Show UTANS IN TilE EAST01 li Cl New York Dec 1GMrs O J Salisbury Sal-isbury Is on her way to Ithaca N Y where her sons are students at Cornell university She will spend a week with those young men at the scat of learning On the 23rd inat they will join Mr Salisbury = who Is at the Gerard Ge-rard hotel Tho family will spend the two weeks vacation of the students in this city I V 1 I Mrs UarknesB Mrs W G Sharp ills Harknewj and Mr Robert H I Hi Harkness continue to be guests at the Manhattan Mr Sharp Is l expected to arrive from the West today They will probably spend another week here before be-fore departing for Christmas at home Mrs Harkness and Mrs Sharp spent n several days In Washington en route whllo Miss and Mr Harkness visited friends j at Bridgeport Conn i r Mr P H Lannan and daughter left this city yesterday after a three weeks sojourn In the East Including a visit to Mr Lannnns boyhood home In Massachusetts Mas-sachusetts and u short stay at Washington Wash-ington They will spend u day In l Syracuse and several days in Chicago returning to Salt Lake City on Saturday Sat-urday Miss Blanche Aldrach ID busily rehearsing re-hearsing with Matthew C Bulgers I The Night of the Fourth which will open Its season at Bridgton N J on J Christmas Miss Aldrach has been assigned as-signed to the role of Elsie a leading Juvenile part Her father C W Ald rach of Mlllard Is visiting her and will remam for the opening 4 rOn r-On Saturday night Mr Channing Pollock the clever young author of Behold the Man and representative of William A Rradyo theatrical enterprises en-terprises gave a farewell dinner to a dozen young = literatcurs at an uptown cate The occasion was Mr Pollocks departure for Boston where he will remain for three months looking after the interests of that remarkably successful suc-cessful rural drama Way Down East which Is in Its fourth season Mr Kenneth Pollock the younger non of the late editor and Consul so well known in Salt Lake City Is connected with the Joy line of steamboats running run-ning between New York and Boston t w Miss Elsie Reasoner goes to WashIngton Wash-ington this week she says to represent repre-sent a cement firm 00 r One of the places of rendezvous of Utahns visiting New York Is No 10 Wall street where H W Early who came here from Salt Lake City = In April has established himself Mr I Early is a member of the produce exchange ex-change > it Mr Vltchcr Jones went West on Thursday Intending to go direct to Salt Lake City Mrs Jones will spend the holidays at Richmond Va Both will return to this city In about a month a 0 r Among those whom visiting Salt Lakers sought at the WaldorfAstoria last week were Dr and Mrs liter nee Mackintosh who have returned from Paris 6 r When Miss Maude Adams goes on tour with Quality Street Utah will still have two fair representatives playing prominent parts in Broadway I theaters for Mies Hawley will be seen In The Toreadors on the Monday following fol-lowing Miss Adamss departure Farther I Far-ther down town In tint temple of I melodrama and rustic plays the Fourteenth Four-teenth street theater Miss Lisle Leigh I will be seen in Up York State that excellent rusticity in which Its I authors au-thors Land Higgins and Georgia Wnl I I dron are playing = the lending parts Up York State which had a short but successful run here early In the I autumn and had to take to the road because less worthy plays refused to cancel their dales will probably remain re-main at the Fourteenth Street theater until the neveryielding Chaunccy Ol cott appears on January 27th S The critics differed violently as to the merits of The Marriage Game by Anglers and adapted by = Clyde Fitch I which made Its New York debut last I week with Sadie Martlnot as the star The audience which Is the best of critics teas deeply appreciative of the stars acting which was a revelation of her power aa an emotional actress Some of the scenes were as powerful and as heartwrenching as the memorable memor-able scenes In Zaza Tho stars part wis not sympathetic I do not believe Miss Martlnot tried to make it so Her design was to show how hard Is the heart how unscrupulous the methods how hideously selfish the liven of I creatures like the degraded Pussy = Carlisle Car-lisle who trapped a young1 nobleman Into marriage that she might have a place In society She finds respectability 1 respectabili-ty dull and longs to return to the purlieus II pur-lieus She discovers her husbands innocent in-nocent love for his cousin a school girl I and threatens to drag her name through the streets To prevent this the girls father an English duke of clean life and high principles after using us-ing every available argument to dissuade dis-suade shoots and kills her The play = closes while the theater rings with her vituperative shrieks The moral is that pitch Is still pitch oven though dropped Into a bed of lilies that the harlot Is born not made that the scientists who advocate the advancement of the racer race-r by killing the feebleminded would do well to stamp out by the same means the feeblemoraled It Is a reminder that In the early = history of Germany the infidelity of either sex was punishable punish-able by death and a suggestion that It were well to revive the custom I Everybody Is glad when the Duke shoots the Intruder which shows that the principle of justice is strong even in the breasts of New York audiences whose demand is to be amused at any sacrifice t There were two women of the Pussy Carlisle type In a box at the Victoria on the opening night of The Marriage Game The play was a French one and had been advertised as 1 daring These bedizened creatures expected to wallow in their native filth As the play cruelly Inexorable progressed I watched Its effect upon them At first they fidgeted and tried to make light of It Afterward they were swept Into its current They grew white under tho anathema of it and before the curtain cur-tain fell they had slunk away to their haunts Tho Marriage Game has as good an excuse for life as Sapho almost as good as the Inimitable Zaza If it serves no better purpose than to drive courtesans from the theater it does well S w Christmas will mark the initial performance per-formance of David Belascos 75000 pageant that Inaugurated splendidly splendid-ly In Washington on Thursday = at the Criterion theater In this city r Tomorrow evening Henry Miller whose finished portrayal of the leading character In the somber The Only Way Is a lingering remembrance with Salt Lakers will make his first New York appearance In the comedy role oZ DArcy of the Guards at the Savoy That playhouse until recently has been known as the hoodoo theater because of its identification with many = failures There arc many to hope that the hoodoo shadows will lift at the approach of so true an artist i There Is a rumor that Petticoats and Bayonets In which Arthur Byron has been starring has been permanently withdrawn a Kyrlc l5ellew3 company Is also waiting wait-Ing for a New York run Faces are long along the RIalto Everywhere is heard the complaint The worst season since 1802 Poor plays and a ferment against the theatrical trust are ascribed as the reasons The popular concerts at the Metropolitan Metropol-itan Operahouse have been resumed Last night Llli Lehman Anna Otten and Joseph Hoffman contributed to the musical enjoyment of a large audience chiefly = of Germans who aro the best supporters of musical enterprise in the city S r Private news from Amityvllle asylum where Maurice Barrymorc once the Idol of West and East matineegoers Is In durance is that his mind Is dying and all but dead while his body is as hale and powerful as ever In his life Apropos of this news a stanza written about Mr Barrymore by = a witty comrade com-rade of his was quoted The lines In view of the circumstances have lost their mirthful ring I dance beneath tho moon I sleep beneath the sun I lead a life of going to do And die with nothing done Mr Barr mores life is another example ex-ample of tho failure that awaits talent without character Utah Is not without Its Instances of brilliancy that flickered Into nothingness because there was no character to keep alive the flame A sterling character first one that gives strength in combat and continuity continu-ity In endeavor and loyalty in all things what a start In life that gives a man and how he Is handicapped without It be his talents as great as the Wasatch range How to succeed in literature reflected re-flected an oracle In that world Cultivate Cul-tivate character answered And that was all he would say = because he said That is all allADA ADA PATTERSON |