Newspaper Page Text
.. uMtiiiU aLJss - , L _
JO
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
idi UUDAV, A rill L 26, lSfJd.
Week’s Offerings at Local Playhouses
RHEUMATISM ^
Chicago Glee Club Quartet
To Be a Feature of
the Week.
The Chicago Glee Club will arrive In
Atlanta Saturday and upend the week
at the Greater Atlanta Chautauqua,
ringing at each performance twice a
day.
They will etop at the Kimball House
while In the city and will make their
first appearance In Atlanta at the bli
mass meeting to be held at the Gram
Sunday afternoon, beginning at
o'clock. Sunday night they will sing
at the- Baptist Tabernacle.
A prominent rltlssn remarked
when buying his season tickets that It
was worth the price to hear the Olee
Club alone Only two more days before
the season tickets will be tsken off sale.
ft FEAST OF
Harry Lester and Bison
City Quartet Among
Features of Week.
JKext weekV Orpheum program la full
of features, no leading stars, but an
all-round general vaudeville feast. Sev
eral of tbe sots promised have been
headliners In big circuits and the ag
gregation will cost the theater about as
much as any bill of the season—and
vaudeville comes high In this day of
rivalry.
Harry B. Lester, the Jovial Jester. Is
one of tbe leading numbers. Ills Imita
tions of George Xjohan and Billy Clif
ford are said to be masterpieces of
mimicry, and he has a monologue full
of good things.
E. F. Hawley A Co., with Miss Fran
ces Haight as leading women, will pre
sent "The Bandit," a western one-act
melodrama and an oddity In vaude
ville.
Welch, Francis A Co. will offer the
skit, "The Flip Mr. Flop," which In
cludes five persons In the cast, and Is
said to be a screamingly ninny farce.
Interrupted by spnsms of music.
The Three Abdallah*. a trio of Arn-
hluiis. will appearln Oriental acrobatic
feats which are said to differ wonder
fully from the usunl acrobatic turns.
Harvey and DeVorn will appear In
grotesque songs and dance specialties.
Bert Harvey Is a well known comedian
and Millie DeVora, a comedienne of
some fame, and the combination should
prove popular.
The Bison City Quartette should
prove equnlly ns popular a singing art
aa "That Quartette." which made the
biggest musical hit of the vaudeville
season two week* ago. The four sing
ers nra said to rank with any In the
country, and their songs are of a popu
lar summery nature.
Tha Orpheum motion pictures will
close the bill, on Tuesday night n spt
ctnl performance will be given for the
benefit of the Boys' Club of Atlanta,
and a big house Is expected. The thea
ter Is one of the coolest buildings In
Atlanta and the audiences are not di
minishing since the warm weather
come. Sente are on sale two weeks In
advance end win be reserved for tbe
season If desired.
Amateurs at Orpheum,
.Jessie Reynolds, who boasts the title
of "obampton buck dnnoer of Atlanta,"
captured first prise at the amateur car
nival at tha Orphotun Friday night, but
was run n dose second by tbe Iosng-
don Slaters, a pair of Juvenile singers.
They were awarded second prise
Grant and Brown, black fere come
dians, took third.
Otto feature of tbe ramtval was that
several members of the audience threw
money to tbe performsrs, most of It to
"DORATHORNE"NEXT
AT BIJOU THEATER
Special Matinee Monday in
Honor of Memorial
Day.
Tbe DIJou's offering for next week will
lie tbe splendid drnniollsstlon of Berths M.
Clay’s popular novel, "Dora Tborue." Tbe
engagement will open with a special mat
inee Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Tbla
rather unusual hour for keglunlug tbe matl
IHMIMMItIHHMtHHHHl
Makes a man feel old before his time. His joints become stiff, his circula-
tion poor, and
his suffering
makes him irri
table.
FOUR SINGERS.
iniment
those who wnut to seeUhe Memorlsl
pantile a cbailce to attend tbe matinee
nra Mures will be
artorwAni. The regular nthtlueea will be
given on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
ufternoona, us usual.
