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Show THE CITIZEN With the First Nighters vaudeville and Arthur and Darling present a frog scene in the woods. The frog performs all sorts of capers which makes pictures are features at pantages bination of high class vaude-th- e best pictures produced rille ant' reen at popular prices has on the t 'One of the made the Pantages theatre country'. in ; ne entire western enter-- ; This wee s bill is exceptionally I thrills and laughs.- Rlnal tuning s violinist,, is here and his domov - 7 is appreciated and very spiring n The co . , : I - ' in-.is- ic . i- 1 Xhe - Ro e and Moon .Revue, is a of pretty dancing girls. pre-Igentati- on tteaTi-- v is a real treat ,'and their-chordance is beautiful and executed Lfjters us , member himself. There is also some excellent singing. George Norton in an original role with a pleasant greets his customers 'smile and tells a series of jokes and adsings. Hr uses a ukelele to good Ljth gra- e. The one male of the cast is some dancer - vantage. Lewis ! and Levarre present a little skit at the railway station at Podunk. The ag:nt The girl sings a jazz song. advice which gives the girl some stays her trip to .New York and she returns home to mama to become a better girl. . . . -- Williams and Young pull a good blackface" stunt, singing and cracking jokes the y much to the amusement of audience. the Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroads touched noses at Promontory Point, Utah, completing the transcona big hit, especially with the children. tinental rails, but without Lincoln the A nymph appears in the dance. The project could not have been carried scenery is beautiful and artistically through to completion. The pathos of the achievement as arranged. The croaking frog and the fire flies put the finishing touches to well as the humor have been recorded the scene. on the screen by William Fox in a suNorma Shearer takes the leading perproduction called The Iron Horse, role with Lew Cody in Slaves of' which comes to the Salt Lake theatre Fashion, ably assisted by May Carr, Saturday, Sept. 5. George OBrien and Vivia Ogden, Miss DuPbmP Wil liam Madge Bellamy have the leading roles' j: Haines and others, in a rather thrillin a notable cast, and John FOrd, the ing picture teeming with thrills in director, has used in addition a regifashionable' society and the adventures ment of U. S. cavalry and a tribe of ' of a poor girl who accidentally ;Indiains. installed in one of New Yorks The historical accuracy of the picmost fashionable homes which she ture has been assured by basing every take3 care of while the owner is in scene upon an incident which has been Europe. His sudden return results in faithfully recorded by eye witnesses. a love match, but oh, the ordeal leadThe story opens with the passage of unthe Pacific Railroad act by Congress, ing up to the conclusion is nearly on June 24, 1862, and its subsequent bearable, but in the end all are happy approval by Lincoln on July 1. WILLIAM FOX PICTURE In 1865. General Dodge, then mereGLORIOUS TRIBUTE TO ly a hopeful surveyor for the governGREAT EMANCIPATOR ment, met a man on the porch of the Pacific house at Council Bluffs and told All the world knows that Abraham him of his explorations through MisLincoln held the North and South unitsouri. The stranger took a deep ined, but it may not be generally known terest in the soldier surveyors talk. that the railsplitter linked the East Seven years later, when General and West, even though he did not live Dodge went to Washington to consult to see the realization of his dream. with Lincoln, the president said. The Great Emancipator was dead when Hello GeneraL Youve done what on May 10, 1869, the crude engines of you were hoping for out there at - f finds-hersel- i and every phase of the conversation and It was well he did, for it was just at that time that he was to establish the eastern terminus of the Union PaHe fixed on . Council Bluffs while General Dodge waited. In his message to Congress on Decific. i 1 cember 1, 18.62, President Lincoln predicted early completion of the Pacific railroad and visioned 50,000,0.00 .people settled in the great interior, region. He drew a mental picture of the unlimited of. Western America. possibilities . . .i . r: .1 . Mi havent you Lincoln remembered the meeting I.l Grounds for Divorce, a celebrated comedy ..of domestic life adapted for the American stage by Guy Bolton from the Hungarian of Ernest Vajda, wili be the exceptional presentation of Ralph Cloninger and his players at the Wilkes theatre next week, opening tomorrow night. Ernest Vajda who wrote the original of the play in his native tongue, is the author of Fata Morgana and other New York successes. Guy Bolton, who adapted the play is one of Americas best writers of comedies. The play was presented at the Empire theatre in New York by Charles Frohman, Inc., with Ina Claire in the stellar role. It enjoyed a long and prosperous run at that play house. The story concerns Maurice Sorbier, a divorce lawyer of Paris, who forgets his .wife .on the, evening-otheir wed- f GREATER VAUDEVILLE GREATER MOVIES GREATER SHOWS ITS ALL IN FUN AND WE NEVER RAISE OUR PRICES ROSE AND MOON REVUE GEORGE MORTON LEWIS & LEVARRE IN AT PODUNK WILLIAMS AND YOUNG 1 RINALDO r ARTHUR AND DARLING NORMA SHEARER IN SLAVES OF FASHION COME EARLY PANTAGES i Coining to Pantages ;) CLONINGER TO PRESENT , GROUNDS FOR DIVORCE. ; Council Bluffs, . i . Theatre in The Naholy Three. I |