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Show THE CITIZEN 8. ami her name will be announced with in a few days. Nightie Night will be played every night next week with matinees Thursday and Saturday. CHARLEY'S AUNT MAKES BIG HIT AT ORPHEUM Charleys Aunt, With Syd Chaplin, has made a big hit at the Orpheum and the theatre patrons were treated to one' of the laughing hits of the season. Syd does a little impersonating and he entertains two elderly fortune Oxford stuhunters and two love-sic- k dents. There was all kind3 of fun un: til the real aunt shows up, which brings the play to a climax and the crowds bring down the house. Some of the best talent in the country appeared in vaudeville, there being five acts. Ralph Pollock and his orchestra in concert constituted one of the vaudeville acts. Some fine jazz hits were displayed, with two excellent compositions. The Orpheum management is staging splendid shows and they are appreciated by the people. GET LOVE LESSONS FROM CONSTANCE AT VICTORY. If you are curious to see how the divorce mills of Paris grind out decrees for American heiresses, you have the opportunity in Constance Talmadges new picture, Learning to Love, at the Victory for one week commencing today. Constance, as a sub-de- b just out of boarding school, thought she had learned to love. Her flashing eyes and piquant personality had wrought havoc with the hearts of her college boy admirers and she gloried in the fact that she was engaged to three of them at once. Then, with the appearance of Antonio Moreno in the role of her guar dian, she experiences a feeling she cannot diagnose. It happens to be the true brand of love which Constance had never learned. Their marriage is followed by a threatened scandal, resulting from the enraged protestations of her forgotten fiances, and her husband, in order to save her, refuses to live with her. It is then Constance rushes to Paris and the divorce mills start grinding on her case. All ends happily, of course, but not until Constance has undergone some thrilling as well as screamingly amusing episodes which bring Learning to Love into the forerank of her comedies. Others in the cast include Emily Fitzroy, Edythe Chapman, Johnny Harron, Ray Hallor, Alf Goullding, Wallace MacDonald, Byron Munson and Edgar Norton. Learning to Love was written by John Emerson and Anita Loose and screened by Sidney Franklin. It is a Joseph M. Schenck product leased by First National. ZANE GREY COWBOY TYPICAL Mix Tom Mix fits the role oij; siter in his latest production ers of the Purple Sage' that it seems Zane Grey had the cowboy hero gg in SaltLakeTlin Three Days, Coi Thursday, April 2 Matinee Saturday, Mail Orders Now y Messrs, Shuberts Sea tional Success ARTIST AND ALL STAR CAST FIFTY FAMOUS MODS PRICES: Lower floor, $1 fin balcony, circle, $1.65; gallery, Lower floor, jli fan: balcony, $2.20-$1.6circle, $1.10; gallery, 50tl eludes tax. $2.75-$2.2- 0; 5; All Next Week -S- tarts! U Sunday Night WILKES A RALPH CLONINGfl Preentx NIGHTIE NIGHT 3IIkn Anno Fnrfiu Hvery night at w !.'. Mnlin7 25o, SOo, 75o, p liir'W mid Tliiirxilny j 2:50. PrlooNi 25o. v All Meats roworvi- Coining to Salt Lake playgoers at the Wilkes Theatre next week Miss Anne Berryman, who will say good-by- e r starting Sunday night in the pajama clad farce, "Nightie Night, which was selected by Ralph bill. Her retirement is because of her need for a long rest to protect her health as her good-by- e which has felt the strain of two solid years of playing. Clon-inge- SF.CHF. Tlio Womloi I " |