H' tmm jl r If N 12 GOODWIN'S WEEKLY Hhi were fortunate in being assigned the Hft song "Sympathy' Miss DeRoso as I Sybil, Dotty Burnoll as Suzette, John Ilines, as Piotro, Craig Campbell as Jack Travers and Jenkins. wo must HL not forgot Jenkins, played by Oscar H " Figman much in the same way as ho H has played other characters in "The ll Merry Widow" and "Madame Sherry" H in the past but funny just the same. H Trentini and her company in "The H Firefly" provided an opera in a hun- H dred for four of the finest audiences H that have been seen at the theatre H during the season. H EMPRESS H Headed by "A Night at the Bath," tfl the new bill at the Empress is fair H j enough though the headliner is not M I new to local audiences. "Willisch a m ' German juggler, opens the bill and 1 . does some things cleverely though his H j act could be -greatly improved if he H i would stick to the fast work he fin- R Scene from "AbBinthe," the four-part feature at the Rex theatre next r Tuesday and Wednesday. The picture was produced in Paris by King H Baggot, Leah Baird and their company, who make a special trip abroad H for the production. B ishes with. Most of his humor Is a H saddening spectacle. D'Arcy and Will- H iams are scoring with their ragtime H songs, Mond and Salle have an Im- H personation act that is cleverly done and is a complete surprise, Lou Wells is a hit in monologue and with a uaxaphone, and Sandwina, tho cham pion strong woman of the world is entertaining even if she does make the henpecked fearsome. The bill wnich opens on Wednesday will be headed by Prince Floro, the man monkey, and Joe Maxwell's scenic production of girls and comedians "A Night in tho Police Station' is the second headliner. Besides the bill in cludes 'Mary Dorr, character comed ian; Wilson & Rich in songs and dances, and Arthur Geary, tenor PANTAGES Powers' hippodrome elephants, five in number, who are so intelligent that they tell their right names and all tho family secrets are making a smashing hit at the Broadway house and if you have not taken the kiddies to see them be sure to do it because you will enjoy the intelligent work of these beasts as much as the young sters do. The bill In general is one of the best ever seen at that house, the Dem itrescru troupe of three being respon sible for a horizontal' bar act In a class by itself and then Billy Link and Blossom Robinson make things Interesting. Benson and Bell have a line of singing and eccentric dancing MABEL BELL, OF BENSON AND B ELL, AT PANTAGES. that makes a prominent place for them on the bill. For the week to come Manager Newman announces Cole, Russell and Davis in "Waiters Wanted," the Six Musical Spillers, the LaBelles in com edy work and Weston and Young in "A Modern Flirtation." PAVLOWA Pavlowa will be at the Salt Lake theatre on Wednesday next. Pavlowa is supreme in that she makes all that see her dance enter into her spirit completely forgettln0' technique where as great dancers of bygone days were praised because they could pirouette or do this or that so many times. Pavlowa Ib not only a dancer but a creator of moods, a lyric poet so to speak. The transcending art of the Russian ballet as exemplified by Pavlowa and her grqat troupe, is really not funda mentally Russian at all, but German, French and Italian. And although bal let dancers have been trained at the personal expense of the Czar for cen turies in Russia no native Muscovite dancer attained world-wide fame till Pavlowa's time. Until a generation ago j the Imperial ballet masters were not I Russians. And today the basic tech nique taught at the Imperial Mar- 1 iensky Institute of the Dance is Ital ian. With their innate love for music, and their aptitude for the graceful national dances, Russians were natur ally adept pupils for the ballet. It is strange then that unitl Pavlowa's time the greatest of the dancers who appeared before the Czar were Ital ians or French. But now the Russian dancers, having made the art of the other nations their own, are beyond any dispute the greatest dancers the world has ever known. THE PRICE "The Price" is nothing to rave about and though containing many dramatic situations Is a vehicle pro viding little for any one in its cast with the exception of the part Miss Ware, the authoress, created for her self. As was to be expected, Miss j Rambeau played the part to perfec- j tion ably assisted by Mr. Mack, How ard Scott, Mrs. Lillian Rambeau and j Frederick Sumner. ' I Broadway Jones I FROM THE PLAY OF GEORGE M. COHAN BY EDWARD2MARSHALL M (Copyright, 1913, by C. W. Dillingham Co.) H (Continued from last week.) Wm'- "I started looking for a 'boy-want- HBf ed' sign. It sounds funny, but it is B" a fact. My intentions were the best. B in all the world. But I got to think- H ing of something else, after I had H walked a block or two, and where do HI you suppose I was when I woke up? Hl. fin Delmonico's, eating breakfast! B'j Turned in there out of force of habit. B "I made a dozen attempts to do Hf. the right thing. I cut out automo- Wmtt biles, and rode in street cars for three Bjl days; I went to an opening night at Kf a theatre and sat in tho gallery; I bought a pair of ready-made shoes; I ate meals at a forty-cent table d' bote and smoked five-cent cigars practicing, just practicing, trying to get used to it. "But I couldn't. That was all I sim ply couldn't! All my good resolutions went to smash every time I took a look at Broadway. I knew my credit was good; the things I wanted were there; I could have them; so well. I took them, that was all!" "And now," said Wallace, who had sat, at first Incredulous, and, 1 ter apellbound, during the recital, "you are fifty thousand dollars in debt!" "I don't know the exact amount, but that's a fairly good guess." "You've been pretty quiet about It. It hasn't seemed to orry you much!" "Hasn't worried me?" Broadway's voice was bitter. "Well, I dont mind telling you that I have just come out of the first sound sleep I've had in weeks. I'll betI walked to Chicago and back every night the first month I was broke." "I don't ur lerstand?" "I mean if you had measured up my carpet by tho mile. I thought so much and worried so much that I didn't dare trust myself alone. I had the weird est ideas; I did the craziest things. Do you know that I belong to the Salva- ' tion Army?" "What!" "On the level. I went to Newark and joined one night. "What was the idea?" "I thought it might help me forget my troubles. I played tho bass drum for two nights and couldn't stand it ony longer. Er-rhave you ever been in Newark?"