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Show THE MORNING EXAMINER Part Two OGDEN 230 'vOlTIvNQ. CITY, SUNDAY UTAH, AUGUST MORNING, 1907. IS, SATURDAY AT null M ' fl" I 1 1 imiiililWHUIIIItHllimitmilllllHnilllll numiMtiinm MISS JESSIE H niiliullinmmil III II I HI I " H m . 1.1. i.i.i.j PRICE FIVE CENTS G-RA- H 1.1.1.11,1 ntiinn,uiMt.wii ' BUSLEY WILL OPEN THE SEASON 11 SI 111 I I I II I I 1 . 1 ... u ....... . -I..I.LJ.1 ....... . t ' I ...... ' Wr w ' j. Pages 9 to 16 v . . . , ! i 4 m I . f . .' . . ' - . f ' f. J ,, . ' I w .v ; 1 , ; , 4 j 'i JESSIE BUSLEY AS NANCE OLDEN ! JESSIE BUSLEY AND HALLETT THOMPSON. I H 1 1 mHMm.frnmi h-hhiii i kihh hh iuiiiihVi h-h wn mhiihi ii n mimtwwHiw mijii that It is New - 1 . Miss Jessie Busley BISHOPS CARRIAGE Saturday Evening Thit the theatrical season of Ogden anapldoualy, Ii.now a for-w- will open e oondualon, a Mr.-- R. A. Grant, the local manager of the theatre baa ucceeded In arranging with Meaan. Uebler Jun ii A Co., of New York, for a engagement of Mlaa jeirie Bus-- . In The Bishop's Cnrrlage. reininbered that Mlae J es-- e Busley with her company, appear-- d here last aeaaon in. thla play and than a favorable Jmpree-mn- . Thla season Llebler A - Cbm-w- y bare surrounded Mlaa Busier bt tte nctibg organl-- , that has ever appeared, upon the row, and It la expected that the suc Hona 1 1 1 1 1 H 1 1 1 1 111 Hill I III cess last season will be more than duplicated. . The appearance of Mine Bualey will mark the opening of the regular theatrical season In thla city, and ' the fact that thla attraction hna been secured, la due to the untiring efforts of Mr. R. A. Grant. Mlaa Bualey is ode of the most experienced actresses of the younger school. Her variety, of parts during the last eight yean la undoubtedly greater than that of many of the compatriots of her stand lug who have been seen here, and ss some guarantee of her quality it may bo mentioned that by far the larger part of her dramatic life has been spent under the Charles Frohman banner. The first Important part ever played by Mias Bualey was that of Fan Kan, the boy In "The Two Little Vagrants, which waa produced at the Academy of Music In New York In 1898. In rapid succession followed, "Pamela,, the listening girl In "The Nanoeuvres of Jane, at Daly's, the mualc hall singer in "Hearts Are Trumps " with Daniel Frohmana si stock company; the boy "Pedro with Vjr.HH 1 1 1 lltlHW JESSIE BUSLEY. In In tlie Bishop's Carriage; , "The William Ksvert ham In asserting "Two Schools," "Tweeney in "The Admirable Crichton with William Gillette, "Mtdra Loney In "Little Mary at the Empire Theatre, "Ms In Mrs. Lefflngwells Boots, and on her first and only trip to San Francisco she was a member of Henry Miller s stock company, playing Annie Russel's part In "Mice sal Men," and the comedy in "Joseph Entangled, which received Its first presentation In San Francisco. In engaging Mlaa Busley to star Id "In the Bishops Carriage, Mr. Geo. C. Tyler, the managing director of IJebler A Co., said he had picked her out from a boat of possibilities as much because of her experience In many roles, aa because of her adaptable personality for the part of Nance Olden In the play. It la not too much to say that Mlaa Bualey la one of the most promising of the rising actresses of the day. Those who hive seen Mlaa Jessie Busley In her most recent role, thst of Nance Olden In the play, "In the Bishop's Carriage, are unanimous in 18111111111 I frfrH-H-- W W-H-t-'- H I miiiiiMW-HmiimHiiimHifrimititminnnmiiiniiiiit- Interesting and powerful characterisation this young actrpM bin ve r attempted, and this Is by 11 self an assertion of importance, for during her comparatively short career upon the stage Mine Bualey has swayed a number of roles. However the part of the girl thief in the play seems to be particularly suited to this actress personality, or' H carried with it a wealth of tense feeling that la part and parcel of the part itself, and a carefully worked out study In soul- . awakening that la of absorbing inter-it- Clown; the French oocotte