tall and rather fair, with a high forehead and an expression poetical and amiable. Ills hair la long and his general appear ance very distinguished. Ha la saying enthusiastically to a companion who ac companies him to the door. "Ah, Miss Fuller, she Is a genuls," and la saying It as one who knows and believes. Later you learn that It la Massenet, who has been playing some of bis earlier com positions which the dancers have accom panied. He has- answered Miss Fuller's request to come again soon that ha may hear a new protegee who has a wonderful voice with one of the eplgrammatlo phrases for which it seems ha Is famous. It is repeated after he has left the hotel. "A beautiful voice? But that Is not rare. Is she an artist?" While the motor car take successive loads of dancers to the ohurch, Misa Fuller leads the way to her aanotum for a short talk about her plans and tha meaning of her present work. She talks aa aba danoes, In rather a roundabout way, and tha ques tion to which she listens attentively may be answered when you have long forgot ten It. What Really Counts. For instance, you begin by asking her vo explain something about the electrical de vices which she has patented and whlcn will do away with the necessity of tha usual draperies and scenic effects. Miss Fuller waits until your Interrogation point Is properly placed on Us feet, then says, glancing reflectively at two beautiful young girls of 16 or thereabouts who are dancing around each other as tha dry leaves dance In the courtyard when tha breties blow softly there: "Nothing In life counts by tha actual. Every one of ua has had her 16-year-old day. Every one of us has known what It Is to be young and fresh and fair. We have all had our moments, but tha world forgets that, or remembering does not care. This fact Is especially true of tha theatrical world, where It la soon forgotten that there Is anything in achievement that can for a second compare with tha Inimitable and Indefinable wonder of what tha French call )a beaute du dlabla. "I was at a dinner party tha other night where every guest was a celebrity. Not only the men, but tha women, with one ex ception, had arrived In literature, to tha salon. In some branch of art. Tha excep tion waa a young and pretty girl. "She had done nothing, but aha was sweet and Irresistible and aha was the center of attraction. Not one of tha women could apeak without saying something which showed a rare mental equipment, for one cannot disguise cleverness any mora than one can the oontour of a faoei but what of that in comparison with the charming chatter of one who was 16, whloh means in possession of a grace and charm as potent as It Is ephemeral?" Her Oni Work. Miss Fuller waves expressive fingers toward the music room where a Baccha nallan melody la being played, and the bare feet sound like the patter of angry rain on a roof. "Listen. That Is why I am passing my experience to those who can make best use of them. There are few artists who can claim, as I can, to have had 2,000 consecutive nights of triumph. That was my moment, and one does not repeat In life, one cither drops out or goes on. I am going 011, but by a different path. "I am known here In Paris, where tha greater part of my success has been achloved as La Creatlce. I have created for myself heretofore, now I create for others. It is quite different, but not less interesting or progressive. I do not mean by this that I intend to give up my own dancing, but the greater part of the work I Jiave planned for the Amertran tour will Da done by the band of girls I have been training for two years. A few of the dsnrers have been presented In private houses and In the Theater Marlgny only, ( At a soiree given by Mile. Rarhn noyei of the Coined ie Francaise, at her villa at Neullly near Taris, the girls danced on the lawn to the muslo of scarlet coated Hun garian TMganea. They gave the Mid summer Night's Dream. The girls danced In an old English parterre and had for a screen a hedge of pear trees. This was followed by a wonderful eve ning at the house of Mrs. Clark, who is an