Hypocrisy, snobbery, jealousy, love:
These are the Important factors which
com blue to Make "Lorn Tborue" oue of tbe
strongest drs matl sat Ions ever made from
any novel, and In this Bertha M. Clay
nearly exhausted tbe entire range of emo
tion. She has swept tbe entire keyboard
of humanity, achieving results amazing,
startling and Interesting. Seldom has a pop
ular-priced production won such eulogistic
praise: seldom has such production been
cast wlth<pl*7*rs of strong Individual merit.
Tbe play Is one of lutense Interest, round-
log out a aeries of actual life pictures of
aaacs—a
r be fo
forgotten.
THE LEADING FIGURE IN “DORA THORNE” AT THE BIJOU.
WHO'S WHO AMONG PL A YERS
IN THE GIFFEN' COMPANY;
THEIR FADS AND FOIBLES
tha Lnngdun slaters.
>av* Lewis, tha German comedian
Dim
who presided over the carnival,
nounccd that Jennie Reynolds and El
mer Green will meet at the Orpheum
next Friday night for the chnmplon-
ahlp of the mate In buck dancing. Man
ager Kahn offering a gold medal to the
winner.
OmedaOil
COLDS INCHEST
AND SORB
THROAT
are often cored
in one night by
i Oil ~
_ U. The
Oil takes imme
diate effect upon
the inflamed or
gans, and the
bo cnees soon
disappears
There is no am
moniaor turpen-
tine in Qmega Oil, so you can use i
freely upon your children as welt as
yourself. It is safe and sure.
MISS FRANCES NORDSTROM.
EMMETT CORRIGAN.
He likes yachting* and motoring
better than anything else when he
la off the stage.
On May 4 the Oiffen company, which
la to be nt the Grand throughout the
summer aeaaon, will return to Atlanta
and present "The Man on the Box,"
Instead of "The Prisoner of Zend a," as
at first announced.
In order that this production tuny
have all of the finish of n real organ*
Isatlon, It will be presented nt Nash
ville during the week and when It Is
produced in Atlanta It will have been
tried and donbtleaa not found wanting.
While "the play la the thing," ac
cording to Shakespeure, It Is the play
ers which moke or mar a summer or
ganisation. TbU company has made a
success In Atlanta and Its future Is as.
S ured. Therefore, a bit of Intimate
etall In regard to each member or the
cast, who are to be seen tn so many
various roles, will not come In amiss
and will serve to give the theater
going public a bit of Insight Into tbe
players whom they will come to know
so well.
For this reason this article lias been
prepared so as to present the va
rious fads, foibles, fancies, sports nnd
hobbles of Atlanta's summer theatri
cal company.
It la Just these little things which will
give the audiences a keener knowledge
of those who will amuse them than
anything else that could be found.
Kmmett Corrigan, the leading man.
has in recent years been Identified with
prominent productions, playing the title
role In Klaw A Erlangen's stupendous
spectacle, "The Prince of India," nnd
Just before that "Ben Hur," under the
same management, moving to that part
from HlraonfUe* In the same play. He
has a place on the Maine coast, where
either In the water on his 32-foot yacht,
equipped with a Fairbanks motor, or
on short In his Pope-Toledo touring
car, he gets lots of amusement In the
summer months. He Is Interested In all
athletic sports.
Miss Frances Nordstrom, the leading
woman, ham had a wide aloek of ex
perience, has played In Mrs. Flake's
companies nnd Madison Square theater
reductions. Her particular fad or fol-
to collect kimonos, and
nrot
ole
some 23 or 24. some remarkably em
broidered. all of unique design. Her
taste Is catholic, however, ami brilliant
colors or dull delight her soul so long
ns they apply to kimonos.
