OCR Text |
Show PAGE FOUR I Gorgeous Grable Becomes Screen Mother BOX ELDER NEWS Brigham City. Utah Wednesday, September 6, A , Half-Doze- Ml? vii 1950 & ALWAYS Graduating Class Of '30 To Hold Reunion (V The graduating class of 1930 are to hold a class reunion during the Peach Days celebration, it was announced today by Lor-iTingey, chairman. All class mates will gather at the Howard Cafe, Saturday evening, September 9, at 7:30 p. m. All class members are urged to attend.. r' Z ,rs COOL sipnsosi Glamour leers n THE PICK O' THE PICT U kit" n ' WED.&THUR. o . AllP J0U. M SAVE w I Webe itock CLIP ahq 1 0) . Opei this specia I. listing Knai) sesb (2313 PEACH i t:Tj A Scene From Minstrel Days , . one of 29 big acts in 1951 world premiere of Holiday On Ice, Salt Lake City during the state fair. 8 , WORLD Betty Grable and Dan Dailey . . . reunite their sparkling talents for the third time in the technicolor musical, "My Blue Heaven, which arrives at the Capitol Theatre for a special Saturday "Peach Days midnight showing and Sunday, Monday and Tuesday of next week. David Wayne, Jane Wyatt and Mitzi Gaynor t. , t , round out the featured cast. PREMIERE 4-- H Mr. and Mrs. Frink of Cedar City returned to their home Tuesday morning following a short visit in Brigham City with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Siggard and other relatives and friends. Mrs. Petty is the former Wilma Siggard. OF COMPANY SEPT. 15 115 thru. SEPT. 23 . N 1:90 Hly MATS. SEPT. 17 A 23 AT 2:30 RESERVED .ALL SEATS ' ORDER YOURS SY MAIL NOW! Seed stamped, addnuwl ratvrn ' with ramltiarue to HOLIDAY ON ICE, UTAH STATI FAIR, SALT LAKE CITY MmiMm 1 choim .1 dMlr.lt I. datM $3, $2.50, $2 PRICES: 'J"- - & $1.50 Including oil lax and ADMISSION TO UTAH STATE FAIRGROUNDS i. FREE A pleasant family was held on the Siggard lawn Monday evening attended by members of the family, by Mr. and Mrs. Norris Larsen and family and Miss LaDean Knudsen and Miss Dorene Mecham. Supper was served to the group by Mrs. Siggard. t club The Nimble, Nine held their last meeting of this year recently at the home of Mrs. Anson B. Call. All members of the club were present with their mothers as their guests. The meeting was called to order by Nolene Jensen, president. The minutes were read by Camille Jensen, secretary, and approved by the girls. The club girls sang the club song. The time was then turned iver to Mrs. Call, club leader, and all the articles that the girls had worked on and completed during were the summer program judged and articles were chosen to represent the club at the county fair. 4-- , i .Refreshments MORE, were served and the meeting was adjourned for the winter months. & - MORE Club Win Awards At The County Fair 4-- H MORE The Cheaper by the Dozen club of Corinne recently were awarded the following honors at the county fair: Geraldine Reed won Indivi4-- & MdDIIE dual demonstration on her short Hemmed story about the Patch. She, will represent the club at the State Fair. . Margot Jeppsen won a blue ribbon on her second year individual dress, and her dress will also go to the State Fair. Dorothy won, a red ribbon on her first year individual dress and the club exhibit won a red rib ' bon for their display. The club girls and their lead er feel that they have had,, a club year. very successful PEOPLE ARE LISTENING ' TO ' vQ Jt j f. ' V y V Ny-gar- LLYWO O d d - per-ho- -0 But here's the best part of all! Your fun feature item in dining cars , ; I' extra Enjoy Pacific.. Union pleasure, extra comfort, by going DRIVE-I- AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT REGARDLESS OF WEATHER "Stage John Wayne , HIT NO. For Dependable Freight and Passenger Transportation i- t 'Long Voyage Home'' With John Wayne and Barry Fitzgerald With fe GCIE3I) QQ3HG Mitchum-M- . hit 1 no. 2. GOOFY JAM Racing ROMANCE! Riotous FIIN! Special Added LAUREL - . Disney Cart, ALL . . ON teafortwe; GREAT