Englishwoman of wealth. She has a magnificent garden In terraces, and up and down these the girls floated in the moon light, with bare feet and loosened hair, enveloped In their gauiy tunics and looking like veritable fairies. There were great arbors of roses and through the silvery leaves the moonbeams shone. Effect of the Dancers. "First they would dance in the deep shadows, and you would get the Impres sion of restless manses of black and gray; then suddenly they would emerge Into moonlit spaces, and while you held your breath they were gone and only the music of the flutes (they danced to flutes) re mained. It was almost too exquisite for you know beauty can hurt sometimes. It was Arcadia returned to our prosaic, com monplace world, and I felt excusably proud to think that I bad helped to bring It back again." Tha presence of a prosaic world is em phasised by the voice of Mr. Shute, who Is now engaged as first male dancer for the Lole Fuller company and who says: "I see by the papers that according .0 the new law we girls will not be allowed to appear without fleshings bare feet and legs are prohibited In Puritanic America." . Miss Fuller is again the executive woman. "I cannot believe that applies to any thing but music halls, where it may efeslly happen that the most beautiful Idea In the world can be commonlzed," she de clares. "To demand that our dancers should clothe their feet and legs means absolutely that the effect of the dances Is ruined, for there is something about the thinnest covering that spoils the lines under tha drapery and really makes the effect more commonplace and suggestive than the beautiful Blmpllcity of the nude limbs. But America! America) Tou never know what to expect. One year Salome Is shrieked at and the next people are turned away at the box offloe. With the Radium. "Once I returned to New York and went to a first night production at a theater where musical comedies have their birth place on Broadway. I had worked for many weary months in my laboratory in Paris and some of the time I had enjoyed the advice and assistance of Mme. Curie, a friend of mine, as well aa that of one of the professors of the Sorbonne. I had in vented a radium dance, the secret for the solution for the draperies being founded on a composition of phosphorescent salts. I had unthinkingly invited several people to be present at some of the experiments ' and they had talked perhaps without mean ing any special harm. "But Broadway waa profiting by it never theless and the evening I spent there was made enjoyable by the production of a so called radium dance, the effect being pro duced by luminous paint and as much like the original I had devised as the light of a candle is -like the radiance of a golden arc lamp. However, It was sufficiently adver tised and sufficiently popular to prevent my ever bringing out the dance I had worked on. So I have tried to keep my new patents secret. Baaia of a Device. "Many of my devices are simply follow ing out Ideas already in use on the stage, others are entirely new. Altogether venture to say that my work means s revolution in stage settings. You know, of course, that the old-fashioned snow storm is no longer created by bits of paper falling from the flies, but by an arrange ment of films passing to and fro In an electrical machine. Carry that Idea along and you see what a field of possibilities opens before you. "One of the most picturesque background is that of a wonderful cj press tree used In the requiem dar.oa, and another shows a cloud of butterflies hovering about a flowering bush, which the chHdren try to catch. There are no butterflies and there are no flowers. Oh, yes, there are children this year; no one knows what may happen; perhaps we may reach a point where the children will be optical delusions as well." Miss Fuller is in the auto car shortly after, with a child on either knee, and while speeding churchward tells of her plans and aspirations. Helping; the Children. "One must read one's own story into a dance Just as one must read it into muslo," she says. "No one can tell of what