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Show I Sugar House, Utah Thursday, June 27, 1957 Page 2 SOUTH EAST INDEPENDENT , 'a WEEKLY FEATURE OF THE SOUTHEAST THEATRE IN SUGARHOUSE (the sweetest spot in town)j SOUTH EAST INDEPENDENT 1123 East 21st South Dial IN 7-17- 32 Or HU 5-82-61 Tht South Eat Independent ii nUr-e- d si Second Claw Matter March 1, 1046. in Salt Lake City Poit Office tinder the oet of March 8. 1879. It it published each Thursday tnornlnt;. South Esit Independent is published hj The News Bulletin, Inc., and 8ucr House Preis, Inc., at 1128 E. Twenty Firit South St.. Sugar Home, Utah. Subscription ratea are 13.00 per year by mail. Sinjla copy price is ten eonts. Publisher Clair King Editor Emma D. King NATION A I E 0 I T O R 1A I X I I ASSOCIATION If your business Isn't worth advertising: advertise it for SALE Classifieds . . . e IIOLLADAY DRIVING SCIIOOL OLYMPUS HIGH INSTRUCTOR Richard Rebbe . . . . Cr. 9S FOR SALE - Good upright piano of solid black mahogany $150; Antique mirrored hat-rac- k, excellent condition; Apt. size gas range, good condition $35; Double Garage Door, like new $35, including hardw. Dial CR IN 58 If Your business isn't worth advertising then advertlss it for Sale! . 1C00 square feet warehouse spaee available In the heart of Sugar House. Contact Co. Phone Hu4-621- 1 FOR SALE: a ce Blond Oak Chest of Drawers (or buffet) double bed, nite table. Contact before p.m. EL5-028- O. FRIDAY - SATURDAY, ONLY 1,001 LAFFS 1,001 7He blew jf fa fortune on EXCITING CO-IH- T ?i.vs Cinemascope: Sl'JU t' GENE BARRV f ANGIE DICKINSON kZ..- -'l NAT'KING' COLE SUN -- MON.-TUES fv)lJ 5,OShed never been kissed, until.. Pf?z DOUGLAS A 1 Anthony FRANCIOSA vA Iff in MG-- i 1 TISCOUIDBF THEfJGIIT" ) Yv in CINEMASCOPE with JULIE WILSON NEIU ADAMS V JOAN BL0NDOL.1 CARROL WAISH, VkV RAFAEL CAMPOS ZASU PITTS AS XCs. and RAY ANTHONY yV CONCRETE CO. Sand and Gravel Product (Once tried Always used) 150 Ilolladay Blvd. CR7-268- 9 FALSE PLATE BRAKES WE SPECIALIZE IN RE-PAIRING broken or cracked plates. Teeth replaced while U wait. Old plates dup. Guar. Reas. Pick up and delivery Service. REASONABLE PRICES QUALITY ItBAIIt DEHTAL LAB 680 East 21st South Hu5-520- 5 And 'MAGOO" Too BONUS WED. MATINEE JULY 3RD 3 COMPLETE SHOWS 10 A.M. - 12:30 & 8:00 P.M. Better Seating at Early Show Plus "CAPT. AFRICA" No. 5 and Cartoon ANTHONY FRANCIOSA IS LATEST LEADING MAN "FIND" TO HAKE THE LADIES SWOON Elia Kazan has him. M-G-- M has him. Twentieth Century-Fo- x has him. Hal Wallis Productions has him. Everybody else wants him. Nevertheless, Anthony Franciosa doesn't look upon himself as a "hot" actor "Anything hot has to cool off' says the handsome, dark-haire- d Franciosa, who is well on his way to becoming the newest romantic sensation of the screen. "I'm just fortunate." Elia Kazan signed him for one of the leads in the film, "A Face in the Crowd," made in New York. M-G-- M signed him for his Holly-wood debut in a ng role with Jean Simmons and Paul Douglas in "This Could Be the Night." Producer Hal Wallis sign-ed him to a non-exclusi- ve contract for one picture a year for five years. And, by the time he finished "This Could Be the Night," M-G-- M had signed this much sought-afte- r new star for two more films; Twentieth Century-Fo-x for three (including the movie "version of "A Hatful of Rain"), and he had made agreements with Elia Kazan for another two pictures to be made in New York. It's evident Franciosa will have his wish. A few year ago, however, act-ing jobs were so scarce for the young man that he was forced to supplement his income by work-ing variously as a dishwasher, awning installer, welder and print-er's devil. "Even after my first Broadway play, The Wedding Breakfast,' I held on to my job as a waiter in a restaurant in Greenwich Village he says. "I didn't want to take any chances. And I needed the extra money to continue my stud-ies at the Actor's Studio." Franciosa decided to become an actor when he was eighteen. He won his first part in a Y.W.C.A. play quite by accident Accom-panying a friend who was reading for a part, he himself was talked into trying out and thus launched his career. u Jean Simmons co-sta- rs with Paul Douglas and Anthony Franciosa in M-G-- M s comedy with music, "This Could Be the Night.'9 Miss Simmons, who scored one of the screen's biggest hits in Guys and Dolls' now plays a schoolteacher who comes involved in the hectic and hilarious management of a New York night club. