| Show UTAtiNS IN IUE t Ef STo t When They Are What They Are Doing and Their Activities on the I Stage and Otherwise I New York April2 TJtahns when transplanted to New York soil Invariably Invaria-bly flourish If there I are exceptions to this rule they arc not known to the writer The Utah colony In New York is well Is prosperous and happy George JJ Gillette received 1 a cable I that his wife Viola Trait Gillette and her sister Miss Iconic Pi all had arrived ar-rived safely on the other side after a smooth voyage The Alice Nielsen I opera company of which she Is a mem l her will open at the Shaftcsbury theater thea-ter London April 9th probably In t ° The Fortune Teller Mr Gillette Is the secretary and promoter of the Development De-velopment company of Cuba whose president is Augustus Ilecksher and whose vlcppresldent Jr M Ccballob Is the senior member of the rich llrm of Cuban bankers Ceballos Co The prospectus of the company stales that its object Is to develop the now dormant dor-mant resources of this wonderful country coun-try It states that the company has acquired valuable lands and mining claims and obtained options upon other I valuable lands In Puerto Principe The company has Incorporated with a capital capi-tal stock of 1000000 Mllamio Pratt Mrs Gillettes father I and Mllando Pratt Tr her brother are In Boston handling the affairs of the Bingham West Dip Tunnel company o Miss Ruth Eldredge Is playing In the Middle West with the Two Little Val Va-l grants company and will close about May Jst Mr Frank Eldredge the business manager of Lewis Morrisons Faust is making a short stay In the city before be-fore rejoining his company on the road ± V NCWK comeS l bythe lattllngr little I bird of the theatrical world of the < successes I cesses on the boards of two well = known Salt Lakers One of these is Miss Sallie Fisher who has been promoted from the leader of the chorus to a principal part with The Burgomaster She Is I also the understudy of the leading female I fe-male part in the operetta Mrs Fichcr will join her daughter during the com 41 panys Boston and Providence engagements engage-ments this month T The other Salt Laker from whom good 4 news comes Is DeWItt Jennings who is receiving equal praise from press and 4 audltnce those two critics who are often so far apart for his work with the American clock company in Montreal Mon-treal When that engagement closes he wIll go at once to Milwaukee where he will join the Tannhauser stock company com-pany for its summer engagement < i Lost River having closed its season sea-son Miss Ada Dwyer Is spending April I at leisure In this city In May she will appear with Mrs Le Moyne In Boston Baltimore and elsewhere in special matinee performances of The Land of Hearts Desire She and her husband IJarold Russell will leave for Sail Lake City the first week In June and will spend their vacation as usual in Utah They will both be under the management manage-ment of Llebler Co next season but 1n what play has not been determined I a Sharpeyed Salt Lakeis who drop Into In-to the Academy of Music for yel another an-other look at Uncle Toms Cabin recognize in Young Marse Selby who arrives Jusl too lale to save the old slave a Utah Thesplon Mortimer 4 Snow a son of President Lorenzo Snow Is playing the part II o I > The appearance of Mis Annie Adams f as Mrs Jinks In the dalnly Clyde Fitch play Captain Jinks of the Horse Marine Ma-rine at the Garrlck last night signalizes sig-nalizes her formal reentry upon the hoards under the management of harles Frohman She succeeded Mrs Thomas Whlffen who has been shifted to Brother OlMcers at the Olympia and will finish the season Since playing play-Ing In White Heather three years ago she gavo up stage life for two years giving her time to tho development of Miss Maude Adamss slock farmS farm-S n y Garth at Ronkonkoma L Land L-and the establishment of their new summer home al Duteo la Park among the Catskllls This season she has understudied un-derstudied Mrs Gilbert Mrs Whlffen and Miss Ilornlek reporting at three theaters every evening and prepared to a l play either of three roles as the emergency emer-gency arose The illness of Miss Jessie 1 inward caused sa shifting of parts c that required Mrs Adams to play the role of Mrs Bulsom Porter In Mrs I Danes Defense at the Umpire theater It was a unsympathetic role but I Mrs Adams gave It an Individuality that was most praiseworthy Charles Frohman happened in one of the four evenings she played lJls substitute role and she scoied 50 iuill thai he at onre arranged for a permanent part for her Jl Miss Eleanor Lawson former assist 1 nut llibrarian of the public library of your city graduated l from the Empire Dramatic school last week with honors Her teachers said she was one of Uio ablest and certainly the hardest worker work-er of the class of thirtyeight young men and omen Richard Mansfield gave an address to the