OCR Text |
Show $1 GOVERNORS Merchants Extend Shopping Hours BOX ELDER $3 eW$-- s Hf Number 96 5I( Brigham City, Utah, Friday, Dec. 6, 1946 w DIVISION IS to 8 Pages PREPARING New Yorker Also Sees Possibilities For Caring For State's Indigent Aged If the good of inmate: .if some of the state's institutions is the unand deton lining laetdr and should doubtedly that is bo then the outlook for state use ol Bushr.ell Goneial hospital Choruses And Choral Speaking Group ifyred In Arrangement By Miss Jeppsen cantata origi--uge- d by Mane Thorne be presented to the nil Deevening, Box Elder ll m the A. jol auditorium, assistant principal Saturday, Sunday C, Of C. Votes All plans are complete for the North Box Elder L. D S. stake quai tei ly conference, for Saturday and Sunday, and indications are that the eve.it will be outstanding, officials declared. s will begin Saturday meeting evening with a welfare at 6:30 o'clock in the old Fourth waid chaoel, now the Eighth ward. All stake and ward welfare workers are requested to attend. F. Rowing ai 8 oclock will lie a meeting for stake rrieothood leadership officials in the same chapel. All Mcl hio-dequorum presipriesthood dencies, secretaries, group lead ers and adult Aaronic priesthood officeis should attend. On Sunday Morning Sunday morning at 9 o'clock will stake priesthood meeting c. nvene in the Eighth ward chapel, at which all priesthood members should be present. At the same hour in the tabernacle a meeting will be held for under mothers and daughters. the direction of the stake girls leadership chairman. Elizabeth Romney Madsen, and members of her committee. At 0:30 in the tabernacle the first general session of the conference will begin. Special emphasis will be given to youth leadership and Aaronic priesthood groujrs. The afternoon session will begin at 2 oclock in the tabernacle. A special chbrus from the Aaronic priesthood membership, under direction of Wayne John- Thursday El-sl- v, s 'id junior division, the 'of today. total a 200 students of the aal's seventh, eighth and will jd choruses $9 ides. in nature, In the City on Handels The Night by Ira Wil-- i religious a, entitled is 'a based cantata Memories Town of Bethle-Rut- h Dale and Paul The the cantatas mu-jiclua number from "Othello by Verdi, diion, a carols, Holy Night" and Ye Faithful. Christmas ij organization, the organized direction of In . By-La- ws Ses-ion- A crowd of moie than 200 Chamber of Commence members and their partners attending the eveBingo party Wednesday ning in the clubrooms was described by officers of the club the largest ever to attend such a function. More than 200 members and partneis thronged the clubrooms for the evenings fun with just a touch of business. The membership unanimously voted approval of changes in of the club which the will effect a new method of nominating and electing officers, beginning with the annual election slated for Friday, January OUB FACTORY 13 N-- SHUT VOW MATERIAL THESE ARE 60A'E I fPOVOUQ CHRISTMAS ; DOHT SHOPPING k EARLY KNOHJ WHETHER VIEULGETWPZ, John 10. Under the changes voted the nominating committee will hereafter prepare a list of nominees three persons for as follows: president and 12 persons for directors. The four three-yea- r names of all persons so nominated will bp posted on the club jsior division girls glee bulletin board 15 days prior to rposed of 77 girls from meetHand ninth grades, un-- i the general membership ing. direction of J. Wayne Nominations for president r will be featured. The and directors may also be made wus taking in the part in good stand15 members be the regular mu-rci- s, by In older to make the noming. mostly seventh gramust place ination valid will assist in the choo- the name of thethey person nominsers ate, on.. the club . bulletin board ."f.h 6 roitr tTiro'irgh-- 't h e 15 days before the election meeto lend continuity, and ing. Their signatures must apder will be one of the pear on the nomination. hgh students. Ballots listing candidates and oge will be set with a the date of the election, stating a uniform, to the left, will be mailed to all club memutier choir to the right, bers seven days before election - with the speaking choir and will include a stamped adstage. dressed - envelope for return aatata will be presented mailing to the judges of the marge, Seely explained. election. d that this Christmas Ballots mailed in will be deroent is vne of the two posited in a locked box by the ags the junior division club secretary, the key to which will be given to the judges of accomplish annually, uied. With election on the last day of elecg the tion by the club president. MemFestival, it high school bers are entitled to nark their greatest effore in prosballots for one candidate for four candidates omething fine and president andoffice-. Any balfor director fr the publics will be no lots not so maiked will be incharge for the per- - valid. . Thursday evening Judges of election willwillbe ap-be three in number and pointed bv the club president to whom, following the vote I