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The Topeka Daily Capital from Topeka, Kansas • Page 9

Location:
Topeka, Kansas
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Page:
9
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a TEE TOFEKA! MILY CAFTTAE: SUNKiT, EECESIBEE they are also the youngest in age, considering the amount of successes they QUAW MAN- have achieved. When they started their looking Englishmen and th sympathy of the audience is inevitably attracted to him. Melodramatic as the ttory may sound above. it is far that in reality, and the story is just a clean, clever, good, well-constructed story of A Colons Kor tho; Songs That Hav Been Somg of Kansas Past acd Present WITH THE KANSAS POETS Cclwccn Cth and 7tb Jscc3n8trc3t starring' tour they were both, very OPORAY HOUGCl mm young men. Their, first vehicle was called Irish Neighbors.

Murray was at IS GOMINGP that time nineteen years old and Mack Anyone who has clippings of Kans as poetry is Invited to contribute them to Many; theater goers will be mm TODAY this column. surprised to learn they Nare not older. tilCHT 8:15 THE GRAND This coming around as they have year PRICCO after year, the playgoer seems to feel PRICES MATINEE loe and NIGHT 15c, S5, Sfie, iOm Autobiography; ground plan and front he has been looking at them for ages. elevation of Sol. L.

Long. (By himself.) human emotions. Every effort has been made to give a reproduction that will compare favorably with the best that his 'hitherto been ut upon the stage, and in other cities the general opinion is that nothing like it has ever been seen upon the "American stage. One of the, many realistic is the use of the Ute language, by the Indian chief, Tab-y-wana. Not one spoken word of English does this character utter, but, through his interpreter, who Both have become solid business men Sol L.

Long; 5 feet 114 inches high- and property holders, and when the public gets tired of them and It is time The Western Piece on Night dark hair and slightly gray hair and eyes both. on back of head New Mnslcal come; AKOCNO THE TOWN Thursday. from brick bat; also one on nose from ring on the other fellow's hand. for them to quit the road, they will both -have a 'handsome competency to fall back upon, They are making great promises for this year's performance Oft CHORUS OF PRETTYCinLQ 911 J)U Matiaee 23o. 85c.

ftoand T5e CW PriCe8 Night 35c, S5o, 60c, 75o and II Born, August 1st. 1SS4. Blood: Virginia American since before by the way is a full blooded Ute himself and a graduate of Carlisle, he carries on an extended conversation, speaking strictly and solely in the Ute the Revolution as to three-fourths, other fourth from Palestine about eighty years ago: Quality: Welsh-Irish predominat Dora Thome the Attraction Today, THURSDAY AMU ARY 3, 8:1 5 ing, then Jew; after this nothing worth speaking of. language, and the use of much of the sign language as it is used by this tribe. Schooling: Private teachers and few terms at country school and two terms at high school.

Quit this young very young FOllMlOFUUGHTOl AND AW'Ql CLKSESa and have since been attending Experience KENT PLAYING RIFFLES Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman, is Lniversity from which I know it is im to be at the Grand Friday. Milter possible to graduate; therefore, no diplomas or something-eum-laude's. Occupation: Began life as messenger Kent will be seen in the part and will for the first time invest it with the charm and virility "of youth, to Alurray and Mack on New boy for telegraph company operator, cable and telegraphs-manager operator again rancher in Kansas broke ranch 1M gether with the fineness of his finished art. Manager Joseph M. Gaites has Year's consumed by "Great Red Dragon" editor twice broke lawyer money to burn- I supplied an exceptionally strong company for the presentation of his fascinating and intensely dramatic study In broke fair to middling.

Married: "Wife a Kansas school teachet of Iowa birth and Ohio-Irish parentage. Children: Five living; four of finest boys an earth and one of finerest girls. 2f I The Marringe'of Kitty on criminology. "Raffles" Is the dramatic sensation of two seasons, and is at pres SOL. L.

