OCR Text |
Show THE CITIZEN Marcus aggregation of dazzling beauties and renown comedians, which completed a three days run at the Salt Lake Theatre, last Wednesday night, furnished stellar amusement and entertainment for thousands of Salt Lake playhouse fans. The play consisted chieily of a melange of vaudeville stunts strunk out in a fashion which permitted of some semblance of a stage plot. Charlie Abot, as Jupiter Finnegan Judkins, appearing in a majority ot the most pleasing scenes, stars. His versatility was given ample room for presentation and it can easily be said .that his efforts go far toward making the show the success it has attained. Mr. Abots stutter earned him round after round of applause as he hesitated his way through an operating room comedy, an aviation field skit and numerous other appearances, including a court in Reno and the roof cabaret of a New York hotel. A1 Byrnes and Harry Stanley dance in stellar fashion. Miss Gertrude Farish, as the "Maid on the Farm in Act 1 and in the "Auto Show, proved her power as a songstress of no mean note. Bee Winsome and Folly Day vied with her for leading feminine honors. The latter made quite a hit as the personification of love in "Come On and Love gress want a general protective t V law enacted, and Mr. Kitchin wants a general protective tariff however much he may stand foj tection of his home industries But ia another respect, tliig of his fellow townsmen must be ter pill for Mr. Kitchin. It party that permitted the war ft corporation to die refused to it. The Republican party revived corporation and his fellow tow are now appealing to that instil for help. In two important particulars, fore, the peanut growers of Carolina and Virginia pay their pliments to the superior wisdom a cj Republicans. They assert their a of a protective tariff to protect tin GlcLciy's Wialton. "High Heels'' - AMERICAN. Probably the most widely read book in the world is the "Arabian Nights FREE TRADE STAGGERS THE PEANUT INDUSTRY. Scores of brilliant costumes and similar scenery dazzle during the two dozen fantastic scenes. 4 . At KInema. traveled to the east found that the march of time had not dispelled the spirit which had drawn them thither. As a result thousands of books and plays have been written with the Orient as a locale. "One Arabian Night was directed by Ernst Lubitsch, the master producer of Passion and "Gypsy Blood. It is a pretentious offering, wherein many thousands of persons have been engaged. Me. rs For centuries back Entertainment. In Scotland Neck, North Carolina, it has been a "best seller and it has lost none of its popularity through the the home of Congressman Kitchin, who is the leader of the free traders in years. Translated into nearly all the house of representatives, they have countlanguages, it has been read by formed a peanut growers exchange less millions and its weird and fantasfor the purpose of negotiating a tic tales have enthralled them. loan from the war finance corOne Arabian Night, an Associated First National attraction starring Fola poration to help handle the present Negri, which will be the feature at crop of peanuts in North Carolina and the American theatre for a run of Virginia. Think of the irony of it! one week, starting Sunday, is a story Ivitchins party favors free trade and such as these, and brings to the screen all the mystery, romance and intri- yet the United States imported for 1920-2season almost 48,000,000 gue by which the famous book wove the a spell over its readers. The spirit pounds of peanuts, of which 42,600,000 of the Orient has been caught by the pounds were shelled. During the precamera, resulting in a picture which ceding year the United States imported the equivalent of 192,000,000 pounds will live long in the memory. The book, whose title has gone of unshelled nuts. Most of the importhrough various transitions, contains tations came from the Orient where a thousand and one stories. The au- the cheapest kind of labor is employed thorship of them has been lost in the in the production uf the nuts and 111 dim past and only the names of the the shelling. In addition, this countranslators appear on the various ex- try imported huge quantities of peatant. Most of them dovetail into each nut oil which represents not only the other, the auditors of the storyteller nuts but the labor employed in extractrelating their experiences one after ing the oil. the other. Possibly, if he were asked the diRemarkable is the imagination dis- rect question as to this one commodplayed by the authors, and thrilling ity, Mr. Kitchin would say that he and amusing are the stories. Even favors a high import duty on peanuts, modern-dafor revenue only, but that answer writers do not shine by $5,-000,0- man were for free trade on all commodities except those of his own district, there "would be no protective tariff on any commodity. Unless a man is for protection as a matter of economic principle, and is willing that his far-of- f fellow citizen shall be protected in the same degree as his immediate neighbors, he is not a protectionist. There can be no protective tariff unless a majority of con from the cheap importations of Orient, and they appeal for the ance of a war finance corporation tide them over an emergencyaa made possible by the Republican pu after failure of the Democrats. It would seem as though the n stantial people of North Carolina Virginia would soon begin to their opinions at the polls as veil f express them when they get togeft in business meetings. v, DISCO NSOLATION. Were you ever seasick? answered Mr. Chuggins, d river sick. Every time I go out b motor boat the motor quits. No, ?IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII1IIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII S SUPERBLY. TAILORED - HANDSOME FABRICS Serges, Cashmere Mixtures Worsteds and Flannels 00 I MADE IN ANY STYLE 1 We Design and cut every garment in our own tailor shop and up S52S. PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED y comparison. It was these "thousand and one stories which first attracted the attention of the lovers of romance and mystery to the Orient. And those who would be insincere. A man who is for protection only on the commodities produced in his own district and under the subterfuge of revenue, is no protectionist at all. If every congress- - ?iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii11' , |