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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 11, 1910)
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BKK: DECEMBER mo. 1 X. t .'V. 1 4 s v Iff 1 r Us i I V V mm ALDA NE of the most notable of mod ern romances will be presented at the Boyd theater during the com In week by the Eva Lang player. "Soldiers of Fortune." o br Richard Hirdlni rv1. being the bt!L Mr. Davla took for hla hero an American engineer, Robert Clay, and nade him a type of the men who have achieved the triumphs of civilization over the forces of nature. In this particular story, the engineer not only wins over nature, but over man. Robert Clar Is managing director and engineer for a min ing company in a little South American re public, when a revolution breaks out. To protect the property of the company be Is compelled to put down the revolution, which he does. In doing this ha discovers that Hop Laagham, daughter of the owner of the mines, la not only a sweet, loveable little girl, but a woman of spirit and courage aa wen, whne quick wit saves the day at a tlm when all seemed loct. And aha finds that Clay is a real hero and not merely a dress parade performer, go good fortune comes to both. The play la Intense li action and gripping In Interest, being relieved by a fine vein of comedy. Miss Laac will play Hope Zagham and Mr. iyncto will be Hubert day. while Mr. Bliss. Mr. MoCab. Mr. KirUand and the others will get good roles In the long cast. The first performance wUJ be given this afternoon and the bill will run all week. "The Old Homestead." Den man Thomp son's great partoral. will be at the Bran dels ail of next weak, opening on Sunday night. The piece will be preeented at bar gain prices by a competent company. ' 0 "Sis Hopkins" will be seen at the Krug theater four nights, starting matinee to day. Miss Rose Melville, who first gave the quaint and lovable character of the Posey county girl to the stags, will again be seen In the title role. The play has been given an entirely new production this sea son by Miss Melville's manager, J. R. stir ling, and the company supporting her la the best sh has ever had. Three nights, commencing Thursday, Mr. J. M. Ixinbar preeents at the Krug Art Rankin and Lou Lawrence In Weber A Field's greatest musical comedy success. "Hoity Toity." Csual Saturday matinee. Al Jolson. Barneses and "The Police In spector" will be three of the features of the new Orpbeum bill starting matinee today. Mr. Jolson la a minstrel of unusual attain ments. Two of his numbers are "Many Brave Cope Are Asleep- on Thrtr Beats" and "Under the Spreading Chestnut Tree." Rameee la a maglaan recently brought from Europe for a tour of the Orpbeum trircutt. He makes no claim of being ear thing mora than a mere human, but the feats ha performs seem almost Incredible. Hla "Temple of Mysteries" Is a preten tious and gorgeous stags setting. Clay M. Greene and Harrison Armstrong have treated the "third degree" In a new way In their one-act drama. "The Police In spector." Soott Hlgglns portravs the role of Inspector Carsoa. John T. Dorl plays the rich criminal. There are three ethers In the cast. Fred W. Force and Mildred Williams will preeeat their new k!t. "The Girt Ahead." depicting rural life In Maine. The Bison City Four consists of Victor Milo. Frank Qlrard. George ltughea and Ed Rosea. They offer songs, comedy and characterlaationa "The Blonde In Black" la the professional tttls of Maris Fen ton. who sings popular songs. Parshly Is an Instrumentalist who has a unique offer lag. One of his novelties Is the playing of the largest xylophone ever made, using four mallets. New klnodrome views and the Orpheum Concert orcheetra will be other features of tha new bill. Ia.ly matinees. "The Trocederos." Charles IL Waldron's touring company, which comes direct from Waldron's Casino. Boston, to begin a engagement at the Gayety this afternoon. "Finney at ths North Pole," a comic opera sort of farce. Is from ths pen of Corned, an Frauk Flcney. The score by Harry