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Show THE CITIZEN 10 With the First Nighters HIGH CLASS'MIxkD BILL PRESENTED AT PANTAGES Juanita Hansen Shows - This picture is ture, the Desire. full of love and thrills. of Pitfalls "THE COVERED WAGON BILLED FOR SALT LAKE THEATRE Deadly Drug Habit and How She Was Saved From the Dope. Thrilling Picture of Western Pioneer Life During 40s and 50s Combatting Elements and Indians. CLONINGER COMPANY 18 POPULAR WITH PUBLIC Bird of Paradise to be Presented Beginning Monday; Lawful . Larceny Makes Hit. A Juanita Hansen pictures the rors of becoming a drug addict and hor- how she came to use the death dealing drug through ignorance in a thrilling story which headlines the Pantages bill this week. She relates how easy it is to become a drag fiend and how hard it is to effect a cure, and she makes an earnest and eloquent plea for universal assistance to stamp out the greatest problem confronting the country today. The liquor habit brings misery to many homes, but the drug habit brings death and the unfortunate victims die in horrible agony. Everybody ought to see and hear her. The "Carson Review" presents pretty costumes and effective stage settings, interpolated with melody. Yodeling by Flo Butler and fascinating step dano'ng by Carson are the features, although the entire company makes a hit with the large audiences wiiich daily pack the theatre Cervo and More offer character musical stunts in a humorous skit. Irving and Ellwood in "Backfire have a clever costume cnange on the stage and their presentation takes well with the audience. The cast of Eileen made up of two men and two women put over a pleasing playlet in a mixture of humor and song, and the two pretty girls make a de- cided hit. Advancing a satire on the modern magician trickery, Noel and Lester The please in "A Variety Surprise. act is unusual and Miss Noel is very attractive. Butler and Marguerite De LaMotte, well known screen stars, appear at their best in a Metro pic David Salt Lake Theatre patrons will be presented with a large photo spectacle in The Covered Wagon, which opens next Monday night and continues for the entire week. It is a photo spectacle of large dimensions, high pictorial quality, quick journeys westward of the pioneers of the 40s and 50s to Oregon and California. The wagon train assembles, moves, camps. Perils by flood, perils by fire, perils by Indians beset it. It courses prairie under sun and over snow; it bivouacs by river bank and in gully; it halts in straggling forts among hard-livinscouts. At length, with prayer and hymn, it turns the sod of the promised land. It ds epic of western conquest by wheel and plow, an epic brought to the screen with imagination, truth, skill and pictorial power. Through this pageant of a people in migration threads a mediocre tale of amorous rivalry, acted according to movie ways. The scouts remain the graphic and vital figures the leaders of the wagon train, the unsuspecting heroes. Picture for men; picture for Americans; picture in which the screen joins the arts. Music that takes in the swing ana color of grand opera, as arranged by Hugo Reisenfeld, accompanies every scene of this great picture. free-spirite- g d, Italy wants to annex Fiume so many Italians live there, have not heard that Palestine ing to try to annex New because but we was goYork. Charleston Gazette. Ralph Cloninger and his company are filling a long felt want In this city in the way of providing first class presentation of popular plays for amusement at the Wilkes theatre. The cast of the company could possibly be nowhere improved for this class of work. While Ralph CloninAnne Berryman are considger and ' ered the stars, the patrons of the theatre are also in love with the other members of the company. In the cast we also find such prominent actors as E. Forest Taylor, Seldy Roach, Fannie Stanley Burgett, Jean Rae, Norma Dean, Kirke M. Decker, Carl M. DeVere and Harry Jordan. retary for the flapper, where- she is able to save her husband from ruin and disgrace and she also recovers the fortune her enmeshed husband lost at the social card table. The Bird of Paradise, Richard - Walton Tullys wonderful Hawaiian romance, will be presented by the such an array of talent it is no wonder that Cloninger is making a Wiith hit in this city. Lawful Larceny which has been playing all the week at the Wilkes and giving its last performance tonight, is a play with a moral to it. It first shows the happy home of a young married couple, followed by an alienation of love by a designing flapper Avhose business it is to get the money from rich married men. The young wife goes to work as sec- - gjlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllic: THIS WEEK IN PERSON Juanita Hansen The Girl Who Came Back She suffered the tortures of the duinuetl la her fight against narcotic craving She won the battle and will now outline the dangers and the suf- fering Mhe endured CARSONS REVUE EILEEN n Six nights, 5 in n tin com, beginning November SIutineeN 2:30 TIiIm 1m 12 Nights 8:30 TWICE DAILY AFTER OPENING NIGHT the only anil exclusive engagement be played In tliln city for the seuMon of 123-102- 4. of The Covered Wagon to Jenne I.. Lanky presents Tlhe Coyered Wagomi Founded upon Emerson HoiigliV Nplendlil story of love on the Oregon Trail. Adapted by Jack Ciiiiiiingliiiin Directed by Jaiiien Cruse. A Muprcine example of how n great natlpnul episode may he made Sir Arthur Conun Doyle. real for all ilincM. - SEATS RESERVED OX SALE AT 1IOX OFFICE NOW FOli ALL SHOWINGS Mat., 50c, 75c, 9 1. 00 pliiN tax Nightn, 50c, 75c, fl.OO, 91.50 CERVO & MOKO IRVING & ELWOOD NOEL & LESTER DESIRE PANTAGES SALT . LAKE'S ONLY SUCCESSFUL VAUDEVILLE AND .PICTURE THEATRE ALEXANDER TIIE MAN -- W1IO KNOWS IS COMING SOON I' |