+ Jr Y
I J L I ii
W I i
8 THE EVENING STANDARD OGDEN UTAH THTJRSDA NOVEMBER 24 1910
11 wiIA THANKSGIVING l r1
0 H Wefe Talking Turkey these days to the Male Contingent of the Human Race
2 Every Man and Boy that comes here for hiz Fall Outfitting is going to have his
1 Lil lV h 7 cup of satisfaction filled to the brim an d running over with good value
i If I ittA ifi i ii 4 j 71 If you expect to get full measure < 5f enjoyment out of the Turkey look well to
I JAI itw your Wardrobe uAt home or 1 out to di ne the better you are dressed the better
j I J J V you will enjoy the feast
j I psj11 f > J t S
Handsome Suits 8 in all the seasons N Overcoat luxury In all tho right
j r I
etylec
correct models and choice fabrics
Jill 1 Ii Zi1 Fabrico arc very fine and tailored
I ll1 i I l4ii Suits of quality and prectlge to perfection
J I 41Iiki 1r Ifr tIi I 1518 20 to 35 15 18 p20 to S40
I i j
1 I 4 t hi I 1fr1 EXCLUSIVE HEADWEAR AND TOGGERY FROM THE HANDS OF THE BEST MAKERS
j t1 1 1 WE WILL BE CLOSED 0 N THANKSGIVING DAY
FRED M NYE CO
I J
I I 2413 WASHINGTON AVENUE
III I
I IIIUNION
UNION SERVICES
I H Of THt ChURChES
I l
I J Rev Frank G Erainerd at Baptist Church Speaks of the Uplifting
Power of Religion and of the Progress in Religious Freedom
I f That Has Been Won Even in This Country
I I
Human Progress was the keynote
of ti most eloquent Thanksgiving ser
mon delivered this morning bythe
Rev Frank G Brainerd of the Congre
gational church at tho First Baptist
church The largo edifice was filled
to overflowing by the throng of peo
ple of nearly every denomination who
were called together by the announce
ment of the meeting given out In tho
various clinches
The meeting was in charge of Rev
S H D 21imierinan of tho Baptist
church and with one or two excep
tions every minister of the city was
present So great was tho crowd
that txtra choirs were brought Into
the church and even then some of the
4 late arrivals were forced to stand ni
I
the corridors
The musical progranuwis an es
pecially pleasing oneTho services
began nt 1030 and closed at 1140
giving the congregation time to
reach their homes for Thanksgiving
dinners
Rev Brainerd said
The distinctiveness of our nation
al observances comports with the
uniqueness of our cosmopolitan life
and the romance of our America are
the wonder pages of all history
Indolent and dreamy foreigners
hoard the fable of the Fountain of
Perpetual Youth and sought to find
it In the land of flowers whose per
fumes made somniferous the snunner
air Their descendants arc still seek
S ing lives of case and dreaming of to
morrow
I llrown own gentlemen and impe
cunious sons sought the golden sands
S of the Virginias that they might there
repair their fortunes and live lives I
tof relative ease Their descendants I
have learned tho dignity and happi
ness of labor and are doing their part
of tho worlds work
Sturdy men braved frost and fam
ine to settle in New England and j
possess liberty of conscience It was
they who insUtuted tho observance
of a day of thanks giving not only
for the sufficient harvests and for
safety from savage massacre but be
neath all this was their gratitude for
S the assurance of life Jn this new land
and for the vision of the ultimate tri
umph of those principles for which
they had pledged their all And for I
S all this they came together and gave
thanks not to each other but to GOD
S Like them let us this morning be I
thankful not merely for the physical
S ulessln of the year which in them
4 selves are more than can be nuaiber
ed but let us also be grateful for
tho srowlng > ictory of TRUTH and for
our assured hope hi the days which
ale to come To this latter point let
I
us take as the keynote for our pres
I ent Thanksgiving Day this senti
ment Our supreme confidence in I
mans eventual understanding of God j
and in his consequent fulfillment of
life
The elevation of life since the I
early days of Tnanklud has been So
stupendous as to give us firm ground I
for our confidence From caves and
temporary structures we have ad i
vanced to houses of wood and brick
and stone from preying upon beast
and men we have given ourselves to
agriculture mining manufacturing
and to the friendly exchange of com
modlties We have advanced from
gutturals to the languages of the na
tions from signal fires to tho tele
graph tho teelphone and the wire
Ti less from walking to steam electric
f I ity and ships of the air from the tom
u tom tj flute violin and pipe organ
f We have passed from the days when