Alford. Is full of good music, and the chorueee have not been excelled in ri trvi(uu at any lime. Prtno'pel singers l.ae been engaged In plenty and ihe pro duction has been staged superbly. There t!l he a ladles' dime matinee duly. The enfageme.it end with next Saturday's mat' nee. Taaehle. ' Horace, my bey." amid Meraenas. "why don't you write an ode tn praise of some I srtlcuiar brand of wine?" "Tou. too. my guide, phlloeopber, and fnend'" exclaimed the poet. "Have you gun to meee up your rhetoric with thnee twentieth century forma of satire V edly he turned away, for he could not dray that tn his cellar lay a eaes of choice Falertea. and that a metrloai quid pre q4 aa abeut due on lu U.caga IrtJuii. . A w. . . tr - V 1 NX i 0m. American Music Hall to Eeopen New Year's Day SulliYui & Considine Vaudeville to Hare a Torn at the Beautiful New Theater. Sullivan Considine are going to try their luck in Omaha again. Mr. B. Jack Bondy of St. Paul, who has been a very successful manager of vaudeville houses there and at Duluth and elsewhere, has closed a deal with tha Bread els people, whereby he will take over the American Muslo hall. K announces that h will open his sea son at the theater on Sunday afternoon. January L 1911. starting a policy of three shows a day at what are known as "popu lar" price. The best acts of the great Sullivan at Considine circuit will be of fered. . . Police to Suppress Schemes for Raffles Officer Hake Tint Arreit in Cro&ie Against Prixe Drawing' Devices. Efforts by Chief Donahus for the aup preslon, of prixe drawing schemes and petty games of chance for premiums have resulted In the Issuance of a warrant for C. C. Cannam. tcbaconlat. 107 North Six teenth street. This case will be carried through the courts as a teat of the scope of the laws covering the alleged offense, according to the defense. Reports made to Chief Zonahue Indicate the spread of the lottery devices over the cuy with the approach of the holiday sea son. The most common form of the of fending game is conducted with a per forated card carrying "stickers' which oonoeal the number, lucky and unlucky. GIRL IDENTIFIES ASSAILANT Tleltai f Oatiwar Dvelaurea Day, Mesnra, la G:lty Mai He Is Arreeieel. Hear Henry Pay, negro laborer, suspected of connection with the assault ef a girt cf U years, on the night of November 17. la held at the city jail under charge of being a suspicious character, pending In vestigation of tiie case. He waa Identified by the victim. ( The negro eaa arrested at Nineteenth and Ixard streets Friday evening by Detec tives Fleming and Emery, The girl, who aaa been working with the detectives toward the apprehension cf the suxpect for several days is positive in her Identificalon of tha man. A revolver found la his poaeeaoicn la the same, she says, as that with which sh mas beaten after the aseault- Frlakleeed late Bite by fear ef apnendlciUa, take It. King's Ntw Life Pills, asd away goes bowel trouble. Omraatced. X For sale by Beatow Prug Co. -"--'- . y. : V if 7,V.' 0 $3sK-, . NB day the weii known and bril liant writer. James Huneker. putting on paper a few thoughts concerning Johannes Brahms and his work, and he Tot this sentence: "ah works of art arc the arduous victories of in-t minds over great ImaglnaUona." Brahma waa a man whoa Imagination was -ways controlled by his mind, and while aca have disagreed, the nam. of Brahms 1 more securely fixed among the treat" musicians than ever. But It la not of Brahma that thi articl It l rather of th, reflections tn br that sentence: "All great work of art are Oie arduous victories of great minds over great ImaglnaUona" It Is a wonderful thought and aa true as It Is wonderful. It must be noted that this does not mean that all ere at works of Art are annihilations or destructions of groat imaglnationa, by great minds. There Is no demolition, no elimination. It la a victory! The Imagination 1 the ettlseo subject, and tha mind is the monarch. The mind rules, the imagination yields obedience. Not again that tha victory Is aa arduous one. Imagination Is