Bee thoven thought when he wrote the "Moon light Sonata;" no one knows Chopin's point of view in bis nocturnes, but to each muslo lover there la in them a story, tha story of his own experience arid his own explora tions Into the field of art. The further he has explored the more heartfelt the experi ence, the more wonderful the story. lou oan put as many stories as you wish to music, but you may be sure that no two people will see the same one. 80 every danoe has its meaning, but yojr meaning is not mine nor mine yours. Dan cing is movement made beautiful. You must in it express your own true self. "Children are self-conscious, but not so much so as their elders, and it is not easy but easier to destroy the thin shell of self consciousness and bring them to that ador able state of simpltetty which Is the high est form of art. As heaven lies about them in their Infancy, so It Is probable that they see visions that we do not see and that the world of their imagination Is peo pled with the fairy folk whose movements they seem to Imitate with a fidelity we can neither understand nor copy. All that is necessary is to refrain from frightening them with too much criticism, to have Illimitable patience and a ready sense of humor." At the Charrh. When the Church of the Saored Heart is reached It is found peopled with a score or more of girls of all agea and sixes, their gauzy draperies and flowing hair outlined against huge canvases painted by Senor Cerf, a Spanish artist of Barcelona, who is using the church for an aleller. He ex plains during one of the dance Intervals that It is much easier to get models, the artlstto atmosphere and other necessaries in Paris than in hla own country, particu larly during the recent unpleasantness. He quotes Fortuny svtth a shrug and says that if war is merely an Incident and art eternal there Is no reason why the eternal should be continually Irritated by the Incident. One of his pretty models listens attent ively and finally claps her hands. She is sitting midway on a ladder that reaches to the celling. " She wears an "accordeon pleated gown of bright blue laced with white cords, her feet are In Louise Qulnse slippers of sliver and a white picture hat haloes her piquant face. On the top of the same ladder perches the young Russian dancer Lmsky, over whose work Paris has recently had one of its periodical outbursts of enthusiasm. Here and there In the church are artists, writers, camera experts of English and French periodicals, all of them frequenters of the Sacre Coeur since Its transformation into atelier and salon. The afternoon light falls pleasantly through the stained glass windows, the chancel is turned Into an improvised plat form, the walls are covered with can vases depicting strange mythological beings only half human, scaffolding and step ladders replace the orthodox furnishing and the odor of turpentine that of incense. Mase of Dancers. Groups of girls dance, pose and float away to make room for others. There are three attitudinizing for the Chopin "Fun eral March;" there Is the dance of Diana, the huntress; there Is a dance of butter flies, a fluttering of white wings about a rose bush and a chasing by tireless chil dren. This is followed by the dance of the foolish virgins, three graceful girls In long flowing draperies that catch every passing air current and wind about them In wonderful convolutions of gauslness. In the right hand of each is a palm branch and the dance begun In Joy and gladness moves rapidly, to a mad whirl of grief, despair and disappointment, ending In a frightened group cowering desperately In a corner. It is to be danced in a woodland glade, and as the dance closes afar off dies slowly away the music of the wed- dlrg night. Miss Lole Fuller will herself appear In the "Ave Maria" of Gounod, Schumann's "Serenade," the "Slabat Mater" of Ros sini, the "Requiem" of Morart, and In sev eral of the classical dances arranged to the muslo of Beethoven, Grieg, Chopin arid other composers. She will also reproduce the Ballet of Light i-ulte. Including the fire dance, given some fifteen years ago when Bhe was lust seen by American audiences. 