LONG. Saturday. 4. ent meeting the end of a six months engagement at the Comedy Theater, Lon VfV une aaugnter in rne lara of Dreams. "Whither went my starry-eyed, Down the ways of Religious Creed: Tell the truth: you fellow mind his If you have to hunt him up and whun '1m.

don, England. Frank McCormack plays Seven, Month Wallack' Theatre NewYork The manner In which Messrs. Row don't fool anyone worth fooling by lying the part of the detective, Captain Bedford, and Suzanne Lee that of Gwendolyn Conron. Side Lines: Prehistoric America; coon dogs and poetry. Salient Points: Loved by little children and dogs and hated by a whole passel of I land and Clifford have mounted and 1 aDout it.

Politics: Individualistic. Creed: Mind your own business and make the other grown-up people and cats. There is something so wholesome about the heroine in The Marriage of Kitty, something that commands respect by the produced Dor Thome calls for only the heartiest admiration. They have supplied settings which are in the best of taste two of them suggestive of the richness coupled with what, to our modern eyes, seems lavish, belonging to the English palaces of the fifteenth IP THERE'S NOTHING BEYOND. 'Tis a pitiful life that we live, my son, charms of imagination, one is forced If there nothing beyond, beyond.

put up with the eccentricities of the If 'tis dreamless sleep when the day is done young lady, who prefers the "occupation century, and yet free from all hint of And no victor's crown if the race Is won. Aye, all is vanity under the sun; vulgar theatrical display. The cos of marrying" to that "of a milliner, shop woman or even companion to a charm-ing old lady. "Kitty" is absolutely irre If there a nothing beyond, beyond. tumes are elegant and appropriate, and IIEXRY JEWETT With the Squaw Man.

the movement and grouping of the per 'Tis a bootless struggle, brother of pressible, charmingly frank and delight sons taking part in the action proper LEGEND OP THE SUNFLOWER. When angles scattered the flowers. When butter-cups and golden-rod Were placed in leafy bowers; That the sunflower plant was cast aside To wither fade and lie Upon a sandy, desert plain Where all things else would die. -And the angels cursed the rugged plant As a worthless, wanton reed As a thorny tare by the wayside grew, That touched the hand to bleed. But the bruised and broken flower stalk, 'Midst heat and drouth and cold.

Put forth its rootlets stron gand deep And the plain grew bright as gold. And the mold of its stem and leaf and bud Builded upon the sand A place for better things on earth Than the stone of the builder's hand, SAME GREAT COMPANY THAT APPEARED AT WILLIS WOOD. KANSAS CITY fully natural. Miss Florence Gear, who mine. If there's nothing beyond, beyond.

have been so carefully considered that and say It is the funniest comedy they naturalness and dramatic effectiveness plays the part this season, is the young and beautiful American comedienne who The shade, the flowers, the cruse of wine And the smiles of women may aU be pte pill have ever had. The piece this season have never been sacrificed, and yet a thine. is in line with their former successes, is captivating all hearts by her presenta-i I 5 pictorial quality which seems to be Then unto the present your heart incline; good, quick and lively. The cast in tion of this heroine. The Marriage of If there's nothing beyond, beyond.

long to the old painting of the Eng eludes, Miss Gladys Van, the original Kitty will be seen here under the man Headed by HENRY JEVETT Red Soubrette, Gus pixley, Gertrude agement of Jules Murry of New York, JTis a strange, wild dream that we live! lish school has been obtained As for the scenes in which the folk have part, these are among the best offered here Rutledge and others. at the Grand next Saturday. my dear, If there's nothing beyond, beyond. Ana ijoa removed the angels curse, in a long time. If the clouds and gloam that surrounds us LIEBLER Therinne.

the Russian virtuose, has Theatergoers are to have a treat in here neuuKing me planters care For nothing He made was made in vain the presentation at the Grand Thurs Are never to lift and the sky be clear. Then hope is the child of a slavish fear; mu in me eartn snouid snare. Dora Thorne is the dramatization of r.ertha M. Clay's famous novel and will le seen at the Grand this afternoon scored over all the other big pianists announced for this season, by being select day of Edwin Milton Royle's four act If there a nothing beyond, Beyond. And the fame of the land spread far and Prices 25, 50, 75c, $1, $1.53 Carriages 1 1 Fret Ust Susptse4 SEATS ON SALE MONDAY 8 A.

M. NUUBERS 7 A. U. ed as soloist for the inaugural concerts play, The Squaw Man, which has been of the Philharmonic Society of New York To homes nf tnilsra iinMacim- There is no error, all things are right. and tonight.