not an easy thing over which to gain a victory. Our asylum arc full of people whoa imaginations have galnsd for a time the ascendancy over the mtnd. Ons of the most tnaensats remark which w Bear every day la thla: "Tou only Imagine that!" or "That la only your Im agination:" "Only your Imagination! Suppose you are awakened in the dark hours of the very early morning by hear ing noises in Oie houee, do you not suffer Just as much. If you imagine that there la a nocturnal prowler downstairs, as If there really were? When you oome down la the morning, and with ths courage Inspired by daylight, go through ths room downstair, finding nothing diaturbed. do you grop the matter as being only a foolish Imagination, and say nothing more about, or do you not more probably tell all your friends About it for at least a week, and then having aroused their Imaglnationa. do you hot aa go ta rest with a utile mor timidity and with a continual Inciinatlo to whlaper "Whars that?" every ume the wind blow the leave against tha window, very time the furnao cough or atgh! and every Ume a aouieily-inclmed mouse roe a-v baiting it frienda? What 1 Imagination T la it not the making an "image" of something T Den t w all make unto uraiva Tmagee." and ' them, or worship them, aa the eaa may be? Some make an imags of Fortune, and spend their time on this planet, wor shipping that Imag and fearing that It will break or fall t pieces; some mak aa Imag of Fame, and giv ail their devo tion ail their sacrltlce ts that Image, xonly t Cnd that it haa feet ef eiay. But thee ar people, trng to aay, who are letting their Imagination run away wtth their mind. They ar oftsa couaidered the prac tical people, but if they war, the mind wou.d be uppermost and It 1 not. Why? Because each people have no tlm to de velop the mind, they have a tint to think ca the great thing of the mind, they have n tlm for music, aor for art, nor for literature. Bur for philosophy, nor for VWVfe-V - ' - AA , r - . s fo 5 fflS JOSEPHINE FOy AT TRZ . languages, nor the many branches of ths mind's storehouses. Having once set up the Image; the image la exacting and Idolatry takes the place of Idealism: the idol, or image, supersede th ideal. Then gradually faith disappear, faith in th eiletec- even, of an Ideal, and th imaginstlon is uncontrolled by th mind. It Is only imagination! But Imagination is making an Imag of something. Take the matter of slckn. and in thla realm wa find th terrible ahaurdity of saying "only Imagination" aa though Imagination wer a trlfla. Speaking of thla matter with a physician th other night he gar th fol lowing statement: "There Is no us tn going into all th phases of this subject; they are many; it la enough to aay that imagination Is on cf th hardest thing with which th physician has ta cop. It is exceedingly Jir&rult to get patients to rail eve their mind of Imaginations, or fixed ideas of falsa nature. Take just on lln of thought, for example, a person, through sxjeeslve us of tea. tobacco, or alcohol, or a case of indigestion, feels a palpitation of th heart: he doe not consult his physician about It at one, but secretly beglni to worry about the poail biaty of heart disease, as tlm goes onlis ldJA bocomss so fixed and exag gerated that he caatot shaks It off. and although he I assured that there le no organ! a lesion. It 1 difficult to disabuse his mind of the results of his imagination, even after strenuous efforts of will on hi part." He tu made ills image so strong, that hs finds It hard to break down. e) Away back, centuries ago, la th apo cryphal writings, these words are to be found: "Pales set on an high place will never stand against the wind: so a fearful heart In the imagination of a fool cannot stand against any fear." This seems strong language, but etrong languag la needed In combatting with imagination, or tha making of image. Paiea, or aa w would eey. picket, or fence-poet a, set en an high place, will never stand against th wind; they must be sunken into bole dug for them; a fearful, fearing, worrying heart in th