Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, March 09, 1907, Image 8

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nmpp A qBOBQlAK AWP lfaWB, . * OFFICERS STATE SOCIETY rr-nMeM-OopMit Own?. Heron. On.' M V.-P.-Dr. A. It. noMottij. Atlanta. • ircouil V.-P.—Dr. B. C. Peet*. Huron. fco.Trr.ii.—Dr. If. T. Jone*. Atlanta. Annual Mrellnr In Hay, 1*07. at Heron. SOCIOLOGICAL EDITORIAL COMMITTEE—Rev. C. B. Wilmer, J. I). Clout on, E. Marvin Underwood, Dr. It. It. Kime. OFFICERS ATLANTA SOCIETY VJ«w rio-4. .*7... Ip*. ...Dr. Tbr-O. Tocpe! ifeWtlff #..* MU# Haiti* K. Martin Trwiiuw <1 K. Folsom )lc«ulsr meeting M*oh4 TburxUr nlfbt of oicb mouth ot th* C«rMg1« Library, THE CHURCH AND SOCIOLOGY U NDER lhr torm "Sociology" I In clude alt eeheme* that havr for tbelr end lb* betteriTirnt of thu condition* under which roan llv* on the earth. All form* Of eoclallem. com raunlim. l$e single tax. And au on, pro pone to reach. by different rout**. *om* arrangrmrtu by wblch lh*r« will b* Im provement In th» condltlonn under which propl* hnv* I* llv*. With euch •rheme* If put alee lit* efTort* of gov- emmrnt gr of Individual* to create I better unitary eoadltlona^in^^ljm gprttrthe-iabee-i*'. ■ ach o«^»o glve'i*«P I* sound mind* la aound bodl**. To theu ahould be added thr 'effort* that avery man more or I*** l» making to Itnprbv* hi* own condition*'of Ilf*; to B*t a better dal- ary; lay up wndelhliiic for a rainy day. and in on. AU th*e* thing* together . am but prfrt* of one way of looking at life; to Injprove the condition* under which the struggle of Uf* I* carried on What t* or ought to be the attlt id* of th* Chrlitlan church toward etch jeffort*. individual and social? Dfun- time* we hear *oM* minuter binned •for "butting In" where It* ha* no trail- nee* to; and. on the other hand, the .church le appealed to to take eldee in . Mine *uch question a* dn elght-ho tr >Iaw, the dl'vlalon of the proflu between .labor and oapltal. and ao on. Wlu t ! ought to be the attitude of the mlnh - ter. for example, tn *0 far ae he rrr • | reaenta the church, toward achemee fn • • the amelioration or cure of the tern tporal IIU of mankind? And what, ot 'the other hand, ought to be the atti tude of peraona engaged, »uW achemee toward the Christian church supposing that they, do not see then way rleir to belong to the church? There le a petition In th* Lord'r 'Prayer, which. It teem* to me. ehedi some light on both eldu of this ques tion. when lu two part* are conetru<u) a* they ought to bo. together. It li thU; “Lend us not Into tirnptutlnn. but deliver us from evil." The word "temptation* In lie narrow tense meenr either trial or allurement tn evil: h it In a larger eenee. when we Include the other eensee It may be taken to mean, thou thing* which prevent • satisfactory environment, or eatlafar- tory »et of condition*. Th* prayer. "Lead u* not Into temptation." taken 1>y Itself, la equivalent to th* effort to get things around ue ae w* would like to have them; to get rid of grinding poverty, of cause* or occasions of *n> - lety, of enticement to wrong dolnn. —gtw Til* ‘whuU of the human race la engaged In that cffnrt. What. then. I* the meaning of the other half of the petition. “But dollver us from ovll?" Does not the other petition, “Load ue not Into temptation.” Iteolf aek for de liverance from evil? le not title juit what the human race U driving at. try Ing to get rid' of evil, or of wbdt I considers evil? But what le evil? 1 elckntsa an evil? Is poverty? Is even the allurement which drawn a man to ward the commission of crime necesea. lily an evil? Have not man and worn- en. In countleaa numbers, risen to great Ml the crucifixion—u better dellvc than the other would lptY* been. Th* irgUi let human Ilf* may be contem plated from two pepts of view—a kingdom or ctrmmstottces In which we are placed