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Show i c: :t:::::3 CYr:;?i; , 1 M Nwa tA by Billions of Mothers for their 1 , , I ciuldrsa wtiUe Trtuior tot over Fifty Tears. 1 lit aootaes tlie child, sulfas th nm aari I . I U pain. eurM wind ool, aod la t beat i 1 ' mneOf for iuUTh(Ba '1 jiwwwin ' MANASE2-. ' ; Ilatinee Today t 3. 1 TONIOHT. AND ALL WEEK I Matinee Saturday. . . . ' Ernest Shlpman Wm. G. Colvin j Present . THE BONNIE BRIER BUSH Ian Mae aren'a Beautiful Heart Story of Auld Scotland. Prices: Evening, 25c to $1.50. Matinee, Mati-nee, 25c to 75c. 400 Seate at 91.00. Next Attraction Roselle Knott .In : "AHce-Slt-by-the-Flre." . i i -":'"7 . O -O r I ) .' T ' ' ' ' '" ' f . crcim FOREMOST IN QUALITY i - . I grand Masquerade Carnival FRIDAY, MARCH 291h ! AT THE Wasatch Roller RInIi FAIR GROUNDS 1 Prizes will be awarded for different differ-ent costnmes. , ' 1 . . ! Held's Military Band j - - Admission, 10c. Skates, 20c. j Ladies admitted free afternoon and evening. . I MODERN VAUDEVILLE. ALL THIS WEEK Louise Agoust A Co. ! 4 Rlanoe 4 Cameron A Flanagan Aurle Dagwell La Oette , Appleby Klnodrome Every evening (except Sunday). 75o. 60c, 25c. Box seats. J1.00. Matinees Daily (except Sunday and Monday), tOc. 15c and 10c. Box seats. 75c f t Owing to the excessive demands of j tailors in various places in Germany, th.e employers have decided to inaugurate a , lockout Saturday. Sixty thousand men will b affected. The tailors' demands are from 40 to 100 per cent over present j wages. . 1 - COX. Manager. 1 TONIGHT AND ALL WEEK. Matinees, Wednesday and Saturday. The Famous Originals, MURRAY AND MACK, In AROUND THE TOWN Handsome Costumed Chorus of Pretty Girls. Funny Comedians. Original New York Cast and Production. Next Sunday: The Lelfrhton Flayers in "FRIENDS." . Miss Bickford,. facial massage, manicuring mani-curing and shampooing for ladies and gentlemen. 413 D. F. Walker Bldg. Bell 'phone 1718-Z. 1 LYRIC THEAffflT VAUDEVILLE SUPREME EVENINGS, Two Performances, 7:30 and 9:15. MATINEE Dally, Except Sunday, at 2:30. PRICES 10c, 20c, 30c; Matinees, 10c, 20c. l tjGARDNER DAILY WENEWSj Consider Your 4p? v Personality. Ify ! j In fact, you must con- f " I sider it if you 'would ; 1 t be becomingly dressed. r y ; j What will suit another ' , f ' ; man may be the very M J y f thing you don't want, .J 5 If j and cannot wear. rfp : ; U 7 This means that your f: I') ; selection "should be C ; made where the styles ; s 1 , H are many, and various V . ; 1 at this store, for ex- I y ; ample, where the splen- p j , ?! did assortment of Suits (Vp Jj will give you ample op- 1 f , ; ;ii portunity to choose with l 1 due consideration for l 1 , the requirements of j , V , ; ' your face, figure and A, t. ' ; temperament. p , $7.50 to $35. J) . t Richards Street WHO'S YOUR GIRL? POPULAR LADY VOTING CONTEST. Last week of. contest and great Inter est Is being taken. She can have a beautiful Upright Piano FREE, a Jatr of Gold Plated Ball-bearing or a pair of Nickel Plat- , ed Ball-bearing Roller Skates. Each admission ticket will be provided with a Voting Coupon. Write the name of your favorite Lady on the coupon and i deposit it in the ballot box at the en-1 en-1 trance to the Auditorium. Coupons are good for date of Issue only. Ballots Bal-lots will be counted by competent " Judges each evening and the result posted on bulletin board in the lobby of the Auditorium. Piano on exhibition in the window of the Clayton Music company. Main treet. Ladies admitted free, mornings and afternoons, except Saturdays. MUSIC BY KELD'S BAND. Rink opened mornings TO-12. afternoons af-ternoons 2-5, evenings 7:30 to 10:30. j THE NEW DANCING ACADEMY AT Columbus Hall (No. 21 West 1st South.) Waltz and Two-Step in three lessons. Beginners' Class every Tueaday ava. SOCIALS EVERY THURSDAY AND I SATURDAY EVENING. -. It's safe to say that every swell dressed man and woman will wear "Money Back" Shoes Easter