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Show I THE CITIZEN 10 With The First Nighters The last show of the season is on at the Orpheum this week. It might be termed ladies week at this popular play house. There are two acts in which the gentler sex along is rep- resented, while in one, King Solomon, Jr., there are seven women and man, one lonesome (we wonder?) Franklyn Ardell. The plot of this farcical comedy is supposed to be laid in 1950. The congress, composed of has passed a law permitting a husband to have as many wives as he can support. The Junior Soloman has six. wives,, and. brings, home, the seventh. The women have a chance to display some beautiful gowns, while there are some really clever lines which bring forth numerous laughs. The act is one of the best of the season. A more serious skit is The Beautiful Lady, in which appear Miss Lolya Alder, Miss Dorothea Thomas and Daisy Bieger appear to advantage. Four Gossips is another act wTith nothing but women, four of them, who sing pleasingly a number of popular songs. Larry Comer gives a number of topical songs which are well received, he having been called back again and again at the opening performance. The bill opens with Lalla Selbini and Berl Nagle in The Butterfly and the Cat, in which the butterfly has the cat jumping through a licop. Jack Dunham and Andy Williams in a singing act, and Prosper and Maret in athletic stunts out of the ordinary, complete an excellent bill. wTomen, S ers of the lake. The temperature of the refreshing brine is reported to be SALTAIR Zim Zam! It starts today at Saltair a three days carnival marking the opening of the 1921 summer season at the big resort. Zim Zam will offer to patrons of the resort a varied and pleasurable carnival program, including amusements, dancing, concerts, bathing and general hilarity. To promote the well known carnival spirit, the Saltair management today will give free to every patron who reaches the resort before 7:30 p. m., a supply of carnival trappings, including a cap, confetti and When these wear out, equipment. plenty more will be available. The star attraction of the program will be the grand prize costume ball in the main pavilion tonight. For this event, $100 in cash prizes will be awarded the dancers most pleasingly and oddly garbed. From present indications, the entry list will be large and the competition will be keen. Contestants are requested by the management to gather at 9 p. m. Saturday in the skating rink. Tomorrow, of course, will also mark the first rush of bathers into the wat noise-makin- g suitable for bathing and this department expects heavy patronage during the Zim Zam carnival. Sunday, the second day of Zim Zam, will be featured by two free band concerts by Sweetens Saltair band. Several weeks ago Mr. Sweeten selected his opening programs and they have been in constant rehearsal. Beginning Sunday, the concerts will feature at the be a regular week-enresort. Monday the carnival will be resumed where it leaves off today, with added attractions; a special Decoration day concert by Sweetens band and the first of the nightly dances, which will continue throughout the season. Visitors to Saltair during the Zim Zam carnival will at once note the many improvements that have been made, among them the new concrete automobile pier. This pier affords more than 50,000 square feet of parking and driving space and, through its completion and the finishing of repairs on the Saltair Speedway, motoiists are now able to drive all the way from Salt Lake direct to the gates, .with ample parking room for their cars. ilar iivi i3d ilit The bathing department l.as unytf fi ira gone thorough renovation and co h erable remodeling, which will greatly to the comfort and pie of bathers. The Midway attractiogjK de ch have been augmented by several attractions, furnishing thrills gIp! D to the lovers of thrills. TI13 reglfc fI summer schedule of trains on the SalJ !o air route go into effect this morniajto continuing until the end of the M?66 "ft 4 season. kformi d -- LAGOON io: Saturday will witness the opening 4 u the famous Lagoon resort at Fan ton and Manager A. C. ChristenrIBarri announces that after three months oir unremitting labor, and with the outlay of over $75,000, Waikiki Beach standi i ready and waiting to receive the puJi?S( lie at its formal opening. while " ever and better than Bigger the term applied by all who are coal rel nected with Lagoon, and with many important improvements sk new features which have been addecl j to the various attratcions of tk thit Coney Island of the West, it vonliljjj r seem that Utahs popular fresh watel bathing resort is due for an unusuaflyL heavy patronage this season. dnc( Among the important new featurKlg that will be found is the Lagoon Didg per, a giant roller coaster that issaicl no to be the largest in the United State! j and while full of thrills from start 3 finish, it is as safe as a rocking chair The Blue Bird Cafe is another featurt j 1 that will attract automobile parti and families who do not care to tat their lunches when spending a day the resort. This cafe will feature goo: meals at popular prices with cleai cabaret dancing as an added feature. Waikiki Beach, with its wide ei panse of genuine white sea sand wil be the usual main attraction and bail ing will run dancing a hard race to first place in popularity this year. The famous Witzells Jazz banii a PANTAGES There is one of the best acts at Pantages this week ithat has ever appeared at the Main street house, the Cevene troupe of six Australians in a Garden 'of Surprises, an appropriate name of a very clever act. In fact the entire bill is up to the usual Pantages standard. The audience is kept in the dark as will hypnotize the followers of terpsi chore and Director Witzell proml dance music with a real kick. The paved highway is now completr both from Salt Lake and Ogden to Lhave bees agoon and arrangements made to care for as many as 3.000 ant omobiles at one time in the Lagoo a Modern Svengali transmits to his Trilby the requests of members of the audience for varito just how ous musical renditions. No matter how it is done, it is a clever act, and wrent over big. Bay and Fox put one over on the greater portion of the audience, appearing in feminine attire, many of those present not realizing that they are men until the last moment of the act. Bogers, Burns and OBrien in a singing act, Duster Quillan and Pals in a series of laugh getting stunts, and the Novelles, who do a series of stunts on the rings with grace and apparent ease, complete the bill with the exception of the pictures, a comedy and a romantic production, The Heart of Maryland, which seemed to meet with the favor of the audience. i The Bamberger Elect :ic at nounces a new schedule this seasoi the first Lagoon train leaving Hie Salt ani Lake depot at 12 o'clock no-'park. i the Cgden depot at 12:30 p. 1.:. daily- - Manager Christensen slates Hiatth midway has been entirely remodeled and many new attractions have bet added to augment the Joy of ' festivities at this popular reset. I SALT LAKE Lolya Adler, feature at the Orpheum this week In THE BEAUTIFUL LADY. J" What preparation and thcati ucation would seem necessary an actress a successful interp the elusive J. M. Barrio? TIu of the little Scotch playwri1 id : olio-er- tsare |