and n hinga.cn of being whrrh U placed in ua. The one le con dition*. the other I* condition. One Is where we are, the other Is.what we ant. On* U the life of to have, the other U th* life of to be.' . And there la this very Intimate con nection' between th* ,two: The very things w* moat object to and try to avoid—lowest* eUkaeea allurement tn evil—may be turned Into th* means pf deliverance from th* deeper evil*, of shallowness, /neannms, selfishness, weakness of moral and Intellectual and spiritual fiber and ao on. Th* true Ilf* I* on* that Is constantly engaged In title double struggle—land us got Into temptation, yet. If that may not be. lead me, through th* tetupuilan. the disagreeable circumstance. Into true de liverance. Perhaps some choice spirits llv* on 'a higher plan... man. this, attainable bfc.aU. Jacob's ladder which links earth and heaven. Apply this to the subject w* are con. sldering: “Lead us not Into temptation —gtve.u*. allow us to obtain a perfect sot .of conditions for society os a Whole. Abolish poverty, sickness, all Induce ments to men to do wrong"—that Is the prayer Of sociological effort. "Dbllrrr •af from the eyll of moral and splrltu.il degradation, enable ua loj' “ 1 wa aaMWI^'.MU.aT^ but Jddch L e|H her undertaklnffcto "judge and dl 'J/m! Vm,v/rnLVT*1 f Vnn w °lhe vM *-" when ehe ha* no apedal function «• •**?! ‘.™».deUTeraqce.JnJfnma.IM u, errfo e. True, the churfh stand* for truth that (hall make ua fred”—that Is the-prayer of the ehtrreh. la thers not room on this old earth of our* for both of the**, even a* both iter Into the life preach one of mu*t enter Into the life pr each one of u«! ~Huppbte Hit) th* Believer* In lm .X’tnhreover, In eetalillshlng *ueh of thing* »» they de*lre on earth. would It be so desirable after all? Take away all difficulty'in life and wha: oold lire be worth? Take nway nil occasion for heroism, and what would become of heroiem? Doe* not the church stand for something worth •while In standing for tb« Inner nnd higher life of men? People nr* going to have to suffer nnd toll and finally die. 1* It not worth while to have a way opened to ue for using th* "ml»e BY C. B. WILMER fortunes", of life's* ministers to the highest life? On the otter hand, the church should regard sympathetically all effort* top tbs bettermcsifof men’s temporal, ma terial conditions, and even lend a hind, wherever lending a barn) will not result therefor. True, the churcl one of the most glorious truths of hu man Ilf*, viz- the capacity of man to put himself Into communion with the higher and unseen powers so as to rise ' ir te circumstance*; to be a per. prqrlng'the conditions off mankind of 'mj^soul,” and'noY' drlft'woosT'on should get rid of the church, and cotrtd Mfe'e-htgb eea. Yet, *uch 1* the power - .... rr-r — —. that, for*myriads, of environment, seen overcomes the - . _ _ .... . no* with It. Blums may be. too much for the grace of Ood, for some people, by Us limita tion of their cap*city to ase the grace of Ood. Bo th* church, from It* own spiritual point of view, should wel come all 'Intelligent efforts to clean up the slum*; to give a living w*gy, and no on. for Is not this 4 platform broad enough the human race to aland on? A DASH FOR A WRECK-OR WHEN FATE PASSES THE LEMON Being True and Hsait-Brsaking Experiences of th* Phoiled Photegraph«r and the Dfmon Dstective. ■ tail of the freight was just chasing It self across the bridge. Fat*'* fourth appedrano* In How to get out of Chattahoochee. That was the question? The nustr was, “ but w* Igtits of saintly character and ehed i human-fife the “light that never war on land ' or sea," by the manner I* which they have borne sickness pa- tlently and sweetly? Ha* not poverty been the spur that has driven myriads ot ytrang men to effort, resulting In making their lives successful and bless. Inge