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Show I ( TRUTH. 1 i i I ' comedians Joseph Cawthorne, Kelly, William McCart, and Clif-- ; Crawford. Leila McIntyre, Neva Smart Edith St. Clair and Edith Hutchins will be the leading women. comedy vein, in conjunction with Weber. Marie Dressier is not to follow t ay Templeton s lines, but is to full scope to her own peculiar give style of humor. Julian Mitchell gives a hint now and then of the secrets of his success as a stage director. Modern staging in its highest form, says he, should aim at the creation of beautiful pictures, Sry Sir Henry Irving promises to appear in a new role when he makes his farewell tour of this country next spring, probably the last part he will ever create will be that of Grandfather one-ac- t tragedy Ccquesne, in a little Hamiltons Co3mo of on story built Mr. a Hamilton, young that name. who come has author into English sudden fame, has made the dramatic veision of his story at Sir Henry's re not at the exact imitation of real surroundings. For example, the poppy field in The Wizard of Oz is a mere poetic suggestion of a field of flowers, not a perfectly deceptive imitation of the real thing. In devising this scene merely told the scenic artist to provide a beautiful but simple background, and then by the skillful modulation of lights and by posing the coryphees in the guise of flowers I obtained the effects sought for a suggestion of a reality; a symbol Instead of an imitation. This scene appeals both to the eye and the imagination. Other scenes of a prosaic nature require, of course, totally different treatment The Kansas farm in The Wizard must necessarily be as graphic as possible, and all of the details must be exact and correct. The artistic aim here must be truth to nature. Hence the poppy field and the Kansas farm in The Wizard of Oz represent the antipodes of scenic realism one is a symbol, the other a reality one a creation, the other an imitation. quest. Frederick Warde and Katherine Kidder will begin their tour in Salammi bo at Buffalo early in September. Matho, the barbarian warrior, will be played by Mr. Warde; Salammbo, the priestess of Tanit, by Miss Kidder; Spendius by Mr. Thomas Coffin Cooke; Narr Havas by Dudley Kellerd; Ham-ilca- r 51 a. by Wadsworth Harris; Hilda by Miss Ina Brooks; and the boy Hannibal by Master Walter Burris. George Ade has a young woman admirer who proposes to him every time it is announced that a new play from the pen of the Indiana author is to be I fear I have an admirer pioduced. w ho is a mystery, said Mr. Ade a few She has written to me at days ago. intervals during the last three years, and I have never met her, nor do I She always signs her I s The Dream Girl. When The Sultan of Sulu was first produced jThe Dream Girl proposed marriage to e. Similar letters came when Peggy rom Paris, The County 'Chairman, nd The Sho Gun were produced. I eceived another letter from the same voman a few days ago when the was made that my newr d lay, The College Widow, will be at the Garden theater in New ork. Some day I hope to meet The earn Girl. David Warfields new play is en It Is in itled The Music Master. wM hree acts, and its author is Charles lein, who wrote also the same stars previous success, The Auctioneer. Ir. Warfield is now rehearsing the ew play under the direction of David pelasco. His company is to include I larie Bates, Minnie Dupree, Antoin-itt- e Walker, Isabel Waldron, Sybil rtein, Campbell Gollan, Archie Boyd, Villiam Boag, Harold Mead, Carring- cn Yates, J. W. Benson, H. G. Carle: i on, Louis Verande, W. G. Ricciardi, Jeon Kohlmar, and several others. It said that Mr. Warfield will appear a character different from any in hich he has been seen before. The nouncement is enough to arouse invest, as his departure from the line work with which he has been iden-fie- d for so long a time is an event of small significance. Miss Marie Dressier has been d by Joseph Weber to be one of o principal comediennes of the Web-Ziegfield stock company at Web-- s music hall next season. This actically completes the list of prin-pslwhich includes Miss Anna Held, r. Weber, Aubrey Boucicault, Harry orris, and Bonnie Maginn. It only mains now to complete the chorus. Weber would have It understood at he is not following the old Weber-jolds lines, but that the productions f new stock company will have mracteristics , of their own. Anna eld, he explains, has not been en ( ' lsed with an idea of reproducing Lilin Russells work, blit to create parts iffr which her own individuality fits Harry Morris is not to imitate w fields, but is to develop his own know7 her name. Try the Shepard Co. (0 VIA 13 NEWS FROM THE CORNERS. Kurns Korners, Sept. 8, 1904. Mister Trooth: We hav boltid,' we are aroused, we are full ov patrotism. We met en Tom haz spoken. Joe has rizin tew the ocashun, Ben is willin, en Dav sals Me en Tom ar together," Dininny, Showell, Nye, Dunne, Offenbach, Morris, Myers