Show T aI who ad adfle adL adL R DON Aug Ur subsidies of f t wl w ate the frequently fr cite L 10 tate b 1 shining example of ot ott frat arit I as a 8 ot of Rid alti hut nUl hutt KS t that there I III another side lide to tote f t mt 1 A wall all has arisen from roni tho the te which are thus assist aIt aul t I b Frt at 31 he is I proving pr their art are compel lIed to lo give away T j mo f r fret free Seats scats to members of ot oft ott fm m 4 tb net and other con conro t t g tM ro than they receive III In l they all an i make no nl profits v In Paris Pari for ex The he ij tra a annual subsidy of ut urI lamp rf r eleA directors this tiis I 1111 HJ flut Rod n j daI short of the value alue an tuiS fuuS a us u a right by ly of 0 th the t R runs not content with i i l demand dUl d n rr fr u constituents It 11 IK Is 1 of nakIn them le t 6 ot ne the oter at no cost ot o l il p t Cs rs 1 ft a rt nt at the tho lh then It II Is i found that tho the th 4 1 f always the returns cx n Is III made by b such lIuch The Jhc same m randan theaters as liS tho the thor HII r ft 11 kU FrAI rt the tho Odeon Odron the Opera Th They S get Iet t tho tto tf d i the th with the thc state 1 rt nl IrA 1 4 of by 11 It ll they the are out outI tr f If bY tt II Instead of encouragIng ln I ti h merely encourages II I In h provinces where the IheI I lade amlar are r su by h b tIe the u scarcely carrel a 1 playhouse In the West Vest End J nd In which rehearsals r are arl not no now going un n There will IiI be br ten t n big bl performances in iii the month beginning Aug Au 29 on which date dale the tho dramatize dramatization lion tion of or W V J 1 Loeken novel nOel The Morals of Marcus is IA to III be he b produced The author Is s the secretary of the thc Brit British BritIsh ish I h InstItute of Architects and I 1 be Je believe behave have lieve this Is III his first play piny pin except for forono forone ono one or two curt prK He lie was we not known as an a novelist either cither until his hll delightful story was WAIl published last year ear An Interesting Instance of af the thenet net fall that you OU cant put pUI on all the stage what hn t you ou rail can say siy In a novel will be found In the thc alteration a II erA lion of the thc Judith of the Ihl novel Into nn nil austere lIu tee friend of ot the hero a e For Jor the theme of his new nel play pia due next month at the Comyns err arl has ha again sought Inspiration at lit atthe atthe the fount of nr Old Once Onre more for the benefit of the thc many mall over whom the Ihl naive nalo and the marvelous still exert ro ye 0 delicious a fascination thc the dramas drama dramatist list of Arthur has hn travelled In Into into to 10 the hI enchanted realms of af and end and for far or presenta presentation pre thin tion behind the footlights one olle of th the worlds most famous fanmous love lovo stories the tingle Idyll of Sir Tristram and U La helm Hello Mr Ir Carrs Carri version Is derived mainly from Mo Io rate dArthur but he has hRS Introduced Intro i several Feml episodes of his hi own invention intention intentions AH s 11 to the environment I have liae given time the drama says MII Mr Ir Cart Carr I 1 have havn been wholly holl gulden liy I b the chivalric spirit nf tin the time In which the le II fiend gend first Ort takes laks Its literary II form forma a we 0 learn that these thele cheap classes cost the members but ten Ien per lesson It Is u not made plain whether they the buy bu their own books or not but as all each och needs his hIli book for tor home study It Jt Is ts supposed crl It Is owned by b the student atU l lIt This Thill would to about four faur dollars a year Mr books hooks and car fare fArt added to each of or the tho thousands attending It ft is III s doubt ess the entertainment to tl ti leave the education duration out of the ques lUU lion tion that young 01 III It men and ladies of refined tendency could fled find In the Ihl great f At metropolis metrO MUCH leCH liMitE Hut But ne note te chute In Salt SAil Lake Uke City II cost our but bUI one olle dollar it mc season Ju just t of that of Sew New York City LII And Aud for this entertain ori In menu and ami outing that thaI would cost twice the thc Ih Ruth Bum are furnished the stu su dents free During time Iho season 8 they hear many mall of the great singers who hll appear ap gr In our cur tabernacle at matinees ami ama band har turn such a as 11 Sousas the Italian etc ell etc Pt are brought within theIr rinch to hear and enjoy And 1111 ai 55 If It this thu th were pre not enough of late the p pa parents rents rent are given Riven concert tickets to th the amount of time the class foe ft Surely Burri Salt Lake In r tl to tl opportunity Is I III away II ahead of If tho the great metropolis when It cornea comes to cost of ot singing classes If It there Is 11 A ft dark side sid to It it Is that tho the public at nt large do not always avail themselves of their opportunities There was fIlA a I titus time when the singing class or school rhonl was wn ns thought to be nut out of date but the best musical