kit i . - i cizzzz:: cu::day jcur:: al. rcr.n:.:;D.r euijday morning jAiru.r.v : 3, isss. r - i1: Stage -Strucl ianclis : Jpates an rv -I eg '( ;- the 1- .1 lUCRD 'ar Mor kind of thU ; . Ttcal Ur, . Tbr r tba'pnu4 ; sUra, who go tbrougb lit m hr to POn tha aUce. with theJr bcada held hlfh. Melnv only what " Ja abora and boyond, and rorfettltif tha . , ,Popa ana tne condlttona Which . !- r rated them to jtardom, f A: .r" ,T:r.T But thara ar th-a. wholhfblt tuch . a world of oommoa aanao In relation to oommoa thln-thkt-thr are. aa Inter I ' aalln jaa liidlvlduala aa they are aa ; .i laura. In thla clan ta Blanche Batea, who ta now making her Urat ateilar vlalt ' I-' to heri native city. . Although Ulaa Batea elalma Callfor v.. bU aa her home atate. having pet moat - of her tire there, ahe wa bora In tble city about well, never mind how many "yeara ago. ' Her parente ware welt known player' in-thoea daya. .'For aome - - time tbey occupied a. theatre -in Ban ,VTaneiaoa Then they mad a trip, to Auatraua. ana while there Mr. Batea waa killed, la an iooJdent. Mra. Batea returned to San TraneUo with " hot , daugliter, and the girl went to training i- v ecltoql to learn to be a teacher. When .'., aha waa graduated aha went to Loa An- - '. galea and taught In kindergarten for i ; ' aome time. ' . - t " Mlea Batea drat experience on the -..V atage'waa about nine yeara .ago. with :f tha NelU-Frawley- atock combination In - Denver, CoL - The young wotnan'a tal ent aoon mantfeeted ttaelf and .before c ',ng1 aha waa playing leading rolea with . Frawley at! tha Calif oral theatre In . , ' Ban Franciaeo. - ; I iil 4 ' hB tJned In experience aha trm ' "ln ambltlom and it waa not long beforf ;. - aha made her flrat appearance In the ' ( "eaat with Frawley, In Waehlngton; D. C ; Auguetln Oaly-wa the-nra of the big maaagera to notice Mle Batea. He r ,-',-a8itred her for one aeaaon. Then Froh-t .man and Belaaco, whq war at that time - partnera, took her Into their oamp.- After another aeaaon there waa difficulty be- ' tweW Frohman and Belaaco. . Belaaco i-took Mlaa Bate with him and after ' aeaaon of th unauooeeeful comedy, -Naughty Anthony." i In which - Mlaa Batea changed etockinge on the' ataga '(Belaaco. '.never . ceald ... caak ' people ''" i lanahlL. cam Madame Butterflv tha dainty and pathatio creation of oBn A " ' Vutber Long, framed -for th ataga by " Uavid Belaaco. While It waa running t ',, Belaaco'a theatre It waa the talk of New ' Irork. Ita aueoeaa encouraged tha ool-j laboratora to a mora ambltloua effort, ..s. i "The Darling Tof tha Ooda" waa tha re-. v eult. Long furniahlng ail thiJapanea ; Ideaa and data and Belaaco "unwritlng lb for the etage." aa one crltlo - re- markedr Thla waa deatlned to be Mlaat Batea' triumph, aa muctv aa the trl- , umph of the ereator. and aver alnce the . flrat ' performance in - Waahlngton No . vember 10, 102 lta aucceaa haa. been , contlnuoua. ; " .' .'V "?".' i . But to return to Blanche Batea. Ther , are acorea of exam plea of her peraonal . charm " and kindly dlapoaltion which --"-might be elted. ' It la j of the price paid for being "atarrad'i receive lltar- ally acorea of Jettere In; every city from eung women who are ambltloua to be- a ctrcaaear ancT TMlaa Batea : aaya r ' . - that many- rth queriea which - reach ' ber.are alrooat patbetlo In their lnno i ' cenoe- ; . . :--- ' "' . -'My friende all tell m that I am i.: very .handaome." one girt wrttea, ""and when 1 went fo tolghTachool ' they aaM - r'f that my elocution waa- ftrat-claaa. ."Do -' ron think I-could be an actreaa, and. " what'ehould I do tlratT; - - v .- 'I have atudled at 4 dramatlo aehoot Tii'-r" Jnontng now." Another, form - of tha Inquiry, "and where would be the ' V; , 'H.. t .v : J - Mm 't '..'sv.'!; ' aOi ,t ossip or Dome K '. KA-WOLF" By u Jack London, v Br far th great J - e,t. novel of th year, there has been ao much written - i regarding It, thar la W ltttl-ew or orlalnal left for th lat reviewer to X - '. say. L)ka all great aterlea It hak its " aevere erltlc. It admirers -and an - enormoua ctrcuUtlonj but It appealing ;. qualltlea are largely (.a tmatter of per- J - ' malna' undisputed and if which ther . can be not two -opinions, namoiy, ua .