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Show THE CITIZEN 10 and studded with dramatic punches, is really a mirror of youth, reflecting their own image to the young and bringing back a vision of the past to the middle aged and elderly. Two Fellows and a Girl, will be presented every night next week with matinees Sunday, Thursday and Saturday. BEAUTIFUL GIRLS IN AMERICAS GREATEST REVUE The Earl Carroll Vanities, will come to the Salt Lake Theatre, Thursday, March 10, and for three nights, matinee Saturday. This girly musical revue played for it was referred to as America's greatest re- 12 months in New York, where vue. Vanities represents a pioneer movement in entertainment. There is not a conventional or stereotyped feature in this revue, and one surprise follows another so rapidly and so continuously that the audience is enthralled with the sensational and daring innovations. Beauty is always dominant in the Vanities and here Earl Carroll shows the masters resource. He is known to have in his company the most beautiful girls in the world. He displays the most exquisite taste in grouping, posing and lighting, the arranging of the tuneful song numbers and the devising of the ingenuous mechanical novelty features for which Vanities is famous. The reputation of this highly-regarde- d review, built up over a period of six years, has for its basis the good taste, artistry and sophistication not too often found in shows of the same general type. The (Current edition is said to be no exception to the VaniIts chief ingredient is ties rule. comedy and this is presented in no less than eleven different comedy scenes with dialogue scenes that embrace travesty, caricature, burlesque, slapstick, satire and pantomime, and nine antic episoides in song and dance. The comedy scenes are The Tank Mystery, The Coachman, The House of Life's Mysteries, Three Christmas Night, Grief, The Judge, Sons, Big Shoes, The Country Hotel, The Matchmakers, The Wrestling Bouts, and The Soeak Easy. For pictorial appeal such spectacles as The Gate of Roses, Neath Miami Skies, Kinky Kids on Parade, Yvonne, and the Rotisserie. The company that has been assembled is numerous. Among the notables are Bert Swor, the blackface comedian, Lou Powers, who is a favorite with local theatregoers, and Dave Chasen. Among others are Mary Dowling, Lew Miller, Alice Bradford, John Coyle, Kenneth Lackey, Aimee Anchie Swor, Harry Sharpe, Johnny Rove, Ricco, John Kirk, Mary Mansfield, Carie Goode, Mae Dickson, Walter Hamilton, Violet Davis, Maura Vesta, Mae Valle, Emmy Dean, Ray Kavanaugh and the Earl Carroll Orchestra and Louise Brooks the perfect Venus. WILL ROGERS Will Rogers who will appear at the Assembly Hall March 17th, sponsored by the Musical Arts Society, and make comments on present day conditions as Mr. Rogers prefers to call his work on the lecture platform. It would be difficult to associate the word lecture with Will Rogers. There is nothing in the personality of this American that in any way suggests a lecturer. The funniest man in the world, he has been called, but like all great comedians he has his serious side. He is, for instance, very serious about being humourous. Listening to him makes one believe that all he says is spontaneous, his thoughts seem to leap with humor, yet they are founded on a very thorough knowledge of any subject that he speaks of. Like all successful men, he has his own method of work. Every day he studies the newspapers from .all over the country, reading first the front pages and then the editorials. He reads all the editorials written on both sides of the political fence, because he has no faith in the interpretive powers of any single publication. Only by reading them all does he feel that he has learned something. What he finds he calls truth. And it is his way of summing up these truths, telling them in simple words with his own point of view that makes him the most quoted man in the country. The Mayor of Beverly Hills has appeared in almost every state in the union and in answer to repeated requests he will give at the conclusion of the performance, an exhibition of his marvelous skill with the ropes. The Poet Lariat.'' LUNMBERMEN COMING annual convention of the lumbermen of ten western states will be held in this city in 1928. It is said that this convention will bring together over 600 delegates from the various lumber interests of the west, which of course, means that much more business for us. The twenty-fift- h WOOD PULP The United States produces only about half of the 3, 500, 000 tons of print paper consumed here annually, and only a small portion of the wood pulp used in this production comes from our forests. By far the larger part of it is imported from Canada and other foreign countries. It is estimated thatwe waste annually 