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Show TRUTH. money. and appreciative audience The Shore Acres production recent- greeted Miss Pearl Rothschild at the. given by Miss Flanders on ly seen at the Salt Lake Theater, recital Thursday evening at the Congregathough much appreciated, falls short tional church. The following program of the magnificent production originally was rendered: A large given by Mr. Herne. This, of course, might be expected, and allowances were generously made. The story of Shore Acres, however, has lost none of Its power to charm, its simple, smoothly-runnin- g plot unfolds itself in a manner thoroughly restful and Shore Acres will apsympathetic. peal to the theater-goin- g public for a long time to come. The programme for Helds band con cert tomorrow evening at the Grand Will consist of nine numbers, among are the following: Suppes beautiful Poet and Peasant; grand selection from Maritana, by Wallace; tenor solo by the local favorite, Mr. Ashworth, Queen of the Earth; violin solo, Seranata, by Prof. Bryant. Also, a grand medley of of Irish, English and Scotch airs. A duett for cornets, "Le Follies, by Messrs. Held and Leslie. Two interest- which ing descriptive selections will be given, The Music Critics Dream, by Dix, and The Battle of Manilla, a stirring musical description of the great fight. A programme of such diversity will insure a large atendance. Marche Characteristlque (four hands).. Schubert Miss Pearl Rothschild and Miss Flanders. J. S. Bach a. Chromatique Fantasie Beethoven b. Sonata, Op. 31, No. 3 Miss Rothschild. Scherzo, Mennetto, Trio, Presto Confuoco. Miss Rothschild. .....Chaminade On the Shore Mrs. Ella Cumming Wetzell. Bendel a. Domroschen Gernsheim b. Ooelus, Op. 59 Miss Rothschild. Richard Walthew May Day Mrs. Ella Cumming Wetzell. a. Hexentanz. b. In Autumn.... Macdowell c. Gondoliers, Op. 25, No. 2 Ethebert Nevin Carl Bohm d. Spinning Song Miss Rothschild. Gavotte Boleh (four hands) Scharwenka Miss Pearl Rothschild and Miss Flanders. Miss Rothschild for one so young is remarkable for her interpretation of Beethoven. The Spinning. Song," by Bohm, Was also an especially fine number. Mrs. Ella Cumming Wetzell was enthusiastically received, and was in On the Shore, by Char-minad- e, was particularly well received fine voice. TABERNACLE CHOIR TOUR. , Prof. Evan Stephens has returned at the Salt Lake from a trip to the Pacific coast, durTheater for next week is announced. ing which he arranged for a tour of the A great double bill Monday, November 11th, Tabernacle choir to San Francisco, and running four nights, with Wednes- where they will give a series of five day matinee, Mr. and Mrs. Brune will concerts next March. The concerts will present Sardous powerful drama, Theodora. This drama, which is most ambitious in its scope, calls for a large cast, sumptuous stage settings and costumes. Following Theodora, and running Friday and Saturday, with the usual matinee, comes Jacob Litts n and popular In Old KenWe all remember this stirring tucky. drama of the South with its thoroughbred horses, pickaninny brass bands, and Madge riding to save her lover. Beginning well-know- At the Grand Mr. Mulvey presents the usual double bill next week. A Female Drummer begins offering bargains next Monday, November 11th, and for three nights, with Wednesday matinee. The story introduces the de partment store, bargain counter and a most assertive commercial female Miss Hasa Bargain, the drummer. Miss Charlotte Scott, the soubrette, is said to be especially clever and bright. The last act of The Female Drummer shows the salesladies ball and gives the various members of the company an opportunity to introduce some vaudeville turns. A number of pretty girls make things lively enough; they fairly shine at the bargain counter, which is one of the features of the comedy. Rounding out the week is the beautiful Southern melodrama, At the Cross Roads, which begins Thursday night. The story unfolds Itself around Natchey, one of the .beautiful cities of the South. The situations are dramatic and forcible. There is just a suggestion of the Octoroon tn this new Southern melodrama, and much of the interest of the play centers about the tainted blood of slavery. Beautiful and appropriate scenery will be a special feature of the play. HARRY LE GRANDE. PRESBYTERIAN FAIR. The ladies of the Presbyterian aid society held a meeting Tuesday afternoon. it was decided to hold the coming fair for which they are zealously working on December 5th, 6th and 7th, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. With Miss Thorn at the candy booth will be associated Mrs. Caskey. .Mrs. Terhune, Mrs. Miles and Mrs. Dean are to have charge of the advertising and newspaper work connected with the enterprise. There will be a remembrance booth, which is exciting much Interest. the-effo- one-nig- , ht Ie i,-- de the-effort- , a: rl. fluenced by ambition, by callous disregard of otners, by contempt for the moral law, they would have dashed us down into the black gulf of failure. Woe to all of us if ever as a people we grow to condone evil because it Is successful. We can no more afford to lose social and civil decency and honesty than we can afford to lose the qualities of courage and strength. It Is the merest truism to say that the nation rests upon the Individual, upon the family; rests upon Individual manliness and womanliness, using the words in their widest and fullests meaning. To be a good husband or good wife, a good neighbor and friend, to be hardworking and upright in business and social relations, to bring many healthy children to he and to do all this, is to lay the