puny children were abandoned to riv
1 er or mountains when tho aged wore
thrust out to die when the erring
one was made an outcast and have
established childrens homes hospi
tals and Florencc Criltenton missions
r We are pushing the debtors prison
the slimy dungeon and the horrors of
the inquisition far into the past and
have substituted fraternal orders pol
itical equality and religious tolerance
Our high schools offer a better
I cur
riculum than was studied Emer
son and the teachings of religion to
tlay give ua a larger conception of
God than was had by tho Children of
Israel and a truer knowledge of Jesus
of Nazareth than came to tho dis
ciples who walked with Him the roads
of Gallllcc
In all this onward march whose
momentum Is increasing with the ac
cumulating years the progress or
t people in fullness of lifo has been
In direct ratio to their progress In re
ligious conceptions
This universal fact furnishes us i
with a working basis for time individ
ual Every mans life Is determined
by his conscious or unconscious con
ception of and relation to God
It is not difficult to verify this
by a comparison of the belief and the
life of any man who has a known con S
S ceptlon and an acknowledged rein
tlon When wo say a known concep
tlon wo do not mean mqrely a pro1
Jessed one Many people profess and I
moat of them sincerely a belief that L
is only superficially understood That
has of course only a restricted ef
fect upon their lives There are how
over numbers with sorious Intelli
gent beliefs which have become
strong convictions Wo find a con
sistency in the lives of such people
and can always safely predicate In
a general way their place in any pro
posed line of action They may be
right or they may be wrong from
others point of view but whoever
uhall attempt to change their course
of action must first reckon with their
convictions or prejudices call them
which you n
It Is however more difficult to
verify this relationship In those who
are not really conscious of the ex
tent to which God has entered Into
their lives Is attributed to their re
spect for their mothers teachings
or to their wives wishes or to tho
standards common to their business
I
J associates or to the customs of that
class in society with which they by I
choice have identified themselves
Yet if these choices of assoclationship
could be analyzed their explanation
would be found In no small degree In
a liking for the qualities shown al I
though without the realization that
they were some of the fruits of re I
ligion Thlg may be illustrated by I I
the frequent marriage of men with i
out profession of religion to Christian
women Few men ask themselves I
why It is that after a miscellaneous
acquaintance with women when the
time comes to choose one for life
they seek out court and marry a
Christian woman But no more do they
ask themselves why It Is that while
I themselves professing no religion
they refuse to live much less to bring
up their families In places where no
religion Is taught Nevertheless the
choice is nono the less real because
it is nade unconsciously arid its ef
fect is recognizable Only a bigot
measures the progress of religion by I
the numbers who profess his own
creed or indeed even by those who I
make open profession of any form of u
belief Some most admirable lives
I
seem to be quite unaware of their
largeness of thought betterment of I
living Yet the one will always be I
found to be the source of the other
and wherever beauty and truth are
there God Is though we know it not
Out of nil this study of pro
gress of religion and the resulting
elevation of human life some import
ant conclusions present themselves
Religion has been concisely stated
as tho conscious relation between
I
Nan and God and the expression of
that relation In human conduct Tho I
end of religion therefore being life
I
the degree of Truth In the religion
of any nation state city church or
Individual Is to be measured so far
as it can be measured humanly by I
the strength purity and completeness
of the life lived And history well
bears out this expectation I
No nation has an elevation of its
icllgious conceptions and practices I
but there followed a corresponding i
duration and purification of tho lives J
of its people No nation of history j
has ever been brought Into commercial
touch with the Christian nations with
out the Indirect result of the uplift
ing of the life of Its people We should
not permit to be forgotten the opinion
of Uie greatest queen of history who
