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Show t Bailu bill to be offered by this company, will be on Thursday night, an- s. other one of Al. Wood's entitled. Dangers of Working Girls. this engagement will be QUESTION 10. 20 andforthirty cents. Special mati- nee on Wednesday of Chinatown Charlie and On Saturday afternoon author of The Danger, of Working Girls." h the Merry Widow hat and tute a Charlotte Cordav as a souvenir, Following the decision, a cablegram was dispatched to the Meadamea boux of Paris, from whom the Merry Widows" had been ordered, instructing the French milliner to substitute the charlotte Cordaye. which are now the Parisian rage. melo-drama- RACE Re-Pric- es Thomas Dixon, Jr, Clansman.' is on his first visit to the pacific states. He hopes to visit a ii ' considerable number of the cities lm MERRY WIDOW" PUTS which his famous race problem play, WIDE SWATH CUT BY THAT WIDOW The Clansman,1 will he performed BAN ON MONSTER RATS next season. He will also gather mav terial for his new novel of the Pacific coast. "Comrades," dealing with an at-- ! tempt to establish a social Utopia unThe Merry Widow" company have Miss Lillian Seville, who. sang the der the favoring shies of California. voted a taboo on the Merry Widow" role of Olga with Mr. Henry W. 8av- lfr. Dixon expects to he at least a hat. with the result that, instead of age's Chicago production of The Mer-th- e week enroute, breaking his journey at Brobdignagian bonnets which took ry Widow," was recently awarded Chicago to visit his brother Rev. Dr. A. C. Dixon, pastor of Moody Memorial church. On arrival at San Francisco he will start Immediately upon his . , literary la bora In response to requests from many at his friends as to his views on the "scoctal equality" dinner York recently, the author New in given of , "The piansman" has Issued the following statement: "The recent dinner given to promote social equality between whits girls and negro men in New York by the Cosmopolitan Club' must he dismissed with contempt, but far the fact that two editors of national Influence wera present and spoke. The standing of these men, Hamilton Holt, editor of the Independent, and Oswald Garrison Vlllard, the editor of the New York Evening Post, cannot be questioned. They represent a force in our nodal and Intellectual life which cannot be ignored. : I ed ed - A Mulatto Demi-Go- d. One of the speakers at this now famous dinner, where beautiful white girls were sandwiched between black negro men, declared triumphantly that America Is the great mixing pot of the earth and that the man of the future who would emerge from this mixture would be mire than man he would The divine thing in he a deml-gothis deml-goof course, being that he would be a mulatto! Could maudlin sentimentalism reach a more dangerous form of insanity? I hold that the men who teach such infamous doctrines todsy are the most vicious criminals at large in modem society, and should be held in asylums for the criminal Insane. The poor fool who kills 1q a fit of rage is harmless compared to the fanatic who alts in high places and seeks to murder his race. Will the breed of horses be improved by crossing with the donkey?Protect Fsir Daughters. "The negro has a racial record of four thousand years of incapacity and this creature, half child, half animal, ' the sport of impulse, whim and conceit, whose passions once aroused are as the tiger's shall We surrender to him our beautiful daughter whose fair skin and dreamy glorious eyes incarnate the progress of humanity, the glory of tle past and the hope of our future? The destiny of this nation depends on the strength and purity of our white racial stock; for this republic Is great not by reason of the amount of dirt we hold or the sise of our census roll. We have become great for one reason only; because of the genius of the race pioneer white freemen who settled this continent, dared the might of kings and made our wilderness the home of freedom. The people of the Pacific coast have shown their appreciation of this truth In the patriotic stand they have taken on the race problem, and they have earned the gratitude of the nad! d, one-ma- n - Horace V. Noble, man unworthy. Just hi friendship and his faith in ties for the Republican Nomin- iiuman nature. Roosevelt has appoint- ed more than one man to office ations for President and Vice- - record reached back to