Imagination of foolish people tor w ar foollaa when we give in to our Imaginations cannot stand sgalnst fear of any description. Again from th earn writer: "O wicked Imagination, whence earnest thou in to cover the earth with derttT" And further I "Great travail is created for every nan, and an heavy yoke la upon th sans ef AdAm. from th day that they go out of their mother womb, till th day that they- return to th mother of all thlnga" "Their Imagination cf thing to coma, and th day of death, trouble their thought and cause fear cf heart." "From aim that sttteih on a thron ef Cicry unt aim that la humbled la earth and ashes. " "From him that weareth purple and a crown onto Mm tiat U clothed with a linen frock. A Uttie or nothing la his ret, and afterward he Is in hi leep, as In a day of keeping watch, troubled ta the vision sf his heart, a if a wr escaped cut of a battle." "Whea all la safe, b awakeUi, and marveteth thai th fear wa athlng." X 1 i " V x PA&LEY-JV the QZPHEUZZ This la what might be termed the New Thought of the Andante: Think of All the thousands of thousands of people who have believed firmly in j f hoe-; these were "only" ImaglnaUona. and yet they were sufficient to keep people ' miserable, frightened to death (and some- j times literally so) and now that most i people have been emancipated from that , belief. It la evident that those who believe In ghosts and goblins and such unwelcome visitors, were the victims of their own ! Image-making propensities. ! But all tha ghosts arc not gone. There j Is ths ghost of tha "public appearance," I which the musician haa created, and what a fine healthy and lusty ghost or Image It ' la! We have even given It a nam a Stage- I Fright. And how people will fight for j tneir image; haw many times has the writer argued and reasoned with people who suffered from this Image-fear, and how many people he has seen overcome it. while others who could have dona so. were so busy sajing their prayers to It, that they had no time to try. In her excellent book. "The Philosophy of ! Singing," Clara Kathleen Rogers, writing nearly twenty years ago, said: "Stage fright !. first of all, an effect; the im mediate cause being lack of proper con centration, which lack of concentration has it real causa In egotism. This state ment may shock some of my reader, who may object that, on the contrary, it la timidity and a lack ef confidence In one's own powers that produce stage-fright. Well and good. But timidity Itself la only on of tha many forms In which self-oonsclouav ness or egotism manifests Itself, for If w were not concerned about the impression we produce on others, w should never be Umid In our br1ng. or afraid of not uoiug our Desi; dux, wateaa ws should, be simple, direct and fear less a little children, before the demon of self-consciousness has taken poesesalon of them." Another image quite akin to ataga-frlght s iue ucage or tenure. una 1 very liable to make thi Image whil really doing good work in the line of study. Ons is so apt to build Images himself or her self, and also to let other help build them for him. Her the imagination la being independent of mind; th mtnd 1 not In control; and Image-fear 1 spoiling th work. In such a cas let the Image be j compared with the Ideal, and the d.ffer- ence will soon appear. Ons should not bother about what other think, but ahouid tudy one's own ideal. The ideal la the actual existence in the mind; the imag 1 a foolish attempt to lmiiate or mak an image of something not ideaL Take the matter of a difficult passage to play or sing; there Is a certain way to do it; If the mind approach It, It will be handled by thoughtful work; If the Imagin ation as to its difficulty becomes para mount there i aur to be trouble. In short, let th Mind control th imag ination, at all times, and your progress will b much mor regular, much more encouraging, and much more certain. THOMAS J. KIXT. Frcaa the tle. At an Informal mua'cale held at hi tudlo last Saturday afternoon, llr. Jean P. Nuffield read excerpt from a musical treatise