in the ( 1111111 by far the most f The whole play Is a carefully built structure tbit has for its base a firm study in psychology, and this Is said to grip the audience strongly, for one may sit there anj watch the gradual awakening of the better nature of a young girl who hsa been steeped In an atmosphere of criminality, by tbs purifying message of a great love that lifts her up oet of the alums and places her upon a solid bail of respectability. It Is In the struggle with herself that la to be found the greatest element of the play, and thla. IWfrHri 1 1 II I I I M-- !! ; ; together with the Mm.rhabivv.il dramatic iltuaUona, have .' been reeolved Into a P'ay that has proved of more than ordinary attractiveness to the average theatre-guer- . Associated with Mlaa Bualey will he found Hallet Thompson, Harry English, George Gaston, Virginia Reeves, Ruth Lloyd, Maud Monroe, and Pauline Palmer. . , ' In selecting Miss Jessie Busley for the principal role In the play. "In the Bishop's Carriage, Mr. George C. Tyler, the executive heed of Uebler A Co., was guided aa much by the young actress' experience in various strong dramatic rules, i by anything else. When he first made the announcement that he bad signed a contract to star Miss Busley, he said that in bis opinion aha should hare been given thst opportunity five years before. That hla Judgment wee excellent, those who have Been the play have no hesitation In saying, for Mlaa Busley has achieved a veritable triumph In the portrays 1 of the character of Nance Olden, the girl thief of the play. The play deala frankly with the . III I II II lit IW11 111111111111111111111111 criminal, Nines Olden, a young girl thief, and the problemAccorded by her reclamation. It la a well known fact, Btatlstlca of our criminal aay, that class are the very young; consequently the many societies scattered throughout the United States for the promotion of crime, have many such as Nance Olden under observation. They are familiar with her kind. To the social element, however, which knows nothing of how the underworld Uvea, thlh play comes Be n distinct shock, and appeals to them from Its very novelty. Its only seeming parallel known to the stags la The characters of "Leah Kleachna. Nance Olden and Leah Kleshchna are far apart; there la only a suggestion of mmenesn The dramatisation by Chinning Pollock shows many signs of the master-hanIt has the action of the lines and la skillfully built, with few of the flaws common to book plan. ' Llebler A Company have given the play a handsome stage setting and two-third- a (Continued on Pago Ten) II I H 111 H nm Hifl Partial List of Coming Attractions Mother to Guide Her, Sis In the Bishop's Carriage, Salomv Jane, Prince of Iilsen, Mary Slio-Gu- Dockstad-er- Mannering, Minstrels, ITeir to the Hoorah, Checkers, West's Minstrels, kins," Three Of Us, a band, Daughter of Jndea, it . SCENE FROM IN THE BISHOP'S CARRIAGE act three. Forty-Fir- e Minutes From Broadway, The Umpire, The . Dream City, The Social Whirl, Anna Held, Charles Hanford, Grace George, Creston Clarke, Coming Through the Rye, Hands and Nix, No Holy City; Black Patti, Paul .Gilmore, The Earl and the Girl, Billy, the Kid, The Man of the Hour, Max Fig-maYon Yonson, Uncle Tom's Cabin, The Choir Singer, Murray and Slack, Royal Chef, Louis James, The County- Chairman, The Little- Prospector,. Devil's Auction, College Widow, Irim-.rus- e Minstrels, Human Hearts, ' Woodland, Wife's Secret, Lovers Route, For Mothers Sake, Yankee Regent, Theodore torch, Geo. Washington, Jr,, Arizona, What Happened to Jones, Way Down East, Black Crook, Quincy Adam Sawyer, Painting the Town, and Madame Butterfly. n, Richard and Pringle Minstrel, Old Cross Roads, Old Kentucky, The Squaw Man, Why Girl Leave Home, Sia and New York, Raffles, Under Southern Skies, Brewster's Millions, Buster Brown, The Ginger Bread Man, Florence Roberts, Ma's New Hus- Hop- - - j SCENE FROM IN THE BISHOP S CARRIAGE, HiiIIIHilliiiiHliillllHI'.WltlllllllllllMMll'MIHIIIHMIWtllllt.lW)).lll)HIin'llliMIWIIIWWHIIIIWtWWfrllWHHtl'tMWHHIIIH'HlHW 4 |