W. K. Bouncy, seen here Inst as
"Kleachna," tho American born, has
lived much abroad. For eight years
he was u sailor and Is one of the few
Americans who arc honorary lieuten
ants in his majesty’s naval reserves. At
one time he accompanied an expedition
to the Falls of Tabesl, Africa, thence
to ('amp Nelson, where he was Joined
some, sweet, pure, whose parentage, tho
■oraewbst obscure, lays claim to dlstluc-
England.
the aham, mockery. Indolence and worth
letsness of that certain class masquerading
under tbe title of notdUty. and It happens
that s young lord, a chap with artistic
temperament nnd lofty sentiments, falls In
lore with tbe maiden, and knowing that his
** *" ' class were she to kno*
e poses ns a struggllnj
his true sthtlon, he poses ns s struggling
young artist. And then Is unfolded one or
the cleverest stories ever taken from life of
a playwright’s pen. The action is swift,
dramatic and of Intense Interest. The sue-
comedy
by Htantey, the explorer. On the Eng
lish stage he has played with Sir Henry
Irving. Sir Charles Wyndham and Wil
son Barrett, creating the role of Nero i Is his game.
In tbe bitter’s production of the "Sign Spencer, once champion, but In
of tbe Gross." In America he la re- I games with Klngdon Gould has
membered especially for his work with
Viola Allen In "The Eternal City." A
serious Illness, which might have hand.
Icapped his career, turned his atten
tion. while he remained convalescent lo
the hospital, to the study of medicine
and subsequently he served aa interne
for a considerable length of time.
James T. Calloway was Janies A.
Herne's stage manager, and played in
many of his plays, notably In "Shore
Acres," where not infrequently he play
ed Herne’s own part, Nathaniel Berry,
when Herne had Indulged too deeplj*.
After Herne’s death he played the part
continuously for several years. Mr.
Galloway has a fine little farm Just
out from Alexandria, Va.. where he
raises poultry to Ills heart’s content.
Herman Lleb, remembered for his ex
cellent work as the absinthe fiend in
"Kleachna," has played many import
ant parts, such as Tllford Wheeler in
"The County Chairman," Captain
Hfidgman In "Arizona,” Lord Jack
Comyn In "Richard Carvel," etc. While
a member of the Netv Theater, at Chi
cago, he created Iji the United States
the role bf Ulrich Brendel in Ibsen’s
Rosmersholtn," now being*played In
Mrs. Flske’s production by George Ar-
Ilss. Mr. IJeb is a prince of good fel
low’s, especially fond of nutomoblllng,
nnd knows his White steamer from
searchlight to license number. Fond
oa he Js of Jt, it shares a comparatively
small place In his heart with his 12-
year-old daughter, now away at school,
but who will be with him later in the
season.
Nelly Angell and Gladys Granger are
mother and daughter in real life, and
have been for the last six years with E.
S, Willard, playing prominent roles In
all of his productions. In the recent
production of "Colonel Newcombs" they
created respectively the part of Lady
Farrell and Rosie McKensIe, scoring
successes. At home on Long Island
they have a ramshackle looking build
ing outside, but delightfully comfort
able inside.
Miss Evans, the Ingenue of the com
pany, thinks more of reading books
than anything else, tho all out-door
sports Interest her. especially horseback
riding. Her favorite pet Is a toy dog
known ns "Moospr,” which she care
fully muzzles when strangers are about.
Another pet animal In her "lifeless"
collection Is known as "The Gink,
which, when squeezed, talks a language
known as ‘Goof." Miss Evans was
with Henrietta Croanmn during the
past season and also In the Mudlson
Square theater production of "The
Coming of Mrs. Patrick," where she
scored hits.
Forest Wlnnnt is a graduate of the
Stevens Institute of Technology, but
follows the stage from sheer love of It.
At the Institute he was foremost in
the annual dramatic offerings, playing
Sam Bernard’s part In "The Girl from
Kay’s" and Howard Kyle's part of
Mozart In "The Greater Love." He Is
clover mimic, raconteur and a de
lightful entertainer, having a fund of
good stories at his command. Tennis
He has met and beaten
his
not
gives him instant relief from pain, starts tin a .r 00f i
circulation, relieves congestion, and gives elasticity
to the muscles and Joints. It Is very penetrating
"eeds hardly any rubbing. Best remedy f<S
Sciatica, Lumbago, Sprains, Strains, Cut*
lltirr.t and Umi***. '
Established 1861.
