Show I AMUSEMENTS I TONIGHT'S AMUSEMENTS SALT LAKE Maude LAKE Maude Adams dams in Peter Pan The ORPHEUM The Dancing Girl Hearts GRAND GRAND Hearts of the Blue Ridge LYRIC LYRIC Vaudeville CHAMBER OF COMMERCE COMMERCE Free Free Mrs Irs Warrens Warren's Profession is said to contain nothing Inimical to public morals The usual musical comedy is Infinitely better furnished with those enticements that distressed St. St Anthony Men and women find the Shaw drama deeply Interesting It discusses one of the biggest problems of the day in the earnest earnest earnest earn earn- est incisive and genuine fashion of the but unlike them It Is never nebulous and it lightens its moralities and Its solemn Ironies with gay witti witti- It sets out two truths of current civilization civilization civili civill- most eloquently The importance of having money and the fact that women women women wo wo- wo- wo men or men can nearly always have money at they the expense of conscience so that poor men and still more poor women women women wo wo- men often choose between bitter virtue and comfortable vice Nevertheless the play Is not an argument for wrong liv liv- ing lug The wages of of sin are are clearly demonstrated to be sufficiently deathlike deathlike deathlike death death- like In the living world to offset for all the moral minds the possession of more creature comfort The St. St Paul Dispatch of April 15 16 says says- Virtue triumphs over o vice as positively If less obtrusively in Mrs Warrens Warren's Profession as in that other popular play The Lion and the Mouse which is most crudely amateurish amateur amateur- ish In comparison with the work of Shaw Indeed the performance would be far more worthy the personal attention of clergymen than the puerile melodrama to which the cloth is usually Invited Miss Rose Coghlan with ith the entire production production production pro pro- will appear here June Tunc S 8 for tor matinee matInee matinee mat mat- inee and night performance s The audience that greeted Miss Laura and her company at the Grand last night In Hearts of ot the Blue Ridge gave the young star a tremendous tremendous tremendous dous reception The great play has been splendidly stage this week and It promIses promises prom prom- to score the hit of Miss Franken- Franken fields field's engagement at the Grand Players like plays s suffer suffer ff r by co compari compari- parl- parl son Those in the rather slim audience at the Orpheum last night who saw John Drew In the Dancing Girls compared compared compared com com- pared his acting with that of Albert Phil Phil- lips lips and and Phillips suffered Yet it must be said that the leading self man t p carried on the he His part support with l marred remarkable a his l efforts The sangfroid the coldness the lack of emotion of Qt sentiment the composed com composed com com- posed pOled arrogant demeanor of ot the average Briton of or the upper tipper classes were abl ably portrayed by y Phillips But little fault can be found with his characterization of Valentine Duke of Guise- Guise bury burp Were It not for the sparkling the scintillation the wisdom and the wit of ot Henry Arthur Jones JonE's In his Dancing Girl the efforts of ot the time company last night would fall fiat flat The lines saved the PI play the play saved e the players I S. S erf re Lucia Moore as Drusilla Ives was In insipid In- In The woman has beauty of ot a kind hind peculiarly fitting to her role of last night yet she spoiled both her beauty and her part art by trying to be coy winsome and blase lase There are times when she shows talent of ot a high order and it were better for her were she to confine herself to naturalness and not to her lines On the whole the play was enjoyable David Miles as Crake Miss rUss Anulta Hendrie Hen Hen- fine drie as Sybil Crake and Roach as Goldspink are satisfactory The company as a whole is good |