ONE PR0GR SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY NIGHT SATURDAY -- September I l. MATINEE PEACH HIT NO. IT COMES SCREEN STARTS DAY AFTER PARADE HIT 1 NO. 2 J THE TO OUT OF LIFES RICHEST EMOTIONS...! Is Your Bicycle Ready For School and FUN? W. Lamont Glover, local life underwriter, and Mrs. Glover, have been invited by the Beneficial Life Insurance company to attend a convention at September t To qualify for the convention, Glover has produced over $55,-00worth- of insurance during the months of March, April and . , , May. Ninety Beneficial Life agents and wives from Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming, will attend the convention. Also in attendance will be several executives from the home office in , Salt Lake Tough ones are our specialty. 5-- 0 - City., MAY'S BIKE REPAIR Inibn-- W 4th East North of High School Campus WILLIAM MARK fjfjf BETSY Pi Wntte ;r Froduciw V SCHAEFtt E Iftlfl r ADOLPHE MENfOII JODAY & JEAN HESSHOLI SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTIONS Laurel & Hardy in HOOSEGOW Colored Cartoon POPEYE THE SAILOE Serial ATOM MAN vs. SUPER MAN THURSDAY BIG DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM Hef$ the uproarious answer to SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOW SATURDAY NIGHT 8 ARE UMPIRES HUMAN? '' S V" N Sunday-Monda- y -- September 10 : -- 11 niLiuu BEEdDllI tub B 5 MEBKEL . ? Att & HAL' "BRATS"! i Dont wait until you run out Order your stationery, office and business forms, envelopes, etc., today at the Attend Convention N mL O'DriscoU AFTER PARADE Lamont , "Fighting Command" Robert o DAY Clair Trevor ALSO With Loretta Young & G Fitzgerald 4 ALSO .. J $ PEACH STARTS Coach " 'Fury In The Sky" (3? SEOSBB MATINEE . September THEATER N THURSDAY & FRIDAY, v : Sept 7 & 8 ! - I LAST TIMES TONIGHT Wed., Sept 6. Family Night , U - -- Zlnaflo-Tfi- m is Fried Chicken So enjoy the tops in travel. I grov FRIDAY Conscience Cotches Up After DULUTH, Minn. (UP) living, with a troubled con science for 20 years, a Duluth woman decided to clear it up The proprietor of a furniture store received a dollar bill in the mail. A note attached said the sender had accepted a dollar too much in change after a purchase at the store in 1930. News-Journa- bot youi L air conditioning. Plenty of space to stretch out cnd to roam about. Delicious dining car meals too, elegantly served. In September, the - Announcement Is made today of the marriage of Marilyn Me Mannis and Joseph O. Ward on July 29. The new bride is the daughter of Mr. H. S. McMannis and of Richland, Washington, Mr. Ward is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Hyrum Ward of Brigham . . . City. The young couple arrived at the home of the grooms parents on September 3 and after a two weeks visit . in Brigham City, they, will return to Richland where they will make their home. UT , GLORIA COLLINS . HENRY ALSO SECOND FEATURE CHINATOWN AT MIDNIGHT with HURD HATFIELD "HOW "bOY . JEAN WILLES CRAZY" Movies Are Better Than Ever At The Roxv! whei good regular , but there had been a military skirmish of some sort on this starts the minute you step aboard the luxurious Union Pacific train. You enjoy the relax comfort of wide, roomy seats. Pleasant r shed devil-may-car- - We. PROGRAM 1 03 t DAYS , die - at . all-ma- FOR THE BEST v . g 4-- - - 5. . "Red Dust? Those were some of the good pictures. The virile, lusty lover of women, and the hard-boile- d likeable big brother to men hit his peak in Gone With the Wind, The part of Butler in this motion, picRhett DIAL ture classic was a natural for Just Owls In Belfry DANVILLE, Va. (UP) Inves- showing his magnetic, mascu tigating reports of weird, ghost- line personality. He was a ly sounds like the screams of a knockout clear down to the frightened woman in an old last scene, when he told Scar a I dont give church here, police found five lett OHara, IN MUSICAL