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Show i AMUSEMENTS. The l'rlvnte Ncretary ' On Wednesday and Thursday next we can most assuredly proiuUe our theater goers one of the brightest and wittiest comedy's that was ever constructed con-structed to carry out the happenings of everyday lifo. the incidents aud harmless harm-less accidents of a household, a domestic domes-tic conglomeration of humorous obsta-I obsta-I cles, most dexterously knitted together to form an interesting plot, a plausible story, and yet bubbling over with tho most ludicrous, laughable events that only a genius like (iillette could conceive. con-ceive. This popular playwright had already attained an enviable reputation as author of the military drama "Held by the Enemy," and his closest friends were not surprised but agreeably enthused, en-thused, on the production of his mirthful mirth-ful comedy of ' The Private Secretary." Mttle Lord Fauntleroy. "Little Lord Fauntleroy," which will beat the Salt Lake theater on Friday and Saturday evenings and at a matinee mati-nee on Saturday is a play that reaches the heart. It is a beautiful ideal, seldom sel-dom realized in actual experience, but none the less real because it is rare. "Little Lord Fauntlrroy" has been accorded the distinction of being the best and most unqualified success of modern times. It is a pure and healthy play good for the people who witness it. |