Show DRAMATIC AND LYRIC A Show Without an Equal on the Globe AIMEE AND HER MANY LOVES Hallen ffi Harts VarIetyThe Home Clubs Out Cunkle on rinsed lugla Date Note The management takes pleasure in submitting sub-mitting the above stupendous and unequaled un-equaled programme It has always been our aim to give the public the very best talent both foreign and home stars that brains and money could engage Salaries Ito object We feel proud to say tnat this season we have aehow without an equal on the globe The publics obedient servants ser-vants HAur < ENd HART sole proprietors This noticewhich the Hallen Hart people put at the foot of their bills i leaves but little to be said on the subject sub-ject of their show which comes to the Theatre Wednesday and Thursday Be in without an equal on the face of the globe of course it will do fairly well in Salt Lake as our town is proud of its reputation for liberally patronizing the best of all things It was only the other week that we paid over 7 000 to see Messrs Booth and Barrett but even those artist it is said do sometimes stick on the question of salaries to their people and there is no doubt that Salt Lake will pay liberally to see two managers who do not allow such petty and vulgar vul-gar considerations to enter into their reckonings Hallen and Hart too set Booth and Barrett an example and teach them a lesson in the matter of advertising While the two great tragedians were niggardly to the extreme in the use of cuts and show printing the two great variety managers have filled our town with gay and startling lithographs on every fence and wall If there were not a newspaper in town the pictures would suffice to fill the house The only other event of the week will be the excursion of the Home Club to Provo and Lehi and their rendition of Confusion in those towns on Wednesday Wednes-day and Thursday evenings The trip is made in response to a frequently expressed ex-pressed invitation from leading people in those places and will be entirely in the nature of an out the expenses of the visit being fully as much as can betaken be-taken in The same nightly royalty has to be paid the owners as for performances per-formances in Salt Lake The whole company of some twenty people leave on the Utah Central Wednesday evening eve-ning and go to Provo A number will return to town Thursday morning and rejoin the rest of the company in Lehi that nn the whole h co min evening party corning back either by the D R tJ midnight train or by the Utah Central Friday morning The event will be a pleasant one for the Club and our southern friend will see a clean cut highclass performance such as they do not often have the pleasure of witnessing The will of the lively little Frenchwoman French-woman whom Americans know as Marie Aimee caused a great deal of amazement on the Paris Boulevards last week when it was found out that I the clever woman had left 840000 in the most romantic way to her last love known in Paris as Ricardo Diaz Albertini of 70 Avenue de Leana In this country he was known BS Sig A Del Campo and traveled with Aimee during the season of 188687 playing minor parts Del Campo was however loi married to Aimee He was th e husband of Miss May Fielding formerly a member of Mr Augustin Dalys Company Aimee whoso real name was Marie Aimee Trochon was a thorough Bohemian and the oddest of the many odd French women on the stage She was always in love with some one first it was said with a Brazilian millionaire who returned her affection in sparkling diamonds of rays serene then with Mr Jolly a more or less jolly New York dyer whom she married and gave a pretty little daughter whose name does not appear in the will Then she married a Mr Ducrow a member of her company with whom she returned to France He managed two theatres for her and managed to completely ruin bar in a couple of years Both returned to the New World again he to die of cholera at Havana and she to New York Bet Be-t said to his credit that during the time he played in Havana he sent half his salary every week tol his wife M Del Campo is a handsome darkeyed man half Aimees age He was and probably is still a very bad actor but has a very sweet voice He was graceful grace-ful wellbred and returned the aftec tin which tbe clever little Frenchwoman French-woman gave him What I should like to write a treatise on at some time is epidemic melos thenia or what may be called collective sweetness and light mania Occasionally Occasion-ally we see great numbers of people attacked tacked with the disorder without any apparent specific cause ns was the casein case-in the outbreak of Eussellogia and jangtrytis Terryconitis and Mania Potter The infectious character of these cerebral complaints has always been as much of a mystery as the popular pop-ular outbreak of tcsthetic morality For several months a large portion of the inhabitants of New York were afflicted with what may be called an attack of Lillian Russell It was very much like one of those plagues of the Middle Agessay the sweating sickness it came upon people without prevision vision threw them into a kind of a trance and then left them suddenly All attempts lo cure it were vain The physicians only advised rest and then let the disease run its course One of the marked symptoms was delusion The moment a person was attacked he began to