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Show r !:3 p THE CITIZEN ' BIG DAYS Lathe Sunday afternoon vaudeville at '. : AT SALTAIR RESORT goon. .V'5 AMERICAN.' Added to the chime of Wedding American theatre, the next week, will be a varied assortment of chuckles, laughs and smiles accorded to this latest Constance Talmadge feature which is released as a First National Attraction. Aside from the comedy situations which have been very well handled, Wedding Bells leaves a distinct im. pression on the audience because of Hi - fact that it presents Miss in a role that has possibilities for delightful bits of the more serious brand of acting something that always makes the comedy situations which follow stand out with greater HHls, at the fir-- t half of Tal-nind- The story has to do with Rosalie Wayne, a wealthy girl. who defies convention and spends the summer at a Palm Beach hotel with. 119 chaperon i & i its sharpness. i - gs i 'A ri other than her maid and her poodle. 3 It is the latter that starts the plot . Every day in the week is a big day at Saltair, because there is always something different going on. Take the days of the week, exclusive of holidays, and notice the' different atmosphere about each one. Monday. is Family Day, a day when folks may bring the kiddies out and enjoy the bathing and amusements at half price. Glitter Globe Tuesday night is night, an evening of pleasurable dancing, featuring the novel and entertaining myriad reflectors a delightful lighting effect. Wednesday is Picnic Day, an excellent day for large parties to take a picnic lunch and come out for a swim. The weather, the water and the crowd are just right Thursday is Concessionaires Treat Day. The concession men generously give on this day free rides and treats to every one comnig to Saltair, In the evening during the dance, a huge Cullen candy shower is given, with prizes galore. Friday is Society Night, featuring R. Owen Sweeten and his inimitable band of dance artists. Dancing reigns supreme on Friday night. Saturday is good old Saturday with a good long afternoon and evennig full of amusements, bathing and dancing just waiting for you. Sunday and R. Owen Sweeten Saltair band concerts are almost synonymous during the summer season. Every week Director Sweeten has something new and different in the way of extra entertainment, not to mention his own wonderful programs. Every day in the week Saltairs the r. place ot.go. NO SMASH WITH LONG-TAILE- D COMET. Professor Raymond Smith Dugan, who holds the chair of astronomy at Princeton University, assures those between v:ho have feared a sinash-uthis old earth and the comet that nothing of that sort will p Constance Talmadge JR t rolling. The gentleman in the case is Reginald Carter, which part is well handled by Harrison Ford. very is fascinated by Rosalies beautiful, long hair. So far as Reggie knew, his marriage to Rosalie was entirely due to her beautiful hair. The marriage lasted two days, xfor at the end of that time Rosalie bobbed her beautiful hair and Reggie caught Reggie measles. Ihe many amusing situations in Salisbury Fields original stage play have been preserved by Chet Whitcy, as director, in turning out a highly creditable production. Among others in the cast are Emily Chichester, Ida Darling, James Harrison, William Polly Vann, Dallas Welford, and Ros-sell- e, bVank Honda. I! v Pons-Winnec- ke inhappen. A trifle of 12,000,000 miles tervened between the two at the nearest approach, the professor declares in a letter to the New York Times. Already it is further away than that, and soon it will have passed out of our ken for another five years. Professor meteor Dugan thinks we may see a shower when the earth reaches the the point where the comet crossed crest. The. letter says: comet will not The hit the earth. If the comet had not gone so fast and gotten ahead of the earth they might have come to close , when the comet is nearest the sun it will grow fainter to us by reason of its increasing distance both from the sun, which somehow has the power to make it glow, and from the earth. Eventually its tail lights will disappear in the distance, and although never much further away than Jupiter, nothing more will be seen of it for over five years. Pons-Winnec- ke Pingree-Matso- n We see the material being driven off in what we call the tail. A comets constitution will not stand many near approaches to the sun. Several comets have been broken up and strung out along their orbits. We should, therefore, expect to encoutner a considerable quantity of debris trailing along a good many miles behind the head of the comet. If these particles of matter are thickly strewn in the rear of the head we should expect a spectacular sower of meteors. As the path of the comet crosses the earth path at an angle of only 19 degrees, teh display if it occurs may continue for several nights. FINDING A HE HYPOCRITE. Browsing among old manuscripts of tve seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, an Englishman founl the diary of a hypocrite a' fraud eo complete that he appears even to have believed in liis own sincerity. For eximpe, here is an entry under date of 27th of July, 1876: As I went home I thought I saw a child playing roughly with a puppy or kitten. Thought of buying it from the , but then thought that by too little from ignorance of its Trice I might .be said to have robbed the child. Debated this matter on my return heme with some anx ety and hed frequent inclinations to return. Another entry reads: Drunk some cold water just as I was going to bed, which chilled my stomach and fo.ced me to drink a glass of wine contrary to my intention. If the Englishmans browsing had produced no other result but this delightful document it would justify the book which he has published under the title of The Cream of Curiosity, but it transpires that the browser, who, by the way, is one Richard L. Hine, had the old manuscipt habit and the habit brought fo.th a dozen or more curiosities quite equal ' to the he-preci- se ch-'ld- . diary of the hypocrite. the labor people much more reasonable to deal with than employers, generally, and I have had many dealings with each. R. J. Caldwell, Chairman of the ConnectiI have found cut Mills Company. Company Incorporated. MINING AND INDUSTRIAL STOCKS LIBERTY BONDS 1 5 23 1 too near. Pons-Winnec- ke This comet was originally discovered by Pons at Marseilles on June 12, 1819, and, judged by the observation of its direction on subsequent dates, was moving in an elliptical orbit in a period of about 5.6 years. It must have returned to the vicinity of the sun six times before it was rediscovered by Winnecke in 1858. It has been seen on eight of the eleven returns that it has made since 1858. Prediction of the time of nearest approach to the sun and of the positions among the stars 'which the comet will occupy from day to day is made for a coming return. This prediction is made uncertain by strong errors in the observations at former returns and by lack of knowledge as to just how much the planets, especially Jupiter, have yanked the comet out of its way. Early search is, therefore, made over a considerable area around the predicted position in the sky to pick up the comet while it is still faint and a long way off in order to have it under observation as long as possible and to be able to improve the constants which define the comets motion. comet went The very close to Jupiter while it was on its last excursion away from the sun. It was impossible to say just how much it had been pulled from its orbit; it was impossible to know before the comet was actually seen approaching just how near it would come. The first three observations of the comet secured in April told the whole story and put an end to the much talked about collision between the earth and the comet. But the spectacular element is not necessarily entirely lost. On June 20 the comet crossed the earths orbit from north to south. Ten days later the earth comes along to the crossroads. What should happen? Fe know that the sun has a powerful disruptive action on comets which come Pons-Wennec- ke quarters. What really happens is that the comet goes through the point where it is nearest the earths path several days before the earth comes We along to the corresponding point. were within about twelve million miles unof the comet on June 7, but were able ot get any nearer. After the 12th 11 Members Salt Lake Stock Exchange Stock Exchange Bldg. 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