class urging simple habits Industry and conscientiousness 1 I conscien-tiousness but closing with nabcllur V S non fit He was emphatically of the oplnlrm that an actor may he Jmpiovecl by study and work but Is Just as sun that that same study and work cannot I make him an actor unless he has the 1 dramatic spark In his soul Miss LawS Law-S son has played the leading part acceptably accept-ably In several i practice plays m MJss Blonde Pollock of Galesburg fti Ill who Jt will be remembered paid 1 t several visits lo her cousin Miss Jell ij ii ale I Ilawley In Salt Lake City Is I studying study-ing music here and will probably talc C a church position In the fall Mis 9 Hawloy Is spending Easter week win I I Mis Craig Iluvemeycr at her couiitr t home In New Jersey Mrs llavcmeye I will be remembered In Suit Lake Clt y as Miss Ada Bryant one of the students rtTIO 1 stu-dents at Si Marys academy Sh L L married n nephew of the sugar king J II I Wabhlngton two years ago II t The latest news of Miss Elsie Rea J j loner Is that she Was making a tour o 0 the Riviera and had made no plans fo q II 4 lur return to America a The unanimity opinion of Howan KylcsAVprk I in the lllle hole of his plaj 1 Na thiffiJ laic Is somewhat surprlflln In viSvgrof the fact that critics are a prone to disagree as arc doctors Her Is the Judgment of a Kansas City crltl that was concurred in heartily by a his fellows After seeing Mr Kyle n Nsuhan Hal one can understand thIs a th-Is Mr Goodwin was wise For with al t set of Ills sl experience It Js very doubl esz ful If life could have given as success tb fill a characterization as Mr Kyle c l that with all his prestige aa an eiitei r r tq talner his performance would ha f S i r b4ra as gratifying to his audience M Kyle possesses what Mr Goodwin doe not the temperament so necessary Ian I tan < t-an actor who attempts loins not onl r heroic but roles that appeal to the pl r irlotism of his audience He Invests 6 with the dignity of a hero and a tri patriot and does not forget the syn lathy 1 that Is due such a hlghmindt cI character There Is never a susplclc I fiti of anting j Tn all of the trying seen through which Nathan Hale passes 1 i e la ever even and never drops to mo < heroics straining for effects Ills e altailon In I the shadows of the gallo I rl is Inspiring He shows his versatility in his ability to chang hls moods from the say and happy lover In the Union grammer school to his seriousness In the council of war that decides his mission mis-sion and his fate II a The critics have only a shade milder praise for Miss Jessie IzcU well known In Salt Lake City Says one and again the crHlcsnre one In their verdict She Is not a pretty woman is Miss Izett but she has facility and charm of expression that count for Infinitely more There Is rarely to be found so wholesome and acceptuble a love scene as that between Nathan and Alice In the second act Mr Kyle has been Invited to address ad-dress the students of the Northwestern I university of Chicago on The Drama I to < Miss Jane Kcnnark is voted the most I popular leading woman the American theater has had She had such predecessors prede-cessors as Mary Hampton and Isabel I Evesson loo 6 I Miss Victory Bateman was out with I the East Lynn company in Ada Grays stead for one week only She is now In New York and Intends going lo the Hopkins theater In Chicago In two i weeks to appear in a vaudeville sketch She will Join stock company for summer sum-mer work In St Louis Miss Ethel better known as Queenle Ferguson expects to do summer stock work Miss Claire Ferguson Is employed as the secretary of a large real estate firma firm-a Lincoln Wagenhals of the firm of Wagenhals Kemper is authority for the statement that Miss Lora Gale also known to Utahns is making gOon In MmeModjcskas company She Is MJss i Odette TylSrs understudyand getsas many curtain calls for herllttle Prince Arthur as Miss Tyler does Mr Wagenhals says < t u V Mrs Fanny Stenhouse who has recently re-cently been visiting relatives In Salt Lake City sailed on March 27th for London where she will pay a long visit to two daughters Before she salhd there was a family reunion In Brooklyn Brook-lyn at the homo of her son T B II I StcnhouBc Her grandson taller S Young la living at Montclalr N J where her granddaughter Miss Clara Young is attending the Cloversldc school for young ladles Her grandson grand-son Eugene Young has recently Jeen advanced to the desk of assistant night telegraph editor He has in course or preparation a collection of short stories of New York life to appear In book or magazine form Rev and Mrs Harry St Clair Ilath away have returned to Cleveland after a visit several weeks with Mr Hath who J lives aavs sister Mrs Moeller in Central Park West Mrs Hathaway Hatha-way who will be remembered as Miss Jean Grpo one of Zions most popular belles has recovered from a recent severe attack of Illness ADA PATTERSON |