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Show EXCELLENT BILL TO OPEN THE ORPHEUfJ TOMORROW NIGHT A great many people are anxiouoly waiting for the curtain to go ip oa "hat has become the .most popular of all amusements la the theatrical i Hdc, that of high-class vaudeville. When the Orpheum curtain goes up to- j Piunow r.Ifeljt it will mark tho opening of the second season of VauJa Ille n Ogden. Manager Goss prom lets a well-balanced and highly en-Urtaiolng en-Urtaiolng bill. The heailine act Is one of tho latest Importations from Europe. The Five 01miierfns they style themselves and they bav6 a, most artistic oft'erng wh'ch will long bo remembered for the beauty of j the pose. The three men and two women reproduce in life the farn- ons bronze statute of tbe psist and present and the act showa the result I f a master in the art of posing. Tue group entitled "The Race," 1 per- haj;6 the most effective of the entire series Sydney Dale aud Pat Hoyle, Introduce a tuneful touch to the big bill 'with a Hngrng and .lancing offerin g thoy call "The Belle and The lieau." i It Is a sciie of clever. Juggling songs and a number of pleasing dances. ; cleverly worci togetbpr j Miss Lillian Ashley, sliging comedienne and mimic, is a cut and charming li tle bit of frrrinfriity. with physical charms a-plenty, a pret-I pret-I ry rce ami a pleading i".nmcr of tolling stories and singing songs which . U e-tremrlv rsre ainopg women. She radiates cheerfulness aud Imper-I Imper-I r.ouafes child types to perfection. , Mr O Ltrien IT.jvel as the "fresh" office bby, who engages In many pranks, one of which is to walk across the office' on bis car. Is about ;s e-"ccnlrlc a comcd'.iri us one his seen ln a long time. He Is ably I assisted in his fun-nakini; hy Miss HotiBie Kyle, the stenographer, a. very 1 i re'ty yo'.nx wov:i'i v ho known how to gt along with the worst kind ! r-f an eUUo Ikv T"".c sketch in which they appear Is appropriately en-I en-I tirled. "The Ofue Hoy" ?-.l the "Typewriter," and is from the pen of I Will II. f'rossy, who h v. ell known to all Orpheu antes. J Mel rone & Kenufdy, a coiur-dy acrobatic turn, will bo seen with much . pleasure. fr both are exceedingly clever, anj Melrose does some won-rierfi.l won-rierfi.l work In 'ofty tumbling. Hi work Is startling ln the extreme, for Ii? falls from the top of four tables, one atop of the other, to the stage. lall 't'ct would he sufficient to breat the average person's neck, but from vhich he emerges smiling. He is called "th clown with nln-)l-e.' His partner 1 a clever ground tumbler, but Melrose a startler . In hh line ;ns net i.j a goo one to bcc, but exceedingly dangerous for ;myone but a practiced pprformer to try and cmulaie. C!i meet De Lion's olfering is a sleight of hand performance at once mystifying ?nd marvelous It is said to be one of the most bewildering bits of niti?tlc manipulation known to the stage. Without tho aid of any nee han'cal or other apparatus nothing but his two baro nand6 he pro-('lce pro-('lce from nowhere tw've regulation ivory billiard balls and after an f xhiblt'on of rare skill as a jngplcr. returns fhem unseen to whence tier came (apparently disappearing in the air) to the utter bewilderment of the beholder He is a newcomer to America ?nd has appeared by royal command I before the Kings of Spain and Pen mark, of which latter country he is a native. I The Orpheum Orchestra with a fir.e musical program and the motion I picture will complete the bill. |