when asked for the explanation of
Englands greatness said that It was
the Bible Nor should we permit our
selves to loso the moaning of one
of the most splendid accomplishments
of newspaperdom In 1870 a commit
tee In America set about the revision
of our Bible Tho committee In Eng
land consisted of forty one scholars of
he Church of England and twenty
four belonging to other bodies includ
ing tho Church of Ireland the Church
of Scotland the Baptists Congrega
tionalists Methodists and Presbyter
ians slxUfive in all Tho American
committed numbered thirtyfour and
included men from all denominations
After ten years work the New Testa
ment was to be published in May
1881 Because of the universal inter
est in the event it was arranged that
the publication should take place si
multaneously in London and New
I
York on Friday Tho fastest train be
tween New York and Chcugo at that
time was twjiiiityslx hours which I
meant that the bringing of the copy j
the setting up printing and distri
bution would cause a delay to Chicago
readers of fortyeight hours To save
twentyfour hours of this delay the
most enterprising newspaper of Chi
cago spent what to most people would
hu a fortune They engaged private
wires and set ninety telegraph opera
tors to work In New York on Friday
transmitting the whole translation
word for word to tho Chicago olfice
where men rushed it into type anti
print and it was sold In the Satur
day edition on the streets of the city
In this study a second conclusion
which presents itself is this viz No j
individual or church has ever under I
stood auythJns like I tho whole of thoilj
I I
truth about either God or Life Tho
most horriblo atrocities and the most
loathful debaucheries of all the ages
have been perpetrated and practiced
in tho namo of religion From be
fore the day of the slaughter of the
Innocents and the crucifixion of tho
Naznrone on through the rolgn of
Nero with his hungry arena and his
pleasure gardens lighted by blazing
human torches down past the execu
tions by Charlemagne the atrocities
by the Moorsthe butcheries by Bloody
Mary the burning of witches in New
England down to thc fitful massacres
in Armenia religionists have too af
ten not only made the mistake of
thinking that they alone were right
but have been guilty of the resulting
wrong of trying to extinguish Indi
viduality by murdering the Individuals
or by forcing them at the point of
I death to a cowards renunciation and
acquiescence And all this has not
justly reflected upon ultimate religion
but has proven to us the toleroncc
that should prevail In the days of par
tial truth And this fallibility is
quite as demonstrable by the spaci
ous arguments of social business or
political sophistries as it Is in tho
realm of religion The acceptance by
t this generation of the necessity for a
spirit of friendly tolerance of the con
victions of others and recognition of
the universal right to individual li
berty Is hopeful beyond expression
No church or council can compel reli
gion to others any more than a poli
tical gathering can decree convictions
into the minds of the voters We have
just finished a convincing illumination
pf this latter fact We are learning
ing that each mans convictions
must come to him not through the
commands of others but through the
experimencc discernment and free
action of his own mind and licarUj
But tho acceptance of the right
to religious liberty should carry with
it the interhuman obligation to es
tablish for ones self an individual
religion Religion must always be
personal and it cannot be personal ex
cept as it becomes individual The
personal belief of any man may he
very much like that of others yet
with him it takes on its special phases
because his soul can no more develop
I to bo the exact counterpart of I
other soul than one rose procisoh du
plicate to another even though slip
I ped from the same plant and grown
in the greenhouse side bp side Schell
er expressed it well when he wrote
What thou thinkest belongs to all
What thou feolst is thine only
Wouldnt thou make him thine own I
feel thou the God whom thou
thinksL
I We speak properly In a practical
sense of the religion of a cuhrch
j or city or nation but we coifld not
I so speak In full exactness The re
licion of a church city or nation is
really the religions more or less alike I
in their understanding of God and I
in the lives resulting therefrom of its
many Individuals Every one there
fore who would become a good citi I
zen will need to search out for him