Murray and Mack, who enjoy the distinction of being the oldest farce com under Safonoff's leadership. If there nothing beyond, beyond. They folded their tents and marched away declared to be one of the real sensations of the past few years. This, one of the best of Liebler productions, has been mounted-with lavish To walk a beat in the face of night Is to cast your gage in a losins fight, It is a notable fact that the photograph ui in: liir uii purpie vvesi. The sunflower nooded to weary ones And bid them welcome be To those who came from Eastern hills.

And reason and mind are a double light, FRIDAY edy team in point of actual service, now before the public will be at the If there's nothing beyond, beyond. Ana tnose irom over the sea. Crand New Tear's day. This season I The drama of life had better been missed makes the fourteenth consecutive year And veterans who followed the setting If thsre nothing: beyond, beyond. THAT FAMOUS PLAY that Murray and Mack have headed theis "Tis follvi the knowledge to which we sun, And came to the yellow heads list.

own organization. Their record and Pitched their tents for a home and life I And the beautiful world which the sun Fuccess ha3 been something unique, as Among its reedy beds. has kissed they never had the early struggles so 1 Were better resolved to Its primal mist. The desert bloomed with richer grain. With golden wheat and corn; The plain was flecked with countless MFffXES If there nothing beyond, beyond.

common With so many of our nromi rent actors. While they are the oldest herds, And song birds greet the morn. Th purpose were better the grave of in point of service before the public, the race. Tf there's nothlne bevond. beyond.

Thus it was that the lowly flower That darkness brooded throughout ail mat was cast aside bp fate. WITH BDace. And that sound and song," from before the face Filled with germs of unknown power. Was made the badge of the State. Typical emblems of State and man, Through struggle our race is run The yellow head nods in the breeze S.

Miller Kent Cracksman Of the Angel of fled, finding no law f4! net Vjgs CARRIAGES NOVELTY THEATER Chart Ojrcns Yednasttay PRICES Orchestra $1.50, Ore Clr. 11.00 Balcony 76c, 60 83c; Oal. 20o place; If there's nothing beyond. 3 Sol It. Long.

SWEET MEG She had th eyes' iv summer skies, Th' movement iv a She wor beloved be all the byes, Swate ileg, iv Tipperary. An' Little Dinney Lanahan, An' Big Murtaugh O'Leary. An Patrick HInry Callihan Loved Meg, iv Tipperary. And turns its face to the sun. Van E.

Butler. Salina, Kan. fe THE GHOSTLY DANDELION. I knew you as a golden drop Splashed from the sun's great meltlng-pot; But yesterday you vanished quite, And now our spirit haunts the spot. You're changed into a ghostly thing That walks at twilight on the lawn; The daisies tremble at the sight And hide their faces till the dawn.

ADMISSION lO CENTS in'1 T.ftt.l ninnev Lanhan Learned swate love songs, an' played Belated beetles, hurrying by. Shriek when they meet you by the PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK way. Good Watchman Firefly lights them thim Upon th' pipes, an Callihan In vistmints gay arrayed him. Big Murtaugh fought wid all th' byes Prom Cork to Londonderry. An' In th end, he won th prize, Swate Meg, Iv Tipperary.

MUaed the Santa From the Great Bend Rustlerl The railroad men have a new story! 1 A brakeman got up to a lunch counter rora a "way-late" Santa Fe train. He loadeft up the commissary department with a big supply of pork and beans and mine pie. He got to sleep and dreamed land thought that he was railroading in the future when railroading was dona up lit the air balloon fashion. They had big explosion on the etherlal railroad and when they, all had reached the earth-' the Alton and Rock Island and Wabashi and Milwaukee, the train men looked around to see how they had fared and some one noticed the absence of the Sent Ft. "Where's the Santa Fe?" waa th universal query.

A man who knew th way of the road when they ran on rail looked up toward the moon and saw them) coming as usual thirty minutes late. Where Va That Letter From the Fort Scott Tribune. On March 14, 1901, the Tribune dropped a letter in the Fort Scott postoffloe, addressed to a then wellknown lawyer in Kansas City, Kan. The letter was returned in this morning' mail, after having been six years, less 2 months and 10 days, on the trip. The postmark shows it was received in Kansas City on the 15th ol March, 1901.