8 TThTl1 nM V 0 KM h 1U The Fall Quarterly Style IkKk and any 15u Ladles' Home Journal pattern iIU 1 Labor Day, Tomorrow K WE CLOSE AT ONE O'CLOCK I In honor of the day and in keeping with our usual ; custom we close the doors at l o docic 1 The Helpfal Bellboy. For four consecutive nights the hotel man had watched his fair, timid guest fill her Ditcher at the water cooler. "Madam," he said on the mtn nigni, 11 you would ring this would be done for you.' "But where is my bell?" asked the lady. "The bell Is beside your bed," replied the proprietor. "That the belli" she exclaimed. "Why the boy told me that was the fire alarm. and that I wain t to toucn it on any :e count." Success Magazine. Take Advantage of the Half-Day Morvda.y tvrvd Duy School Apparel for Girls and Boys I Thia store takes particular interest In children's wear. We dote U on quality, finish and style In these lines Just as strongly as when t buying women's garments. n GIRIjS' DItESSES We show today scores of distinctively girlish styles, y In 6 to 14 year sizes New fall ideas, charmingly simple In design, to N gladden the heart of the little Miss. There are wash dresses of percale, " in plain and neat patterns. Handsome plaid madras and wool dresses, h at $1.25 $1.98 $2.50 $2.05 $3.95 $5.00 m. NEW TAILORED SUITS For the high school Miss, 13 to 17 year sizes; Jaunty worsted models, with three-quarter coats and kilted M skirts at $12.00 nd $15.00 1 Boys Suits, Pants, Blouses and Caps IMirUW 'itwiiJsv You'll be able to take your choice this fall from a very large variety of styles in Ml LAW M Boys' Bnsslan Malta, with sailor or military collar, 3 to I years red, blue, green, tan gray CI fn c: and fancies.... ?..... 10 Junior Korfolk Bolts Pleated coats, with yoke or plain douhle breasted, knlcker pants, all new C" fM C fall shades. 5 to yrs.. lo r Boys' Double-Breasted Baits, with knlcker pants, all tne latest sntiues nVaV.'?..l.0.....$2 to $8 Boys' Combination Bolts nouble breasted coats, two pairs knloker pants, everv suit exceptional BC value, 5.0b, M-00, $3.60 V.OJ Boys' Keefers, In covert and other new fabrics tan, red, brown, green, olive, gray, plain O 50 fO $5 shades and stripes. . U Knickerbocker Pants, of sturdy ma terials, for boys to 16 years of age, worth 76c and 11.00, SOf for .UC Boys' Blouses, of best washable mad ras and percale, attached collar, reg ular "5c and 11.00 garments, 50c Soft brim Turbans. In velvet, cloth. patent top; in red, navy, black, gray. Nobby new styles for small 50e boys Bovs' Eaton Caps, in leather and cloth, regular 85c kinds. Golf Caps, new worsteds and 25c cheviots; regular 60c line for."'" 19c Shoes and Stockings for Schopl Wear SCHOOL SHOES We have the strong, durable, all solid leather shoes that give the hast service. Boys' Valour Calf, box calf and vlcl shoes; blucher style, heavy and med ium weights; slses 2 to 6, 93.60 Boys' Satin Calf and box calf, lace and blucher shapes, sixes 2H to 6, at 92.00 and 91.60 Youths' Teloor box calf shoes, sizes Utt to 2; Saturday, 92.60 and 98-00 Olrls' Tlol Shoes) blucher and button styles; light and heavy sole, all sizes 91.60 Olrls' Tlol Shoes, in button, lace and blucher styles; superior leathers, Saturday, pair 93.60 and 93.00 GUIs' Oxfords; tan and oxblood; lace a.id ankle straps, $1.60 and (2.00 goods, pair 91.00 STOCKINGS Stockings fox boys and Rlrls In every wanted weight and In all sizes. Mothers will find here only the best grades and a number of Interesting specials for tomorrow. Boys' and girls' heavy and medium rib stockings, sizes To H, pr. 19Vsa Boys' and girls' imported ribbed stockings, in two weights, actual 26c quality, on sale at ISO Boys' heavy "buckskin" stockings, fine rib, most durable and lasting stocking made 950 Girls' Imported mercerized stockings, double knees, fine 86c line, special, at HBo THE RELIABLE STORE Hart, Schaffncr & Marx clothes wo have brought together for you. You needn't wear the pattern or stylo that others wear if you don't want to; we have plenty of good things to snow you new grays, uiues