Sunday. Better be one of them. Mr. Businessman. Look About You. What Firms Are the Most Successful? Are there not old, long-estab- llshed firms right here who have been left far behind by newer, more enterprising concerns In the same line? Which of them advertises? ad-vertises? Which of them has a practical advertising manager to push their business, tha largest or smallest? Good advertising pays. I plan, prepare and place , proper publicity. Business Builder, P. O. Box 1663. I r- : j The Greatest Success I In Magazines During Recent Years is the New Broadway Magazine. Less than a year old, it has jumped into favor all over America wherever progressive men and women are interested in the national aspect of New York life. Several hundred thousand of America's livest people are reading the NeW Broadway Magazine today, because it focuses the light of brilliant text and bright pictures upon the heart of American Amer-ican energy at its keenest. From frontispiece to finish, the New Broadway Broad-way Magazine is the essence of interest. There isn't an article, story, verse or picture in it that doesn't tempt and satisfy even the most jaded reading-palate. It has freshness without foolishness, foolish-ness, dignity without dullness, informativeness . without preachiness, fascination without folly. It is, in a word, the one magazine so put together that every one in your family will want to read it all through, and will feel better for having read it. The April number just out is the best proof of all this. The frontispiece is a color reproduction reproduc-tion of the President's favorite portrait of his wife never before published, and loaned to Broadway by Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt personally through the courtesy of Mr Robert Keeling, the famous painter of miniatures. The facts about New York's mayoralty fight are told for the first time in " Hearst Vs. McClellan." " Helen Miller Gould A Study in Philanthropy," tells the complete story of this beloved woman and her work. " Society A Day with'the Real Thing" is a fascinating tale written "from the inside" by one of New York's "400 " When Father Knickerbocker Goes to Market" is a quaint bit, illuminated by the finest pictures Jay Ham-bidge Ham-bidge has ever done. Stories by Miriam Michelson, Holman F. Day, Gelett Burgess, Anne O'Hagan, Annie Hamilton Donnell, and others. j Other Wide-awake Articles The Plays of the i Month Rich Illustrations Current Comment The Month in New York Humor Verse. You'll find it ail in iw bpdaiWay . Ne" MAGAZINE Apt 15c All Newsstands $1.50 a Year I V 1 J McDonald's Bitter Sweets, the highest quality, the highest priced Chocolate Bonbon Bon-bon made in the world. It is an article of superior daintiness. dain-tiness. It represents the very acme of chocolate . perfection. Compared with other high-grade high-grade chocolate bonbons the dif-: dif-: ference is decidedly in favor of McDonald's Bitter Sweets. . Where the best,is desired it is suggested that you ask for Bitter . Sweets if you are going calling if you expect company at your J home if you want to mail a box. , McDonald is an exclusive maker of ' xhocolates of all kinds. ' V The LAGOON ROAD Salt Lake and Ogden Railway. Simon Bambrg.r. President and General Manager. Time table in effect September 4, 1901: LEAVE SALT LAKE 6:60 and a. n, . 1:10, 4:80 and t:30 p. m. LEAVE LAV TON TOR SALT LAKE, 1 and 1:16 a. m.. 2.45. i and 7:45 p. m. Ask your irrocer for Vienna Bakery Bread. "Itl the beat" Dr. Leroy's French Tansy Tablets. That's all PMall orders' promptly attended. DOULL DRUG CO. The Owl Corner, Cor-ner, Market-Main, and the postofflce la , next door south. Thcro to onty ono That to LaizntiivQ Bjromo Quinine. i Similarly named remedies sometimes TT f 9 daoelve. Tola first and original Cold Tablet If V- la a WHITE PACKAGE witn black iffi SjrX and red lettering, and bears tha signature of ijr - away JCyirOTJ ' |