The Lowry National Bank
)„ OF ATLANTA, GA.
Capital
Surplus and Profits $700,000.00
Designated Depository of the United 6tates Government.
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
Accounts Large and Small Received.
American Express Company’s Travelers' Checks and Brown Brother,'
Letters of Credit, available In all parts of the world.
The VICTOR*'
WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM
OPIUM and WHISKY
l and all Inebriety and drag
treated without shock or
severe suffering. Comfort of patients carefully looked after. A home-
like, pleasant sanitarium—not a prison. Treatment entirely fr*
from any harmful results. Our thirty years' experience shows the*
LITERARY LIGHTS AND SHADOWS
U+..t l-AJALL. I
By 8. MAY8 BALL.
CHICAGO GLEE QUARTET.
These four will zing at every en
tertainment of tha Chautauqua.
8pecial Baptist Meeting*.
Moss meetings will be held In tbe follow*
Ing baptist cbnrches Sunday afternoon at
3:30 o'clock: West End. Dr. Luther Little,
speaker; QgpItobAve. Baptist, Itev. II. C.
Buehhols, speaker; North Atlanta. Rev. T.
Me(*ntchen. speaker; Kdpewood. Iter. J.
-r. Rev. i. ^
rank
at the electric
car barn at 9 n. tn. nnd preach at Itody'a
at 3 - —
on the river cur lino
p. ui.
Suffering & Dollars Saved
E. S. Loper. of Marllla, X. Y„ aaya:
"I am a carpenter and have had many
severe cut* healed by Bucklen’s Arnica
Balve. It has saved mo suffering nnd
dollar*. It In by far the best healing
salve I have ever found.”. Heals burns,
aores, ulcers, fever sores, eczema and
piles. 25c at all druggists.
“SOME LADIES IN HASTE.” By
Rbbort W. Chambers.. (D. Appleton &
Co.)
The author of "The Fighting Chance"
and "The Younger Set" has published
a new book called "Some Ladles In
Haste," and Mr. Chambers, who does
seem to write pleasantly of club and
society life In New York, not possibly
ns it Is, but as it should be, tells us In
hls latest book of ten young men and
women who became very busy In love's
affairs. A young clubman of New York
by the name of Manners had more
time and money on hls hands than he
knew* what to do with. Manners was
In love with a young woman who al
lowed him to believe he was engaged
DR. E. E. BRAGG,
OSTEOPATH
and
PHYSICIAN ud SURGEON.
Office 324-25 Century Building,
Hour*: 9 to 5—Bell Phone.
ATLANTANS BUY FINE HARNESS.
GaUlln's Herne** Factory, 80 Ma-
rtetta-*L, ha* recently mode to order
for Mr. Asa Off. Candler, Mr. John S.
Owen* and Mr. J. G. Oglesby, the very
finest harness It 1* poslble for expert
harness mnkcr* to produce. The hlgh-
est (trade harness obtainable today It
manufactured here, and Atlantans are
learning to patronize home factories
making their own goods.,
Clicquot Ginger Ale
Clicquot (Click-O) Club Ginger Ale
ha, a moat delicious flavor, highly roc-
ommended for ita purity. Clicquot pos
itively has no eqffal. One bottle will
convince. Clicquot Club Company,
Millie, Mass. Shewmake d. Murphey,
Selling Agent,, Atlanta, Ga.
Clicquot Ginger Ale
FOR SHERIFF.
My deputies will he J. ... ... .
Stnnler, J. I. Poindexter. Foster Hunter,
J. M. buttle*. Jt. S. Shepard, It. R. Deteres,
J. T. Holden, V. II. Ilnrrougb. J. A. Inins-
f an. Waiter Knight. W. 1,. Iloyttood. J. W.
hampers. Drew IJdilell, T. A. Ilimlette.
If elected I promt—* tbe people of Fulton
aunty an honest and fnlthfitl administra
tion of the office. Thinking you for your
rote., I um truly yours.