-" I- brutal atrength. f: . ' " T ) It id the atory of a young Callfornlan. L - J. who- had been reared in the lap of lux- . . nil, wnn u hwwil muwi m . '-.U'livlng. and whoaixnly occupation wai ';oft. literary nature,' who meeting.. with ant accident In Baa Francisco bay Waa jV picked up by "Tha Ohoat," n Outbound sealer; and pressed Into-aerVIca aa one A;, of her-crew. During the voyage Wolf ;- Iarsen, th captain; undertakes to work out hla theory by' putting th young ' miil, Humphrey Van-Weyden, "Upon hie 0Wn" leg," and provtnr-to him that the -' law of nature- le aimply one Of brute ; force the etrong oatlng up the weak. L; T make a romance ef th etory, while -r-tth vessel le In the far north. It plcka V.jup a castaway boat from tha wrecked Z-ateame -"TohlOv and Maud Brewster . . comes into tba scene. This romance ia ; th Only weak spot in th book. Aa r" aimply a atory .of, the eeai: rwouldrrb . oh of tremendous force-and power, put v One In which a weak, fraU girl aeema In- '' congruou and .out of-piece. Of courae aha la a receaaary lay. figure, aa Mr. : Loadon ha' worked out hla plot, hut with 'his resourceful Imagination.' a .'.good a prooiem,'and a far better atory, .' could have been evolved without brtng- ing Maud Brewster,' With Iter rather In ' slpld character, ' Into It. . But her. Intro .' duotlon In It makea "a thread of rd , ' tmanca runhing through lt"'which aeema :' ., almost necessary for a certain claaa of ',; .readers. . .'.- - '-. '.'', - ") v tt .- Anyon ' who ha' foltowed " Mr.' Lon ;. don' i phenomenal career, knows, bow--.- 'ever, that there le alwaye something deeper than a dlapoaltion to please the . ", reeder or Just th , atory underlying everything ha has written, and that, : abov and beyond. ' being a good etory--' - teller he haa theories which make hla 7 "books welt worth studying, for much of -' his best thought appears In th guloe sf .nctlon, and perhaps will continue to so appear , until his .wlnga hare ptrepgth 'ened for greater flight, ; ' . , . . flom one haa called "Tha Beth-Wolf tha greatest allegory . since - Pilgrim! Progress appeared. . Thla may . be a .:;:.. aomewhat eaaggs rated estimate of tt, ,, ? but looking at If from the viewpoint of an allegory, th author haa certainly worked It out with depth and under- Stndlng. , -;,...-..', rf : Wolf . Laraen and Humphrey ; Yan ' ' Way fl an atand - - f or . contending - f orcea -f which ar being fought out upon the . . sealer "Qhoat," which, rwlth It varied types of sailors and huatera. each rep . Y resenting eome dlatlngulahlng trait of r- th animal, man, fairly rep rea en ta the - ' world. , ,': ' ' , .. ' - Wolf Larsen-stands for brut, force ' entrenched behind an Intelligence aa . strong and powerful aa his muacle. but wholly-devoid of -moral reaponalblllty. and whor can conceive of no ether , hypothesis to baa one'a conduct of life . j upon, than self. In the most degraded conception Of tha word. ..- ' L'u: :.t7 5 i Vvi-'l II l' rr- beat plac to apply for an vngagementr Still another common on lat "I have had a lot 1 experience In. private, tha- axrloala. , .how long will It be, do you think, before. I can get poeltlon aa tarT"- . While many - ( th 'lnqulriea are ao hopeleaaly bopeleaa that it la eelf-evtdent that tha writera do not know even auf ftclent of the very' rudiment, of what la required of an', actreta, , aim Mlaa Btea baa a'ahort atock anawer which aha eenda to ail tha ambltloua one. ; "My own expertance,". aha aaya. "haa taught m ha among th.e moat Im portant of te Ablnga I know -are the thing I learned la, a etock company. It makea one alert, it teaehea'you to learn quickly,' and It teachee you to adapt youraelf to Circumetancea. Toii learri th alphabet of the language that la apokao beiflnd the footllgbt. Tou learn tha - addition and eubtraction of theatrical -mathematao.- And yon learn them more quickly there than anywhere elaa. ' There are dramatic acboola which bav done arid are doing good work but many' people who can look graceful on tha wooden pony In a merry-go-round cut aorry figure whan pe robed on rea) aaddle- ta the back of a -live bora. What yau learn In a 'atock eom- riny I practical and "permanent, and know of no other place where on, can learn ao well,",- .v.