It was addressed to a certain number. Across the front of the letter as returned is this notation: "Returned to P. 12-22 '06 from room 4, 64S Minn. Ave. Gone." Another letter addressed to the same man by another Fort Scott party last August has Just come back with tha same notation on it.

We are willing to lose the $17 which that fellow owes us. but we are 'just curious enough to ask Uncle Sam where that letter ha been, all these, years. Overture Th' Father sealed thim toight for loife, home, And then they lie awake till day. The honey-bee will not believe The story of the fearsome sight-But all the world of grass-Land knows He never ventures out at night! Ah, dandelion, poor little ghost! Your neighbors feared you overmuch; For now a valiant cricket comes And lays you with a single touch! W. C.

MitchelL Oswego, Kan. Vflith Oi do not dissemble. Whin Ol say thot Big Murtaugh's woif Can make him joomp an treroDie. He's singing' in th ale-house now, Th ballads iv Ould Erin. But fhere will bejth' Diwle's row Whin get's home, Oi'm fearing.

MURRAY A ND MACK. is superseding every other form of illus She waits this noight wid eyes still blue, An' temDer far from airy tration in the pictorial magazines and that He'll be a solght whin he gets through the names of great photographers are becoming as familiar as those of artists taste and all the completeness that marks the stage presentations of that firm. As the title indicates, the story has to do with the life of the West, where, when a white man takes an Indian woman for his bride, he becomes in local parlance, "a squaw man." In working in other mediums. The progres TP sion displayed in the work of the lens and i 626 KANSAS AVE. Wid Meg, iv Tipperary.

He got whut he desired, in truth. But may th' Saints protect us From some iv th desires iv youth; We Pithecoid and Erectus. Sol Long. INTER ALIA. 626 KANSAS AVE.

dry plate is responsible for the increasing r-T-V 7 this particular instance, the squaw man popularity of the efforts of the noted operators. Of this interest has been born tux sj Buffalo Rag" Miss Pohlman. Coyne and Tinlin World's Greatest Hand Balancers. C. B.

Mariyne Song Illustrator, Presenting I'll Walt for You at Home, Sweet Home." Lamb's Merry Manikins another an interest in the great essential the model. The masters of pen, brush Think noble thoughts; all ethers needs and pencil are fancy free, but the de must rank As highest treason; since they dwarf the votees of the camera are bound to their soul: HY NOT GET THE BEST? models. Like to his toola the worker dally So shalt thou grow like to thy chiefest Probably the most sought after portrait thoughts. made in America and the most difficult to secure is Maude Fealy, who appears this Speak kindly words; there is na war Frequently Don't Cost Much As the Poorest Is an Englishman, and the play opens in that country. There the audience is introduced to the hero, and his relatives, among them the Earl of KerhilL who is the head of the family.

To save the earl from punishment for embezzlement of regimental funds, and the earl's wife, whom he loves, from disgrace, the hero allows the suspicion of the crime to rest upon himself, and disappears. The audience next finds the hero, now known as "Jim Carston," in the role of a cattle ranchman in Wyoming. The scene is the Long Horn saloon at Maverick, a cow town and water tank on the Union Pacific, and with all the usual appurtenances of bar and gambling rant or season as a star in The Illusion of Authority in all infinitude Beatrice, a comedy by Martha Morton, lies well For harshness; save such within The rule that Justifies an homicide, Miss Fealy's photograph was awarded the first prize at the international contest of the world's most beautiful women at Paris, and to the French photographer sh See pleasant things in all God's universe Exists no thing but what, when viewed with eye is the "woman perfect." Well known The Lady of the! Which sees beyond the cmid-mana among her pictures is Furs," by Ami Dupont, a beautiful tone manuig, ja In all its aspects good and beautiful. picture enlivened with the spirit of winter. Our 1907 Baby Go-Garts Just in from the factory, are certainly premium takers when it comes to beauty of appearance, solidity of construction and all around utility purposes.

