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Show AMUSEMENTS. Kale Casllclon opens her three nights' engagement en-gagement at the Salt Lake theater in ''The Dazzler" tonight. The play is a merry skit and Miss Cust'.eton has a role that tits her like a glove and is full of possibilities for the display of her talent and abilities as a burlesque burles-que artiste. "The Dazzler" is not an untried play. It received the seal of approval at the hands of the public last season and with the introducsion of new music, song?, dances, specialties, etc., and a company par excellence, excel-lence, it will be even more attractive this season. Among the well known artists selected se-lected to surround Miss Castleton, may be mentioned the clever artiste Lena Merville, i whose artistic and graceful daneintr and singing easily place her in the front rank of singing soubrettes. The male contingent is headed by Joe OU, a young fun maker whose rapid progress in his profession is due to his original methods and spontaneous humor. - Even church singers are not safe against the wiles of the farce-comedy manager in his rigorous and aggressive search for novelties. novel-ties. A case iu point is that of Harry Leigh-ton, Leigh-ton, a youth with a phenomenal alto voice, until recently a heavenly-visagcd soloist at Dr. John Halls's church. New York. In an evil hour he met Major "Billy" Keogh, of "The Hustler," and succumbed to the blandishments of tbat siren-voiced farcical purveyor. And now the silvery-throated Harry trills and warbles with the worldly "Hustler" instead of chanting sacred music in Dr. Hall's fashionable Fifth Avenue house of worship. This simply goes to show that the reigu of the mighty American dollar still continues throughout the land. "The Hnstler" opens at the Theater Thursday night. |