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Show I y know that our amliom'es are hard I cold, and do not doubt, that you V illtij ' thorn elsewhere, but this is I j only kind of audience. tht we can ' , so ?orpive us. ,e realize that if yon were on an-?r an-?r spot on the hill you would be a ekont, but do your .best and you be paid Saturday night just the e. t' course the orchestra ''crabbed" act. We know that they are rot-but, rot-but, confidentially, we cannot hire one for the orchestra but a lot of tieians. -S a favor, don 't mention to the 10 player about the cue he lost, he 1 to be a champion billiard player. F the audieuce docs not applaud n you ask for it, wave an American , we are so patriotic, e would advise the artists to de-telling de-telling each other how good they until after the first performance, audiences are so peculiar, the applause does not occur where days ago, prefers to "be ugly nod in foresting ' in homely ch;i racier, work Pauline Bush has had an offer to gc ou circuit in ;i servant sketch. It rather appeals to her, but she has uol yet decided to accept or not. She is wonderfully well and has enjoyed hoi long rest to the utmost David Smith is making comodios at the western Vitagraph. He is at present pres-ent engaged on ''Nobodv Home,'' by Edwin Hay Coffin, in which the throe tieorgos. rtolt, Stanley aud Kunkle are enjoying themselves. Anne Bchaefor also runs in this edition. . Neva tierbev is a husv little Indv these days. o sooner is she finished with one director than she has another ono ready for her services, although every picture she appears in is a "Beauty" brand. Nova has fulh established estab-lished herself in the place where .Margarita- Fischer once ruled. expect it, be real sarcastic. If . take offense and stay away it es them right. o avoid heart-aches over the dis-utiou dis-utiou of dressing rooms we are con-Ting con-Ting abolishing them and dressing he barn. rowding each other out of the spot t and taking each other's bouquets ' onsidered bad form in this theater, f course we knpw that you "raised n out of their seats" in the east, remember that our folks don't w a "knockout" when they see They eveu laughed at Harry ' ider, 'an you didden see nothin ' iv in that gink's ack. A few v tho'ts of Frederic Leopold of the on-Nordlinger Vaudeville Agency, adelphia. - liver Morosco has gathered two e stars to his fold in the persons Blanche Ring and Charlotte Green-d, Green-d, the 1 1 Most Awkward Girl in World." """"lanche Sweet's next Lasky-Para-rut photoplay will be, "The Secret 3ard. ' ' and that will be followed "The Case of Becky," David -::isco's production of which was a success several years ago. Both psychological dramas of unusual d er. " :rheie now are nine leopard cubs in r; Selig Jungle Zoo. Princess Olga's is leopardess gave birth to two in- s Tuesday, raising the total. :au i: esjrie Eyton and Edwin J. Piel are in another multiple-reel drama, ke Sinful Influence. The feature j nder direction of Lloyd Carleton at Selig Zoo studio. Hi ;r"crincess, one of the whopping lion-its lion-its of the Selig Jungle Zoo, has -ributed two cubs to the general ; Action of animal infants. The in-;s in-;s were bon on the day the Elks i:: ;ed the great show place. c ea ore than 6000 head of sheep appear .nthe Reliance photoplay, "Hidden . :; le, " whose background deals with 3C upon a sheep ranch. The sheefi secured as actors through a Hsmey to Mt. Maceo, Cal., by Di- ilaor Joseph Belmont and a company i :-zh included G. M. Blue, A. D. i :'s, Irene Hunt, Richard Cummings jig Bessie Buskirk. n n i: dthough she has frequently been for important society parts in riean releases and "in Mutual ; . terpictures, Lucille Ward, accord-to accord-to an admission she made a few Helen Rosson, the 17-year-old leading lead-ing woman, has played her first feature ficture with the American company, n " The Idol " she wears the dress of a Salvation Army lassie, and it becomes be-comes her well. Helen is a hard work-. work-. ing girl, and is determined to get to the head of her profession. All the wiseacres have had Edna Maison leaving the Universal company, but. so far neither the company nor Edna know of it. As a matter of