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Show I PANTAGES it A really remaVjta'ble achievementin the' way of an animaL act is that of Winston's "water, lions, the headline offering at the Pantages theatre i this week. Ttfewater nymphs, shapely young I women who do some clever feats in the way of swimming, by no means detract from the j performance, but it is to the animals or to J their trainer that moat of the credit should go. The intelligence they display in seeming I to imitate the dives and strokes of the girls calls forth rounds of applause and the whole 1 act is something altogether out of the ordinary j and much worth seeing. The young women in i their abbreviated bathing suits, manage some pretty difficult and apparently scientific twists. ( turns and jumps. The music of the current bill is furnished j by the Six Serenaders, four women and two i men. Their repertoire runs the entire gamut J of light and classical music, each variety draw- 1 ing its meed of enthusiastic appreciation. I Nor is comedy lacking, provided this week' by Roach, and McCurdy, the "Prune Center Cut-, ups," being an interpretation of "rube" humor,' producing plenty of laughs. "College Nonsense" . is the title of the act, if such it may be called, j of Keith and Dumont. Either flrstnighters are 'l easy to satisfy, br the nonsense was good of its fi 1 kind, for those present seemed to enjoy it thor-ughly. thor-ughly. Richard Walley juggles for the entertainment of Pantages patrons with considerable dexterity. In his act are a number of original turns which are always welcome in whatever form they appear. ap-pear. Another in the series of the moving picture. "The Secret of the Submarine," with the selections selec-tions by the Fitzpatriclc orchestra completed the bill. BsssVr -' PBinBilH jHHLB c 'st9JjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjJH BBBBB ''Ik- - JPlitBBBi bIbbbbbbW- 1' s - -iSbIbbbbH y -x&sbbbbbbI BBBBBBBBBBI vtBBBBBBBH bbbbbbMbEi ;; oifr .LLH bbbbbbbHKT -AMBr .JH ibbbbbbbVbIbBk tsKr .bbLbbH BBBBBBBBBHhStkaaLD .BBBBiBBbI Jbbbbbbbbbbbsbv' .HbsbbbLI BBBBBVBfln9Bm jmaHiBlBIBH BBBBBBBLraiBflm& .AnWfflmBHBHJIHH bbbbbbbbKIbbbbbbbIbbbbbbLI HbLHbbbbbH J W. f. S WANSON, HEAD OF THE SWANSON THEA TRE CIRCUIT, A LEADING FIGURE IN THE MOVING ) PICTURE WORLD Salt Lake is indebted to Mr. Swanson for having hav-ing given it such a prominent place on the movie map. He began his enterprise here with an investment of half a million dollars, in the American, Amer-ican, Rex and Liberty theatres, three of the finest in the country. |