Show r fAirOLKIIN THE EAST I i Their Comings Goings and Settlings Some Chat from J t l the Theater and the Street = J Tribune 1 CorrespontlencoTrlhunc 1 Ifev York May IIMrs Ejjbcrt robe rls Is the guest oC Mrs R G Graham Gra-ham Woodward at 50 MornlngsUle av Mrs Woodward Is better re fnUC j Miss Lucy by Utnhns as J mbercd She is a Salt t Lake City girl young I r anti the daughter of Mr B II Young Juno 5th Mr and Mrs Woodward On ant charge oC the fashionable take the dl Ich Hell lwood hotel at West End near fng Branch for the season which IAng a l Continues until November Mrs Rob al will go with them to West End and Lain until fall She visited her tiushtcrlnlaw Mrs Albert Taylor Indianapolis on her way East and 11 j i spools to go with her to Honolulu In M fall to Join Mr Albe Taylor who the lul Commer r city editor of Honolulu I cial Advertiser 110 Dr and Mrs Nelson Ilulck Henry returned I re-turned t from a brief wedding tour on Thursday They wcie married April I Ath and divided their time between i 1 t and Buffalo They leave next II 1 I Boston It week for Salem S C where they will I attend the commencement exercises of Mrs Henry seminary where Salem I r her mother and her children all spent If their l school life They will bring the Misses Sloan and Master Frank Sloan hack with them They will go to tin country soon after and will not send zr out At J Home cards until the autumn 0 n Mrs V M C Silva has recovered from a severe Illness of two months 8 For three years illness has prevented her singing Mal Siva Is now one of I the stall of the Unlled States commissary commis-sary department In the army building 7 V a Miss Jennie Gregory once of Salt Lake City lr the wife of the prominent S physician Dr L F Potter of lOtS Fifth avenue 4 t a Ke and Mrs F W Norris are well Installed and popular In Mr Norrls a new charge In Brooklyn They are at 5 home to all old Salt Lake City friends 4 at 5G1 AVllloughby avenue K 9 Mrs Fisher and Miss Sallie Fisher expect to spend the summer In ZIon + a Miss Grace Almy left May Irwins a company to Join the Metropolitan Opera Ope-ra company in New Orleans Miss Jennie Hawley visited friends here yesterday 3 r a Dr Ellen B Ferguson and her I daughters Misses Ethel and Claire Ferguson have removed their household S A house-hold goods to 72 West Ninety third areet a r Judge Colborn is oscillating new = n-ew York and Washington with the regularity of a pendulum Last week it was Washington This week New York expects to ice him a Mr Howard Kyle has extended the far < > n and Itinerary of his play Nathan Na-than Hale He will close on June I 1 15th Instead of May 31st as Intended + t and his route Is as follows Butte May 20th Great Falls May 21st Helena May 22nd Fargo N AD May 24th25th IJ St Paul Dunn May 27ih2Sth23thr tri Minneapolis May 30th June 1st Pu tt rJ June jith Ashland June Cth Calumet Mlchj June 7thSth Marquette June 10Mv Sau SXe Marie June llth Mari eU June Ylxrr Green Bay June 13th Oshkosh June Aith and Waukesha June 15th I a Capt and Mrs Willard Young receive re-ceive friends from the West and East In handsome apartments at the For ress 351 West Eightyfirst street near j Riverside drive S a aMiss a-Miss Ida May Savage is said tohave deferred her return home until next month I 4 a a is Mrs Moses Levy known to Utahns bs Mrs Ada Rich Collett tills occa tonal engagements as soloist In church choirs In this city I 6 Mr Robert H Davis who I has just ty written a vaudeville sketch which crit Ira pronounce clever Is a New York Journalist and brother of Mr Sam o f Davis the proprietor of the Carson An K f real C aMiss 1 Miss Para Pitts and chaperon and i i friends have completed arrangements 1 to t go abroad for two months They i ttlll sail on the North German Lloyd l L reamer the Alter June GUt They i will I visit England and the continent and return on the Kaiser Wilhelm del Grosse September 11th > > aMiss + a-Miss Maude Adams closed her nAIglon season on Saturday and Is visiting for a few days at her farm Sandy Garth at Ronkonkoma L I before going abroad Much pleasure Is expressed by her admirers that she Is returning to a Barrio role for the coming com-ing season a e Mr W So Godbe has made a flying trip to Chicago since coming to New York a Y Apropos of the close of the splendid thieeyear run of Zaza the following follow-ing yarn is traveling the worn and winding paths of the Rialto A young man who earns his living by turning the brake on a street car and narrowly avoiding running people don took his steady company a young woman who works in a tailor shop to Harlem to sec the play The pair were much wrought upon by the strenuousness of some of the situations situ-ations The girl cried frankly and the young man had much to do to avoid It But he rallied bravely when the curtain fell upon Zaxa getting Into her carriage and smiling a sad farewell at the lover l she is leaving The young man squared his shoulders and looked at the I girl with a great assumption of sternness stern-ness nessStop your snivellin he said Dont you see Its a cinch Hell follow the carriage home a New York that was at first all sternness stern-ness Is now all l smiles for Blanche Bates Her mother a dear plump pottering little woman told me the story of Miss Bates various entrances Into New York while that young woman wo-man sat by listening and concurring Blanche came to see Augustin Daly 1 and he wouldn look up from his desk while she talked He only listened for a minute and then went on reading his letters and grunted Nothing for you Blanche came home angry but defiant de-fiant He shall want me yet she said Three years afterward he engaf > d t her for a part In The Great Ruby It was quite evident to Blanche that he had forgotten her She began rehearsals rehear-sals and would come every afternoon looking like a different girl She was pale and dispirited and almost lifeless She would throw herself on the lounge and not say a word She was so unlike un-like herself I hardly knew her I would ask her what was the matter and she would say Oh mamma I dont know I didnt know then but I do now said Miss Bates taking up the narrative 1 narra-tive Oil simply couldnt live In that atmosphere Dalys theater was dark and dismal and made you feel as though you were at a funeral and that Mr Daly was the undertaker It mils all such a serious business No one ever smiled and a laugh was unheard of It got upon my nerves I felt as though I was living in a tomb and I really got superstitious A Joke Why It made me feel hysterical even think a joke In Mr Dalys presence The morning after our opening I met him In the theater and he passed mo without speaking rwell I couldnt stand It and I resigned Perhaps I was hasty but I havent gotten used to It yetthe coldness and gravity of these New Yorkers I passed hundreds of persons on the street every clay and their faces were an immovable and meaningless as statues Oh its all so damp heir theater air It was quite different dif-ferent Miss Bates admitted but the people on the streets and in business hours what Icebergs they were That Avas more than two years ago and she has melted the Ice about the New York individuality and captured the heart that whatever may be said of Its sIze exists V aMiss a-Miss Batess view of New York is the view of Mr Paul Potter the clever Englishman with a splendid home built of play royalties at Geneva I met Mr Potter five minutes after climbing from the coaster that carried us from Cherbourg France to meet l the Kaiser Welhelm del Grosse on its way to America I You came wjth a load of Americans I knew you were from America all of you You were so pale and smileless Tie told me that he made a wager that he could Walk twenty blocks on the most t crowded street In New York Broadway at the busiest hour of the day and would not bee one person smile Mr Charles Frohman coveicd hlo money They walked from Twen tythird street to Forty = tlllyd street on Broadway at 2 oclock when Madame and Miss Everybody were going shopping I shop-ping or to the matinee Mr Potter won ADA PATTERSON |