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Show TRUTH. ' at Manager Bergerman's sylvan retreat. I crowds were much SALT AIR. During the week Professor Christensen gave a dancing matinee to hundreds of children, in the evening there were waltzing contests. Follow the crowds, it's Calders is still Manager Bergermans flag of victory. BEACH I I in evidence THE OUEEI DF WATEHIIC PLACES Mr. Charles Smith, the press agent 4 I 400 $ BATH HOUSES 4)10 of Calders park, is doing some clever advertising work these days. Some advertising merely occupies space being read, but Charley Smiths ads always arrest the eye and compel attention. J costs more to go The fact that it to Lagoon than to the other resorts has not lessened the attendance at the pretty Davis county resort It has its regular list of patrons and many of them wouldnt go anywhere else the children cry for Lagoon, just as they do for Castoria. without afternoon and nANPINn UAUblNU every EVENING. PIONEER DAY 3 , 4 ,i On July 21 the American Lyric Opera Co; will open with Alladln Jr. an eight weeks engagement, during which various high class performances will he presented. TIME TABLE. The twenty-fourtis not far off, and every resort is preparing for big doings on Pioneer day. h t i Leave Salt Lake: No. 2 .10 30 a. m.. Arrive Salt Lake. No. 1 130 p.m. No. 4 2 20 p.m. No. 8 8 45 p. m. No. 6 4 20 p. m. No. 5 5 45 p. m. No. 8 6 20 p. m. No. 7 7 45 p. m. No. 10 8 00 p. m. No. 9 9 SO p. m. No. 12 9 45 p. m. No. 1111 30 p. m. Sunday's last tram leaves Saltalr at ! 9:00 pm. TRAINS FROM FIRST SOUTH AND FOURTH WE8T STS. FARE ONLY 25c HOUND TRIP. Jt In addition to the high class musical programme by the First Regiment band tomorrow at Calders Park, there will be some extra features of more than ordinary Interest Mr. Roy Barnard will be seen in a thrilling high dive of one hundred feet. Professor Wayne Abbott, the worlds greatest balloonist, will make an ascension and parachute jump from the clouds. Such heavy attractions will bring out a big crowd at Calders Park tomorrow, the events taking place both in the afternoon and - J. E. LANGFORD, Wo; Xanager. XcXILLAX. G. P. GEO. W. DERR, T. i. Excoriioi igeat. AT THE RE80RT8. ' a t i f 4 ' 4 ' ? I i The recent hot wave has driven thousands to Saltalr during the week. Nearly everybody takes to the water, for bathing is the proper thing to do while at this popular resort During Pacific Islanders day, one train with twenty-fiv- e coaches pulled out for Saltair and proved conclusively that there is much virtue in reduced trans portation. The week has been a busy one for Manager Langford and his efficient force at the resort. Tomorrow a program of popular music will be rendered at the beach. Manager Myers is giving the best vaudeville show ever seen at a local resort. It is worth" going to the Salt Palace just to take a trip with Martin and. Ridgway. The Continental Tourists. There are others, however, just as good and they keep the pace going at a lively rate. Altogether the Salt Palace theatre is about as good a show as one usually gets for a dollar. How Manager Myers can give such a production for twenty-fiv- e cents is puzzling a good many people. Tomorrow evening Held's Military band will be heard in their usual popular sacred concert Jt While at the Salt Palace dont forget the Palace of Illusions. The admission is surprisingly cheap and the show astonishingly good. It costs only ten cents to visit the Palace of Illusions and it is considered the proper way to round out an evening of amusements. Jt J Calders park has had several splendid offerings during the week and the evening. o An automobile - speedway 113 miles in lergth and connecting Long Island with Montauk Point is in contemplation by the Automobile Club of America. It is to be a double-tracsteel toll road, exclusively for pleasure and freight automobiles. William Hamilton, the veteran league baseball player and who has been managing the Haverhill team of he New England league this season, resigned and announced that he would never play ball again. He says that he .'as recently had offers from Boston, Chicago and Philadelphia. -- k . MUSIC. One of the papers recently made a statement that in Salt Lake there were several teachers who made over $1,000 a year. The publication has caused all manner of ridicule in leading musical circles owing to the fact that many of the real teachers, people who have themselves been abroad and studied under the best masters or in the east with the finest talent procurable, have come to this city and by careful attention to have work and conscientiousness, cleared three times the amount in a year. But one of the great troubles of the genuine musician is the competition of untutored students who, The Maidens when they master of Battle Waterloo, or Prayer, the some other popular descriptive classic which calls for feet technique, immediately imagine that they are teachers and straightway get out for pupils. The queerest things about it is that they get the pupils too. Their neighbors little girl is the first one and then other neighbors fall in line with the result that a half dozen are thus secured. Jl J This does not mean that there are only a few good teachers here, not at all, there are dozens and dozens of them, but on the other hand there are many very bad ones and they are the 7 FUST REGID1EHT BAUD 3 GRAND SUNDAY CONCERT. PROF. WAYNE ABBOTT, GREATEST AERONAUTICAL : ENGINEER. BALLOON ASCENSION AND PARACHUTE DESCENT. ROY W. BARNARD. The Great Swede Challenge High Diver From 100-fo- ot Tower AFTERNOON and EVENING. CALBER-- " S clean, especially if you are a summer resort. THE FARE TO Jl In many cases the early work of a youngster is without results and when the time comes when the child wants to take music from a teacher of ability, the primary work has to be done all over again. When giving a child a musical education it is just as well to give it the best procurable from the very start, but in many cases in and around Salt Lake no attention is paid to the merits of the teacher, his or her success with students or the eastern or foreign training of the teacher. This goes for naught at the outset but the time comes that one of the experienced ones is called to teach the pupil and all the errors of the untutored teacher of the past have to be overcome and those who have tried it know how hard it is to break a youthful pupil of a bad habit J It pays to keep CILOWDSGO. IS 50 CENT8. And its the cleanest and prettiest spot in Utah. Trains Leave Regularly: 6:30, 1:30, 3:30, 9:00, . 11:00 1. X. 5:30, 6:30, 7:30 P. X. ones who are hurting the profession the most. They will be weeded out in time, but until that time comes they will be a constant source of annoyance to those who follow music as a high class profession. J And is it not queer, to go into the other side of the question, that the title of Professor is used so indiscriminately. Time was when the title was an honorable one, meaning that the one having the right to use it had acquired that right by years of study and graduation from an institution empowered to confer the degree, just as a lawyer or a physician secures his title. Nowadays Prof. has degenerated Into a title given to any kind of inferior musician as well as other people, and those who have the right to it by their study at some famed musical conservatory, are ashamed to use it and prefer the plain itir. as being more elegant in every way. In the old days it was a title of distinction, but now it is quickly falling into disuse owing to the many who use it witnout any right Jl Jl Apropos of the subject of youthful prodigies, it has been called to Truths attention, that when the Mothers Congress was in session here a few weeks ago, a child of one of the promoters sang both afternoon and evening. She had not a remarkable voice at aX and sang a common little popular air. The Mothers Congress is supposed to be for the purpose of stimulating an Interest in the culture and development of children so it is strange that It should afeist in presenting a child before the. .public when the pos- - |