the door should be I of th PrpsiHpnt Thpir Pprcnnalitipc IIICII rCIUJIldllim riIUCIIL in wld breath that he has , the shown his fairness uncompromising and Achievements Written by by turning upon nten found unworthy of his trust and has overwhelmed them Staff Possibilities and Near Possibili- aubsti-whic- ON DIXON TALKS Slate 2mmial talented loading man with the Burg ewe Stock Co, at Utahns neat week. t- - prne the i'tiary. Representatives of tbe with his wrath. Theres nothing United Press Who Are Personodore Kotisevel:. ally Acquainted With the Sub- y about TheHe likea a man with ail his heart and soul and vigor. If he doesn't like him he ha't-- the ground walks on, hales his family, his rel- stive. his ancestors, and his birth- What is more, he Is not at all slow to let the fact be known. Much as he loves a fight, he loves peace better. Rut he makes no bones f MylnK ,hll, wiu1y and willing t0 fl,r He wants the United States to build the biggest navy in the world so that peuve shall he versal. He wants ;he gun pointers of our navy to be dead shots at five miles, If they are so known, what nation would war with us? If they are ao recognised, w liat iwer woulj go to half-wa- WASHINGTON. June 11. Theodore Roosevelt, youngest president of the youngest president of the Unite Rules. will le only a few days over fifty years of ag on election day. Probably no man living or dead has' a greater variety of big things than he In half a century or has brok- en more precedents. His every act, official or private, has been a contra- diction of established usage, yet every some moss-- 1 time he has knocked grown precedent Into th proverbial cocked hat. the world has declared, as' soon as it has regained iu breath, j that the Roosevelt way was best and has wondered why no one else thought ' of doing it that way years before. Roosevelt was scarce out of college before he cUlmed the center of the of publicity stage, and the spot-lighas been following around ever since. In tlie legislature of New York sUte, as Civil Service Commissioner, as Police Commissioner of the as secre assist snt metropolis, tary of the navy, he plunged into the midst of events nr, if there were no evenu in teach worth mentioning, he made them. When the police force of New York. Inefficient from dry rot md cancerous with vice, came under his control, he shook It up until its old bones rattled and gave the grafters a scare that they remember to this day. He didnt quite convert the force into a band of evangelists, but he made the Tammany Tiger ahlver In Its lair and caused the name of T. Roosevelt to be known throughout the land. . Once upon g time, when ha was second In command to that dear, good peaceable Secretary of the Navy, John D. Long, his chief happened to be sway from Washington for a few days. Buss! Bingj Before the sedate bureau chiefs in the department knew the day of the month, he held laued orders that dispatched shiploads of amunltlon , unl-do- b. the departments at Wash- - iugton. ror these things, in spit, of u these things, th vo.e at the last elec- proved hint to be the most popular man that ever ran for office In this or any other country, in this or say other periitd of written history. MORE MERRY WIDOW theater in Montenegro was raided by a mob because the management re-fused to withdraw The Merry Widow." The people claim the opera is an suit to Montenegrins, as the escapades of one of Its former princes form the basis of the story in the opera. A he s jects. w tempted to erase In God We Trust-shofront the coins of the realm, and that if he had his wsy the great corpom- tions of the country would be con- The passionate rhythms of The Merry Widow" waits floated through the office, and the boss looked up from his desk impatiently. Frederic, he sakl, I wish you wouldn't whistle at your work." I ain't worklu, sir." the office boy I'm only Just whisreplied tlin'." New York Press. ne ht to the Asiatic squadron and prepared George Dewey for the day that made ' Inhim famous and sent the Spanish hulks Vienthe 6600.00 in suit her name from the their against charming nese operetta, Charlotte Curday sailor terborough. Railway of New York City. to the floor of Manila Bay. He was the something-differepolihats will be given away as souvenirs In February, 1907, Miss Seville was Inon the occasion of 'The Merry Wid- jured while boarding a subway train tician. He told his political