C. W. UANGUM.
principal occupation was gazing off
to space from the windows of the Lotos
Club on Flfth-ave. Manners beln,g un
able to break himself of smoking, went
to n sanitarium where he was cured
and where he also became familiar to
a great extent with "mental sugges
tion" nnd "absent treatment." Man
ners had four particular friends, mem
bers of the Lotos Club, of whom he
was very fond. These young fellows
were entirely too commonplace to suit
Manners. They had no romance - In
their make-ups at all. They were busy
down town getting rich quick, to Man
ners decided to "demonstrate” upon
them hls mental suggestion thru absent
treatment
Looking out of the window the same
afternoon he saw pass by five young
women whom, thru hls one eyeglass,
he did not recognise, so he “demon
strated" on them. too. causing all of the
trouble. The club friends he worked
on were Kelvin. Todd (called "Toddy 1
a social Indictment that he was s «py
and a thief employed by King Grorp.
At this time most of Curtis' friend, st
Bath were engaged In a conspiracy
against King George to place Stusrt
on the throne, and Curtis had been ot
tered a bribe (but had declined It) to
betray hls friends. Hls friends knew of
this offer, but did not know of Curtli
having declined It, hence \all of th.
troublo. It ls^qulto Interesting, It this
story, In its light way, which Is a good 1
way of the light love storlea with duel.,
disappointment*, love, business and in-
finltum. There Is nothing heavy about!
It, but the book !■ unusually well writ
ten and the description* of social l!f.|
In the eighteenth century at Bath ud,
thereabouts la splendid, a* witness:
"A monotonous splash of fountain, a
rustla of silk and a never-ceasing bab
ble of talk; a aea of rainbow-colored
silks, a forest of nodding curl*, a bory
of fair women’s faces and music; sun
shine and laughter and you have a pic
ture of the Pump Room at Bath on a
bright July morning tn the year of
irrnd 17.K "
grace 17(5.'
Timothy Curtis, remaining undsr t
cloud of disgrace In the eyes of th.
woman he loves, and also In th# syet of
society generally, has a hard time of It
In the book for a good long while. But
truth and virtue not only brings It.
own regard (sometimes It’s only recora-
pence), will sometimes prsvall. It did i
with Curtis, and he won the Fair Moon
of Bath and was vlndlcatsd In Ur* eyes
of society.
‘THE SIXTH 8PEED." By E J.
Rath. (Moffat Tard A Co.) Stephen
Sanderson was a young fellow In New
York who grew tired of working for a
for short), Gray nnd Billy West, all rich banker. Henry Halstead. Sander
stock brokers, except one—an adver
tising agent. Immediately these fel
lows began to take up the "simple
life;” to shake from them everything
they had formerly cared for. Kelvin
meets Manners' half-way fiancee, falls
In love with her at sight an(l she with
him; they were married. All of tho
other-demonstrated-upon couples meet
each other nnd are married (living hap
py ever afterward, let us hope). Then
Manners loses hls money, nnd goes to
live on a deserted farm. There he run#
across In a ridiculous way the last re
maining mental suggested female, also
living on a farm. He tnoses this love
ly girl up a tree, makes love to her, Is
accepted and the book ends. Every
thing which Mr. Chambers writes ts In
teresting. The people In this book talk
as they should from the way they look
In the Illustrations, but never do In
real life. The book Is bright, light and
entertaining.
MILO. GIRARD. LEAVITT.
The.* four jolly follows ere th. Bison City Quartet which sings at th*
Orpheum Theater all next week.
I fared so well. Mr. Locke Is another
1 lover of outdoor life. He la president
I of the Duquesne Fishing and Boat
I Club, with headquarters on Jamaica
bay. There he has a 39-foot gasoline
boat nnd at Renaonhurst, in the Mnrine
Basin, a 62-foot sloop. Fishing Is hls
fad. He was with Mrs. Flske for two
years In "Mary Magdala," with Mantell,
the Proctor Stock Company of New
York and with David Kessler, the fa
mous Jewish comedian, playing In both
English and Yiddish.