olives, worsteds, cheviots, serges, tweeds; all the high colored, smart weaves; in all the best and most fashionable models. You can't buy bet ter clothes than these there are none better made all wool, best tailoring, correct fit Suits $18.00 to $35.00 Overcoats $15.00 to $10.00 Special sale bovs' suits, kniejt erbocker punts, all week. "Will men tion only a few values: $3.00 Suits, with extra pants $1.95 $4.00 Suits, with extra pants $2.95 $5.00 Suits with extra pants $3.95 $0.00 Suits, with extra pants $4.95 DON'T TDV llivnriifo nnor IT iiu iiHiuLii o rinoi sill Mmfig:) FORGET PAYS Bovs' Hats and Caps I I JOYS! TOYS! TOYS! We have opened a new Toy department. Don't fail to bring the little ones to visit toyland. Dolls, Teddy Bears, Drums, Rifles, Tianos, Doll Heads, Mechanical Toys, Coasters, Wagons, Doll Cabs, Dishes, Trunks, Book, Banks and Ranges, etc, etc. All these go on sale Monday regardless of cost. School Supplies Cost Less at Bennetts DIARRHOEA Quickly Cured by WAKEFIELD'S Bla.cbkerry B&l&ixm Read This Letter. I have used Wakefield's Blackberry Bal sam for over folly years. 1 am not giv en to writing letters oi lids kind. In fact never did before in my lire. Due i ao wisn to say to you, it has never failed me in one single instance nor any of my friends, I have recommended it to. When druggists say to me: "Here Is something Just as good," I tell them very candidly there is nothing: lust as good. The fact Is 1 have never found anything Just as good and I never expect to. 1 can cheerfully recom mend it to any one young or old for all Bowel Trouble. It has certainly helped me when nothing else would. J. K. PARKE. la E. Mth St.. Chicago. Wakefield's Blackberry Balsam has been the surest and safest remedy for Dlarrheoa, Dysentery, Cholera Infan tum and Cholera Morbus for 63 years. While It Is Quick and positive In Its action. It is unlike other remedies In that it is harmless and does not con stipate. It simply checks the trouble and puts the stomach and bowels in ' their natural, regular condition. Of the millions of bottles that have been sold In the past 63 years never has a case been reported where a cure was not affected when directions were fol lowed, even after other remedies had failed. Every home should have a bottle or more on hand ready for sud den attacks. Full size bottle, 35c, or 3 for 11.00, everywhere. Come to the best equipped store in town for your school needs. In many cases lc buys as much aa 6c usually brings. Erasers, Ink or pencil, le bponges, each lo Crayons, each lc Flulers, each lo Chalk lo Pencil Boxes.. 6o and 100 Ink Tablet 6o T Squares, curves and triangles, special prices. School Bags for 100 Book straps.. Bo and lOo History Paper, 60 sheets, for So Slates, 3o, 4c, So, 7o, 10c, lbo and 8 So Webster's Dictionary, lOo Lead Pencils, with eraser l r lo Fountain Pen Sale as ad vertised, continues. Webster dictionary Index taken from international 1782 pages very special im international M " $149 I p 8 CAPITOL "The Best that Burns' In Lump or Nut Summer Price Ton COAL Our Mis Shoes Our Misses' shoes for fall and H winter wear are a very attractive line of choice, just right Shoes. They are made by a special maker, who understands bow to make Misses' Shoes correctly. GUN METAL CALF. TAN KVSSIAX CALF. PATENT COLT. VICI KID. BUTTON OR LACE. $1.50, $2, $2.50 If we fit the young lady's feet, she will be fitted with the shape of last, size and width of shoes she should wear. ample Backs, delivered, 300. Aa an extra Inducement for you to order while roads are good we offer All This Week fl I With Each Ton 11 S. & II. Green Stamps $ PENIN G U. S. GOVERIMIV1EISJT LAND IN THE FAMOUS SN AKER.IV5R VALLEY, IDAHO EIGHTY THOUSAND ACRES Choice agricultural land, under the Carry Act will be open to entry and settlement, in the BIO LOfcJT 1UVE11 TRACT. DRAWING AX ARCO, IDAHO Tuesday, September 14, 19Q9 You Must Register Between September Otti and 14th IX you do not uko land after your number is drawn It costs you nothing. Title Acquired With Thirty Days Residence Water Ready for Delivery. May 1V10. Homeaet-kera rate