8,000,000 cords of wood. This takes into consideration the average of 40 per cent of the log left in making lumber, and the branches and small trees left in the woods as unfit for lumber purposes. B. T. McBain, who has been connected with the pulp and paper industry for over 25 years, suggests that the best way to make the United States paper industry independent of foreign countries, is to conserve this terrific waste of our forest resources. MINING AND IND USTR that SILVER The Annual Silver Market Review for 1926, of Handy and Harmon, of New York, while not encouraging as to the future market for silver, is nothing like as gloomy as the impression which prevailed shortly after the report of the Royal Commission on Indian Currency and Finance was first made public in the United States. This report shows that in the United States and Canada the consumption of silver in 1926 was . 33,500,000 ounces, an increase of two and a half million ounces over the consumption of 1925; in the sterling silverware trade an increase of three per cent, and in the silver-plate- d ware, an increase of four per cent over the 1925 consumption. As against this increase in the use of silver, the coinage in the United States decreased from 17,000,-00- 0 ounces to 6,700,000 ounces, but at the same time the production of silver in the United States decreased to 62,000,000 ounces, while production n Mexico increased from 92.9 millions to 93.7 millions, and .in Canada from 20,200,000 to from 616,000,000 21,-900,0- 00 ounces. During the year 1926, the proceeds of the base coinage in England was but 700,000 ounces while the previous year, 1925, the proceeds from this source amounted to 7,000,000 ounces. While India is not likely to be a purchaser of very large amounts of silver in the future as she has been in the past, it does not seem probable that much of the Indian silver will be placed upon the market; and there is even a probability that India will still be a purchaser, but upon a much smaller scale than heretofore. On the whole, the promise is for a fairly stable market at a price which is very low as compared with the cost of production. Mining Congress Journal. It has not been so many years ago that mining was not only a very ex- pensive business, but the work was of the slowest possible kind. Finally the single jacket was set aside for the modern electric drill, and all other work has been brought to such an advanced stage that long drifts could be run in a few weeks, where heretofore it took years to perform the labor. Not only has efficiency in work brought much progress and a big reduction in mine expense, but the new methods in treating ores at the smelters make it posisble to send out all ores of any mineral value to be treated at a profit. Thus we find many of the old dumps which contain the former poor ores, dumped as waste, sent to the smelters. The North Lilly mine established a record last fall in drifting, when 2400 feet were run in about three months and a half. Speed mining is what produces results. Eureka Reporter ie last week from Tintic. 1 Did you hear bill was killed? that the mining ' Yes, but the man who introi it into the legislature has been 4 to live. Full justice has not yet done. Eureka Reporter. The Silver King Coalition min Park City has paid to date $20jSi; in dividends, the largest annual end being paid the past year, amounted to $1,337,710. v eke ' fcjJSev RUG ANCHOR It will be good news to that; army of men and women who 1 had accidents or near accidents t slipping on rugs, to know that it try has now developed a p which makes such accident impose It is known as Rug Anchor. This rug anchor consists of a: terial with a dull black surfaa one side embossed with a fine p This side which is heavily coated? a special compound lies next to floor. The other side is a good-lowhip-corWhen laid upon the i the weight of the material three pounds to the lineal yari holds the adherent, pound to the floor with a suction; that prevents all sliding or wrint " The rug or carpet is laid upon thr" anchor, cloth against cloth, r eliminates all danger from slipp d d. - air-excludi- t: ng G Injuries from this cause have so frequent that one of the impon accident insurance companies repc recently that it had paid 1225 di amounting to $100,000 for such Statistics recently compile the National Safety Council show: there are approximately 20,000 fe annually caused by accidents home. Of this number, 6,000 an to falls. Many of these falls an to slipping rugs which can nff prevented through the use of bee it; in MINE PROGRESS The 42 ass 95 carloads of ore was announces : anchor. ATTENTION ATTOntfETI Let Co-oper- ate. Bankruptcy 91 .50. ..Bankruptcy for! Form Schedule court request th u P1 DELBERT NEBEKER. 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