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Show j cro-.v J ti t' r - : ! : r ' t c I ;.l ver.t away tl. ; I ; i j t V.'arde cc; lry. .;t Lyr.r.e" vl'.l 'run &I1 the veil:, n Uh matinee today ; ! ar.l SatlrJjy. " The rrW... nation of "DaviJ ITaruni" which Charles rrohr.an Is to mike at ' i the Salt Lake Theater Thursday r.!:':.t with that well known and sterling comedian, com-edian, Vri":ain II. Crane in the role of the- horse-tra dir. g old bar.ker should prove highly diverting:. Mr. Crane's success In the r'ay has reached an' extraordinary ex-traordinary pitch. The play Is clean, It is wholesome, its atmosphere is redolent redo-lent of the country and its humor is of the healthy, kind. The scene of the third act, on Christmas morning', when the Widow Cullom Is first made to believe be-lieve that the two mortgages will prove too much for her property,' and in which David finally tells her how her late husband, Billy- P. Cullom, had taken ta-ken him to the circus as a boy, and had given him 10 cents with which to begin -life.'leading up to the statement that the 10 cents had borne Interest all these years, and that the.' mortgas-s were canceled, la one. of those odiiy sympathetic contributions of human tenderness and stage art that make one forget -the .unreality of the surroundings surround-ings and cause one to bestow the tribute, tri-bute, of 'unexpected, but - unhindered tears. ' -. Miss Violet Craig left last night for Denver with, the Harry Corson Clarke company.-. , |