- - . - Like aU tha tr "brought out" by David Belaaco, Mlaa Bate la an ardent admirer of that acknowledged, monarch of atagecrafUAa a rule , the pub! to-la not 'much Intereeted in theatrical mana- gera and ,their buameee- affaira. The people who pay their money to aee nlav want to get-taelr'Tnony .worth. - If they are aatiafied they don't care a con tinental whether the production I owned; by John Bmith or Bin Jenee, and' (hoe managera who -eonaider themaelvea 'of personal Importance to the people who patroniae play houaea are away .off In their reckoning.--- : -'-r.-v,--., . Belaaco, however, la a atrlklng exceji tlon. - He haa a peraonallty ao Imprea atva that one la aim oat atartled bn meet ing him. - Uo ia the kind of man we point to In crowd and Bay "Who ia thatr There la nothing'ebout hla tailor. Ing- that attraota notice, nor doee he roaembl 'walking advertleemenb for a Jewelry etor when he Appear on th treat. - The pooreat burtaaque manager of a fly-by-nlght (how la tb United Btatea ' carrlea more Jewelry In i eight than Belaaco haa owned In the 'whole eourae of hi life. ' He ha none Of the mark of the traditional tlteeftalcat man. lndaedVn-looka7raiet clergy- man than anything one can think of. He Invariably appeere In Mack elothea from head io foot. He wear straight white-collar, rauoh like the teck af fected by th Cathollo -clergy. nd" tho button in hi 'euf fa are made of white bone, -- He la utterly unaffected, . and apenda it or II minute after lunch la converaaUon with a newsboy known ae "Dumprv" who aella papere ia front f th Belaaco theatre, In New York pity. - That Mlaa. Bate failed to resist hla magnetism - la made clear in . her 1 guage. .. .n-j , "Htage managera a a rule. -ah : 1kre martineta and are dreaded by actor folka. The work of rehearsing a, pany of player' and, producing a big play la aa enterprise of such anormoua magnitude and taxea pn man' anergtaa and tamper t ao great a degree that an oocaaional violent rag la admitted to be a prerogative Of all ataara man- gara...-, Indeed. ..ther Ar it when ataga manager -become so abuatv that nnlrc WF I Si W W kF 1 I feet antlUteels, phyhloally and morally, and representing th ; nltruiatlqj and ethlcak Meal of society, r jn the other characters of the' book each playa hla neoeeeary part,, walla these twa work oua the problem of eplrltual .and maT terlal aupremaoy, and all. being taken to gether caa be readily reoognlsed aa the oontendkng forceo of life, i , .. The gradual ascendency' of mind 'over material .and the anal Victory I 'the RMt moil? af tha atortf r . . . ' isealde the atory and ite lesson an other element, entera lit-which moat be given .Placo In th summing up of uhe book, land that is the authorV magnlO- oent 1 descriptions bf th northern eeaa. Which are auperb and could only be con ceived through actual experience; There la a reality, ... wild ptetureequeneee about them that but. few wrttera have evercaught, or been able to make you fact 'all over, aa you. do here, fairly taetmg the salt spray -or groping through tba darkneaa and intenatty of th breaking etorra.. or again shivering anuer tne glittering teei , or lba north em stars. : -. ..w...-? .. ... Strong, vfr-lle and forceful, the est ting are in perfect keeping with the charactera or taeDatery. Th book haa an appropriate cvr .design and la well Hhwtrated, ItfacMlllan -Company. 'Price ., "?n to the',n,jBy7wiliiam iBey mour Edwards. Ja a aeriea of lettera u horn friends, ..which he waa afterward Induced to put-Into book form, Mr. Ed ward relate hla observations and ad venturea during, a -tvTo montha trip taaen oy nirpeeir ana wire to Alaska. They make th-usual tourist route through th great lakes and over the Canadian Pacific taking a ateamer to Skagway, gotug from ther to Dawson, and returning over the, earn general route, making aeverat aide trip of inter est and worthy of note, but what seems to be unaccountable) avoiding the lnalde peasage, thereby omitting from hla Itin erary Sitka and Juneau, th former being almost tha Mecca for tourist and stu dents of Alaska, - From, th time they travel through: the treat wheat seglone of Canada to hla earcaatlo remarks on the mining regulations of the Northwest territory Mr. Edwarda shows himself a keen observer and drawa aome logical conclusions well worth consideration. , Hla trip through Alsska waa made six years too iar to eaten jttia wUd. .plctua asquenesa of th Klondike country or to aee th Alsska 'miner In hla primitive aurroundlngs, and no book that falla abort of that time can do