enemies, gs well as his political friends, the ow's" 275th consecutive performance at the Fourteenth street station. truth. He wore his heart on his slecv in New York at the. New' Amsterdam Tt was unheard of. Before his day, to will a is theater announced It that Theater on June 11 to be a liar. He Some time ago, before the Merry be named for 'The Merry Widow" In be s politician was became the Conn. greatest politician of the Meridan, Widow" hat became a national calamtruth. the age by telling comity. it was decided to fittingly President soldier It was Reba Dale of The Merry He was the something-doin- g memorate the 675th performance of Widow" company who, according to as well as the something-differepoll "The Merry Widow" In New York, by authenticated records, said to her col- -' tlcian. When he went to Cuba, if battle with another If Unci Bam should say, "Let there be peace?" Roosevelt loves work, and the harder the work th better he likes It. He also loves play after work, and he plays Just as hard as he works) The 1 rvp'.e'an Is where the great big boy crop out In his disposition. Hed rather take a nt Roosevelt nt FIRST AID FOR THE FOURTH. The Fourth of fireworks are synony- - 1 moua with the small buy and fatal!- - ' ' ties, says a milter In the July De lint s.'ov. Very often the small aister is Included among the patriotic victims u: a uav. fifteen-mil- e walk In the rain, or a sevenThe wise mother, recognising the ty-mile gallop over the prairies, than fascinating fun of fireworks to th sit In a box at the opera. He Isnt small to guard, tuik, begins partial to grand operas, by 'he way. against the fatalities early' without handicapand will te I you thit Ms favorite melothe fun. ping dies are Garry Owen" and "A Hot First, in regard to matches, she In Tim in th. Old Tim Tonlgh'." Walkslsts that the firecrackers be lighted ing, horseback riding, tennis, boxing with punk, not only from an economiand single-stic- k are his favorite play physical rcreations, arj he'd rather cal standpoint, but for safety as welL . meet and hobnob with an old back-woo- By using the punk, close contact 1a guide than a politician In s avoided with firecracker fuses. . Second, she Instructs children not to plung hat He hates plug hata. "I ' feel like a stuffed club in one of them, stand directly in front of the firehe observed on day, "and If I were cracker white lighting It. but to stand not holding a Job where I am sup- at one side. Neither will she allow posed to look like a stuffed club on flrecrakera placed under tin vessels. The wise mother knows that on certain occasions. I'm blessed If I'd wear one." should be prepared for Fourth-of-Jul- y Roosevelt does not use tobacco In emergencies, that it Is not enough to any form, and although no teetotaller, know what to do, but how to do it, aa he has very little use for a drunkard. well. She provides herself with a packOn one of his recent trips when he age of absorbent cotton or lint, a bandrefused to take etiher a drink or a age roll and court-plas'te- r. cigar at a banquet, one of the ladles FLAT-IRON- S present asked him if he had no vices. REMOVE I can swear like a blue streak," reWRINKLES. g tion." .tit ds PRESS AGENT TELLS ' ABOUT UTAHNA SHOW On next Sunday night the Elan Burgess Company will open a stock engagement at the Utahna theatre and will present Al Wood's latest and biggest success, Chinatown Charlie. As its title implies, it belongs to the melodramatic class of plays and methods are put to a most rigid test and the types of characters employed in telling the story of the play are all true to life In the great city of New York. With a whole regiment ,of familiar characters, an immense equipment of acenlc details which encompass a wide and diversified assortment of metro Pll tan views, ranging from a peep into the sluma of New York's east side to a vivid glimpse of the midnight doings melo-dra-ma- tlc around Times square and the Plot niving the Pace that kills. With ( dope fiend as Its central figure. "China' town Charlie" conjes as a genuine sen atlona attraction, one of the kind that plainly shows the rar marks of novelty and originality, a Play of the people In which vice ta vanquished and virtue la triumphant The play has achieved a notable d on account of its powerful exposition of sceneg that actually exist In a tlg city HUM with sorrow and suffering. Horace V. Noble will be seen In