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Show THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MAY 26, 1907. DRAMATIC Rare Trent Promised Salt Lark« Miss . Laura Prankentiekt and Company Orpheum Stirs Turn Wreck ito Voy- Company du tion of as the Grows in Payor With Patrons the ies this week second attraction of STARS OF THE Rircamnaliee of the Man Who Some thew SCHOOL n FOR SCAND . tree Vv ent oy his is paying officer his Ane a atte entions fight to ensues is one th at ‘here will afford have her an| given an_ Gonertuntt; new Orpheum stock an the way of tale nt em the Seas and Fe company for play in which Nat affords ope > ns "Gooa TILLMAN snoramus it pees a woman in de iy with fehl in the love with IS He WELL Tas BRED Been Declared. | Starting at the Theat day and Saturglay Matinees, his mate ‘ntures class of: propr le tress of the laughing v as if old-time! da a sho sine aftr Wisatontia Killed, VIOLA ALLEN [fine IN "TWELFTH NIG H1," AT SALT silence Almost Sible the® per eXactly would ‘i a 1 nd ' of char: scr a eace a was exceedingly LAKE THEATRE, BEGLN of a litthe watercress seller | fact, But that was not the nearest that lish Barrie got to politics and politician | sours Later on he enme within an ace of | 4 ; flration Standing for parliament at the gen- |} election, but somehow the Ae pare rangements went awry, and he was] forerunner spared the worry of polities, happily| bookland Perhaps thing went | USS | Scotchman most speedily awry because Barrl jin The pretty. nee REC ee 4 LAt4S PRX PORES the There is in whic Nich Grand him, ‘and with nation charm, bit which was running in a religious | him paper. For months the watereress |surest seller filled his dreams. Then one | month the paper missed, and there | this Was a disappointed bos in Wirriemuir | derstood ‘by Cc Who went to bed and dreamed of | whom watercress, and wondered what had} queed become of his little heroine. But WON=lmanusc ripts dering did not bring her back SO| "friend ; James Matthew Barrie wrote a story] nes f nis own with something about perhaps Watercress and = shipwreck C ran) attempt along until it grew into a three- | ness volume novel, and actually reached office of a publisher But its end | down came before it had a chance of cireulat cl write Yr} yurious The publisher thought the thinki very clever lady," ar id. was ready | details of publish thé book 7" a aan d abou pounds; but Mr. Barrie's autograph | 2 ' not worth a hundred pounds "a | pe ; those days, and his first book remained plot Wrapped up somewhere in brown pa-] poo] in the obseurity of WKirriemuir | jt home. eve hing Wsould Jke Robert Louis Stevenson, Bar-|a per to BRdinburgh university after iterial leaving Dumfries academy, and here | yal Was that he first saw Tord Rose| Tt would berry and threw a elod of earth at the! 4 noble lord "Hie was a peer," say se] gartie, "those were my politics," h i had explains, adding, as though the mem| mind ory anneys him, that the clod missed I} lhe 1d, the oats mo re tice erning ¢cle ass. evening £ ahhe cc mpany é Fiteh Night Mat-J a some- |‘ not a great suecess in public life many authors are"? le was jnee duced to preside over oa Bur ns' cele. bration in Seotland by ral of asBi sisting himself. into public atte ntloi | de he said next to nothing one No [eee Hlerenes away quietly before anybody h a chance to miss lim Phe next wee vell-kKnownm paper had a tirie ee article on ‘Mr. Barrie in. the ‘Chair, | Which the author was held up un- jmonpl r sparingly to public ridicule Those {and 1 who had invited Barrie to the ce lebra- | Uifying read the article with ‘creat yp--| from und they will learn some day. if j bein ti n tke have not learned. alread that writer of it. was, Mr. Barrie him- fhetpful | a page Everybody who knows lim, even | those whe can claim him as a friend j ton, many i years' standing, just as many | is the sided in character, Just as quaint and | cannot curlous as his Peter Pan He is the | except tinest of tiny men ae * whimsical my witty; his sympathies are of the | mis widest; his kindliness - without end. His} busine conversation at its finest is poctic al | sil ao te my pastoral excursions, fai atic ne l from the modern noisy world He is} of the Simple as a shepherd. boy, el oins Which team to field, or sitting under the} and hawthorne piping to his flock, "as! Ul tea drinking be though he never should grow old." |a game company with him one seems to! our converse with his for¢éhead, which ix | device broad and high, light a if built of | meal Ivory, with large projecting evebrows, | plained sympathetic eyes rolling beneath| gradual them, His face has the pale, thoughtful complexion of the Spanish portrait |}an pela fu ainters, Murrilloand Valasquez. One|! ley not is tempted to think that the genius of | inve ntfon: face, as from a helgat survevs | lation projects him into the world un-/traveled known of thought and mee rations as if the tiny body were will oe veered | furlous the boundless imaginings of the Seana giant Inind. rile is one of the wt delightful) in he coped one acuta mes in a life- | ondary has a mind i so vieh in folk! son ed it Leen fhena io fertile in strange fancles, pr i youth: made up of flétion, partly of fact, in or | ¢ which he can narrate over a table a country walk with a fine fasciSeasonable ~ Cowboy on a "The ~ S With James academy is not known that the article in school magazine ever took anv- | body by storm Phe Seotch lad who!| a, expected so much for it was then & way from fame and fortune But found an inspiring friend in the | village tailor, who taught him to re- story Good Plays Will ‘Ope n Tomorrow ago. serawling Dumfries ert What can I do to be forever known, L and make the age to come my own | se icing Mr, Barrie made up his mind th at} her Sete thing for bi to do was to write, | appreciation of, Berle. he took his pen and wrote | the up himself into fame through many plays/ SverE of any other Phe and books, ! Bs But Merrat aes a not find ao hiner did By ina ght It® was aj} pression slow SAGRIE. It Samar in-a Bis words. Flis is not a small complicated His imagination had been captured by ' mind : such show 1s years was at thing like this } companion "When you read the following article | him think you will exclaim, ‘Who is this / to . ‘ar nin bef great literary genius appearing before : tional eyes and. takin' our -hearts by} ance One that | | have. appeared thirty Barrie paper "THE Wrote ‘"‘Peter Pan. dreams. ane nea rthiness of mood, |