the great baaln er the Yukon or th chain of lake lead ing to It with, it a motley crew of gold aeekera. Justice: but Mr. Edwards' "la to tho Yukon." where th trust to hla bwn observations, la a valuable bletory of the country aa it exiata today tn Ite aeoond ataga of subservience tto th vase of man. We ua th wordg "his awn obser vation" - advleediy. fori throughout he developa a faculty for1 meeting people and extracting Information not nearly ao reliable aa hla own Judgment,' and aome time wholly without foundation In fact : For obvious reasona It Ja a matter of regret and Portiand'a mlafortupe that he did not meet eome old-time friend. s be did tn Seattle and Tacoma. who would have shown him th city and exploited tta greatness, peat and future. . Leaving Taeoma, h - write: . "We boarded the night express for Portland. The country between thla city and Ta coma ia said to b rough, gad unsettled, and not Tit foe even lumbering or' pres ent cultivation, ao wedld not regret the travel st night." .What doe Olympla, Chehalia, Centrallsi and the many other fin 'town pa seed through on -this 'night express"' think of this unsettled hnd iTnflt conditlonf , ; In th same letter he says: - "The third great center of the Ufa of thla northwest coast-Is Portland., Already Se attle outstrip it In population, ao a Portland man admitted to ma yesterday. ' Portland ta a wealthy and eub- atantlal city a city for tha elderly and well-to-do, vThtle Seattle 1 the city for the young man and-the future." Aa the writer, did not - tarry-' long enough In Portland to personally In ttgate, hla prognostications fnuat have come second band, while census attla. Uca, bank cleajinga. etc., die-pro re what a Portland .man. (Tr told him. When,) however, Mr. .Edwards is left to his owni unoiaaea oonaiusnma, as was on Ing a-trlo tip the tMiumbia.. Jr aaaln awinga rouna. -to piumnj - Again weina- Ing the tourist s trait, he return 14 nl home in west Virginia via aouthern California."- r-rf.?- j Deviating from th usual rout but lit tle In thla day of "globe-trotting," the boeg; might not attract. but paaalng ao- t toe if U were-not for Its profusion of original and beautiful Uuatralona ll picture taken by . the ' author and Ma' wlf and exquialtely reprodTced' In half tone. : Many mignt do specially men tioned If space permitted, for we; who have grown tired of "Klondike views." appreciate good one when we aee them. Two. however, deserve special mention one being the exquisite picture of "Bun Dogs" n page ITT. and "Moonlight on Lake Le barge," page lit. The book la well bound tn delicate gray linen, with red and black totem cover design. 1 Tbe Robert Clark company, rrlce $1.59. , A New'Ruaalan Story." Soon to be publlehed by A. &' Barnea 4a Co. . Th varloua atrangely changing phaae of th ematvo movement in Russia for parliamentary representation - Illustrate n aspect of what haa been termed the revolutionary movement, it neppena. curiously enough, that very little haa be4n made known to tha outalde- world of the exact' lifer adventure- and alma of tha Inner circle of tha Russia revo lutionists, and atmoat all notion that haa dealt with the subject has been written from- tne outalde, and haa been far from alcturlng tha etrangeneae Of tha actual; condlttona. Now that the Internal affairs of Russia, and the dra matic possibilities of th future' are brought dally before the world. It I of peculiar Interest to know that A. Cahaa I completing a novel of atrlklng char acter which he haa bean engaged upoti for a long time, picturing the actual Inner life of Ruaala and th atrange adventure of th revoluttonteta. i . Mr.Cahan Waa a member of the revo lutionary party and . fled from Ruasp to avofd BHbcrla. ' ... - J "Poultry1 Keeping as an. Industry. By Edward Brown, secretary of tha Na tional Poultry organisation eoolety; , -- Since th last edition of thla book waa published the work has been greatly enlarged and revised. Several chapter have been entirely rewritten and. new :-c,'-:.' - - f;-' .' -.: - ' - '' ' feti BLANCHE BATES: Gdbdty I .tat Ike 2 - a- c l fTTHB old-time- mthstre! treP show Is . -1 surely a thing of jth peat." . , 1 ald th old -theatrical mana- ,T gar. 