They, are cute, cunning: and almost as beautiful as their intended future occupants. "The Rose," by this artist, symbolizes the Talk immortality; the soul that broods mellow beauty of June. Introducing Thirty Walking and Talking Figures. drawing room pictures by Schloss shows I js Dut a sepulcher, takes ashes for The one who dwelt within the vanished Miss Fealy in afternoon dress the em bodiment of all that is beautiful In the and Mcintosh are among the photographers who have found her an excellent sub house. Sol Long.

SIGHING FOR HOME tS AUTUMX DAYS. ject for some of their best work. American social ideal. In autumn days Temple City Ouartett tables. The earl and his wife, who are part of a large touring party, stop off at the station, and Carston saves them from an unpleasant predicament.

He is at first unrecognized, but the earl's wife penetrates bis changed personality, and thanks him privately just as the train pulls out. In the excitement attendant upon the departure of the rain. Cat? Hawkins, a desperado, who has a grievance against Carston, gets the drop upon him and is about to shoot him down in cold blood, when Nat-u-ritch, the daughter of Tab-y-wana, an Indian chief, shoots him from ambush. Carston is at first accused of the crime, but manages to prove his innocence, and the curtain drops with the Indian girl's revelation of herself as the murderess. In the next act, which shows Cars-ton's ranch on the Green river, and is When a gloomy haze Mr.

John Cort, under whose management Miss Fealy is appearing, has issued a little folio printed in olive and black Comes over the eartn. ana icy. And the sand hill crane Going south again. on white laid paper which contains half Gives forth a lonesome cry; Then I turn my face, tone reproductions of photos of the fav When in the market for Furniture you should most assuredly see and buy the up-to-date kind. WE ARE HEADQUARTERS orlte of the camerist in The Little Min Soloists and Harmonists Formerly With Tivoli Opera ister, Sherlock Holmes, Quo Vadis, The Cardinal.

The Royal Family. Mice and Toward the old home place And utter a lonesome sigh: i Oh, I want to go back, home again. As the autumn days draw nigh. And eat some of mother's ginger bread, And also her pumpkin pi. Men, The Christian, as "Juliet," and best This wand'ring life of all as herself.

These tiny booklets are distributed gratis to playgoers prior to Miss Fealy's engagements. It Is expected that the present Western tour will be productive of breezy Ameri With its noise and strife. six years later, we find that the rancher has married the Indian girl and is In the possession of a son. News comes that the earl is dead, and that Cars- May be all right in spring. Ard in summer, too.

When the skies are blue. canism from the dark room of the camer- And toil is everything; ton Is now. the head of the family, and 1 1st, twuu- And the harvest's home. This one refrain I sing: Kinodrome Moving Pictures Panorama Thro' Ceylon. the possessor of the title.

Feeling that he can not desert his wife, he decides to renounce his claim to the title, and sends the boy off to England with the Oh, I want, etc Tons of Bibles. From the Indenendence Star Our 1907 Floor Rugs are certainly beauties Almost every first-class manufacturer is represented. The Largest Stock in the City to Select From That Montgomery county is advancing rB family lawyer to be educated and pre every une, spiritually as wea as fin-1 And I shall cease to rove; pared for the position he is to hold. The Indian mother tries to disuade her hus- ancially, is proven by the fact that in I When trials are rast --m i th nast few davs four tono nt Rihls I And I find at last nana. xromr.epiu.K -nex -irom tue to tte already Uree That nothing endrres but love; cnua, ana wnen sue umis wiai nerisuppiy I When the last tear rails pleadings are 'ot no avail, she wanders Coffeyville demanded twenty-nine And a still voice calls ADMISSION IO CENTS Me away to my bjia above-Why.

I want to go back home again Once more before I die, Where I -ate of mother's ginger bread. And also her pumpkin pie. William A. McKeever. -Manhattan, Kan.

out the" desert and shoots herself. I inousajia. maependence twenty-seven Th' ktiM-t-: Cherryvale thirteen thousand The removal of this obstacle to his and ten thousand. With tons of happiness, "brings th curtain to the the holy book and thousands of churches hero. and teachers of the scriptures there is Mr.

Royle has' made hi. hero one of JST thoee manly, courageous, lovable, good.

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About The Topeka Daily Capital Archive

Pages Available:
145,229
Years Available:
1879-1922