fact, when Edna finishes her acting in the "Blind Girl of Portici" with the Smalleys she will return to features with her own company aud a special director. Harold Lockwood will be seen in a picture which is almosf entirely taken on the sea or by the sea. It is a smuggling story, and the company will be able to enjoy a week or so on the Santa Cruz islands, off the coast of Santa Barbara. In the photoplay there will be a shipwreck and a buoy explosion, ex-plosion, and Harold has a heroic" part, which should suit him down to the ground. He is at home in the ocean as much as he is out of it. Jerome Lewis, well known in eastern film circles, has been added to the George Kleine forces. He will travel out of the New York office, filling the vacancy made by the resignation of Edward Guzman. . "The Fixer" is the title of the first Kleine comedy featuring Biokel and Watson. This was selected to take the place of "Hello Bill," the original title of Willis M. Goodhue's famous stage farce. "The Fixer" is scheduled for release through the Kleine-Edison Feature Service September 15. If ' ' there were giants in those days," theje were surely heroines in the glorious years of the American revolution. Mollie Pitcher was only one of a hundred that any "live" reporter re-porter of today would have immortalized. im-mortalized. Joseph Adelman, playwright and director, has put such a young lady on the screen in the photoplay, "A Continental Girl," which he has made for the first appearance in the movies of May Ward, the popular vaudeville headiiner. Perhaps the greatest sensation ever introduced to vaudeville is Gertrude Hoffman's newest and most magnificent prodirction, "Su-r.urun," "Su-r.urun," Max Reiuhardt's wordless play, which is now playing an indefinite in-definite engagement at the Palace theater, thea-ter, New York, and which will later tour the Orpheum circuit as an attraction attrac-tion par excellence. While Gertrude Hoffman has been considered one of the greatest show women in the world, and for several years has beeu identified with nothing hut her own tremendous productions, each a sensation, it is declared that in "Sumurun" she has reached the climax this marvelous mistress of stagecraft has outdone everything she has ever before accomplished. "Sumurun1' was introduced to America at the Casino theater, New York, by Max Reiuhardt's own company com-pany from the Deutsche theater, Berlin. Ber-lin. The company was headed bv Richard Ordynski, a pupil and apostle of Reinhardt and producer extraordinary extra-ordinary of Moscow aud Berliu. At the Casino it created tremendous comment. com-ment. It was produced under the direction di-rection of Winthrop Ames, and it proved an extraordinary novelty. I "Sinners," the best Ameriran play I of the past ten years, written by Owen ! Davis which William A. Brady, Ltd., has been presenting at the Playhouse! New York, where it was given ,'121 consecutive performances, will shortly be seen at the Salt Lake theater. Its mixture of mirth and dramatic tension have proved so delightful to all kinds aud conditions of ' playgoers in the metropolis that "Sinners'' will doubt less remain on the stage for a long time to come. Tt is a plav that will appeal to people who have" lived and who know something of life. "Shakespeare must be catching listen to this,'! savs Allan Rinehnrdt. who comes to the Orpheum today in a 'neat little sketch "A company' of us were once rehearsing "Twelfth Night" in the director's garden. Next door a lot of workmen were building a house. vOne afternoon some of us were loitering about the garden after the rehearsal, when we heard one of the workmen sav, "I prithee, malapert, pass me vernier brick." '..' - Gus Edwards has sent out Orpheum acts again and again, but has never before appeared with any of them. Some of his past successful acts here have been Gus Edwards's School Boys and Girls. (Jus Edwards's Blonde Type writers, Gus Edwards's Show Girls. G us Edwards's Kid Kabaret, to sav nothing of several others. Over thirty people are carried by his "Song Revue of 1915." Born in Europe, reared in Chicago and "discovered" in New York, tell in brief the story of Nan Halperin, the singing comedien ne: |