believe that Russell was both an angel and a vocalist vo-calist As soon as he recovered his senses he denied that he ever held such a belief Men were struck down while carrying on their business and immediately imme-diately set about making assignments and wills in favor ot Russell Car drivers were attacked on their platforms plat-forms and siezing the companys money left their vehicles and rushed off to buy sealskin cloaks and bouquets One young man in the Lotus Club had himself tatooed all over in pale blue with her name The Terryconites never reached such a paroxysmal stage as this It was mainly febrile and was characterized by a low fever much thirst and pert per-t But it lasted longer and was much harder to cure Most of the patients utere females and showed a strong inclination to go into solitude and erect shrines to Terry Dr Horse H Sense a very skillful practitioner met with considerable success suc-cess in bia method of treatment of this disorder He introduced his patients to Miss Terry Most of them immediately began to recover I have heard but cannot vouch for the statement that this course of procedure pro-cedure In cases of Langtrytus not only ntforly failed but aggravated the symptoms Dr Sappingtons advice that where these women caused such disorders they should be made to marry the patient is obviously absurd in epidemic outbreaks for the actress cannot cf course marry everybody Although I believe Lillian Russell did start in with some such idea at one time Nym Crinkle Notes THE Long Strike is on again in New YorK PINSUTI the wellknown songwriter is dead LILY POST has joined A Little Tycoon company THE converts to the no hat doctrine are rapidly increasing ANNIE PIXLKX revived Mliss in San Francisco to heavy business LEWIS MORRISON ia enroute with his great tank and his Dark Secret FANNY DAVENPORT opens in San Francisco I Fran-cisco with La Tosca five weeks from tomorrow to-morrow night ANNIE ADAMS and her dangiter Maud leave San Francisco to gu east with a traveling company THE eastern papers are commenting wonderingly on tho fact that Booth and Barretts three Salt Lake perlormances drew over 7000 LOUIS DAVENPORT vife of the late W E Sheridan has received an oiler from Booth and Barrett to become a leading member oftheir company next season but a previous engagement prevented her from accepting aud she sailed for Australia from San Francisco last Thursday week THE Stage News contains the following follow-ing paragraph which one hardly knows how to regard While Mr Herbert Kelsey snowing himself daily to admiring ad-miring female eyes on Broaaway his wife Caroline Hill has retired to private pri-vate life in London and will not even see her best theatrical friends THE BOOTH society one of the leading lead-ing amateur organizations of New York was playing Confusion the same week that our amateurs were doing it here Rather oddly the gentleman in the Booth who played Mortimer Mumple ford and who secured principle mention from the critics was of the same name aa the gentleman who does that character charac-ter hereMr Wells MARY ANDEBSONS farewell performance perform-ance of the Winters Tale at the Lyceum on Saturday nIg ht was marked with I tremendous enthusiasm She spoke a pretty little piece at the finish the gallery gal-lery said God bless you Mary and when she threatened to come back again next year with another Shakespearean Shake-spearean play they cheered her to the echo and proclaimed in chorus their opinion that Shes a jolly good fellow I As a matter of fact so she is and so say all of usLondon Letter MADISON Avenue drawingroom I Reception Two fashionable maidens meet Bertie Why Gussie how well you are looking beautiful evening eh By the way have you seen La Tosca Gussie Oh dear yes Its perfectly grand isnt it Bertie Elegant my dear But how shockingly immoral and suggestive tUssie You are light my love I would never consent to father or brother bro-ther going to see it THE New York herald says Drums guns red fire whooping Indians so diers scouts and lots of exci event marked the production of On the Frontier at the Windsor Theatre last night This melodrama went right to the Bowery heart Mr James M Hardie and Miss Sara Von Leer assumed as-sumed the leading roles of Jack Osborne scout and Blue Flower an Indian princess Mr Hardie was rather inclined in-clined to be stagy but in the main was very acceptable Singing I and dancing coustituted an agreeable feature of the performance which altogether was well received and largely attended NEW YOBK at present is laughing over Mr James Owen OConner who has been seen during the week at the Star Theatre as Hamlet Mr OConnfr inherited in-herited a couple hundreds of thousands of dollars from a very frugal and shrewd father and is amusing himself by posing actor His audiences have h as an u uuultaiI uuvc been numerous and boisterous and he will probably make as much from his exhibition exhi-bition as any star playing in the metropolis me-tropolis this week Mr OConner is said to be a fair lawyer and a very prompt i paymaster Mrs OConner Mr OCon1 ners good and faithful wife has been I watching the boxoffice while her husband hus-band has been famishing great deal of fun to the young men about town and ducats to the reporters nearly everyone every-one of whom furnished a column of very clever and bright reading s |