'I've aeen the 'thing that will deaf It Ita aolar piexua mow. -i "Everyone, of course, la familiar with the up-to-date minstrel show, partlfu-j larly the flrat part, where th minatreie sit around la a seml-Clrclo, spring their gaaa and do their song atunta. iTThat parxf tha -modern mlnatrel ahow- la th only. reminder of th good old-blackface daya.': Well,. the moving picture maohlne ia going to aettla that. -. ' i , . . waa invited . the -other -day-- to- a prtvate rchearaal of a new aet of moving pictures, and-what 'do you suppose It waaT- The 'picture : dleplayed a first pari minstrel-ahow. and I'll be bleeaed If It .didn't look like th real thing. It takea ! miautea fotr b ptcturea to be unwound. '. - V' r ..:, ..J'ln a darkened theatr with the proper llgbta on th canvas It 1 aurprtstng how lifelike these -picture are.? tiva first shows the minstrel standing with the Interlocutor in the center. . -- " Oentlemenr be seated.' aaya a vole from behind th canvas, and they all Bit down aa if they had Ufa and blood in 'em,. -. - '.- . -. , , - . . "Now, we'll have tha opening) chor ua. says th sate voice, and tevertr can-, vaa coon opena hla mouth, a If he waa U111 r ' chapter have been added.' A 1 large aeriea -of Illustration haa1 been Intro duced, with plana. In many case from photograph.- - "Thla "Is to our mind," say th Farming World, "the moat u-4 ful book of th kind that haa ever been publlehed. .-' The author keep practical utility la the foreground all through the work, and aa a result wa av a book brimful of moat useful' Information," Longman. Green dt Co. 1 Price...! 1. , The Incorporation and- Organisation of , Cerporatlona" By - Thomaa ' Oold Froet, ia member f th 'New York bar. Thla la a practical guide to the forma tion of business corporatlona under the law ef every atate. Th book furnishes full lostrurtlona as to drafting charters, holding meetings, gives th decision of th court a. Interpreting every section of th several acts, and all other necessary Information.- Th book I announced for immediate publlcatlea by Little, Brown Co. of; Boeton.- . - - ,r - ; kfagaxincs. - ,t. The' February Delineator amouV an anusually large number .of good articles containa on worthy of special mention. and which will be of great Interest to. musicians, "Orand opera on Ita Trar ala.f Marina, "that oerhani thoaa who tar enjoyed grand opera at tha Metro-"was f ir ":rr& singing. 4 Ther I an, openlu, ng cl but it la aung by a live tha cajiKus.- .--. "Thea tha Interlocutor rlaei.sjnd aak Brodieri Bones, on bia-lfft a question. The brother on the light give vole to loud guffaws. : You csn see them 1h the picture,' and It gives you a kind of un canny feeling tUl you realise that ..the volcee com from behind the screen. '" "Brother Brown will now' sing that beautiful ballad. "Who Threw the Mualt In Father'e Facet"' aaya the Interlocu tor after hla 'gag converaaUon with tho two end men. .. . V"Ae th Interlocutor makea hla an nouncements. he stands up, nd when he Introduces the singer... tbe-aloger steps forward to the renter ami front of the stage. The. canvas minstrel open his moutn ana tne real tenor singer behind the acreen doea the ainglnr.a That ,1a the way thla particular minstrel show la run to th end. - I " --"It; 1 varprlslng how real It ts. The man who originated this quick action mlneti-show-harcPTr1ghted-It and has spent. tt.OOO In rehearsing and. get ting it ready fori the atage. He had to have . a -whole troupe of blackface men originally, and- had to . drill, them well before he could. ait the picture machine man at work. t- ' , "Now that if Is tn working order Mt will ' only take uttfic" men id preeent It, One man will -do khe announcing. With the quartet he! Will be hidden, behind the acreen.' Th additional man will be needed to work th light and tha ma chine. . .. t "The ahow wilt aoon be aeen in the continuous houses and I think the plo tura minstrels will make th real black face men take to the woods! Anyway, th thing Is a novetty-and well) worth t,4 n v " - ' .,.' . V - m. . - . . , , . .... J i polttan In New , York do not reallae.thslr gooa fortune, ani to properly apprfoiale It- they ahould gq with It "on the road after the Kew York aeason closes, where it nas to o given tn sKatlng rinks, taber nacle or atux -building that can, b found arga enough to aocommodat Ita heeds. On Its travels grand opera, encounters hot a few vicissitudes, and to bear Up under ' all their experlencea requlrea a sense of th humorous In the artists. But that ther are compensatlona to cheer their spirits msy be gathered from tha Interesting photographa accompany ing th article, which represent the great Bfhgere tn poses entirely unfamiliar to the habitues of the opera.,. Thla collec tion waa preeented by Mr.' Mapleaon to th queen of England and gracloualy accepted by her. -. . . - ( "Thi Llbertjr.vof Florentlnb.' Th real hero bf thla story, which -appeared In MoClare'e for .'January, has turned ap to Indianapolis. Ua la a young Cuban, once a reconcentrido. named Florentino Altequero.