RADIO owls in the belfry. and then showed his damn, heels to the gorgeous beauty. Gable wasnt handsome in the aesthetic sense at least no one could say he was pretty. His profile was more like a pugilist than a Barrymore. His big ears got many a joke from the radio comedians, we remember. But there, was something in that big, cheerful face that stirred us all. His eyes, his dimples and his crows nest wrinkles twinkled with the devil. Heavy eyebrows and lashes surrounded e those eyes. His voice was somewhat raspy and metallic, but the way he put out his lines was exciting rhythm to the hearts of young maids Foil is the ideol time to visit the East. New and men. (We always remember a ridi-lou- s entertainment shows new exciting Broadway scene in which our hero was a foreign correspondent everywhere. wearing a dashing trench coat. I t . The name of the movie slips us 8-0- 0 D Pacific Island and Clark dictating his news story to Lana Turner, who typed on a portable as he rattled it out. He paced up an ddown dictating, and she would have had to break typing speed records to get it all down. But she did. It was a silly, farfetched scene, but the way Gable did it was wonderful. His voice crackled with heroic intensity. . Gable was, generally speaking, heavy with the com, but nobody seemed to care. His talents were best displayed in slam bang, love em, .leave em, fast moving shows.' Serious or tender dramas werent his style. And how the women in the audiences loved it! Perhaps the' men saw him as the character they themselves really were if they werent too modest to reveal it. His forte was playing the American type. His strong face, his frank, 'un subtle histrionics meant just what the lines he read meant. Now our Gables hair is grey an The first show he got a de- ing. These new junior stars cent part in is now quite for- will never measure up to him, gotten The Secret Six," an un- though, Some of the new boys and we say boys advisedly derworld gangster - thing. But from that movie on he was al- try to work up a reputation for ways big stuff. He didnt have being tough guys and often this to work himself up from that toughness borders on the neu- show. Clark simply had mus- rotic. cled In, as they used to say in Well, being tough leaves them gangster movies. He made a about 20 grades below Gable, hit in one show after another. because our Clark wasnt Some of his movies were third tough. And he was never neurate in quality, but Gable, the rotic. He was a plain, strong, extrovert none of personality, was always worth ; the money. this , psychopathic uy , ' Remember him in "Muntiny business! on the Bounty," San Francis- co, "Boom Town, and as a su t lover of Jean Harlow in Glover To By Charles A. Fisher, Tho Hollywood movie makers are desperately trying to push actors a new gang of Widmark, Lund, Clift and Mon-talba- n starup Into cinema dom. This needs to be done because the old stars are already middle-agegentlemen. Gable, Cooper, Stewart, Tracy and Cagney were the stars of the 1930s, the 1940s, and so help us were still stringing along with them come 1950. Looking back over the heart th robbers, whose stardom is beginning to dim, surely the most impressive was Clark Gable. What a man was Gable, and he didnt have to do a Western to convince anyone. Gable never did prove that he was a good actor In the artistic sense, but it must make the new. crop of stardom-seekinjuveniles wince to try to equal his stature as a screen personality. Gable was big on the black and white screen, a big man, a opening Sept. 15, Marriage Of Marilyn McMannis And Joseph O. Ward Is Announced film Shop he-ma- Cheaper By The Dozen ,& . he-me- n 4-- J. Petty , J Nimble Nine Club Hold, Last Meeting Frank J. Pettys Are Holiday Visitors From Cedar City . - - . H XX , , of ' JANE WAYNE "'ami -- WYATT iostei MitZI R .GAYNOR "aii m THE THREE STOOGES CARTOON and OTHER SHORTS Tuesdi, 12 |