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Show THE CITIZEN N.! MISS their support and hopes she can ciprocate by making a success on the APPEARS FIRST AT PANTAGES. re- GU; LIVER Georg offni eddty Tdsof Qd dig are flocking to this house to see the best .resented in this part of and. high class pictures. Ple I Vaudeville ft the of g at the Pantages aking a big hit and thous- t!!Lular si last es s show This w hefski ny count . diamond is also showing a Gul-Lr- f of ld in person Dorothy the .:lt Lake girl who won the gait' Lake Telegrams , movie contest. Manager the !5faj i- lba'ch, Mrs. raanagers ;and movie, picture maker who have, seen Miss Gullshe will make iver are c fident that come a film star another good and Miss boost for ' ilt Lakes talent. contract at Gulliver ha - a six months and if she Is successful, $50 per wt;k. this amoui.L will only be pin money. opportunity which falls She has thto the lot of but a few girls, and all will her friends hope she can and Theatrical ksbn, - Mrs. k tiling, 1 berger, 88 and frothy cheij, hearer, - rs. E Living nd Hr K. make W, Clem Miss oft, ! Hr. McKd r. and arrett, and good. was selected from 143 The in elimination contest. She girls In judges unanimous in their final decision and award. They were Mayor C. Clarence Neslen, Emma Lucy Gates, Mrs. Henry Dicke, Garrett Graham of Hollywood, and Ralph Cloninger of vere Wilkes theatre. Gulliver appears in person at the theatre and makes a short speech in which she thanks the people for the I. Miss F. ed in stage. The Hawaiian Quartette, presented by George Kalaluhi, is a classic and the Hawaiians are given a big encore. Their native music throws a spell upon the listeners and is very pleasing. Their singing, vocal and chorus, makes a hit, and the Hawaiian step dance is a scream. Oriental Won- Kuma and Company, r der Workers, perform feats of mystery,' such as making people' appear and disappear in trunks and slight of hand tricks. The hypnotized girl that is suspended in the air and then made to disappear is simply unbelievable. Arthur C. Astor wins first place as the master English ventriloquist. He places real life into a dummy and his voice control is so perfect that the dummy really appears, to be the real live one of the two. He is given a big hand for his meritorious perform. . t ance. Louis and Frieda Berkoff, late stars of the Greenwich Village follies, and Helen Troy, assisted by Walter Spilky, a violinist, show artistry in dancing and their act is pleasing and one of the most popular on the bill, nonsense, song and music, show class. Wyeth is an expert on the harmonica. The Perottas present a snappy gym- - E 3fi give William Wyeth and Evelyn Wynn In nast stunt on swinging bars and ropes. The Cyclone Rider is a thrilling film of hairbreath escapes and adventures which finally result in the hero marrying the girl of his heart. The audience becomes dizzy in following the hero in swinging about the frame work of a twenty-storsteel building, and then changing, to the automobile race track where many thrills are enacted where only fool luck preserves the y' hero's life. Wprklng conditions on the Wend-ove- r road' are shown and obstacles that had to be overcome in building this section of the highway. Dorothy Gulliver is filmed in a picture of poses and actions in which she shows to good advantage. This same bill will continue to next Tuesday night. trans-continent- al BARBARA LA MARR COMES TO AMERICAN THEATRE. i array of the new Paris styles m i ife the one. theirs diseas herepc the of . The diplomat, with his mother and his fiancee, ignores her, and, womanlike, she resolves to crush his heart, as she has the hearts of scores of others. The climax comes when, having won his love, she finds her love gone out to him in return while between the two arises the unsiirmountable barrier of his aristocratic family. There are many highly dramatic scenes in which Miss La Marr and n Tearle perhaps present the best acting of their screen careers. Phil Rosen, who directed, has given the picture an unusually capable supporting cast. Harry Morey has a strong role as the American millionaire who becomes a' plaything of the siren; Clifton Webb of musical comedy fame has transferred his little mustache and talents to the screen for this production, and mirth-makin- g others include Ida Darling, THIS WEEK BERKOFF KUMA & CO. ARTHUR C. ASTOR HAWAIIAN QUARTET Ft to ct 4 ;tah WYETH & WYNNE THE PERROTOS Arctic e he THE CYCLONE RIDER Mac Mr. 11 be ation $ e menial than SALT LAKES GREAT M. I. A. PARADE DOROTHY GULLIVER IN PICTURES AND IN PERSON THE REASON FOR THE WENDOVER ROAD report iversit 10 FEATURES PANTAGES ALWAYS OPEN ALWAYS GOOD 3 i ;c I I I .i 1 . Barbara La Marr and Conway Tearle are again seen together in The Heart of a Siren, the Sawyer-Lubiproduction which First National opens today at the American theatre for one week. Miss La Marr, as a siren of the gay est of the gay spots of Europe the Riviera has a role perhaps better than that in which she played with Tearle in The White Moth. Famous for her lavish costumes, she wears an section at ) ' LOUIS & FREIDA extingt 1 - Ge: e W ; f negli- gees, day frocks and a splendor of evening gowns which would captivate the fancy of any woman. Tearles role as a poor but aristocratic English diplomat also Is admirably suited to him. The plot finds the pair stopping at the' same sumptuous hotel on the Riviera. The sirens entry is a signal ' for all the men in view at once to de-sert their ladies fair and stare with dazed admiration upon the gorgeous " creature ad 'she passes that is, all but sement f I With the First Nighters B. Tn lb 7 IFOR DAVOR VICTORY THEATRE This week commencing today Florence I |