- The atory in which be fig ured Is by Charles Fleming Embree. and deacrllbea the rebuff of a young Cuban who can't find "liberty" In the X'nited State. - He -can't find it in the public school because they call him "nigger." j and he can't work because they call him "scab. Thr only square deal he got In th reform school. on would .euppoao he. waa driving a bard of .Mlaaouri mules inatead of In etructlng an Intelligent company of men and women.;., - - - - ' ' - "There Is a certain man In Nctw York, producer of a number .of greWt ataga spectacles, who once threw a chair at th head of an obtuse leading wan be cause he mispronounced word. -while the language and mad erica of another well-known stage director are proverbial along Broadway, in New ' York, where actora gather on . the corner to talk ahop." ., f "Belaaco,' however,' takes aa his text the old adageV tha( ye may drive a hora to water but you can't make him drink.' .. He argues with the players under hla direction until they think aa he thinks, and then be gradually moulda them .'into the part which they are to play, i He has 'been credited with poa eeaslflg hypnotla power) for his euccesa Is due to the fact that he achieve hit purpose by 'insinuation' rather thaa by command."" ', -' - - -. "Belasco'e dhipoaltlon ia kind because lie baa uch perfect control over hla temper. - That be la a nan of passionate nature and atrength . of character has been proved again and airain, by hie un dying opposition -to the theatrical -trust. Against overwhelming .$dds, against, in' fluence find money, he has -waged and la still waging an Implacable fight tnat will 'Ultimately end either In the oblivion of hla enemtea or bis own partial defeat. Ona thing ia certain that either in defeat of victory Belaaco cannot be relegated toj oblivion. He la too great an axtlat. and 'While he.eoatlnuee as aa active pro ducer of pi bye the public Willi. Insist on the right to witness his handiwork. I e,t Bvldene of hla atrengfti l'r character Ilea in Ihls. very power of same Kinaneaa ana eonaiaeration ior an unimportant -supernumerary - that - he ahowa for a leading man or woman, and no matter how much he may -be dis turbed and excited by the - nnneceaaai t mistake of aome thoughtless player, he never permit an unkind word to 'escape his Upa." f . Aa Incident which lllustratea lila won derful control, and whloh also acoounts for th fact that Belaaco never carries a watch, occurred ' awhile 'The Darling of the Oods" waa In) rehearsal. , Jt waa the first dreaa renearaal of tha drama and things were running amooth ly. Not a stngle mistake had been made. Belaaco with hla prematurely white head bent upon hla breast, and hla coal-black hypnotla aye riveted on the ataga, was watching every detail of the perform ance.- - ' - r Suddenly the blare of trumpeta which announce the arrival . of the outlaw. Prince. Kara, rent the air. ' And It did rend the air. ' It tore the atmosphere Into- ' Jagged atrip. - For on . of the muslciana had struck a horrible, false,, flat note that ruined Kara's entrance, and- tha whole effect of the music It was. Ilk . throwing a handful of "mud upon the statue of Venus. . Belasco gasped, his features assumed QrABpina hla Jorehead. wlthbla .long, whit - hand he reA up the oreheatra stele and dlaappoared, behind' the-curtain. .' -'-. '-. - v--' ' It was- Impossible to continue the re hearsal without him: MlBa Batea asked"' someone to And mm. and . tr. Roeder. general manager, of the, Belaaco com- panlea. volunteered fo look. He-found Belaaco behind the cnrtala. tha rage .upon him. beating tha wail with ht hands. - In -hi clenched fist he held his magnificent gold ..watch, which ha had abetters into blta. . . - .1 Tke' Risal Joe BowaSfsb1 j (From th New York Herald,) . D