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Show THE CITIZEN With the First Nighters ville skits, speedy, clever and enticing, PROVE8 OPENING including the following:, ",iM act. , brilliant stage A speedy musical farce features A Jimmy Savo and Joan Franza ing The Love Nest,, a bungalow loaned . Scream exhibit of Salvo season of a prolonged by a livewire real estate agent, Jack in a marked degree. ability Salt and Margaret the Orpheum theatre, Savos mastery of facial expression is West, to Clyde Kerr the most of made house, show Cameron, who nlv Big Time and he has the put it over1 marvelous the fall and winterWed-fnieh- t, style that tells. things. The young womans friends add to the festivities of the evening. vaudeville, last direcunder orchestra, The Orpheum J e southern The touch of the with a large, enthusias-musia has good of Short, tion Edgar a responsive thrill brWatly arrayed audience cal program that is well presented. favorites,' bringing or southerner, is always Fables in modern film form, to northerner Aesops brothers as L theatre has undergone many the pungent Topics of the Day and a winner and the Bowman its The Blue Grass Boys are well above round Pathe in events current pictures changes that heighten -It appears new and esout a truly good bill that will- go the average. A bit out of the ordinary is the . inviting. daily. to one was fering in the way of comedy gymnasopening , program entire-almost Made up tics of William Lockhart and Walter AT. THE LLOYD HAROLD Laddie. provoking skits, it had just DRAWS BIG PANTAGES if the serious and the thrilling Angie Cappell and Freddie Clinton AUDIENCES NIGHTLY. the and i nicely with the spjrit present a, skit well. worth while in the of the big" 'crowd that thronged way of really new stuff supplemented ate to capacity. Repeating the major success by a judicious use of old favorites. Harold this tained in other western cities, outstanding acts feature Billy Bouncer may not be Billys real she the is Grandmas Boy with Tnxie Friganza, Lloyd in real name, but as a nome de bounce this atraction at the popular Pantages various estimated avoirdupois, is adequate. The bouncing act, feait from being week. This feature motion picture, a bouncing contest, is full of (head. Trixie, aside turing close to forty, is said to be the very best the famous bounces and consequently full of fit and perhaps of the Lloyd has ever appeared in, has' had The ability to pull a difficult rthe piece de resistance laughs. in now of Trixie still has the long runs in other cities and is program. stunt, worthy from the standpoint with Los the also Angeles, its seventh week at Kineanor of the flapper, skill, and coupled it with a laugh may art-nre- ll still movie public master stage the devoted Lloyd Usemble of the well be applauded. rewill The .. it slambang picture go. to let loath as the vigorous, the for makes regular main in Salt Lake only humor, that of depicting KINDRED OF THE DUST, and vaudeville week, and all who really a little different, Pantages A MASTER FILM, AT turnpre-n- it movie star master productions, vaudeville a as enjoy fflher AMERICAN THEATRE. is ' natural ; it ing on the comic and depicting life in Her make-u- p Her its most realistic realism,' should ar- . not require any trimmings. one of the most successful so range to see it this week, as the pic-Following wt her so charming,1 is ility weeks of the entire year at the Amerture is in such demand that it may he and so spiced with the harmless ancan come back to ican theatre, the management it before time a her stuff, long enormity provoking nounces another big production for the Salt Lake. Albino hair, all serve to make beginning Sunday afternoon. ie ideal This master Lloyd picture is com- week lady comedienne real-1-of, Kindred of .the Dust is the name of rille. Her Bag O Trix is bined with a classy melange of vaude really exhilerating and self, as is Trixie he:head-calibrand December is also of It is a pretty story of told and versus duty, cjgverly acted. It depicts love and going hand in hand as agains land duty combined with- - riches; the audience cares to absorb in one affair. mirth-provokin- 10 ses-Jstand.i- rd . old-tim- . .at-Jnes-s. - Hy ik E . . . . . - 5T e. r poverty flnsiily triumph and and Jy a r, thelact that it was unfolded Is test of his-daughter- stabil-characte- r, s " will.'' it . -- , n pre-viewin- g . . ducer. Readers of magazines will remember Kindred of the. Dust when It was appearing in serial form in one of the mo3t popular magazines. The story made such' a hit with the reading public that it was issued in book form before its serial publication was ended. The book has ever since been classed among the best sellers. Miriam Cooper, star of many successful photoplays, enacts the leading role and is supported by a cast of well known players. There are a number of spectacular incidents in the play, among them being a rescue from death in a log jam. The iminent danger of the actors in this scene is so realistic that the spectator involuntarily leans forward with bated .breath,, fearful that one or both will clip between, the logs into 'the tur bulent rapid in . which the scene : was staged. The; story is a drama of the great northwest and of the logging and lumber industry around which so many of Kynes plots are laid. - . . devised by a doting had died and left a rather who the new picture, which of itself con- veys but little to average reader of dramatic columns. However, when it is' stated that this story was written by Peter. B. Kyne, ,who referred to as Americas premier writer of short stories, the production takes on added significance. This production was especially chos-'eby the American management after a number of- - other subjects as being the best of the new offerings which could be had for release for today. It is entirely up to the high standard of offerings which have been presented at the house for. a long per- iod of time. Its not often that you find a play that sweeps forward with the spontaneity of dramatic action and thrill of events of Kindred of the Dust. The appeal of little Nan of the sawdust pile, the force of the 'grim old Laird, the dappling courage and cowardice of the son, the truth to type of a score of characters surrounding them, fill this production with the maximum of entertaniment and make it a high water mark in the many achievements of R. A. Walsh, its pro- GUS EDWARDS AT ORPHEUM NEXT WEEK. - furnishes many opportu-fo- r histrionic ability, and fine effects, which are taken advant-- I by Miss Sheila Terry, who is the .and who is also one of the most ud clever dancers that has ever to this city. She is given good by William Goodhall as Mr. and Roy Schley, as John Jy, the impoverished lover. sketch Gus Edwards, himself, Gus Edwards, who is known lyrically and musically from the concert stage to the hand organ, Gus Edwards who has written more popular songs than any man in America and therefore, more than any man in the world, because nowhere in the world is music sung and mis-sun- g as it is here, is coming. Mr, Edwards, who comes, to the Orconpheum next week, has not been tent to devote his time solely to musical compositions. He has written and produced revues and in this line he was so successful, that a Gus Edwards Revue was accepted as the last word in tabloid musical comedies. For a time Mr. Edwards starred himself in a series of these revues. .Then he. retired from the stage and produced musical comedies, featuring other manipularing accor-soviolin, are master musicians irrespective instruments. They it virtually to a complete band so ?ood and lively music can they And they do it all with a round excei: tricities that helps im-- . Their repertoire ranges from the most profound and classic foand Moro d to lions. . Osborne Trio, composed of man. end child, ambunts to a clever ERymna8tie work and some really 5 the skit is. its bucopss. . players. the company. p father. Like Ron. of as The bv the fonr r Li a The Cameron. imeron, is dubbed the ater and he is eailv a hit more as he furnishes an-there is as much as companies. This he describes Gus' Edwards Song Revue-- of 1922, and is headed by the inimitable Gus Edwards himself and a cast numberincluding . several of ing twenty-five- , his newly found proteges, Alice and Chester Fredericks and Hazel , is much that, is fantastic, that is clever and some good ? . Now pressure has been brought tobear that Mr. Edwards is again appearone of his ing In person at the head of The manner in staged fsa gTeat The1 kid is easily acts. alancinp hy Canmie Louis c J Harold Lloyd In "Grandma's Boy," at Pantaces thi. week. Furness, ; |