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Show Why does eveiy woman have - to batlleagainsUove? VVJiy does every woman have to feel the straining strain-ing power of seduction through love in one forrrt or another the hot, ALLURING BREATHS OF DECEITS? DE-CEITS? This thing has been, from the beginning of history, his-tory, through all the ages. Man's most beautiful dream, most sought after, most desired, HAS BEEN WOMAN. And through all these ages it was more through passion than the' better desires. Even the saints of past history fought bloody ' battles; worked, dreamed, struggled through their love for women not satisfied with one or two or three. These almighty men demanded hundreds- every variety of beauty, ' dainty little girls in their 'teens; blondes from the Northlands; strange, slant-eved slant-eved brunettes from the Southlands. Mightv wars, broken nations, WRECKED CIVILIZATIONS OVER THE HELENS-OF-TROY. And Cleopatras. Doesn't the same battle go on today, though changed and modified? Is not every girl still pursued? pur-sued? Why? What is THIS GREAT MYSTERY OF LOVE? There is the greatest revelation of a woman's soul and a woman's temptation in a tremenJous plav that is shaking the world; the greatest UNCOVERING OF A WOMAN'S INNER SOUL ever given. If you know, Ihpn ynn lcnnu.- all 1rve- an.i all teniptllkin., 'ji.IV and sorrow. You will know the DIFFERENCE 'between 'be-tween the alluring passion of deceit and promiscuous love that leads to bitter ashes and the ?reat ail-enfolding ail-enfolding SOUL LOVE that looks through 'the bodv and finds the great WOMAN-HEART; the love that every woman wants, with peace and passionate purity, pur-ity, leading on and up into the great happiness, with the masterful, overwhelming, all-centered love of the great ONE MAN for the ONE WOMAN ONLY. To learn the lesson of ALL LOVE vou must see "WAY DOWN EAST" and WOMAN and ALL WOMEN, WOM-EN, and the story of Anna Moore in this play. And of- David, the farmer boy, greatest of all lovers. And Sanderson, with the old licentious idea of deceit, and shame for those women who fall in his clutches. "In 'Way Down East' Mr. Griffith has pictured a plain human story of love 'and life that will go thundering thun-dering down the ages BECAUSE IT IS SO HUMAN." Boston Traveler. "The patrons shrieked and roared. It is enough In raii1 the hair nnajrnnjihi';id and raise the man out of his seat." NeFYoTirttrntMr You cannot afford to miss it. Go to see "WAY DOWN EAST." It will be shown every afternoon and every night at the SALT LAKE THEATRE from Monday on. |