OCR Text |
Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 3. 190&. PAGE THREE. tlHt ii Ttthetheatres tSf at home. You find hut few tiiigen ?t the preaent day including in nit evenprogram, without encores, twenty-si- x ing's AT twenty-eigto songs, one or two of Welle Wedneeday' The oratorio numbers and two or three operatic arias like Witherspoon and ringTABERNACLE. In per feet manner. ing each selection Wither Herbert , Tuesday Bisyt-apto quite Like Witherspoon Choir. Doon and Tabernacle in hto work. With n big dramatic atutahna. Fklr Virvoice thoroughly cultivated this addiDuring week For tional talent adds much to the enjoyginia." ment of the program. The Groat Western Lyceum and Mulctl bureau to Indeed fortunate in securing Wither poon loWither poon, Program Maker tor their Western territory, and the cal management to to be complimented who appear on bringing to ua auch a thorough muHerbert Witherspoon. 4 under the sician and auch an enjoyable program. on February ta jy, city Tabernacle choir, to al-- Mr. Witherspoon will ring the rain trTto of the to among the mualcal people of aoene from Elijah with the Hast and the mualcal critic of both aa the program ABte(lca and Europe ' The Walls ef Jericho. Thl to a tribute to the ability . gntherapoon to make a eelection It to with no Utile interest that the jj, d auch a forthcoming appearance of Mr. KeU-ef program numbera of character that they pleaae a and Mlaa Shannon, who will be seen In The Walla of Jericho" at the Grand cr number of auditor than thoae reIn now house Wednesday, February 6, touring other ainger Opera H any that our lovers of the truly wholesome. ntal aork. are aeveral reaaona for' thl, In a theatrical aenae, anticipate an ento the aplendld tertainment of the eneat possible enthf atrongeat of which Wither-o- f Mr. by poeaeaaed joyment. tnovledge modem aa well aa claaaical One needs to go nut so far back in m which to added to revive pleasant memories of order work, (Wp0aers k the poaaeaaor of a tremendoua re the times when Herbert Kelcey and to a fluent llngulat and a Effle Shannon were the blight and shinpdolN and ing Ughts of Daniel Frohmana old Ly(npoaer himself. Tfv. for example, the program which ceum stock company. on hla preaent tour of the Since then a mighty revolution In Vh affairs has taken place, VMt; a group of old melodies, includ-p- y theatrical English and Iriah tonga, a group i f there are no such organisations nowDaly's, gaiera trench aonga. lnduuing Hahn'a adays aa wero the La Wallack'a or Madison Square. All of itktoated monotone composition, group of modem aonga In Eng. the favorites of those days have driftp.iw Hh from the pena of Albert Mack, ed away some may be counted among Homer, Herman Lohr and a pa the weary travelers who have gone tv tonl by Sam Wilaon. . rest Now and then some familiar Hto program always opena with an name of an actor or an actress to to be aatorio selection, and include one or found In the cast of a play which has am operatic artoa from Wagner, Mo exceeded the long run limit. Mr. Kelwt Verdi and very often a ae lection cey and Mlaa Shannon, however, soon Then after their retirement from the Lyceum, (Mm Haacagni or Leoncavallo. them h the favorite group with With which has conformed a onpoon, claaaical and modem aonga tn tinued without Interruption, and so wed Quinta, which ha tlngi moat perfectly have they kept before the public with and which language he commands dignity and with the highest regard for In fact their art that It to small wonder that equally at well aa English. whither to French, Italian, German or their Joint appearance to always aura to to equally command attention out of the usual.. Engltoh, Mr. Wltberapoon THE GRAND. ht atthe La diver-cUc- 81d-a- tp Scene From BONES MENDED WITH SCREWS. The screws which are now being used by surgeons to hold together fractured parts of the human anatomy were a feature of the recit medical exhibition held at the horticultural hall In London. , These ecrews, ranging In else from a quarter of an Inch to three Inches, are silver plated. When these are placed to hold a fracture they must remain In the patient for life, but the limb can be need very soon, after the operation, and there to no future danger that the bones will become displaced. A aperies of twin tin. tacka to also recommended In bone carpentry" two tacka at the head, which to used to bridge a fracture and to simply hammered home. THI RAKING OF THE GREEN. To the Home-MakeThanks to the latest form of anesbuild which leaves the patient conTo the our of thesia, up power homea, Havm Rightly Claims First VilN for beauty, for companionship for In- scious, but Incapable of feeling pain, a lage IftprevemenL case" could dispastelligence, for charity, for a constant strong nerved and furtherance of sionately watch these new points in acknowledgment was there observed May years ago righto of others, la to build up a surgery aa Illustrated on hla own limbs. t WtH custom In the little town of the a greater, perhaps, then we power The new anesthesia to due to the disConn. In On one the (MM, day ever And shall realise. It's covery of novocain. When Injected diUK the jeer the women of the town the reach of every home, rectly Into the spinal cord complete ifbM the village green. Each within It's a big or a very little one. whether and senselessness ensue. onM I voodeo rake, decorated with lowed him to settle hie bill for eert, paralysis . fetr hrorfta colors Press. and. each wan Philadelphia Manes. heed la white, decked ont with col-- lees with two ribboaa. It was a day of fete, al It was caned The Raking of the r, our-eelve- The Walls ef Jericho. Never Go Empty Handed. That 1a what mother used to aay to me many times when 1 waa a child. If 1 waa going upstairs, I muat look about me and see If there wasn't some thing downstairs that belonged upstairs that I could carry up