self an individual religion Ho may j
not get a very large conception in
the beginning but he will come to
have a growing and an over enlarging
understanding of God and he will set
about rightly relating his life to the
example and teachings of that divine
personality When each man rocog
ul7es this obligation and sets out to
study and choose for himself our
knowledge of God is sure to be en
larged toward the whole truth and
our sfcarch for the way to the highest
life will be so illuminated by individ
ual examples as to forward the day
when ignorance sd fish nets dishon
esty vice hatred and sin shall be in
tollorablo to humanity and knowl
edge unselfishness honesty virtue1
love and righteousness shall crown I
the fulfillment of life In man 1
Not In a day may tills come lo
be but wd look forward confidently I
to that faroff divine event toward j
which the whole creation moves Our
physical advance from that first
Thanksgiving day with Its hardships I
and dangers Is multiplied in tho splr
itrial progress we have made beyond I
tho days of the burning witches Tho
modern marvel of American democ
racy born out of ancient tyranny Is
not half so wonderful as the spiritual
democracy of this generation reached I
in humanitys long journey from say j
agery up through Ignorance supersti
tion and coercion to the sovereign
ship of individuality
And what shall be our several
parts In forwarding this fulfillment of I
lIfo We aro to seek ourselves to
continually enlarge our own knowl
edge of God and to Impart that
knowledge to such as will receive It
We are to be tolerant of LIme beliefs I
of others and to bo willing to learn
from them We are to live our own I
lives buoyantly and reverently and
to walk in charity and helpfulness I
one with another It is our privilege I
to believe devoutly in God profound
ly in man unwaveringly In the even
tual perfection and fulfillment of hu
man life
Bound to the Pilgrims of that first
Thanksgiving day by n common sin
cerity of purpose and faithfulness of i
striving let us today lift up our
hearts In their spirit of gratitude to 1
God not alone for our physical well1
being hut for the reiigiots freedom
of our day and for he promise of the
fulfillment oN life5 l the flays that
shall come It was Huh rt Browning
who taught us this prayer j
But I need now as then
Thee God who mouldest men
And since not even while tho whirl
i was worst 1
jDId Ito tho wheel of lifo
With shapes and colors rife i I
Bondiflzilyin1stak my eujj to
slake Thy thirst
So take and use thy work
I Amend what flaws may lurk
i What strain o the stuff whut warp
I ings past tho aim I
j My times be in thy hand I
i Perfect the cup as planned I
I Let ago approve of youth and death
complete tho same
TAB ER NACLE
I ADDRESS BY
APOSTLE
A large audience enjoyed an 1m
resslve Thanksgiving service In the
Tabernacle this morning
The exquisite strains of Snug
Song layed on the great organ by
Organist Sam F Whitaker was fol
lowed by tho solo and chorus Ilosan
na beautifully sung by Myrtle al
linger and the choir
I Invbcation was offered by President
Ie F Middleton after which tho solo
1 and chorus See Now the Altar was
sung bjv Walter Stevens and choir
The wellknown tenor David Reese
I who Is in the city td assist in tho
production of the opera Ermine fa
vored those present with a most pleas
ing rendition of Fred Clays exquisite
II solo Ill Sing Thee Songs of Araby
Apostle David 0 McKay began his
address with a tribute of apprecia
tion to the choir and soloists for the
flno music which had been rendered
Continuing his address lie drew
impressive word pictures from life as
seen by himself showing that though
j the people of the world lacked some
of the elements which go to make
perfection by tho goodness of GQrt
these defects were made up In other
ways and for such they should bo
thankful
With the thence of Inspiration
over to the front tho speaker gave
an interesting narrative of American
history and invention The exanplo
of remarkable faith and pcrslstencl
in the lives Columbus Benjamin
Franklin and others wore used by
Apostle McKay as illustrations of
true manhood
The trying experiences of the PI1
grlms in their efforts to secure re
ligious freedom and in memory of
whom Thanksgiving day is set apart
were also reviewed by him
In conclusion he gave the quota I
tion There is a divinity which shapes
our ends rough hew them as we
may impressing npon all present
the truth of it by an exposition of
tho place held by1 religion In all the
great events of history
