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Show and Imitates well and wins the heart of her audience with her smiles. The Office Boy and the Typewriter, presented b Mr. O'Brien-Havel and Miss Bessie Kyle, Is a playlet that keeps the house in an uproar of laughter laugh-ter for fifteen minutes. Mr. Clement De Lion the man of dextcrious digits has a truly unique act He Is aB deft a master of spheres as T. Nelson Downs Is of disks or coins. His work Is not that 'of mechanical me-chanical magic but of the most intricate in-tricate legerdemain of finger Jugglery. Juggle-ry. Mr. Sydney Dale and Mr. Pat Boylo In the Belle and the Beau, give the audience a surprise that tAkes screamingly, but which must be seen to be appreciated. The five Olympiers In living statuary statu-ary form a pretty climax to the vaudeville vaude-ville program. The figures are in bronze and one doubts that they really real-ly live until they boldly step from tho final picture into animation. The entertainment ends with a film of moving pictures. fl AT JSBTiB & j VAUDEVILLE SEASON OPENS AT ORPHEUM. The Orpheum theater opened tho vaudeulle season in Ogden last night and entertained a closely packed house with an especially good bill. Under the supervision of Manager Goss the theater has undergone a complete com-plete renovation during tbe summer months and in addition to being beautified beau-tified In many ways the bouse has been rendered as nearly fireproof aa any theater in tbe United States. Several Sev-eral of the orchestra musicians who were with the Orpheum last year and left the city during the summer have returned and under the direction of ; Edgar D. Short, will play again this I season. : The opening program i a mingling '( of clever variety, suited to satisfy the 'jinost diversified tastes. When Solomon, Solo-mon, the sapient, exuded that bit of wisdom about there being nothing new under the sun ho meant to Include In-clude vaudeville. Luckily, the success suc-cess and pleasuro of this particular line of theatrical entertainment doe3 not depend upon its uniqueness alono, . but upon the manner in which an act is presented. Vaudeville performers know better than any one else that they can't "get by" on novelty, j Without a single exception the peo-j peo-j pie on the bill this week are clever ; and every act wrung Iron-handed ap-I ap-I plau6o from the spectators. Tho first act. the Athlete and the Clown, by Melrose and Kennedy is real comedy of the concrete sort without resort to the slap stick a truly funny clown and a decided athletic tumbler. Miss Lillian Ashley, a comedienne in songs and stories, presents a handful hand-ful of Joke3 of recent vintage, sings |