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Show I ccizg to sa i&t Ruth Chatterten in "Cm. Out of the Kitchen," at the Salt Lake theatre, next Thursday and Friday. When Burton Crane, multimillionaire New Yorker, decided to lease the laln-gerfleld laln-gerfleld mansion in Vlrginta for a period pe-riod of six weeks and consented to pay IfrOOO as rent, it looked as though all the pressing financial difficulties" of the Ialhgerflelds were about to end. But unfortunately Crane had stipulated In the lease that there should be no black servants on the place. And, at the last sassasm. It was found thai i white servants were unobtainable. This la the state nf affairs at the beginning of "Come Out of the Kitchen," Kitch-en," the charming comedy by A. E. Thomas In which Ruth Chattel-ton has scored the greatest auccess of her career ca-reer during an eight months run In New York, and which will he seen st the Salt Lake theatre Thursday and Friday. The solution of the problem comes i from Olivia Dalngerfield (Mies Chat-terton) Chat-terton) who persuades her slstar and two brothers to act, with her, as servants ser-vants In their own stately mansion. With the arrival of Crane and lis three guests a Mrs. Falkener and her daughter and her brother, who to lso Crane's attorney complications begin Immediately. Such a quartette. of servants ser-vants were probably never assembled under one roof before. Their eccentricity eccen-tricity of behavior results In the discharge dis-charge of one after another until only Olivia, as Jane Ellen, the cook. Is left. Of course the merry story comes to a happy and characteristically charming conclusion when Crane tBruoe Mc-Rae) Mc-Rae) sees through Olivia's masquerade and capitulates to her captivating ways. |