Benediction was oCferedhy Pa
triarch G W Lnrkin
TYPIIOKB ON
PACIIFffC
VENUEI
Four cases of typhoid fever In one
family were reported to the sanitary
officers yesterday and steps for the
relief of the afmcted home will prob
ably be taken by tho board of health
All of the fever victims are children
of the family of W Halliday residing
at 290G Pacific avenue
The sanitary Inspector in speaking
of the case this morning stated that
the family has been using well water
and that it Is most likely the disease
had its originIn this water
Pacific avenue especially the dis
trict in which the Halllday homo Is
located according to the sanitary of
ficer is an unhealthful locality Ho
states that the sewerage Is defective
and that there are sloughs of stag
nant water near the Halllday home
that arc a menace to the health of I
the residents
Vo may always expect to hnve
typhoid fever and many other kindred
diseases In that district until some
big improvements arc made In tho
draining of tho street says the in
spector
At present none of the HaHlliday
children aro In a dangerous condition
but the cases aro too young to say
what tho outcome will be The health
department will lake every precau
tion to prevent a spread of the dis
ease
The inspector states that there is
little change In the scarlet fever sit
nation There are at present 26 cases
under quarantine Six cases were re
leased yesterday and three now cases
reported One scarlet fever placard
was tacked up today The city is
free from smallpox and diphtheria and
there is but one case each of measles
and chlckcnpox
Only a FcirclgnerThe alleged
crazy man at Uiutah who caused the j
sheriff of tho county to send a con
pie of deputies to tho little village
last night has turned out lo bo nono
other than a foreigner unable to
speak much English who was passing
through the connrFy on foot
READ THE CLASSIFIED PAGE
I
I
ACT V TY OF F
TUECEMENT
PLANTS
Concrete construction has grown so
qxteuslvoly during t ha past decade
that today the manufacture cement
Is among tho leading Industries of
the country and the demand for ce
rent Is a fairly good Index building
operations Since the erection of ce
ment plants inUtah and other parts of
the western country they have been
Upt busy day and night supplying
toe demand from contractors and
builders
Manager Gilson of tho Union Port
lmd Cement company of this city and
tho Three Forks Cement company I
of Montana states that the demand
for cement this year has not boon BO
great as It was last year this mean
ing as he puts It that there has
not been quite ns much building
Manager Gilson states that the
plants have been running full blast
night and day during the entire year
but that It has been quite easy to
fill orders for cement while last year
the plants were taxed beyond their
capacity many orders having to be
held for a considerable length of time
before they could be filled
Ogden has kept Tell up to Its stand
ard of building the dcmund for ce
ment from Ogden contractors and
builders having been equal to that of
Just year if not a little In excess But
Ogden Is among the few Intcrmoun
taln cities that has equaled tho build
ing activity of last year The build
ing permits Issued this year will be
in excess of those of last year and
tie amount expended in building will
be a number of thousand dollars more
this year than last year
Mr Gilson will make a trip to tho
Three Forks plant In Montana the
frst of next month and likely will re
nafn there until near Christmas time
He says tho plant erected at Three
Forks last winter at a cost of some I
thing over a million dollars has been
running constantly anti has lone a
splendid business during the season
Manager Gilson has great faith in
the future of Montana hut he Is In
clined to the Idea that although Mon
tana is conceded to bo a great mining
state tho future greatness of tho
state lies In Its agricultural resources
He anticipates that within the next
few years large tracts of land that
leretoforc have been used by large
cattle and sheep Interests for grazing
purposes will be placed under cul
tivation and Montana
will become a
great farm state
ORPHEUM SHOW
I
WILL PLEASE THANKSGIV
ING CROWDS TONIGHT
The bill at the Orpheum this week
Is a rare collection of acts seldom
seen In vaudeville one of which alone
vould be more than worth the price
pf admission Hock and Fulton the
unions dancing tarn In their original
dnnco creations are making a sen
sation all over the entire Orpheum
circuit Never before has an act of