George Foster Platt ta the stage di
rector, and one has but to see a pro
duction staged by him to read hls
artistic life's story.
"THE FAIR MOON OF BATH," by
Elizabeth Ellis. (Dodd. Mead & Co.)
It 1s Just as well to let readers know
right at the start what or who "The
Fair Moon of Bath" was. The Fair
Moon was a very charming and beauti
ful woman, who went around coating
■pells over all aorta and conditions of
men, when she ought not to have done
so. There was also a glorious Sun of
Bath. A rival of the Fair Moon. The
Fair Moon was Miss Celia Winnlngton.
a delightful young person. Her rival,
the Sun, was Miss Dorothy Smallahaw,
another delightful female. There sim
ply can not be too many of such In
books or life. Timothy Curtis, a young
gentleman of pleasure In the eighteenth
century, had been Informed by hls uncle
and guardian that as he (Timothy)
was very poor In worldly goods, he
must marry the rich heiress selected
for him. Miss Dorothy Smallshaw. Cur-
when he ts Instructed how, am
whom to fall In love. He came to hate
Miss Smallshaw’* name and declined
even to call to aee her. Then he met
Fair Moon nt Bath under romantic
conditions, and everybody can see the
answer at once. For Curtis fell In love
with Mis* Celia Winnlngton and wished
to marry her wlUy-nllly and he waa
getting along finely with hi* wooing
until he was brought under a cloud hy
son had charge of Mr. Halstead's motor
car and the latter Jumped on Sander
son one* too often when Sanderenn
gave hls employer a piece of hls mind
and threw up hls Job. Then Sander-
■on had an Idea which he went Into
seclusion to perfect. This Idea was to
build a motor boat which would prop*
Itself thru th* water at the rate of 19)
mile* per hour. Sanderson won oil
and completed hls boat, which he call'd
the Projectile. The book tells of die
experiences and escapades which Sm-
derson had with the Projectile and ner
crew on their voyage of piracy. Of
course, with a boat capable of 160 nllf*
per hour, Sanderson and hls crew vert
Immune, to say the least, from paiult
or capture. Sanderaon would call jpoa
a yacht, rob tha owner, get back onto
the Projectile and, before anjbodf
could say Jack Robinson—where *r**
Sanderson 7 Nobody knew but every
body, particularly Sanderson's victim*,
tried to find out. Enormous retard*
up to $1,000,000 were offered fur San -
demon’s capture, dead or alive. ' But,
of course, nobody could catch Satder-
son. Even when, the United Rate*
navy sent torpedo boat destroyers wh»
their futile 46-mlles-an-hour S'”*
could do nothing In trying to catch •
boat making 150 mllea an hour. A<v
no doubt Sanderson would be robDtni
people yet had It not been for the ettr;
nal feminine. For, of course, the '*"•
was there. Sanderson had a » wM '.
heart of course, and she was old ">•"
Halstead's stenographer. Sander*/™
loved her but "feared to tell of l ' l '|
love." However, he waa not much ns*
"Patience on a monument Milling
Grier," for he waa on a boat going l«>
miles an hour moat of the time. Bui
Elinor Benton, knowing that Sandercon
loved her, refused to realise that h*r
sweetheart was a wicked young n an
who was busy robbing people, so ■»
Inevitable pressure was brotight to w*r
(The Frenchmen say "flnd’the'woman
Just when Sanderson was about to **'
the Projectile to the United States g«_
ernment. The reader leave* the wnllon
pirate won over by Elinor at the *"
of this exciting book. / „
Of course there Is nothing heavy abo
the book, but It will kill time and m
reader will finlah It. The book *“*
gests, too, a great undeveloped field
i nventlon.
Guaranteed Under Pure Food and
Drug Act, June 30,
1906.
BEWARE OF
IMITATIONS
VIVA
NETTHERY,
5c
In Big Bottles at
Grocers and Soda
Founts
5c
DRINK VIVA AND
SMILE
j