Show I Plays and Player People II IIi i n 11 11 Miss Donnelly UN as the lie ie 3 ID UNO That brilliant drama o of Am American financial and social conditions The TheLlon Lion Llon and the Mouse will open Its third local engagement at the Salt Lake theater this evening to what promises to bo be a n. capacity house This season Jeason Mr 11 Henry B D. Harris is sending Miss Dorothy Doroth Donnelly hero In the tho role of oC Shirley a character which until we ks ago o she has never played outside of New York City Next year Miss Donnelly will be starred In a Do new of J American social life by a n nn II n native UVO dramatist Tiit Sf Sen eM t Sale SuI Tho The sale Rale of or seats for tor Ralph Stuarts Stuart's appearance ranee In Salt Lake which this season will occur on 01 ron l Monday II a at nt the thc Salt e theater promises to attract his admirers admirer In goodly numbers It IL will open nt at the box office tomorrow morn- morn ron v n y B. B I will j Mr 1 Stuart In In C. C db new db corne comedy y drama of colloRd life Strong heart hoart In which Mr Stuart promises to win an oven even cI greater r St t triumph r than O was scored by him him II In in his S previous productions productions lions or ot Soldiers of oC Fortune and s 's s Polly Folly oll The leading role role that of oC A It a college bred Indian affords Mr ir Stuart great scope for fol an in unusual characterization one one that ho he has taken advantage o of oC to the tho full tull Additional at attractiveness attractiveness at- at Is lent to tho the play pia by the fact tact that IT Il pictures college e life with Ivl vividness ness has freshness an and force In InUs It Us its situations and much humor h of at the breezy American sort orL An exciting in incident incident In in- Is the football game Iame which forms Corms an n Important part in the de development development do- do of the story Tho The engagement engage engage- ment Is for one night on only i Scene for foE The Fur S mm Man Inn Wh When n Edwin Milton Boyle Royle was looking look look- lug ing for the locale o of The Squaw Man which antI and Co will soon present present pre pre- sent here with William Faversham as star the dramatist recalled to mind a beautiful I. I park in Colorado Indelibly associated with the early history o of the tho state and Its Hi pioneers This valley lies between the Sangro do de Cristo and Green Horn ranges and Is IR from three to miles wide and five fifty miles long Toda Today It is Imo known Imon n as the Valley alle of the Younger Sons and more than titan Otto ono old English family has gone broke e in attempting to establish horse ranches The Tho place is now peopled peopled peo peo- pled pied b by Impecunious scions of an impoverished im im- im British nobility an and hero here on one of time the three divisions dl of the continental conti divide may be f found und many o of the old habits anti and customs of England About three miles north of West Vest WestCliff Cliff stands nn cia historic lot of r rt red d sandstone sandstone sand sand- stone which i Is known as Kit KIl Carson's Carsons fort These monoliths are arc about sIxteen sixteen six sIx- teen feet teet high of rugged formation and encompass s nn an area of about twelve square foot feet In tho lie center of this natural natural natural nat nat- ural fortress bubbles a spring and it was this never failing supply of DC water which enabled the famous amous plainsmen to stand oft off the Utes under Ouray Oura until old Trapper Baker nakor and nolI Jim Beckwith arrived with reinforcements and ad administered administered ad- ad ministered a a. sound Mound thrashing to the tribe of oC which Is now the principal chief In 1880 Silver Cliff which Is on the edge of oC the nUe valley was the second largest mining camp in the world and ann a short way from tills this town was located the famous tL Basick mine which s yield yield- ed od 01 ore oro running ISOO to the ton At the theother theother theothor other othor end enil of ot the valley alle is Cotopaxi which up to 1890 was the headquarters of tho tue famous Dick McCoy gang of ot rustlers which were wore wiped out by cowboys cow cow- boys lOil headed b by the famous broken T out H. In Bud Hard Hardy a a. character In iii InThe The Tho Squaw o Man 1 an the famous old catlie cattIe cattle cat cat- tIe lie th thief f Is given I cn the Am American public n ml I Play lovers never tire of oC a n good play piny that that Is 18 why Lovu l In Now New ow York never nover plays to small audiences and its coining en engagement for tor three nl nights starting tonight ht with a a. matinee Saturday Sat Sat- will prove provo no exception to tho the rule This season this gr great al play celTics comes coms In a complete new lIew dress having been thc tho h past post summer rebuilt and fo- fo painted In Its entirety The Thc play pia Itself has hus boon hoem fully Cully revised so 51 as to bring the stor story of life Ute in tho lie great rca city of New York right down to tolie the lie present date yet retaining the tho In- In lIng story that has for tor so many years vears entertained countless counties audiences In or E every state slate in itt tho the Union I |