to mankind, while riches have been a handicap? Is not character, the noblest thing on earth, th* noblest thing conceivable by the human mind, la not character wrought out In con flict with temptation? la It not forged on the anvil of resistance by th* blows of so-called mlefortune, adversity, temptation? It I* evident that thee* are two points of view here; that some Ablnga may or may not be evil, ac cording to how me uee them; some things that wo consider causes may be only occasion* and occasions of good as well as of evil. A* a matter of fan, life la the resultant of two aorta of forces, which work against ons an other, the one centrifugal and the oth er centripetal. We have all many a time watched a boy tie a rack to a string and whirl It around In a circle. The centrifugal force, pulling on the string, hold* It taut; the centripetal fore*, which Is in this case th* airing. EXHIBIT A. One of th* Powder Springe wrecke, in which th* demolition was complete. Did you ever chase a freight train from the North Inman yarda to the Chattahoochee? No? Then don'll For the origins! lemon orchard le located at Chattahoochee, and Fat* wilt take a morning off any time -Just to hand you a large, free bottle of,lem on extract. * JV What'* the answer? WelL here's ua much of It as la left after the profanity and tears are eliminated. This Is th* etory of Iho Phoiled Pho tographer or the Freight Train that Didn't Rec* Fair. It happened last week that a atrln/t of untamed freight cars ran away, smashed the Insides nut of a passenger train and raised particular rand. EXHIBIT * The other, showing material suit for “mental anguiih." catch your freight But anyway— We caught a car to Howell station “we” Included the railroad reporter. Wonder Wilkes, th* Demon Detective nnd the Volunteer Photographer. Th* railroad reporter dropped awny after we Mt the near end or the yards. The remainder of the party pushed forward. At the raid user end of thr yard* they told u* that a local freight for Powder Hpringn we* making up at the far end of the North Inman yard. We also learned thnl we must hurry. The men who told us that called ihe turn Ue hurried for the next two hour*. We'd have caught that freight, but we bit the wrong switch nnd went climbing over ten row* of fralght ram. Thar was the flrat lemon. If we had gone straight ahead we would hnve "won easy." After we had climbed over hold* th* rack to th* renter, and the Hprlngs. He doubt* now If he ever will result of both acting together la the again. Title happened at a point near Pow- the ten ro«r*. we climbed back and ran der Spring*. Oa, j ten miles, t don't profess to be certain Now. the writer did not suspect that i JteJ •• w »" ten miles. 1 only know Pu ‘ - * - "- he would ever want to go to Powder circle, more or less perfect, according to circumstances Thera la a natural effort to get away from disagreeable condition*—that la. th* centrifugal force In lire tending to make us fly off on a tangent; hut than la In th* best Uvea and more or low ftlt In ev*ry Ufa since none U wholly bad, a force drawing us to the disagreeable thing*— the centripetal force. U'e And them both In th* prayer that Jraua tlhriet prayed In th* Garden ot Oethramane; "Let thl* cap pass from me; neverthe less, not my will, but Thine be done." Here le the effort to avoid a difficult situation, coupled, however, with th* determination, which I* suprema to : It If neceosary, and not only meet And experience show* lhat In -’sneering the hard thing* of Ilf* In that way there la more of real derive ranee than In successfully avoiding th* con flict. A boy at school, for example, has a hard problem In arithmetic to solve. One way of getting rid of th* difficulty would he to get th* teacher to cell on ■onto otter bey, or to get excused end go home. But another way would be Jo solve the problem. That