OCR Text |
Show i i THE CITIZEN ai. i ti With the First Nighters . excellent bill (S : is to va-C11rie- ty of acts at ,nd the Pantages this week, making the show one of the best that lias been here for a long time, a real rodeo in which some rjg. There is expert roping and riding is shown and the Cyclone Revue is a most pleasing and unusual dancing act. lal The large gathering of religious at the Eucharistic Congress at Chicago is shown on the screen, and hundreds of thousands of people are lVil seen moving to and fro and taking IHgpart in the exercises. The Johnstown flood of forty years ago, interwoven ,ailI with a love story, is shown, wiping out the town with its roaring flood waters 5, aland the many scenes of humans who are vainly endeavoring to get out of the path of the flood and death. Two strong men open the vaudeville bill with a series of athletic stunts that require not only great Lai strength but unusual dexterity as well. are known as Murand and Leo. jThey A blackface comedian tries hard to get the audience interested in his Jokes. Marrion Talley hears herself lllllon the Victrola and is greatly surpris-vfoe- d in hearing her perfect voice from another source than from herself. at;! The Cyclone Revue composed of eight beautiful dancing girls and a couple of gentlemen, brings out all Ca there is In dancing. The girls are at . idd tert ?re: vill lie and are unusual steppers, appearing in their various dancing roles in beautiful costumes. No better dancing act has ever been seen here. Tock and Toy is a Chinese act in which there is some excellent singing and it is an act worth while and very pleasing. Al Bernavici, and assistant, an accomplished violinist, pleases the audience with a series of violin selections and he gets a big hand. The Rodeo Revue is an act in which several horses, a bull, and expert roping is exhibited by cowgirls and cowWestern boys, and they are great. ranch life is truely depicted in this act, from roping wild steers to riding bucky horses, and rope tricks performed by the cowboys after the days work is done. Big Bill is coming to the Pantages theatre next week. . tractive, graceful BE SEEN AT PANTAGES Every act a feature and such a , 1 peo-yjip- le BIG FIREWORKS DISPLAY AT LAGOON MONDAY EVENING Manager A. C. Christensen has centered all his efforts in providing unusual amusement for the thousands of people who will go to Lagoon, the Coney Island of the West, during the holidays. The Fourth of July will be celebrated Monday, July 5. Lagoon is prepared to care for ten or fifteen thousand people and all those who visit this beastiful resort will be pleased with their outing. Over in fireworks will be shot into the air for the special amusement of the patrons, and the many amusement features will keep the people in a jolly mood during the entire day and evening. There will be a matinee dance at the resort Monday afternoon, with the best dance music in Utah. During these hot days, the fresh water bathing at Lagoon is a God-senThousands of people enjoy themselves there in the refreshing cool water which trickles down the mountain sides in all its purity, and where people can enjoy bathing without being strangled or blinded. Many people have got the habit of driving out to Lagoon, take a swim and return to the city where they may better accomplish their work during these hot days. Special musical and vaudeville programs have been arranged for the week, for the enjoyment of the people. The shade trees, the pretty green lawns and the beautiful flowers, all combine to make this resort the most popular in the State of Utah and that is where the crowds go. Meet me at Lagoon has become a common phrase. A feature which no other resort can boast of is the paved highway that takes the patron to the very gates of the resort, and there is no necesity of driving over dusty and rutty country roads. Lagoon is the favorite resort of the people, and it is a continual round of pleasure when you once get there. $1,000 d. COMMERCIAL CLUB. f u-m- Prominent men have been chosen for officers at the recent election of erii the Commercial nit? Keyser, well known and progressive businessman of this city, was elected president; Edward M. Ashton, Sherman Armstrong was elected for the third consecutive time for treasurer, and Joseph II. Rayburn was reelected general secretary, for the seventh consecutive administration of the office. Mr. Keyser is president of the M. A. Keyser company, vice president of the A. Keyser company, president of the Utah Outdoor association, a df- - Club. Malcolm A. viie-preide- tax oa. 0 f est rii. nt; Pretty Rose Lyle, Artistic Dancer at Pantages rector of Walker Brothers Bankers, and vice president of the Salt Lake Country club. Mr. Keyser is also a member of the University club. He is a native Salt Laker and graduated from Harvard university in .1909. He was a member of the sixteenth Utah legislature. Mr. Ashton, the new vice president, is vice president of. Ashton-Jenkin- s company, and former president of both the Utah Real Estate asociation and the Salt Lake Real Estate board. He has been a membed of the chamber of commerce for eleven years, and is one of the newly elected members of the board of governors. Mr. Armstrong is now serving his third year as a member of the board of governors. He is vice president of the National Copper bank, the Bingham State bank, the Magna Banking jre acl vl 31 IS c-- yisit A lit ?:' t The Cyclones at the Pantages |