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Show TRUTH AT THE RESORTS. Decoration Day BOATING, DANCING, HORSE FACING. Music for the season by UTAH STATE BAND AND ORCHESTRA X . Anton Pederson, Director. Danclnf afternoon and evening. new dance floor has been laid making the finest dancing pavilion in the Btate. A World's Fair Day, June 15 Two round trip tickets, and one Pullman sleeper to the World's Fair will be given away Admission 10 ' J If you dont want to go out of town, but still desire to escape the heat and glare of the pavements, Utah-npark is waiting for you with cool breezes and shady nooks. This beautiful resort has, from the Cents a Each ticket entitles the holder to 10c in trade. , It's only five miles, and It costs but five pennies to CALDE RS bounded into favor with all The best of order is enclasses. forced and the comforts of ladies and children is the special hobby of its There is a manager. s vaudeville theatre on the the best of footlight taland grounds ent to keep you amused. Then there is dancing in the pavilion, where a good orchestra makes whirling easy. Light refreshments of all kinds can be had on the grounds. first, Next Tuesday, Decoration day, all tho summer resorts will formally open their cool and inviting doors. Salt Lakers will have five resorts to choose from, each of which offers inducements not found elsewhere. There are many, however, who do not confine themselves to any one rest, preferring to visit first one and then another, until they have gone through the entire list. If, however, you cannot afford such wholesale pleasure seeking, consult the following list, make your selection, then go and spend your money like a prince. For Decoration day, Saltair, the beautiful, is making preparations to handle thousands of people. There will be every kind of amusement, The boating, bathing and dancing. music this season will be supplied by Christensens orchestra, which, together with a floor polished like a piano cover, will enable the gay whirl-er- s to dance without fatigue. Trains will run out to the pavilion every forty-five minutes and strictly on schedule time. The water may be a trifle cool, but the brave ones will dash into the spray and keep themselves warm swimming in the deep water. Today is L. D. S. field day at Salt-ai- r. Grand Opening 1 wide-awak- LAGOON e first-clas- Jt TINE TABLE IN LEAVE SALT LAKE 6:30 9:00 1:30 3:30 Manager Bergerman of the Lagoon is confident that his pretty resort will do the biggest business in its history, It beginning with Decoration day. 7:30 10:00 2:30 4:30 Jl Calders park, under the management of Mr. Levy two seasons ago, was about the biggest proposition for the money in the summer market. If enterprise and hustling count for anything, Mr. Levy will have the gay crowds with him again this year. Decoration day, Calders park will 1.1. . 11:00 1. 1. 7:30 I. P. . 12:00 100N. 8:30 6:30 10:30 P. 1. ; FAKE FOR HOUND .TRIP 25 CENTS isnt every day that Salt Lakers can J 6:30 5:30 LEAVE LAGOON jl lawns and catch glimpses of well-kep- t flowers in pretty designs so arranged as to attract the eye with restful picBut up at Lagoon there are tures. stretches of bright grasses running everywhere and acres and acres of the prettiest blooms in the world. Every boat on the lake has been repainted, every seat on the grounds touched up with fresh color, dozens of new swings provided for the little ones and everywhere a surprise for the amusement seeker. Lagoon will, no doubt, be well patronized on Decoration day, when the gates of the resort will be formally opened. EFFECT, MAY 30, 1904 1. D. PIERSON, Puienger and Ticket Agent . i. B. BIAN, Rieinioi Agent OFFICE 161 MAIN STREET ' be there with the goods and a little of everything will be going on. Horse racing, boating,, dancing, games of . sport and the Utah State band in a program of popular music. The ride to Calders is alone worth the money. - J J Helds band played to an open, air audience of seven thousand people at Liberty park last Sunday. Tomorrow evening the popular organization will give the first of its Sunday evening concerts at the Salt Palace. Jl J park will offer some special Sunday attractions tomorrow for the lovers of innocent amusement. In the evening a grand sacred concert will be given. The location of .this pretty resort is all that could be.de-- . sired, being in the heart of. the city, yet sufficiently removed from the noise and bustle. Vaudeville' entertbest the that can be proainments, low price of ad- the vided, considering mission, will always be one of .the big drawing cards at Utah-n- a .park, m Utah-n- a - til its motives and moral lessons were The understood, the preachers put Proud Prince under the ban. But the critics who, perhaps, understand plays better than the gentlemen of the cloth, came to ical the rescue of Mr. and applauded him for his ethteachings under the guise of dra- So-the- ra matic allegory. The play is by Justin McCarthy, author of If I Were King, which Mr. Sothern played two seasons ago. In motive The Proud Prince is a morality play the insistence upon this point is strong while in treatment it runs to effective but consistent melodrama. It has a literary basis in Longfellows well known poem on the legend of Robert of Sicily, the very bad king who became very good, after The being punished into penitence. liblends and play shrewdly religion centiousness, in which a heaven defying young despot persues a Christian maid and is then brought to repentance by a divine miracle and the girls unselfish love. The sentiment of the pulpit has entirely changed in reference to the motives of the play, although still condemned here and there by a clergyman, but to liberal-minde- d church people it is said to appeal irresistibly. Mr. Sothern promises his entire New York company and all the accessories of the elaborate scenery d just as upon the metropolitan stage. pre-lente- HARRY LE GRANDE. o Get busy and send your bills to Wallace. He collects good or current accounts as well as bad debts. Top floor D. F. Walker Bldg. Phone 1069-- k. e J Everything is in readiness at the Salt Palace for Decoration day;' when this, popular- resort will be thrown, open to the public. One of the chief attractions on . Monday .evening at the -- - . - We are proud of eur Clear Creek Coal. If you have tried it you know why. If you have not it is to your interest to do so. . palace .will be the bicycle races, when some of the speediest riders in the country will compete for up. The match race be- hung , tween N. C. Hopper, and G. H. Collett promises to test .the. merits of these.. two popular riders,. while the motor exhibition promises to.be a hair-ralslng event Numerous. other riders in the amateur and professional classes make up the program of nine events; ' and the patrons of this resort will surely get a run for their money; The dancing pavilion under the capable management of J. R. Chamberlin, will., be open every evening .with. Hauer--, the-big-pri- . i zes . . - -; , . bachs orchestra in attendance. After the races the Salt Palace theatre will : be thrown open, when that laughable and skit entitled "What Happened to Brown TV. A s vaudeville ar-company , of tlsts will be presented.. Beginning Sunday evening, June 6, Helds band will give concerts at the Salt Palace , and a1 series of moving pictures, in-- , lcuding the Passion play, will be thrown upon- - the canvas. Other at-- " ; mirth-provokin- g, first-clas- o J J in this issue of Truth1 is published'-thLagoon time table. Persons desiring to arrange for . excursions call at the office 161 South Main1 street, and ask for J. B.; Bean, excursion agent Elsewhere r |