would he a real. true, deliverance. The problem once solved would no longer be « dif ficulty. It would bo something more: It would be added power, wider freedom for the use of the mathematical f*cq|. tie*. That Is what rhrl»tl*n* believe happened In the case of t’hriat. II* Rut when he hit The Oenrglan office Saturday morning and found every body there trying to dope out a feaul hi# route, he caught the Infection and offered to go aa th* Volunteer Pho tographer. Now. getting to Powder Springs I* not the picnic It I* painted, even with all train* running. But with lhaiBea'. board out of whark.it was two prob. lem* nnd then a few. Muddy road* made an tuiomobll* trip to that point hoprlesn nnd a buggy tide doubtful. It was an hour too late to get Into that country by a Bouthern passenger train and twenty-four hours too late to go by the Heaboard. No other lines reached there. The suburban trolley* did not help any. For a half hour four telephones burned. « half doien reporters perspired and a city editor clawed Ipr ulr. How to get to Powder tipring* was the prob lem? We don’t know the nnsw-er yet.’ A process of elimination proved that the one chance »» in go to the South ern freight yard* «nd "hop" a freight. Tire verb “to hop" when u*#d thun technically mean* to acquire a position unobserved between n couple of freight nir* mid hang on until you get thrown off The Important part of the rule la NEWS FORECAST OF COMING WEEK Washlagton. March The nenat* committee on military affair* In to reauembl* Monday to resume the Brownsville Investigation. A* several of th* member* arc absent from Washington, it I* probable that a fur ther adjournment will be taken, and. In fact. It Is not unllksly that the Investigation will be permuted to Ing for wrek* or month*, now lhat con- grera ha* adjourned and public Interest In the ce*e h«s subsided to a considerable degree. A convention Of the National Association of Koadmaker*. having good mad* far Ua abjatti. will attract Jelegata* from msuy pan- ->f the country to Pittsburg during tho week. Stockholder* of the Penney! vault Rail toad t'ompany. ut their annual meeting In Philadelphia Tuesday, will take action on the proposal of the director* tor an Jeeo* of ttte,M«.eo« in new stock* end bond*. The first ot the examination* for th* eor*ulsr service under lbs new rtrira laid down hr BecreUry Root ha* been ltx*d (hr next Thursday. Oa Saturday th* annual tournament of the American Rowling Con- , tte must Important oveot of It* kind In th* country, will open In Hi. A not ter sporting ovoni on the ram* dar that will attract International wilt be tte * aural Oxford-Cambridge boat rare, to he rowed ESS.' atteailoa — — •*er tte Must course an the Than i from Mortlake to Put net that It saemed Ilk* tan mile*. Whan we wore almost at the end of our strength and- also almost at the end of the yard, we aaketl a man where our freight was. He raid: '“Thera It la.” pointing up thr .track it couple of hundred yard*, "and If you run Ilk* - you can catelt U." Hut the man was In error. W* ran nil that and more, but the freight sneaked out ahead. That wq» lemon No. i. We asked the man In the little tele graph office at the end of the yard how ,wc could gel to Powder Spring*. He told u* that th* freight would ivrubably be held up for a while at Chattahoochee and that If we ran we might ratrh Ik before It crossed the river. And »o we might. Hut w» didn't. There tvs* u nice doubt* track Run ning Out of the yard and betweefMhe ties a* good a cinder path aa a man could wl*h. We ran a half hill* or so and then fate soaked us with the third lemon. >'or the two tracks split. And neither of us knew which one to lake. It wo* no time for argument. "Which do you think we ought to take?" asked the Demon Detective. -The left." said I. "I think so. too," he answered. "So let'* take the one to the right " I never before *aw that process fall. Which only goes to prove you can't depend on a sura thing. We ran live or ten mile* more and Anally came to a locomotive. It M'v-hI beside a station. 