on all railroads and s)eUl rates from all northwestern iiuts. Parties desiring to avail themselves of this oiportuuity to tecura tome of this Carey Act govern ment Und and riot wishing to make the trip at this time, will be provided with powers of attorney and all desired Information, by calling on or addressing, a. i. tucker, Rs::r""0A0,KA37 From Monday, September em, to Thursday, September 8th Indications point to higher prices this winter. Prespnt purchases secure for you the lowest possible price. Prompt deliveries to all parts of Omaha, South Omaha, Dundee, r'loronce and Benson. Half Day Grocery Specials y Bennett's Capitol Baking Powder; none superior; equal to highest priced w K-pound can 1 AQ I One-pound can 24C Hal." ?,ound can 13C U and 100 stamps.. A,W I and SO stamps u and It stamps fg Bennett s Oolden Coffee, pound Mo and SO green stamps Bennetfs Challenge Coffee, pound 18o and 10 green " amps I assorted Dound 80 and 60 green stamps 3 BUhop" Grape ruUati. (sherry flavor) 40c-nd 20 green stamps U Burnham's Clam Chowder, three cans for J8o Jell-O Ice Cream Powder, pkg lOo and 10 green s amps ft Oalllard s Olive Oil. large bottl 70o and 75 green stamps 1 larae ran 800 and 20 grpii stumps ;, f'hnrnlatina two cans 330 ad 10 Sie "tamps Yankee "hoi Toilet Soap, three for ?5-nJ. i. "" Keystone Lye. three for r"" "" ZZ t Skat Hand Soap, three for "Tl i IX " . . i.I i ' pure Honey, pint jar ?; " Hartley s Jelly Marmalade. 26c Jar -ISO ,,. Hipp? wlilUng Powder, six for aSO-aml 10 green stamps U FRY SDOE CO., THE SHOEltS 1 16th and Douglas Sts A MESSAGE OF COMFORT If there is a woman In Omaha that, has tender feet, or who suf fers with corns or bunions, we want her to know that we have the only positive relief for her foot troubles in our ANTI-BUNION SHOES They are made of fine kid, with flexible soles, specially constructed one size smaller in the Instep, and two sizes wider in the sole. This gives a snug fit and throws the foot into its natural position, giv ing real comfort to the wearer. Button or lace, dress or common sense toe. Turned Holes, at Welt Soles, at 83.50 $1.50 Drcxcl Shoe Co. H19 laroara Street. BAILEY & MACH DENTISTS Best equipped dental office in the middle west. Highest grade dentistry at reasonable prices. Porcelain fillings, Just like the tooth. All instru ments carefully sterilized after each patient. Tllllil FLOOK PAXTON BLOCK Cor 10 tli and Far nam Sts. I U. S. GOVERNMENT and Opening Along Railroad in Montana CONRAD-VALIER Project 60 Miles North of Great Falls. 70,000 acres of irrigated land, segregated by the United States under the Carey Land Act, will be open to entry and settlement. $3.50 per acre down; balance in fifteen years' time This land will be allotted by drawing at Valier, Montana, a new railroad town, on Thursday, October 7, 10O0. You May Register for This Drawing by Power of Attorney If you do not take land after your number is drawn, it costs nothing. Title Can Be Acquired by Only 30 Days Residence. There Is no sage brush or stumpB on this land, whirh Is ready for the plow. Reached over the Great North ern or Burlington Railroads. For complete information and blanks, call on or address Wlf T 4T-rrv 01-1 HOtf Heeurity Itiink llldjt, Minneapolis, . JM. VYayiTian Minn., or Valier. .M..i.Ua. exorcises In a "Imlted decree et.y. the marntfteenee r im eoenery la the Canadian hockles viewed enroute to the ALASKA-YUKON-PACIFIC EXPOSTION Stopover without eatra charce at the famous resorts: Baaff Lake Loulae rUltt Olaeter. s This "Land of Enchantment" is reached only by the Canadian Pacific Railway Throush trains to Seattle from EL Paul dalljr at 10:t a m. X.uw xaoaxslea raxes from all plaoea to lieatue and ell Puaet fcound cities and return. gtlaaha and return from Vancouver tt. by Can. Paclfle eiMnieJ. Tickets for sale by scents of all rati aye baud for literature and Information. A. C. Shaw. General Agent, Chicago. A. BEE WANT AO Will rent that vacant house, fill those vacant rooma, or secure boarders on short notice, at a very small coat to you, Telephone Douglas 238, V Bee Office, 17th unci Farnam.