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Show IREVUE AT PANTAGES PLEASES ttf 3 S IS GOOD HOT WEATHER SHOW Songs and Dances by Pretty Pret-ty Girls Score Heavily With Audience. TEAM of Salt Laker well known A for their vocal ability, a novelty unexcelled for the intense interest inter-est it aroused, and a "girl show" which puts far back In the deep shade of mediocrity any act of like char, acter seen at Pantages for weeks pasi, are the reasons why Pantages theater was taxed to Its capacity at the initial performance of the new bill which opened yesterday afternoon. As a midsummer attraction Anderson's song and dance revue was exceptionally diverting. Every girl In the act was pretty and good voices were the rule. One of the most striking features was the barefoot dance led by Miss Margaret Marga-ret AValker, who also scored big In her dance from the Follies: The costumes were original and nifty and the scenic backgrounds elaborate. Capraln Louis Soreho's presentation of his submarine performance was something some-thing unique and educational, showing how divers work under sea in the event of wrecks, how submerslbles are lowered and raised under water and the manner of discharging torpedoes and exploding mines. A huge 15,000-gnllon tank Is used. Methods of undersea telephony are also shown. Summerhays and Woodward appeared In evening dress and sang some popular songs, and were an Instantaneous hit. Mr. Summerhays's tenor and Mr. Woodward's Wood-ward's baritone made a strong combination. combina-tion. Freddie James juggled three balls for twenty minutes and was a riot. As announced, an-nounced, he is certainly the "world's worst iuggler." But he can tickle one's risibilities. And on a hot day that is all that an actor needs do. Freddie got his share of laughs and applause and he fully deserved It all. Stoddard and Hynes furnished some beautiful music with a violin and piano accompanist. Stoddard's characterization characteriza-tion of an absent-minded professor was capable. His work on the cello was exceptionally ex-ceptionally good. Jerome and Carson opened the show with novelty acrobatics. The act was different from the usual line of acrobatics. acro-batics. Diving through hoops was the best thing Jerome did.' DRAMA AND VAUDEVILLE. SALT LAKE Tonight. Friday and Saturday, with Saturday matinee, John Cort's "Flora Bella." PANTAGES Vaudeville. Three shows daily. LIBERTY Hippodrome vaudeville. New bill opens today. MOVING PICTURES. PARAMOUNT - EMPRESS Pauline Frederick in " "The Love That Lives" ; Eurton Holmes Travels. Continuous, 12:30 to 11 p. ra. AMERICAN William Desmond in "Time Locks and Diamonds"; Triangle Tri-angle comedy, "A Toy of Fate." Universal weekly. STRAND "The Little Orphan." featuring Ella Hall. BROADWAY Viola Dana in "Aladdin's "Alad-din's Other Lamp" and Mary Mac-Allster Mac-Allster in "Do Children Count?" MEHESY "Money Madness," with Eddie Polo and Mary Maclaren, five-reel feature. "What Could a Poor Girl Do?" Nestor comedy. 'Tlora Bella," Musical Comedy Nov-; elty, to Be Presented at Salt Lake I Theater Tonight. j TLORA BELLA," a Russian musical comedy novelty, book by Felix Doer-mann, Doer-mann, revised and adapted by Cosmo Hamilton and Dorothy ' Donnelly, lyrics by Percy Waxman, and score by Charles Cuvflller and Milton Schwarzwald, under the management of John Cort, will be served in three complete and appetizing courses at the Salt Lake theater beginning tonight, coming from Its long run at the Casino theater. New York. Few musical comedies or light operas of the past decade can compare with "Flora Bella," which was constructed with one point in view pleasing entertainment, and in this the authors and composers have been highly successful. The play possesses a story of unusual interest, which keeps the audience in fits of laughter, from start to finish. The dialogue is so bright and clean, the situation situ-ation so excrultatingly funny, that tne audience au-dience is held spellbound with excitement, excite-ment, wondering what will come next. The score Is unquestionably the most catchy, tuneful and pleasing heard with a musical attraction for many a day. Twenty song hits grace the score of "Flora Bella," among the popular ones are "Good Night," "it 1b Very Hard to Bring Up Father," "Cat and Mouse." "Yount; Men Take a Tip From Me," "Love Is a Dance." "Flora Bella." "You're the Girl." "Give Me All of You." "Adam" and "Creep, Creep, the World's Asleep." The oriinnl beautiful Joseph Urban production will be seen and prncwca'.ly the , New York Casino theater cast intact, including in-cluding Eleanor Henry, Lily Leon hard, j Guy J. Sam jr.se 1, Irving: Brooks, Ro'"ert j O'Connor. Josephine Kirk wood. Mortimer ! H. Weldon, Kate Stout. Adolph Link. Gilbert Clayton, the famous dr.ncing team of Grant and Wing and the famous Casino Ca-sino theater beauty chorus of singing and dancing girls. Musical Comedy to Be Peat-are of New Vaudeville Show at Liberty Theater Today. MUSICAL comedy will head the. new Liberty bill which opens this afternoon after-noon at the Liberty theater for a run of one week. Libby, Blondell and company bring this refreshing departure in vaude-: vaude-: vllle and the offering is "Almost Married." The attraction is said to be teeming with witty lines and excellent song numbers. Rose and Rosana are billed as the man, the harp and the girl. Arthur Barret is a dialect comedian and a whistler, and is said to be a topnotcher on any bill. Brooks and Lorella are acrouatic i comiques and Dale and Weber are two dainty misses jn musical moments. The 1 usual moving pictures will round out a j very unique and wholesome programme. |