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Show THE CITIZEN 12 jiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiir I SALT LAKE THEATRE I Beginning Thursday Jan. 29 3 Days Matinee Saturday JOHN GOLDEN s Producer of Lightnin and 3 Wise Fools, offers THE COMEDY THAT I I EVERYBODY LOVES TO THE I CAST OF ORIGINAL FA- I VORITES THE ONLY 1 COMPANY ON TOUR I To be presented exactly as it enthralled capacity audi- ences last year. I I SEATS NOW ON SALE Nights: 50c to $2; Saturday Matinee: 50c to $1.50 giiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiim A Warm I Welcome I E is always waiting1 for you at our E E bank. Close contact and service S that reaches your needs, are our Z E aims. s E : Our desire to aid you is sincere and personal. Approach any of our officers talk frankly and confidentially about your own af- fairs. If you want to buy a home, or make improvements on the old one, expand your busi- ness, buy a ranch, or if you need money talk your plans over with us. Our service is yours. IS H E E S E E E E E E S : E S The National Bank E E E ; E Tdlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli? iiiiiiiHiiiiimiiiniiiminiHHiiiitiiiitiMiiiiiHitmiHiiimiiiiiniiiiiiiiiMiiiniiiiii. AETNA Service Supreme Ed D. Smith and Sons General Agents Was. 4000 38 W. 2nd So. St. SALT LAKE THEATRE, Theriac and the chorus. This number, it is promised, will be something original. Coming to Salt Lake direct from Chicago, Madamoiselle Marion, the famous dancer, will open a limited engagement Monday. Her dash and grace has won for her the encomiums of the Chicago cabaret world and Salt Lake people will like this clever performer. Because of the popular demand, the Canary Cottage number will be continued for one more week so that everybody may have an opportunity to witness this delicious theatrical morsel. There is now being prepared the greatest fashion show ever attempted in Salt Lake. The announcement for the opening of this show will be announced later in the papers. I 26, 27, 28 d, Its his brother (my husband) William F. INVENTIONS THAT WERE Goodwin. TURN TO THE RIGHT to the Right, the comTOedyTurn of village belles and city crooks which John Golden will present at the Salt Lake Theatre Thursday, Friday and Saturday, January 29, 30, 31, goes the distinction of being the only play to be witnessed twice by President Wilson during his incumbency at Washington. Accompanied by Mrs. Wilson, the McAdoos, the Graysons and other no-- , tables of capital society, the president attended the premiere of Turn to the Right at the National Theatre, Wash' ington, before the play was introduced to New York. When the company played a return engagement at the National this season Mr. and Mrs. Wilson were among the first to return to renew acquaintance with Mother Bascom, Sammy Martin, the village belles and the amiable crooks who acquire wealth and affluence through the sale of peach jam in the comedy. Mr. Golden has held the original company practically intact for a general tour of the country this season. ' Because he has steadfastly declined to send out No. 2 companies, comparatively few of the smaller cities have seen Turn to the Right up to this time. LATE TOO Brother Charlie used to say it was his daily letter to us. These letters began with the Virginia Enterprise. Then it was The Salt Lake Tribune and lastly Goodwins Weekly. My husband died more than twenty years ago, but the daily letters came just the same: I beg pardon for the delay in sending the subscription price, which I see is now $2.50 a year. Unfortunately I was stricken with paralysis last summer. This is almost my first letter since then. I enclose N. Y. draft for $2.50. JENNIE PALLEN GOODWIN. 9 cynic has perhaps some right maintain that human energy and ingenuity are relatively inert in the saving of human life, but they become extraordinarily efficient in its destruction. The reply is, of course, an obvious one. Wars are always waged, ostensibly, for national The destruction of preservation. ones enemy is the means to an end, and not the end in itself. The end is the life of the nation, and however uureal such a plea may oftenj be, it is none the less significant that no people would ever dare to make war without the attempt to establish a case of absolute necessity. These reflections are suggested by THE self-defens- e, THE MATRIMONIAL MARKET Tom came into the room after interan article written by Mr. Frank viewing Muriels father with a long Parker Stockbridge for the November and very glum face. Harper's. It is entitled War .InWhat did he say? asked Muriel ventions That Came Tqo Late. anxiously. The most important of these invenWell, he told me that he considtions is known as Lewisite. It is a ered you very valuable stock and and if it is conveniently worth at least ten thousand dollars, poison gas, sort-odefined as a methyl' we may and that Id have to save that amount .be quite sure that the word contains and settle it on you the day of. the no indication of its composition. wedding, sort of buying the stock in, Lewisite is the invention of Professo to speak. Now I havent half of sor W. Lee Lewis-whformerly octhat amount. What shall I do? ' cupied the chair of chemistry . at Well, I am afraid you will either Northwestern University. He became have to take me at Pas valuation or a .captain in the Ordnance Departelse cause a panic on the curb. ment and was assigned to duty in conWhat do you mean, nection with the preparation of poiWhy, place a ladder under my winson gases. The gas to which his name dow tonight and the stock will come has been given has an action upon down and get into your auto. When different from any it starts up, father will come out, and the human system ' known poison: other . the panic on the curb will begin at Lewisite is a gas so deadly that it has once, but by that time we will be un-'do . f . o -- . A f ' N. Ju. SEATS NOW. Prices 50c to $2.00 Hilarious Rollie WOODS Present the Piquant. Pejeme-elaA. H. LIKES THE CITIZEN ol the Republic f Main and 2nd South Street SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH We Leave a Little Sample Everywhere' is a novelty number by Mr. Frankie, who will be assisted by Mr. 14. Y., January Rochester, I wish to thank Citizen: Editor The you for continuing to send The Citizen to me. The moment I knew Goodwin's Weekly had been sold I turned to my desk to write that the paper need not be sent to me. any more. . I had no sooner begun my letter than the mornings mail was brought to me. It contained a Goodwins Weekly which I opened. I was so much interested ' in the contents I didnt finish the letter and decided to send a New York draft for the yearly subscription. C. C. Goodwin, founder and editor of Goodwins Weekly had sent it to er times the killing power of most the deadly gas used in the war. When the armistice was signed the United States had 'manufactured and on hand enough of this poison to kill the .entire German army and was making It at the rate of ten tons a day. The United States, moreover, was the ' only power that participated In The Hague. Peace Conference . that was not bound by The Hague Convention against the use of poison gas In the war. Germany, the first to violate this rule of war, had been one of the first to ratify It; America, on the advice of the late Captani Mahan, had declined to bind herself not to use poison gas. Acting on the principle that we had announced in 1900, that the use of gas was more humane than the use of bombs, bullets, or high explosives, and Infinitely more humane than the torpedo, our seventy-tw- way. .What then? Why then just head for the min- isters, and after the ceremony you a will own the controlling interest in the stock and it will not be necessary to save that ten thousand to buy it in! PICKING THE CARGO. We favor an early opening of trade with Germany and Russia, but hold s of that the first hundred freight sent to those countries should be composed of former residents of said countries. Cappers Weekly (Topeka). ship-load- . gov-(Gontin- on Page 16.) ued I |