'is title Chattahoochee?" w* waked. "No. IF* Holton." ealil the engineer. "Wlrcre'a the blooming place*' we I want to digress right here long enough lo say lhat th* freight took a mean advantage of ua. It le bad enough trying tn outran an veriapatt freight train without having to chase I It to Bolton over the Western and At- I lantle, whan It went to Chattahoochee', on the Southern. Rut. aaywav. we ran etx or eight miles more. Thr man who mad* my I camera said It only weighed five poundabut t could have proved hint a liar teff of hi* own mouth If h* hod carried It th* last mile. Whan at reached Chatlwhoucte* th* did riot And It out until lalfer. Chattahoochee transportation ex perts "opined" that wa could “hop" a freight at the station. But the,South- era neglected to sand any tr right direction. Wo stood on the banks of the coffee-colored Chattahoo chee and frosa for an hour or so, and then, for want of something better to do, blew Into the station. An obliging station agent went over .tte possibilities with ue. They were: No conveyance to be hired In town, end If one could be stolen or subsi dised. It meant a long journey up or down the river to gat aero**. If wa crossed the river on the trestle (and it wa* no pretty Joke with train* bowling over—going toward town—ov- ary few minutes) there was no chance to get a conveyance. It was too late to walk to the wreck —a distance of 12 or IS miles from when wa were. The Southern would not tend any more trains of any kind out until late In the afternoon. The Seaboard would run no more over th* Southern's tracks. finally the Seaboard office said that a train was due to leave Atlanta about I o clock for th* scene of the wreck. So wa started back for town. Of course, to catch a car, w* had to run. But that was getting chronic W* ran a distance so long I am nahatned to guess IL.and caught a car. When we reached Atlanta w* found wa ted about three minutes to catch th* train. Bo wa ran to the station. Wa went puffing up to the gate keeper trail asked Mm where the 1 o'clock train for Powder Spring* wa», "There ain’t no *uch a train," he said. (Always a question In my mind about the overage depot gate-keeper, wheth er his grammar or hit temper Is the worae.l "When Is the next train there?" we asked In desperation. To uMrii he replied; "Totnocrow." Whk-i wa* tte last, appearance of our old friend the lemon. There le on* thing mighty comfort ing about working for a first-class pa per. If you don't get the news some of the other reporter* will, so It doesn't matter much. Somebody sent In the story we want ed from Powder Spring*. Somebody else picked up the local ends. If l hey hadn't I shouldn't have had the crust to have written about It. ' I turned tn an expense account u* follows: To car fare In abortive effort to reach Powder Spring* $ To mental anguish 500 Item" lh,y dldn '* * llmV ,l "‘ *er»tnd After the paper had gone to pre»* and I was trying to get a nap. with my feet upon the desk, the Human Poet blew In and tried to get funny. "Did you see the wreck?" nothing," wa* the aniwer “Wreetej one of 'em la sitting up at W likes de.k, Anri you are now talking MUM TQ DEVELOP POWER AT AHTHOMY SKOALS $5,000,000 Cqmpany, Secures ‘ Options.on 10,000 Acres ! ’ ' v Of Land. '•* ' ■ Special’to Tip J* , Rlb$rton,"OiL, March 9 —M«*nra J. K. Sprlnjrfleld. George H. Olney and others, of New York ^lty. hmr* been In Elberton for cbout h week taking up option* on land along Broad river, nea/ Anthony * hoe in. They represent a syndicate that* hu purchaned ihd AMhony-shoaht—waWvpowerv rapHal- taed at 15.000,000, -and hold options on 10.000 acre* ot land'near the