educators of the age nitI have hI found tau III their mistake ml ant and have hll noted the deterioration dt In th the musical progress of f the III masses and are hastening to 10 replace them a All as one olle of the tho most moat needed Institutions In III tin tim land lend outride out of tIme public schools and they give 11 the public school hool can cannot not afford time or effort to do the Ihl art artof artof of blending voices alre Joining together to ether In song at 01 time and a t place where ont only mul Is considered I The private student here himself to III masticate to Sonic some advantage tile the five fire fh dollars worth of nf lie h Is III to pay Ita for or once OnN or twice a al week Hk from corn some noted master In III the tiit th sweet liy II and by b and RII his hili and ability to 10 Interpret what hat he lie or piha has been icen enlarged a s hundred hundredfold hundredfold hundredfold fold No l community needs singing Ringing as 3 the Saints Saint do tie There The c ought ou ht to tn he be one on In I every Iery e ery town and anti settlement of our community They would 1 be th the nurseries of our choirs the very 11 cradle of OUt our touch much needed s t V the thc same fame demoralizing state of prevails So o many inan free freo seats loot hf j of tf the th unhappy managers t mary many man of them are clamoring for forthe or orthe the abolition of if the Ibe system litem which takes rM out cut of rockets pockets than It puts puIs I 1 fo o Ibm Ani AM deadheading teems seems In db from it jt t tIt If It rd s n a pity pit that Ihal contracts compelled J JI iob b A Her to tn return to New ew York thiS 01 1 lc Ie C forth fcc till Itie greet great Yiddish h dmn ha hi has b n making such lIuch a stir at tho the IaIn down dOln In that thai ha th Ill attention n of the West Welt End 1 jr dr to I attracted On the last lal two to ta or Ir crowds crowd besieged oo the nil theater and a good ll many man hun bun dr i hAJJ hail t I be turned away na I 1 hap ft t td to 10 ro across Itro eros from New ev I York th Mr Ir Adl Adir r and al his charming wife witt art aM h hs bl t told td id m ins mp th T to play pia a Iw 11 dya at the Ihl Pavilion and then go KO goIn got In t i tn or oT If q German baths for or a much auth neeJ rest r Instead dd of af this ter Iff ha f hern bf playing steadily In III Lon Len dna aon t was ivas as mado made U till that st Mr Ir Adler should hould be bl 1111 an n opportunity of af showing what shat M b do for n a week wk at one ThE of the bit bt West Wat End theaters and the Mf at r that when hi his hll New Iw York Tork I r Hig gHi nig permit him to ta di dl daIC I Ie IC hf ht will return to lx london And try In till t nt Mr tr Adler came to tn touN uN fl from St Petersburg twenty t hll o years s ro and bad three thrle years year of ur drudgery in small limA II theaters In tho the tat Cut ut End of nf tendon London After Mining w to 10 the re of starvation he hI eon con W Wid d tn to go 10 to America In ItS and JV Jy 1 been there ever since Th ill Tendon London dramatic season Is III go 0 If he to begin unusually early earl There Is III n n nun n n spirit which so O colors colo the whole eory lor lorns ns as wo we know It that I have hae thought It best to In reject the purely purl barbaric set fiet setting setting ting which might otherwise be bl appropriate to the historic epoch to which the legend may lUay be IMS supposed to boll belong My Ir aim In short has been to make the setting us as legendary us Ii a the thc theme themeS S There Thore In ts nothing so stimulating ns nil debt In is tho the rather dangerous moral which Madame Emma Valve Calve herself draws from the story of the beginning of ot her own artistic cUter career some seine of which she he has hall Just JURt given glnn to ton toa toa a n friend who discovered her In a Pyre Pyrenean nean village While singing at the tho Brussels she wis ns till engaged by bythe b bythe the Paris Opera at mit n a salary alar of a year flIr This to 10 her hern hera n a fortune and on the strength of It sho shoat shoat at Rt onre once ordered 1 a n complete wardrobe At H the end of the y yar ar she found that she he had spent times limes as a much as M asher asher her salary and was 1000 In debt This stimulated her to 10 seek Icek a 1 more remunerative atio engagement nl America came caine to her rescue But nut by br tho the time she phe had returned and paid fid off her previous she Mund und herself confronted with a 1 still till bigger bl l cr de of nt which was U owing to dressmaker Under this stimulus she went bark back to the land of dollars and there mado maile mal She Fhe has hlll made a n lot Int more mort since and has hn dispensed I entirely with the Incentive 10 lo effort provided by b cia cla clamorous morons creditors In fart fact sh she has hall learned to 10 save money mono and Is III building a 1 house for herself at nt Stilt Still she Is III convinced that If she hn had hI not nat had debts to goad her forward her success would have bae beer by no means meaca to so 0 rapid or to so great CURTIS ce BBOWN n |