URINQ A recent vieit to cameron. Mo., former senator js. w. Ma jor of Pike county,' Mo told the true atory of Joe Bowers and 1ie lnvraetal ballad.' '' H ' According to Major, the traveler from Pike waa not, aa currently auppoaed, aa Imaginary hero, neither waa: hla aweet- heart fickle, nor IS ther any Tecord of her. having maxrleil . butchef, whose hair waa awful redV Jo Bowers waa born In a Plkh county log cabin Vi 1H.. Before h pasaed boyhood Ma fathers death -compelled hlm to forego th .prtaltmr education kfforded In thoaa daya, and to help hla brother Ike In aupportlng hla widowed mother. Alternately tilling the aoll and laboring In. a mill.. Jo Bo Were showed jm rare -ajuaUtle. aave his devotloir to hie "old mammy." v. -In--th prta of 114.- however. Joe obtained -employment In a maple sugar camp, and this led to the turning point In hla-career:- Carrying water one oar from the maple tree to th kettle, hit came upon his employers aaugnier. Sallv Black. th belle of Plk. Tho, aequenc of n incident Itkwthat 1 )ro ma nee, and In tha case of Joe and saiiy th law wafulfUla But Jo was poor, and whenbe naked Sally to become hi wife ahe hesitated and remembered that Joe's loitering be. tween calls ' to whlape to tier had not strengthened his chancea-for-Derraanent emplovmerit with Peter Black. So she pictured to Joe the desirabltfty of first hiving a home. t ' Th California gold fever waa at Ita Piker, had organised a band of fiy gold hunters, and their train waa prepared n mnva. - iaa Rowera Immediate! r en listed and, despite the pleadings Of his old mammy" and hla brother, be started adros th platna aa a bull driver aad a privileged servant of Captain McPlke. , file waa also assigned the special duty of eceut, which required him to precede the wagona before night time hnrl select a camp alt. This waa perrormeol ao Ju diciously that Joe aeon commanded more than ordinary respect among th travel ers, and attracted th attention of one Frank Swift, afterward governor of Cal ifornia, Who saw In Jo a rough dia mond.: - . ' ,' ' -, . , . On day Swift reduced to verse the kv atory narrated byl Jor Bowerav and a few evenings later, while tho party were gathered about the camp fir, and while Joe' was entertaining .them In in imitable' fashion, ha waa Interrupted by th reading aloud Of Swlft'i ballad. It waa tha flrat time any Jok had been perpetrated at hla aspens, 'and it made a hit.'- - 7 ; , i-:--- ' Before the Western elopes had been reached every man In the party had com mitted tha rhyme to memory, and a few month later It found Its way back to Pike county, where- it waa first pub lished in the Salt River Journal. In California the poem waa set to a tuna, and for y- n l tt-' se-v sunt en the Paelflo "- i. jt All tha 'Way . v. ("They are waiting for. yoi( tot return, said Mr. Roeder. ... ... "Then take that muelcian away," erl1 Brlnsco. ."'Put him out of the theatre." "Why. did you not break' hla horn In atead of your watch V asked the general manager, i; it coat mucn le.as. - "Beruu,' Waa the eply. It would have Injured Ms feelings to humiliate him before, his brother musldana. On aeoond thought, don't put htm out. ' Qo to him quietly atd tell him not to plav . again during rehearsal until he ha had an opportunity ' tu practice the muale. ; The-poor fellow may Have, a-spark ef -art somewhere In bis aoul an4 1 don't ' want to hurt him." ? - - . ' Mlsa Bates aald tb other day: i "There ia a saying on Broadwav'that 'Beiuaco can make an actor put lit an Indian cigar sign.' Of course.- noli of -' ue under hi management clatma ktrishlp to an JndUtn cigar start: neverthclees the Baying contains muchOf ruth,",, Of her self she aaldi : ' j. ' -' ; ;'. iiL TOne i thing'TTim thankful for I my splendid health'.- It haa. been tlio boon of my existence- "Aside from a few tem porary illnesses. I have tWh. a strong, healthful woman. i-. ' "When"! have been vexed and dtscour- - '. aged- by-the -obataclea-of llfe," when the" feminine moment had arrived far 'good I- . cry I always found glHj solace in' re-'J peating. 'What' tha dlfrerenc ao long,, aa I bav my health T . t, .. ' "I ride horseback every day. .'