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Show "TIE IIP" COMING The great Drury Lane melodrama, "The Whip", which held the boards in Ivondon for two solid years and at the Manhattan Opera House New York, for an entire season, will bo Been in Ogden at the Orpheum Theater Thea-ter Sunday and Monday, Jan. 10th and 11th. Ogden will at last have an opportunity to see the most mammoth mam-moth stage spectacle that has ever been produced, comprising In all four acts and thirteen scenes. Five special spe-cial earn are needed to transport, the scenerv alone, exclusive of the company com-pany of one hundred and the horses and dogs used during the course of the performance. Among the during Bcenlc pictures are an automobile accident, ac-cident, a train wreck, and a horse race, taking place in full view of the audience ' The Whip" Is a race horsw upon which the Earj of Brancaster has wagered all hi6 fortune He has been injured in an automobile accident and his brain la clouded as to many events of his life. An adventuress, Mrs. D'Aqulla, aud the vllllan, Captain 8ar-tpris, 8ar-tpris, with the active aid of a weak rector, have taken advnntage of hit ment8l condition and hew that the Karl has been married to the adventuress. adven-turess. He cannot disprove them, so his true leve affair with Lady Diana Sartorlg is interrupted. But "The Whip," the race horse of Lady Diana's grandfather, lp expected to prove a winner at Newmarket aud, to get funds with which to establish i his innocence, Brancaster wagers his ail upon the romlng race Sartnrls and Mrs. D'Aqulla arrange to have the i horse car cut off on which the Militia Mil-itia Will travel on the way to New-market, New-market, to be crashed into by the following fol-lowing express. This is accomplished, but an automobile brings a rescue party in tho nick oi Ume So "The Whip" reaches Newmarket In time for the race Without doubt the wreck scene is one of the most vivid and eftcltlng pieces of stage realism that has ever been seen on any stage, and the racing rac-ing scene with live horses adds a pitch of plctori.il power that is unsur-passed unsur-passed "The Whip" is the last word in thrills, acted by a competent company com-pany of one hundred people The authors of "The Whip," Cecil Raleigh and Henry Hamilton, wrote Dearly all the great Drury Inne melodramas, melo-dramas, and in this last effort achieved their maS'terpiece Seat sale for 'The Whip" upen Wednesday, Jan. 6th. Advertisement, |