H. K. Htvrti. The reading were Interspersed by piano number i:ated by several of Mr. Luffle,.l pupil. Maater lirneet Wehl played a "Miment Miatcal" by Schubert. Miee Irma Podolak contribu ted a valt-e bv Chopin, a minuet by 8hu bert and a Chopin prelude were played by M a tlllh Hockman. and Mr. Henrv Irfit gave McXHtweii'e "tierenaia ' and Llaai "l.ebeiruiu" In E. Mr. K. M. Jones preeented his pupila. Miss Kdna Taylor and Helen Taylor. In a piano recital Friday evening, loember a, ! llu, at the Kchraolier Mueller aud:tir- j luin. An elaborate program waa Hiven. Tney were assisted hy M a Martide Mitchell , and Mr. A. J. MoCluugen. M aa Bella Robinson will give a musical tn her studio nest Wedneeday evening. ' eeverai of her advanosd pupil will ta part in th prugrani. The third number of the regular B. H. W. concert eerlee will be given at the Bran deia theater, Tueeday afternoon. IxceniMr 12, when Mme. Frances A Ida, soprano, will sing ths following number: ITALIAN'. ror La Oioria O. Bonoticlnl Tu M ami a. Pergoleel AmartlU o. racclnl la Bel dl "Mm. Butterfly" Puccini OtRMAN. fie Lotoeblume F.r 1st I'U riiot Wl Elne Blume.. Ich Trage Meina M:nne... tftaednchen FBENCII. Chanson Trlst Neil Romance Chant Vonetlen , Gavotte, Manoa" ESOUSH. . R. Schumann . K. fx humann i .U. bchumann ftraun Straus ; Du pare Faur i Debuaey ' Bern berg I Maseenet Hail Bounteous May Uana Braneoambe 1 t'harity , McLraiid i From tha Land of Th Sky Blue..... Water Cad man ' I 'am on Max btrangel eucpacru, lay uemeanour ry Lane Wilson Th Tear at the rlprlng Beach Mr. Arthur luwasatein will asaiat at ta piano. Th Mountain Aah mal veto stetr ef Wale. Creet Prllalri. mtll r-n.1er the f,' llng prrCrm on Thur.l.f hm! at rt Xry Avenue ortrti,nl cfiwrch Mr Spen V1 Fanner ... Arranged hjr Kh s-llerbert. Chnriieee: Morfa Rh-i11'.au Wen of Hreieeh ". Arrancl hy the Conductor ,!7r"' " A. ThABiss .r,;r,..of ,h Arena" Ie ii.lle Revlle" i.;-s,r tple' lAughing Chorus i.eil Part Songs: Nightfalls A N,M I-on Day t .omw ir A. Mil'tvan V r' Pri.-. tr,.DT Herbert plantation melcxir. Old Hlark Jm. FoetT t-ris. F:tc. : The lai!ant Salaman.ier. . . The eteran Ijght of World..'.".'..'.. lUke .ew Krin.1 . . Barnard Stuart AlamK Pr PrrT ....Handel .... Hernial m. Waft Her An, J b. leeper and Iieeper'jltiVl Conductor. T tilyndwr Hl-har,s. Accompaniot. J. W btier The program of choral and oorcert work given for the Tueeoav Morning Musical' c.ub. under the dire- uon of air. Ktmuel Kats. m-aji held at the h( nie of Mrs Katx Ix-cember . The prorram ae a m hole m. of a vert hiah etandard and wu tltoroughly enjoyed by Cie lr audience piernt. Mrs "n . mi it on i a ii. a soprano new to imint, aselsied. Her voice m of an ew. quliute quality and she uan It im. ,n,.iu gonce-her beet work being don In the iiahn-Bemberg numbers. Mlai Helen !om mer. a young violinist, la of great promise The choral number were all aplendldlv given, under the direction of Mr Vernon C. Bennett snd Mrs. W. w. Turner. The next meeting of the club takes plsce Jan urr I. when the program will consist of works by American composers. On the evenlrg of Wednesday. December II. at the Gfrmm home, the i.vra rinsing society, compomd of the young women of the Oerman association, will give a con cert, at which Mlsa Mary Munchhoff wl!l aastst. The program: I Jtrwacnt ..Frans Abt Lyra tJesangvereln. Wllst Du Deln Herts1 m!r Schenken .... J. 8. Bach By Request. Pa ellchen m. saj- Nymnha and tniepherds Purcell coiner ts.am M Bind Aly Hair. Haydn Pastoral . . .Carey AMt'SBMEXTs. TODAY yps q ADVANCED Late Star Feature of FORCE & WILLIAMS In "The Girl Ahead." By J. Butler Havliand. The Newest Th Wonder Worker In His Egyptian Temple of Mysteries Th Mysterious Sight Th Incubation Growing Real Flowers in Sp Th tin Goddess. HARIE t-EUTCIl "The Blond la Black." "THE POLICE A Dramatic Playlet by Clay M. Projecting Orpheum Animated Photography. PRICFS Mltl"c. loo. tsc riUtLi Sv.nlng, loo. ic r honest D. Mtmnif: tWHBal, TmcaaoAT, 4TU1DAT SPJTDAT. MATTaTZa TODAY s:15 r.liSS EVA LAUG and HER GOf.lPAIlY Freeattng- th aVnaaatlo Fleiy a Fieseitad hy Boaer Xda "SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE" l-oo Show a aTSXT Will W. K. CraaC ...BRANDEIS TTTBSSAT iJtaalOOV AT 4 V. at. MlVf E. FRANCES ALDA Th Vriaaa Scaaa opraa ef th Boatoa aa Chloac Opera Compaalea, Tw Tears Bcnraa KetrovoMtaa Opera Bern. PrnXCBO a.OO, liJn. ginoi ooad Balcony Beats. 