foundations of good citizenship as they must be laid. But we cannot stop even with this. Each of us has not only his duty to himself, his family and his neighbor, but his to the state and to the nation. Weduty are In honor bound each to strive according to his or her strength to bring ever nearer the day when justice and wisdom shall obtain in public life as in private life. We cannot retain the full measure of our If we cannot retain pride in our citizenship. For the sake not only of ourselves, CHARLOTTR 8COTT but of our children and our childrens With A Female Drummer" Co. children, we must see that this nation stands for strength and honesty both at home and abroad. In our Internal poliJfcr icy we cannot afford to rest satisfied until all that the government can do M E. MULVEY. L has been done to secure fair dealing and MANAGER. equal justice as between man and man. In the great part which hereafter, whether we will .or not, we must play Chas. E. Blaneys Big Extravaganza, in the world at large, let us see to it that we neither do wrong nor shrink THAT ENORMOU8LY, MERRY, TUNEFUL, from dblng right because the right Is HA-HA DAINTY difficult; that on the one hand we inflict MAKER. no Injury, and that on the other we have a due regard for the honor and the UP TO DATE TO interest of our mighty nation, and that THE VERY MINUTE. ft we keep unsullied the renown of the flag which beyond all others of the present ALL VIM time or of the ages of the past stands AND DA8H. for confident faith In the future welfare and greatness of mankind. Theodore r A Still Greater I Roosevelt. Cast, including aAAAAA r NEW GRAND THEATRE self-seeki- ng ct AA 4 4 4 i 4 4 4 4 i . A FEMALE DRUMMER. All-Sta- JOHNSTONE BENNETT, 4 ft Tony Williams, Harry Ladell, David DeWolf, G. Payson Graham, Albert Travernier, Charlotte Scott, and 40 others. 1 STARTINB MONDAY, NOV. 11 rJbSJMHii 5ijtwniir ? no-les- self-respe- 99-ce- nt . work. If after making a! the Metropolitan temple, mans that his strength of body Performa 0j and in addition he yet honorably mind Hs The permit Stanford. at be ance will given why he is still entitled to a e. .. .ain excursion is to leave Salt of respect because he has share 300 peoof consist March 14th, and will But if he does not make effort. the ple. A rate of $50 for the round trip or he makes it half-heif diy has been secured from the Southern and recoils from the labor, the as or down run a includes which Pacific, mere Irksome monotony of his uLk the Del and Grove Pacific far as Monterey. he has forfeited all right t.; our Monte. The Tabernacle choir has done why, and has shown himself a :ere respect advertise a great deal in the past to won of the earths surface, u Is cumberer many Utah and Salt Lake. It has no to us all to strive manfuMy to not given doubt laurels already, and there is success. deserve its forthcoming excursion will be as We need, then, the iron qualities that successful as the others. must go with true manhood. We need the positive virtues of resolution, of courage, of indomitable will, of power LUXURIOUS LIVING. to do without shrinking the rough work that must always be done and to persevere through the long days of slow proor of seeming failure which alYou,' men of the West, with stout gress come before any final triumph, noways who heart, cool head and ready hand, brilliant. But we need inure matter how have wrought out your own success than these qualities. This country canand built up these great new common- not afford to have its sons less than wealths; surely you need no reminder men; but neither can it afford to have them other than good men. If courage of the fact that if either man or naand strength and intellect are unaction wishes to play a great part in the companied by the moral purpose, the world there must be no dallying with moral sense, they become merely forms the life of lazy ease. In the abounding of expressions for unscrupulous force and unscrupulous cunning. If the energy and intensity of existence in our is in man not him the has there lift todemocratic Strong republic mighty his ward idler. the small space, indeed, for lofty things strength makes We hold work not as a curse, but as him only a curse to himself and to his a blessing, and we regard the Idler with neighbor. scornful pity. It would be in the highAll this is true in private life. If est degree undesirable that we should and Lincoln had not had in Washington all work in the same way or at the them the whipcord fiber of moral and same things, and for the sake of the mental the soul that steels itreal greatness of the nation we should self to strength, unshaken and endure disaster in the fullest and most cordial way rec- with wrest to resolve grim victory from most ognize the fact that some of the one not have the could then defeat, needed work must from its very nature our nor the other founded, preserved, be unremunerative in a material sense. touch federal The union. least mighty so far as the Each man must choose, or unhealthy softness, in conditions allow him, the path to which of flabbiness, meant ruin for this would have either, he is bidden by his own peculiar powand the downfall of therefore nation, man ers and inclinations. But if he is a But mankind. the of proudest hope he must in some way or shape do a is it true that had either been inbe given in MUSICAL RECITAL. company gave us a swift run for our FOR THREE NIGHTS ft AND Wednesday Matinee. & Elias Morris & Sons Co. have just received a very large shipment of the most elaborate and elegant line of wood mantels ever exhibited In Salt Lake City, new and beautiful effects in Golden Oak, Birch, Mahogany and Birds Eye Maple. . t i V i |