this kind been seen at tho Orpheunis
low prices Peoplo In New York City
have paid as high as two dollars aseat
to see this same wondornil dancing
that the Orpheum theater offers at
fifty cents tonight
PINTSCU GAS
PLANT IS
LARfiER
+
The Plntsch gas plant Is now manu
facturing gas by the now process
known as the low pressure generator I
system and nearly all of the improve
ments planned have been completed 1
Because of the additional capacity of
the plant It Is expected that early In
the spring gas will not only ho fur
nished to the roads reaching Ogden
but to the lines entering Salt Lako
City
According to George Lochhcad
manager of the plant the increased
capacity of the factory will bo so
great that the product will be shipped
to Salt Lake City and furnished to
the San Pedro and Western Pacific
Hues The shipping of gas such as
Is intended will be on a large scale
Special gas tank cars will bo needed
These cars will have to be a mass of
coiled pipes each pipe capable of
holding a gas pressure of over two
thousand pounds to the square Inch
Into the pipes will be forced the
Plntsch product under a pressure of
one hundred atmospheres One hun
dred atmospheres means a pressure
oooooooooooooooooooooooooo
o
0
o Laxative Cough Syrup
0
0 Cures When All Fail 0
o
0
0 0 Make It At Homo 0
0
0
o Tills fine rcclro when prepared 0
o at home la said to maku tho surest 0
o acting cough euro ever heard of 0
o It had cured many III 5 hours by 0
o the clock Fine for lt urlope 0
0 coldu sore throat anil chronic 0
o bronchitis of old iieojili too Any 0
o one can easily make It at homo 0
o o a full pint costing less than iO 0
o coiils Obtain a llk ounce pack 0
o age of essence niciUhoIaxono iiihl 0
0 maku It Into a pint of syrup by 0
0 following simple directions con 0
o tilmtl lit packaKe You make the 0
o wyruo of urimilnted sucar and 0
o mix Ulcht to tun doz J dally ere 0
o ay a laxative action of tho bow 0
o ell and the couth and cold are 0 0
o soon cured as till poisons arc car 0
o ned out of tho system IL rollovo 0
o tho lluhlcdt cough In out hour and 0
o cures the chronli couch of oM 0
o people quicker Ml sucr than 0
o anything over hc < nl of while It 0
o Is Just nun for childrens coughs 0
o Ui they like It and by IU5 laxative 0
Q
lonla effect It nrovrntB i > nr > umonln 0
o fovar and other complications or 0
o
cold 0
o coldThouo
6 Thouo In this city who have 0
0 tried It think It Is the best thIng °
VIT discovered to relievo and euro 0
o throat and lung trouble 0
o Hero Is the formula 0
o EI > > neo monlholaxcno 2i 01 0 0
o Granulated auRir loIrup136 ozs O
o Compared viE3 labeled syrup 0
e you save W or Jl by making It at 0
0 homo
0
0
o
0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 Q 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 Q eo
f one hundred times as great as atmos
Spheric pressure which is 14 7 pounds
o to the square Inch This would bring
the gas pressure up to nearly 1000
pounds to the square inch and under
such pressure each car could carry
In tho neighborhood of 10000 cubic
feet of gas
Tho gas would be released from
tho car pipes at Sale LnkoTand3pfRcof
in storage tauki under a pressure of
fourteen atmospheres and from these
mospherlc pressure and from these
tanks tho smaller tnnks of the trains
would lx filial
Beginning this week the plant Is pro
dncing four Unies as much gat as It
formerly produced and it is producing
it without any more coat of produc
Jlon than the smaller quantity I Tho
game number of men will bo employed
and tho material for making the gas
will cost no more Formerly five tons
of coal were burned every day for
heating the furnaces and furnishing
power for tho pumping of tho gas
Now no coal will be consumed for
the by products of the oil from which
the gas Is made will bo utilized to
supply the heat and power necessary
to run the plant With the machinery
which has recently been installed at
tho factory there is practically no
wnste at all Formerly there wag a
gas pitch which Jt was necessary to
dispose of This was burned up out
side the plant nnd the heat which its
combustion afforded was carried away
on the winds The pitch Is still
formed In the making of the guts and
It Is disposed of by burning but there
Is not a unit of Its heat wasted
A 125horsepowor boiler which will
be used to furnish power for the
pumps will be put in place next
week as tho excavation for the base
has already been started
It Is likely that the slzo of the
building will be somewhat enlarged
before spring as if will be necessary