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF SALT LAKE COUNTY STATE OF UTAH SUMMONS Civil No. 112821 LENORA J. BECKMAN, Plaintiff, -- vs- AROL WALTER BECKMAN, Defendant. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon Alston & Maughan, plaintiff's attorneys, whose address is 201 Kearns Build-ing, Salt Lake City 1, Utah, an answer to the complaint within 20 days after service of this Sum-mons upon you. If you fail so to do, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in said complaint which has been filed with the clerk of said court and a copy of which is hereto annexed and herewith served upon you. This is an action for a divorce and incidental relief. QUENTTN L. R. ALSTON ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF Plaintiff's address: 341 East 2nd South Salt Lake City, Utah (Pub. June 27-Ju- ly Donald O'Connor At Comic Best In 'The Buster Keaton Story' y.::::.-.-.::-- . 1 f s : 1 ' J ' I 1 ,s ' - ? i . 1 ' , ' I 5 I " ) (Review) The richly human, sometimes poignant, sometimes hilarious, story of one of the great comedi-ans of our time, "The Buster Keaton Story," open Friday at the Southeast Theatre, and a wonder-fully rewarding movie it is. The life and times of a vaude-ville and silent-film- s figure the whole world knew and loved, Paramount's VistaVision film of the rocketing rise and dramatic fall of the master of slapstick pantomime is a song-- , dance- - and laugh-fille- d saga that emerges as an epic of one of the most glam-orous and colorful periods in en-tertainment history. The picture opens with Buster a small boy, the third member of his parents' vaudeville act, living the precarious existence of a bottom-of-the-b- ill performer - a revealing insight into what made Keaton run. Thereafter, the sup-erbly talented Donald O'Connor takes over as the adult Keaton and in a brillant performance takes Buster to the heights and down again, first as a vaudeville headliner then a rising and ar-rived screen star and finally a luminary dimmed by the blaze of talking pictures. There is a triangle in the story, a very touching one. Involved in it are Ann Blyth and Rhonda Fleming-Mi- ss Blyth starring as the petite and appealing young wife Donald has no time for, and Miss Fleming guest-starre- d as the In baggy pants, flat hat and dead-pa- n, Donald O'Connor por-trays the master clown of the silent films in "The Buster Keaton Story," due Friday and Saturday at the Stardust Theatre In VistaVision. gorgeous siren who first helps him squander a fortune with riotous living and then drops him for a title. The unfolding story of Miss Blyth's courage, patience and final daring in bringing the once-gre- at star back from the depths ia a . warm and satisfying one. NOTICE OF DELINQUEMU UPPER CANAL IRRIGATION COMPANY, a corporaUon, principal place of business in Salt Lake County, Utah. There are delinquent upon the following deecribed stock, on account of assessment levied on the 18th day of March, 1D57, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: Stockholder Certificate shares Amt. Number Von G. Adamion A2561 1 .90 John E. and Lavon Boyd, Prudential Federal Savings & Loan Association, Mortgagee A3298 1 90 C. Taylor Burton A1321 4 3.60 Arnold Friberg, Zion's Benefit Building Society.Pledgee A2805 16 14.40 Paul E. Hahn ' A91 1 .90 Wilford H. Hansen A2175 1 .90 Adolph & Myrtle H. Locher A2609 2 1.80 David H. Quist, Western Savings & Loan Co., Pledgee A3165 1 .90 S. Morgan Sorensen A204 2 1.80 S. Morgan Sorensen A476 2 1.80 S. Morgan Sorensen A2383 6 5.40 Joseph Raymond Spencr A1587 2 1.80 Barney L. Sutton A1953 1 .90 Leland Tuft A1326 2 1.80 Leland Tuft " A1546 1 .90 Leland Tuft A2788 2 1.80 Frank C. and Marie C.Winther, Zion's Savings Bank Bank & Trust Company, Pledgee A2795 ' 1 .90 and In accordance with law and order by the Board of Directors made on the 24th day of May, 1957, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at 4849 Viewmont Street, Hol-lada- y, Utah, on the 16th day of July, 1957, at the hour of 2:00 P. M. to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. UPPER CANAL, IRRIGATION COMPANY By Guy Q. Simdberg, Secretary, ' 4849 Viewmont Street, t: Salt Lclct City 17, Utah |