.But rid- r ing wa indirectly the cause of a lot of trouble for me at Bt. Loula ' Bhortly after arriving there, , during the early -. part of August, I Jumped from myhors -on morning and landed on a particular ly hdtd atone wrlth my left foot X felt . a. pang of pain and then tried ta for- get -It - ' ..... - i i j. '. r - - "Somehow I could not forget It. My. ' nerves insisted that I should remember. ."That night at tha performance it hurt me ao badly that 1 felt an inclination to limp. Otherwise, however,. I felt bo well -that I refused to limp and Just let, It hurt, -.r r " . ! ... ' ''During" the week -lt became worse. ty - mother Insisted - upon f calling a physician.- He eame. n said. that it " waa a bad com on the sole of my foot. I shan't Bay what I called him. though it is certain be did: not tell th truth. Also he was Invited to return. "Within two- daya ;two -other phyal- olaaa -followed him both In and out They both said tt waa a corn. '' . . . ' , "I sent for a specialist. He Imme- ' dlately: pronounced it a ' dangerous tumor and ordered absolute -root That ' - waa lovely. It Bounded ao much nor Important. - A tumor! Aht . Now I thought," I am forced to-close- my - - -engagement and go to bed. the tvewa papers, under ny elrcumatanc,- can not say It waa a corn., i . "Jst imagine a headline reading! something like-' thla:'' . r -, CORNS DRIVE BLANCHB BATES . FROM. 8TAQE. - ; Actress Has Don to Bed With 'a Sore -Foot, Temporarily Closlna Theatre. -"Tghf Think of trying to-draw a matinee-eudionc after- auch a -report. ' " "Well; to make a abort story shorter, the doctor called at. th theatr every night until th end of the 'St Loula-. run. which lasted .e-ver--four -nfonths, and treated the troubleaomo foot. . I did not get .well until f very cad of th "' :1 engagement In the meantime, nlevlnv ' -4every night, 1 Buffered greet pain. The . ooy witn a atone bruise will sympathise with me. ' But my good health per mitted m to-conquer the pain l-which-. ; might have caused many -woman to ' faint"- --;.'.',. ... '-'..,. . . : of th eong a orlgiintIlj,'"pu: bltaoad,' were. - ... . My nam It la Jo Bowera, ': ,' ;-I'v got a brother Ikj-,... X came from, old Missouri, - !,- -j t 2 . jaJI th way from Plka s - ' tell yon why I lft ther,.-, - And how g cam to roam, ., ; '. ,And leave my poor old mammy V So far 'away-from home. 'Jt.1:-. V.. .i L ' , . ? , .. -nl weed to love a gat there, '-" -'Her nam waa Sally Black. I asked her for to marry (mav She aald It waa a whack. . . " -Bri- says to me, "Je Bowers; , ' ' Before w hitch for ltf -You ought to have a little horn ' j To keep your Uttl wtre. , i .-.' -.--.--'. . . .- . .-;...', -V'-'- Saya I. "My dearest Sally, . " ''v O, SallyV for your aake. jin :go to traiirorny ' - - - And try to raise a stake.' ." . . - Bars she to m, -Joe Bowera, " "-' You ar the inhap to wtn."-- ''. - Gave me a kiss to-seal the bargaJa ' ' .vl Ard thrbwed doaen in. I'll never forget my feelings . When I bid adieu to all. J - x Sal Just cotched m around tha neck ' And I began t bawL t ,Wben I aot In they all commenced. y How they all took on and cried -.-. j The day I left old Pike.. - - ' ' : " -4- - ".....-' - " Whwl got'fOtMa her count rjr , , I hadn't naryred. - C V I had auch wolfM feeling! v i'; I' wished' myaelf meet dead. At lei)to,jr went . to mining, Pat 'In. my blggeet licks, r . ; Came down upon the bowlder -.-r Just like a thousand rlcka. 5 , .I worked hoth lale and early, . .. In rain and aun and enow;- -nut it waa woramg tor my Bsiiy, j . - 8o -Hwaa all the earn to Joe. . - f . - I made a very lucky etrlke. i; jvAe the gold Itself did tell. ' . ; . For I waa working for-my Sally, 1 ' - - The gal I loved bo well, i r , :.r-. . - - ' .But on day I got a 'letter 'J From my dear brother Ike, j '". t cem from old Missouri, , - Yea aiLthe way from Pike. Ml , -. -It told me th gokierndest newt;.'.' That ever you ' did .hear. -. y ..r ' My heart It la a buatln. z ' : -V B pray excuse ,11x1 tear, -'.-'- -j It aaki tny Rat waa ftcfcT . . , , 4 Her lov for m bsd fledi--. that aha had manic a botcher. - : -Whoee hair waa awful red. ..;. . It told me more'than that ' ' . , tt'a enough to make me swer, ' , . It aald Sally had a baby--- And th baby bad. red naif. J ' '', ; ' ' , 4 , .. :,'"''' "'"-T ' Joe Bowers neve rettirned to Pike ; ermnty. He died pennllmHi and among etrangere tn tha gold field, and M rest ing place I unknown. Wla Tsfra. tMwxm. Mr. Orlmee Whr dldi-i y o lend Mrs. Jlmmerrr-- " dear? Mr Cri er-- ' ' rr -TV