to install a number of high pressure
pumps for the loading of the gas cars
and there Is but little room to spnro
In the building as It now measures
ELLEN BEACIIYAV
I
THE GREAT PRIMA DONNA
COMES TO OGDEN ON
TUESDAY NEXT
What an American prinudonna will
dc with a group of songs arias bal
lads and operatic scenen of world
wide diversity wil be shown at the
iNcw Ogden Theater Tuesday even
ing November 29th when Ellen
Beach Yaw will be heard in a con
cert program of the most extraordin
ary range and diversity
Miss Yaw may not properly be
culled nn American primadonna any
longer She is n world primadonna
and has made sonastional triumphs In
opera in Italy France and Germany
and has as well enthralled concert
audiences in Spain and England be
Bides enrapturing tho coldly critical
folk who filled the boxes of New
Yorks Metropolitan Opera house with
a blaze of diamonds and glowing
sloulders I I
My first duty says Miss Yaw Is
to my own country and my own peo
ple Hence she has turned down
fabulous offers of European engage
ments to make the grand tour of
North America upon which she Is
j embarking This is to be fol
lowed as all readers of the daily
papers know by a tour of the world
vhich has excited wide anticipatory
comment in every quarter
JMJss Yaw has also Induced Jay
Plowe the famous virtuoso of the
Royal Opera house orchestra Ber
lin to accompany her on her tour
and ho will be heard In several Into
solos find In an obllgato with the
young primadonna
Mary Newton a rising pianist of
great artistic powers and rare sym
pathy as an accompanist will preside
a the keyboard
Seats Monday Nov 2Stn 10 a m
MfilE NAZjfiIOV
COMIN6 NOVo 30
The promise bade by the Messrs
Sliubert that they would send Into
the West this season their most Im
portant stars and attractons Is al
ready being fulfilled and the announce
ment that on Wednesday Nov 30th
they will send Madame Nazlmova un
questionably one of the greatest Eng
lush speaking actresses In the world
to the Ogden theater for one perform
ancet will be received with genuine
pleasure by the discriminating nlnv
goons of this city The engagement
vill be one of tho choicest fruits born
of the Independent action of the west
ern managers this 3eason It is to be
hoped Unit the emancipation of the
theater holds In store the coming of
many stars of the calibre of Nazi
moa
Madame Nazimova needs no intro
duction to local theaterlgours For
the past five years the period of her
appearance as an English speaking
star she has been the most talked of
and written about actress on the Am
erican stage She is this season mal
lag her sqcond transcontinental tour
before beginning her New York
sea
son at her own playhouse the Nazi
ttiovn Theater on 9th stronl
The Naxlmova repertoire this sea
son includes three plays two of them
new and one old Little Eyolf Is
one bf the least known of the Ibsen
dramas aud was given for the first
time in this country by Niizimova on
the occasion of the dedication of her
own theater last April It was one
of the last plays written by the great
Norwegian dramatist and although so
little known it is undoubtedly one of
his greatest efforts
The second nov
City Is Tho Fairy Tale which was
translated from the German of Arthur
Schnltzlcr especially for Madame
Nazlmova by Nina Lewtou and pro
duced by her f6r the first time in
English on the 12th of last Septem
ber The third in the repertoire Is
Ibsens A Dolls house one of Nazl
inovas first successes In English and
undoubtedly one of her greatest In
deed so constant Is the demand that
the actress appear as Nora that it I
has been found I
advisable io
o retain it
In the repertoire rather than Intro
duce a third new play It Is not yet
announced what bills will bo given
Jverc The Messrs Shubert arc send
lug the entire Nazlmova Theater com
I pany en tour with the star
I From Wlnnemucca R Tlajroirn
editor of tho Silver State Wmnomuc
ca Nevada fAn Ogden visitor Io
r nbrts the Humboldl metropolis pros
porous
III
OGDEN
I THEATRE
Th
Tuesday Nov 29
ELLEN BEACH
YAW
Prima Donna Soprano f
Coloratura
Assisted by
MR JAY PLO WE
Solo Flutist
I Late of the Royal Opera Ber
lin
and
MARY NEWMAN
Pianist
8 p m Nov 28th
Seat Sale Monday 10 a m
Prices250 200 160 1
75c and general admission 50c
Next attraction Madame Nazi
mova Wednesday Nov 30th
Seats Tuesday Nov 29th f
10am j
THE
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ANCES BUSINESS AND RE
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r
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