60. Oa Bale Day r Coaeert. on win, Biarxirna nn bttvdat fbozaxi BJieAasaaurr or sajtslaji TEOimori "THE OLD HOMESTEAD" m 5tk T8Ai m ffuiTirr axxbuoav rur rrrm whtth PBC1A& IOUSAT VaVXC&a Mights. l.Oo, Tee, ftOci Second aaloear Beats. So. BTSCZAX. laAOAni aLATXJTXM VTBD. AJTD (AT, go and' ao. ajt m m ax ihj rra oooo Beeeted to Utrtetiy Elg-h Oraa asrtrava-aaaa aad TaaaevUl TfflCi DAlLf vfi-i-a IT. TO-lf (agagsaat Terminate Wtti Bat- arday Macia) That ataealv GHrUe Bhow TBI ALWiTI TAMOCB TROCADEROS ZHrc. frrm tli Crtni This.tr. V0VwOafi STUi: FRANK FINNEY la hla m maateat jingle, -FIHHEt "taz KQRTH POLE" (Doe, Ooeke aad IHary, plaea writ) i va-yaarrin cboioi oa a4 or rCLAA QU1III OV rCLAA QD1I1I mm a rreas sig ualaal aomeay ahowa tha yen ased to aay l.&O t see. Ze& AVeadert - Covering every thing from th North Poj to til Equator; from grand opera to musical comedy list' "The Troraderoe." Tou're safe In Investing your coin In tick et: I guarantee it wlli yield dlvi lends of Joy. a. lonios. afrr. Oeyety Theater aeuiuis aad tuiUf aauiet ISO. aa. ao sad TS Mai. 15c & 25c LAOICS' nw, Aa, wai. TICKETS W 0 Tiay Mstlne. BATTTASAT IlulT OAX.T. BBC. IT. EDITH SPEXCES . STOCK C3. la ta OaacMa Aagle-k oierlcaa Ooiaveey m man. r o at tVABAMrjr Brie ISO. SO aad a. We-ker'!n . V eckerhn Ve.- Marr Mjn hhi ff 111 I r.'tii'M i fliln lubert imprvnutu "j-hu Mr. Mx tAndow. IV IMe Roern If. C. Rirhter I.vra Gear.m"erein. V I Mat l;e Rtih aht.be-t Auf rtfrn W eeer iu itiPiti-Ti huhert IVr Ne'ijt:er "chuhert tiretchen am S:intirai1 Shubert M. Marv Munchhoff. VI N'ct j-ne OirtT'll Aheno Chopin Mr. Mx Ijimlnw. Ml l eher Narht Hht Wn'f Morannthau Huid Wolf M.4uf iilMTi-Pprurli'.f ir. ..Ha Wmf A Ht-.l P..r Fell V.n-rtner Cradle Song K. H nmperd nek Ecstevy Wa ter M-"-e Rummel Mii Mary Munrhhoff. To improve Color and Beauty of Hair (Marlon Harlow In V om.m's t'i'herei "To keep the hair f;ee from sgns of thinning and graying It Is re essar to adopt some treatment that will act as a stlmulstlng tonic and give the sap aid hair roots strength and vitality. "Too much moisture on the hair Is a mistake, for It makes the scalp dry and liard. and the hair dull and faded. It Is ootier to use s tonic shsmjjoo powder one or twice a week. "To make a good shampoo powder put four ounce of orris root In a fruit Jnr and mix wltllt four ounces of therox. Sprinkler a little on the head and brush It thoroughly through the hair. This removes dirt, oil and dandruff and the therox Improves tha color, brilliancy, beauty and strength of the hair." Adv. DYBALL'S j 1313 Douglas st. ! Candy Specials for Monday. Peanut ami Cocoanut Taffy at per pound 15c AMI SEMETS. WEEK VAUDEVILLE Dockatader'a Minstrels. The Bison Ciiy Fear Mesra Milo, Olrerd. Hughe and Roecoe. Vaudeville Sensation I PARS1ILEY Th Versatile Instrumentalist. INSPECTOR" Green and Harrison Armstrong. Orpfisuni Concert Orchestra li Talented Artiste IS at, and Baa. Matlae. lOo, as. BO, aaday Svoalaf, lOo, goo, SOe, Too. 4H no-, A14-. 1.1'rtt M iniHn. BOYD THEATER ftM'e and AXX, WIH Our Prtoa, s&e. Comedy, "Jgy Wife rather." THEATER., KRUG THEATER C aoo, so; riw AT 7e Xverybody Ooe to th Krog Theaaex. aTig-hta, atartlng Matin Today. Usual Wad. Matinee. j. . mm9 maim ROSE HELUILLE miiif Za ta Charactaristl may "Sis Hopkins" glOaTTw, BTABTTaTQ TXVafSIT, MATUTZa aATVBDAT. ax sc. svnii rmxxsam ABT BAJTEZaT al LOV ZAWatKaTCa Xa ta MTaaUal Comedy noes, "ISoity Toity" Sand.-UeFA:OEl'S FLATS Tha Ccrgiua Studios 2MI Iougla Stretrt Anjrna M. Bontlam, Sladaiua Borglan laptl of Wacrr Bwayae, Pan Piano Instruction Iracht!iky Method pvplc-mented by Ear Training and Bight Reading. Bigger. Better, Boater That is whst advertising- la Th Be will di fjr youe tuain.