and put into Ita r,"'o; and ao on from one part of the house to another. She said It would be a great help la one'a housekeeping and aave lota of nnneceaaary steps, if people would Just remetober that little rule, and although I fall la many ways to practice all the good things she taught ma, I very often find myself aaying to the children aa they help about the bouse; Never go empty handed.' In the Telephone. Lc Henry A sham haa calculated tha maximum of the tele-ponfor a sound of given pitch and. a current of Pleasured Intensity. The result shows that there Is great room for Improve. iept in this respect -- e the apparent extreme aensltlvene'i of the beat telephones, they are, after all, surprisingly ineffective, since they transmit to the ear s In the form of leas than a thousandth part of the energy re calved from the line. Bound-wave- A Family Russia. Atklnaor The family seems to be John 8. Cox, Dpi miter of the Tenea-ae- e somewhat -'- sod. Hughes Yea, it to; senate, had an old negro servant the worn' to the maua third wife, who liked hla drink Just aa well as the and the m" is the womans second beat Kentucky colonel In the Blue husband; the baby to the child of the Grass state. One morning, Juat after woman's vond husband by hla third are children of the the cold spell broke, the darky came to wife, the man by hlj first wife, the girl with Senator Cox, saya Judges Library. to the woman's child by her Marse John," fays he. Til Juat up red hair the boy with the abort first husband, " an dean dess windows dia morning. la the eon of the man by hla trousers AH right. Caesar," replied the senaeeond wife, and that little girl etand-ln- g ator, over there by the woman's second Tse got to hab a half tumbler of husband to another of the woman' whisky, Marse John. Dre aint mif- children by her first husband. life. fin' like whisky for cleanin' winders." The half tumbler waa promptly given Caesar. who armed himaelf with some Largest Tree In Sicily. rage and carried the whlaky to another Sicily boast the largest tree In the world. It to known aa "The Chestnut room, to begin work. A few minute afterward Senator Cox had occasion to Tree of a Hundred Horses," and 1 enter hto room. Caesar waa busy pol- situated at the foot of Mount Etna, ishing the windows. The tumbler was It baa five enormous branches, each on the table, but no whlaky waa In It aa large aa an ordinary tree, I' ng to 2 1 feet In cir"Why, Caesar, what' become of the from a trunk which A large hollow In tha whisky?" asked the senator. "1 thought cumference. I capacious enough to contain trunk In used It thin yon work,". So I doe. Marse John; no I dos.' a ttork of sheep. Its name originated in the itory that Queen Joan of Ar waa the answer. "Ye see, rah. I drink de whisky an blows by bref ag'ln da goa with her nobility and their Inuea onre took refuge from a viowinders." Savannah News. lent storm under its' spreading branches. Journal want ads dsllvar the goods. MIGHTY BREF." A . na Orem." Ties with song and with laughter and auy e Jest this band of women deuei the village green of all the tana and refuse and dirt of a years mamhtion. When the Job was M they adjourned to the town hall, ta they were Joined by their hue-u- d brothers, end the village token. A public banquet celebrated ttooeculon. VUle this wau hot the first char-toevillage Improvement association J lh country, it wee probably at that tot the most enthusiastic, and had tata the largest attendance. New d ! Conn, can rightly claim the In village improvement, Stock bridge, Maas., should be ibered as offering the second. wi than e hundred years ego taj Hillhouae, of New Haven, or-ta-d whet he called the w ueoclatlon." He raised' Public $1,600 the Breen and for planting One man la said to have do- gallons of rum for this pur-FJamee Hillhouae waa also Unit-ta-a aenator for 20 yean. Almost "taws has forgotten what he did uhlngton, but no one le ever W efort 1 Remember it T ' Remember the luscious Fall pippins, fiie roasted potatoes" and the cool, gamey, turnips? you used to tuck away just to fill in" and whet up an appetite for dinner ? frost-season- ed We services in making New Haven else ale ... by the nature's gothic architecture, Tk country owes him a debt g Wtade that can only be paid by to time r I! In hto memory. cine Companion. F And then on Thanksgiving morning when you peeped into the kitchen and saw and the big turkey those yellow, mellow pumpkin pies and the alluring mince-me- at Oh 1 the big eyes, and the hungry mouth 1 Remember that appetite? Ask the boy! Wom-- 1 potting Another Barbie statue of Fake. the Immortal Rltaalmmons had been finished newspaper mn had been to an Informal view of It in toe rest exclaimed porting editors. with wu Jtot 52J? .eer a boy again, with a bos appetite. public. "mental fake! ,! C. Well be ltr Inquired he said. This la Bb'ha The Beer You Like lee All aacMroawwa the real test is ii U Chris n TifaL It a Tbmv by which to srtlcls 2 abHlty any Sjtot 5Jtat is bSJ,1 d0- - to do that Haoy hair nay Men nlro. saSVtoB?fi m k7 wadtaate Dan-A 5 tel, E h 2 hair? JSUL fcjb Hrrid wot f , does. the evil tlmt attacks tbv taaaa tha halr gris Its l?.toiiT""ent peeps aad ILK. Brewed and Bottled In Omaha by the Fred Krug Brewing Co. every-ta- b "Exponents of the Fine Art ot Brewing" will make your Thanksgiving dinner fit for a boy! C, Luxus supplies which invites an fit for a King" that palate refreshing, old-fashio- ned fill" taste-tingli-ng and your Thanksgiving appetite . something not on the bill" of good things. Luxus is unique grating beers light and sparkling with a piquant snap that raakfia it the most exquisite refinement of the brewers art." It is the crowning gift of the Seasons bounty. homo C. For an Thanksgiving zest order a case or two of Luxus sent today, and have it ready. Your dealer has it or we will supply you direct old-fashion- ed |