shoal*. The land alone will coat them I’OO,000. They propose to build a 70-root dam and will carry, the power-to,Augusta. vVashlngton and Thompson. Oa. The development of this enormous power M eaiu much to this part of the elate. Ih addition to the above other power on tho*8avAnnnh river is In process of development HITTINGIhTpIPE! IS ITJ CRIME? Accused of .smoking ■ opium, three young white men, Charles Davi*. M. Garnett. M. Quitter, and a young wom an, Mr*. Moore, who says ehe Is a professional bookkeeper, were arrested by Policemen Wood and Churning Friday night Id a raid'on a boarding house In Madison avenue. The case* will be tried In police court Saturilay afternoon and at that time Attorney Harvey Hill and J. B. Ridley, counsel for the defendants, will make the contention that "hitting th* pipe" Is no offense against th* law. The attorneys will ask that the caaei be dismissed on th* ground that smoking hop Is nothing more than H bad habit, the tame ae drinking whis ky, and that (t I* no more of an of fense. , . Two of the young men admit they were smoking. Mr*. Moore denlen ehe wa* "bitting the pipe." PUNS FOR UNDERPASS WILL BE' CHANGED R. M. Clayton, city engineer, has received a communication from H. M, McDonald, chief engineer of th* Louis ville and Nashville railroad, hi which he states that hi* roqd prefers artificial light* during the day In the proposed Pryor street underpass to the llluml nstlng tiles overhead. Engineer McDonald elates that the president of his road fears that In case ot dsrallntent the Illuminating tiles would not hold tte load. He atao objects because the tllee would be cov ered with dirt nearly all the timer The plans will probably be changed. The underpass will be about fO feet long, extending from th* Dodd 'build ing curb on the southwest corner to the Wall street curb Just beyond the railroad tracks. The sidewalk un the underpass will he six feet wide anil ten feet below ground. The side walls will be uf while brick. A Fainoun Doctor's Prescription Checks an Acute Cold in a Day and Cures Chronic Coughs. The wend erf* I healing newer* of nine have been known for ag*i, but th* **nw*rntitrely new farm of pin* *r*d**t wtiieh has th* quality of be. ing eefuala, thus enabling It te be used In a mere aleaaant manner and whleh >• new being generally nrseerllnd by deetorc, f* known te th. pro. fereion a* Ceneenrreted ell of pin*. \Htlladalphis lung and throat <p,. eiallet dealers* that th* formula In whum he new uaea th* Concentrated sit *f aln* has predated remarkable result*, often entirely curing a .ever, oold in twenty.feur hour*. This formula m very efmpl* and the ingred,- _ seme* put up far. madiaal>u*r*nly in hci eunea vista, which are edeurely seated in screw-tap tease - and. plainly labeled. The hexes ere air tight e.hd thus, retain all the original etonc. well as pretesting the fluid.frept ttmeepherie change*. Care should b. taken net t* get any of th* patent medicine imitation* ualnfi similar name and paekaga. Th*** tan be avoided by making sure to get the “Oeneentreted” oil of pine. It Is alee said te ha a splendhl specific for rheumatism red. lumb.qo Far this purpose it is taken raw en sugar, a few drops eaoh night and' morning. No family medisin* cheat should at any time be without th;. powerful remedy. Life Guard*. Thr Lire Guard* are two regiment* of cat-ally forming part of thr British household troupe. They're gallant sol- dlera, and even- loynl Brltl.h heart I* proud of them. Not only the King’s household, but your*, our*, everybody's should have life guard*. The nrad of them Is especially great when the greatest foes of life, diseases, find al lies In Ihe very elements, ns colds, ln- ■litenia catarrh, the grip and pneu monta do In Ihe stormy month o March. Tha beat way that we know of to guard agalnat there dleeaaes la to atrengthen the system with timid's Bar- saparllla—the greatest of' all life gunrda. U remuvea the condition* lit which there diseases make their most successful stack, give* vigor trad tone to all the vital organs and functions, and Imparls a genial warmth to the blood. Remember the weaker the sys tem the greater the exposure to dis ease. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes the system strong. $40,000 COMPRESS WILL BE ERECTED FOR NEXT SEASON aperlsl •« The «J sort Is a. Klherton. U*.. March The Elber- ton t 'niton and Compress Company has contracted with the Webb Pree* Com pany. of Mlnden. La, for a new 140,000 compress, to be erected before the beginning uf a new cottun season. K '° ,A VoW^ DU m N ^. h » C0 ’ Phone* 1761, Atlanta, G*. & FOO». JR_ GASOLINE PUMPING ENGINES, For Farmer*. Nurur.c* and Gre*nhe**at- Dunn Machiiwry Co, M Marietta Street. Atlanta, Ga. Camp Walker Meeting. Camp Walker, U. C. V.. will hold !ta regular monthly meeting Monday night. March 11. nt 102 South Forsyth atrret. A full attendance la desired. Uuaineas of Importance will be transacted. M&RAND Matinee Today—'Tonight Louis James sumptuoua presentation of “THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR." Night, 2Se to S1A0i Matinee, 25c te |1 Sal* net BIJOU Tonight—Matinee Today. P. AUG. ANDERSON In “THE CURSE OF DRINK” NEXT WEEK, Florence Bindley, I" El Dorado | II . l*JIUi. niEI li ■ rVui'iTS BLUNKALL ATWOOD STOCK 00. Thursday, Friday and Saturday Nights. Matinee every day. "A Confederate Spy.” Night price* U. M. A Mr. Ratine* price* li, rit Mr -SPECIAL ATTRACTION. THE FAMOUS LOLA EARL CO. or Yoxmo TEMPTATIONS MIR," Adtiren by S. R. ROBERTS, M. D. Y. M. C. A., 8UNDAY, 3:30 P. M. MONDAY* MARCH If. MATINEE ANO NIGHT. auuuat. t rata Of APELAIPETHURSTON And n Company'Of Unusual Strength in Her Great fat StiaMea, i THE GIRL FROM OUT YONDER “A Play With a Haart,” Pteji Night, 25c By Paulite Phelpi i and Marion Short. A Magnifioent Seenie Production. . Matin**, 2So to 73c. ■ . , A Magn «• H-oI Tuesday and Wednesday Night*-—March 12, 13—Matinee" Wedntidiy. CONCEDED THE BE8T IN THE WORLD. OIKCCTION OF CHAS. P.JMLSON LEW DOCKSTADER AND HIS OWN GRfcAT MINSTRELS Manuel Romain, William H. Thompson. R***e V. Prosser, Harry M. Moor* — if Relay Brothers, and 8ixty.Others. . Night, ?5o to $140. , Matinee, 2So to $1.00. TKuriday Matinee and Night—March 14th. DENMAN THOMPSON'S OLD HOMESTEAD The Sam* Splendid Production That Hat Delighted Thousands During iti g „ Twenty Years of 8ucc*ts. The Famous Double Quartette Night, 2So to $1.00. Matin**, 2So to 75c. Sale New On. FRIDAY SATURDAY MARCH 15th ANP 16th MOST ARTISTIC COMBINATION FORMED IN YEARS! Charles Frohman Presents WILLIAM H. CRANE S ELLIS JEFFREYS In a 8umptuoue Production of Goldsmith's Comedy, SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER Direction Of Llrbler A Co. With an International Star Cut, Inaludingt OKORQK QIDDENB. WALTER HALE. KRKD THORNK HKRBKRT BLEATH. I.K8LIK KENYON. HARRY LILLFi'HD. MARGARET DALE. FANNY ADDISON. and other*. Night, 50o te $2.00. Matinee, 2So to $1.50. 8alo' now on. . Sale Nov) Open (or the Appearance Friday, April 5th SEMBRICH From the Metropolitan Opera House, N. Y. Price* $1, $1.5 *, $)■ Rl I All NEXT WEEK PlIvU Matinees: Tues., Thurs. and S;it B. E. Forrester Presents the Dainty Uttle Comedienne. Florence Bindley THE MAMIVK MUMCAL DRAMA, THE GIRL AND IHE GAMBLER SUPPORTED BY A COMPANY WE XTR AO* DIN ARY MV*! 1 > Merry Music. Dashing Girls. Gorgeous Scenery. BRUNSWICK RIFLEMEN MAKE GOOO SHOWING. Spertal to Th* Oenrglan. Brunswick. On.. Merck A—<'ola*w| W. O. Obenr. Inepnrtar ut tte Overgte state UMpn gad Captain John M. Morgan. V. S. A, are |n Brunswick on spectlea trip. _ ’ Th* Brunswick Riflemen "< through their annhal IneprcU • night, end. a* was expected, th pany ehourd up better tte" " several year* paafc