th title role of Chinatown Charlie" and will be supported by Miss Dorothy Marke and the entire of the Eari Burgess Company.strength The second con- melo-dramat- ic rec-or- m Chinatown Charlie, Scene From which presenting every woman who should attend the Saturday matinee on June Merry IS, with genuine, gigantic Widow" sailor; but when the enormous headgear began to stop trains, gash open the features of unfortunate mankind and become the subject of pulpit denunciation, it was feared that a riot might occur at the theater when the hata were given away. Then, too, the big hat loet Its vogue with the women folk who decide what la fashlonabje what, and even some of the girl members of The Merry Widow" company criticised the management for selecting aa souvenirs for a millinery show of the country. the As a result of these numerous objections to the original Intention, It waa decided to leave the matter to the votes of the company's female members, and with one voice "The Merry Widow" folk voted to forget has-be- est en ths Burgees Stock Co., brings to Utahna next week. maid, when the latter brought around her new baby for inspection, as the perfect imagine of his father, Yes, a regular carbon copy." there wasn't any fighting to be done, his men fouhd that there was tvotk to do. They dug kitchen sinks, they drilled, they got ready, and tney stayed ready; so, when th time for came' the charge p San Juan At a recent Sunday performance of The Merry Widow" In St. co busters and grlzsly-eaterburg before the Grand Dukes, the Roosevelt love fight beter than cheapest seats were sold for $25 apiece. nine Irishmen out of ten, and the strain of Dutch in his blood makes him Merriam is to have a "Merry Widow" stick" when once he mixes in. Like house. "Jim" Campbell, proprietor of the Irish, he doesn't know when he the general store at Merriam, is pre- is licked, and many's the tlm he has paring to build a house of nature stone 'on t after he had apparently been beaten to a finish. He sticks to his friends as grimly as he sticks to Ms foes, and the same aid Mr. Campbell, "because the eaves dogged determination that makes him will project beyond the wails such an fight to the last ditch for what he beunusual distance that In appearance it lieves is right, places him at th back will resemble these 'Merry Widow of the man he claims aa friend, no hats that the girls are wearing." matter if there he a stack of affidavits From the Kansas City Times. as high as the Washington Monument oned - - I s. plied the President, with a grin, "would you like to hear me?" Roosevelt like to preach little sermons on personal conduct, hut as' the world knows that he practices in private life what preaches In public. It forgives him for this trait. His fellow citizen have come to know that he Is very ' human, indeed.and they like him all the better for it. They know :hat h is Impulsive, that be often leaps befor be looks, and changes his mind with the ease of a summer wind. But what mater that, when they also know him to be honest and sincere, that he detests fraud, that he places the mother on a higher hero plane than the soMler, and that he is working with all' his might and main to right wrongs that oppress the people? The world knows, too,' that Wall street has been geared stiff ever since fie has been in office; that he settled the coa strike; that he stopped the wholesale slaughter of Russian and Japanese. It knows also that he tried to reform our spelling, that he at- - Ore of the very newest ways of banforehead wrinishing tlie cross-wis- e kle la to Iron it. says the July De-signer. Yet, really Iron it with a. flatiron. Ironing away your 1 quite new fad, and one that Is prov- Ing very successful. Perhaps this suggests burns to our readers, but there is no danger If you are only careful not to let th iron slip. Take a heavy cloth, flannel Is best, and after aaturating with hot water apply to forehead. Now take an ordind Iron and heat unary til it Is moderately hot; this 1 pressed against the hot flannel on your forehead and held there for several minutes. This may seem a rather strenuous method, but. Is very effecnickel-plate- tual For the straight wrinkle rising perpendicularly from the none, stretch the skin of the forehead, smooth wih th fingers of the left hand. Now massage across th wrinkles with the finger-ti- p of the right hand, using a firm rotary movement ' ' ; |