and skores ov the weflthy en patriotik sitizens ov Utah, ov hi standin en kulture wer with us. We met in a lodg room. The password waz K-at the outer dore en Me and Tom at the inner. The sine ov rekog-nishu- n waz drawin a long sigh en lookin weery. That astoot Amerkin who haz sufird so much at Mormon hands, havln only reseevd wun appointment az judge from a Mormon govner, wen he cood hav reseevd 2 if sum wun else had resined or died. . K Judge John A. Street wuz made On takin hiz chare Mr. char-man- Street sed, Feller onest en patriotik Amerikins, statesmen, millyuners, en others ov yu who wood like to be millyuners, ez i I gaze intew your handsum en mugs i see paritism bubblin frum evry pore, en i kno now that Uta intel-lektyo- is safe. The renound atty., Mr. J. B. the Walter Meeks ov this new crew of perfitikul nite errants, wuz made sekretary. Mr. Danner wuz so overkum that he sat down. Kuropatkin Tom wuz not there, not wishin to embarrass the select politikul saints on collections. in their sanhedrim performens, he iz ST. LOUIS RETURN VIA CHICAGO. Or go yla Chicago and return via St. Louie. The low rates which are now In effect wlU allow yon to do thli. Be sure that yonr ticket reads either going or coming orer the Chicago, Milwaukee & $1, Paul Railway. Sekondly That we will resent oil interferens ov Mormon republikins in politks wen there not workln or votin fer us. Thirdly That we refuse to vote with Mormons, except that tha kin vote our tickit. Fortbly That the politikul wants ov the late republlkin konvenshun, en the manifest defeet ov our deer Tom, fer senitur, konvinses us that divishun on party lines by Mormon votes iz a sham. There kin be no onest divishun until old Jos. F. Smith sends word to Tom that he kin be wen that mesig komes old Dizzy Kurns will konsent to Peace with Honer. Fifthly That we will never ceese tew demdnd that compleet control over politikul affares wich will inshure Toms continyool elekshun tew that posishun he so magnifies en adorns, United States senator. Our motto, Tom fer sinitur be Gawd. Sixth We disklaim eny attempt tew attak eny church. Oil we want is tew hav our own way, az patriots we ask nothin less. d s, Appeelin tew all speshully those lately on our pay roll, to sustane us in our rightchus effurts to forever separate church en state until Tom is wuns more O. K., en askin oil tew fergit Toms kicks, we say kome with us, fer we need you. Wen Joe in a voise chokin with emo-shuen tremblin with patriatik fer-ve- r, sed wil yu pledge your forchuns, your lives en your sakrid oner tew help poor politikully krippled Tom Kearns, every man rose en kontribut-e-d a quarter. It wuz a tuchin site, every chare wuz empty, en wen tha sat down there wusnt a man standin fare-minde- Through cars between Western points and Chicago in connection with the Union 1'aclfic. siti-sen- n, G. S. WILLIAMS, Coml Agent 106 W. 2nd South St, Salt Lake City. up. We are fer Tom, we will vote fer Tom, we will wurk fer Tom, so long as his barril holds out, wuz the SIX THOUSAND SVBSCRIBERS IN SALT LAKE JVLY ' you-nanimo- us sentiment. 3 ROOKY MOUNTAIN BELL TELEPHONE CAN TALK TO 20,000 OTHERS Keith wuz much gratified but sevral times he made quik grabs fer his pokit book. Yours for Kurnsavika, JABEZ SPRINKLER. 1 s, 1 na-shun- al offisis. Dar-mer- , : & ol em-fasiz- ed re-elekti- d, pro-uce- en-ge- . makin a masterly retreet up Salt River. High Preest McDowell, the man who never votes bekause Mormons are alloud to vote, wuz the hole thing on the speekin line. Dininny wuz a good man with Snyder squeekin near the distans pole. Wen Joe sed he wood control the Tribune, meny stared, wunderin if sum peepul supposed tew be rich had bin compelld to sel out. The follerin reslushuns, prepared be 4 hand in Toms office wuz red and adoptid amidst exhileratin silens. Whereaz, repeeted experyunses, by bein defeeted fer the konvention, havin our ticket fer sity offises knoked hi ski, haz provd uz not tew be so powerful as we wuns wuz, haz shown us that our foolishness haz dividid the gentiles into hostile kamps, an as a konsequens the fronds ov our beluvd un venerated senator, Hon. Mr. Thomas Kearns, Esq., have bin krushed, their voices mind by politikul ha fever, en their inflooens hist-i- d by fellers a darn site more grafty in perlitikal affares; therefore be it piously resolvd, First That we wont pla ball eny more, until all Mormon republikuns will et us have full kontrol, ov all the 0. i UTAH, IDAHO, WYOMING AND MONTANA WANTED. Special representative in this county and adjoining territories, to represent and advertise an old established business house of Bolid financial standing. Salary $ 21 :weekly, with .expenses advanced each Monday, by check direct from headquarters. Horse and buggy furnished when necessary; Address Blew Bros. & Co., Dept A, Monon Bldg., Chicago, 111. o Warren Foster sells insurance, not Haw suits; 30 Progress building. |