OCR Text |
Show Magic Spectacle To Come Here April 11 f ... ' : v I 1 it Laughs, laughs and more laughs as well as spine chilling scenes of mystery and illusion are In store for the people of Cedar City when l-.e "Great Virgil" and l is company present a full evening mystery show at the Public School Auditorium Auditor-ium on April 11th. "The Great Virgil", who has spent a life-time developing this unusual attraction, is rated as the world's greatest living magician. If you have not had the good fortune of seeing Houdlnl, Thurston, Kel-lar Kel-lar or Merrmann, the great masters of yesterday, don't feel disappointed, disappoint-ed, as you now have the opportunity opportun-ity of seeing them all deincarnated in the appearance of "The Great VlrgH", the supreme magic of the present. Among the dozens of mysteries to be seen In the performance will be "The Weird Execution on Mars" in which a steel bullet will be fired from a high powered gun thru the bodyfef a living girl, "Sawing a Woman In Half" In which a young b.dy, after being bound and held by members of the audience, will be sawed Into two separate parts. "The Strance Invention1', in which "The Great Virgil" will demonstrate his iryaterlous electrical ray by directing it toward a young lady's head and causing the head to vanish van-ish and float in it's invisible form above the audience. Julie, Virgil's leading lady and America's sweetheart of magic will present two novel specialties; one an act of beautiful art work and the other a perplexing mental accomplishment that has dumbfounded dumb-founded psychologists and students of psychic research. (Advertisement) Stitie In Cotton Gin When both cotton and air are very dry, static electricity is generated by the movement of cotton through the gin. Th2 effect is to clog the gin with balls of cctton and the five hazard goes past the danger point. The gin must be stopped and the electrified cotton cl aned out. Many remedies to offset this fire danger have been tried, including mechanical mechan-ical dc-ileclrifying and moisture, but nothing proved satisfactory until a fine mist composed of water and ulphonatcd oil was introduced into the system. Preliminary investigations investiga-tions seem to indicia: that the use of small quantities of this mist eliminates elimi-nates static. |