Beecher count, they will report the one candidate having the highest number of votes for president and the four candidates having tsVet the highest number of votes for directorships. be Winning candidates will Brigham City, announced hChlr a t the annual memr been appointed hpiihin meeting bv the piesi- training coordinator i.nme-- , tder county, under di-t- derit and will take office ,0Urm Utah State industrial divi-,,Members of the nominating McBride and Ben are Scott Horsley, committee are at the supervising chairman and J. D. Gunderson, e speech pitch and high, me-:- J low parts, create out-- ! moods and emotional their choral speaking, ad. ninth-grad- Forty WHN by-la- ry and music will choir, or choral Making r i, O the full feature of g Si-p- Changes divided as to of voices into 1 (WNU ai U an-m- iepre-young- J er re Post Agri-coUe- ethas e recently returned Dili Long and aining conference at eapiM held under diB. Gunderson, industrial education. The co- attended n ,Was from all areas by of the preparation for the le? lng and revising rt VOCattonal, -- iness operation,' as' ia nm iegjs'at()n .tbe taw eran s pi'grams bF es in the n that ere-nrn- and made it - lY a11 training at the and brought Js,andard5 of the new says. in the pro- evituJphls f1 S give" the Weduie veteran , ?roer!he fcstfrmt11' Cngth of and tho o the A ! the analy-beiriJptl- occu-icai'- d. Slulra the occupation tent composition and neatness. 0n of The picture contest is open each and ,e,rfp the carious work . teran r experienced by to trainin8 ia re- meet com-de'seri- n- standards of tog:Ia ion- Employers occuta;ke Such 8 study to vtiH bc mas. The pictures neain . and on originality and bB pre-:- cd aid S2.00. $L50 ana e of coordinator in Cash prizes up . COmPlete descrip-- ? $1.00 will also be awaidt their Pregram of winners of each schoo "iH gets there, The stories sna he onh .Ihe numbers be iuriged by or a. t. t name of the author the judges. to is will not be known will probably stones 'to ads 15 in the Box Elder Newsavailable. pl ted in ns g Service) Boy Seoul Drive Sons Of Utah Pioneers Stories And Incidents Of Pioneer Times In By The Box Elder County Camp, Sons of JHE UNITED ORDER By J. E, Halverson President Lorenzo Snow is generally credited with the establishment of the United Order as and its beginning is fixed 1864. It is sometimes referred The to a sthe Older of Enoch. directing power was through the L. D. S. church and its officers as sustained by its mem- Utah, Related Utah Pioneers word of wisdom according to the spirit and meaning thereon. Rule 4 our families We will treat with due kindness and affection and set before them an example worthy of imitation; in our famwith all ilies and intercourse persons, we will refrain from being contentious or quarrelsome, and we will cease to speak evil each other, and will cultivate a spirit of charity towards all. bers. it our duty to keep Agi tcultui e, manufacturing and We consider hvestick laising weie all coordi- from acting selfishly or from covetous motives, and will seek nated with the thought as All for the interests of each other and in the phrase: As a rule the salvation of all mankind. one and one for ali, his Rule 5 family each worker had We will observe personal home, but all the village people food cleanliness, and preserve ourate, in a common mess hall, best selves in chastity by refraining prepared and served by the and cooks the settlement afforded. from adultry, whoredom We will discontinue and All labor was merged into a sin- lust. of refrain from all vulgar and obgle unit in the preparation ditchscene language or conduct. crops, dams and irrigation Each family shared in the es. Rule 6 a according to We will observe the Sabbath production cirAnd when its numbers. and keep it holy in accorwhere Day developed cumstances with relevations. dance cash payments might be necesRule 7 in made were script these sary, That which is not committed called home do. to our care we will not approThe order was given a trial in priate to our own use. the mailer settlements, mostly Rule 8 Among the m southern Utah. That which we borrow we are mentioned Brigham places will return according to promise City Long Valley Mt. Camel, and that which we find we will to our own use the not appropriate '' to return it to its propso named in but seek at Orderville, plan er owner. appreciation of its organization, Rule 9 At Orderville, they built homes We will as soon as possible m a square convenient to the cancel all our individual indebtservice units, such as a kitchen, edness piior to our uniting with a bakery, a dining room, school, the and when once fully Order, The hall. amusement and church identified with said Order, will flour the and fields community contract no debts, contrary to mills were further out but a the wishes of the Board of Diindividual and spirit of jealousy rectors. dewere insidiously competition Rule 10 plan stroying the communistic We will patronize our brethaoandoned was and which ended ren who are in the Order. But the old flour mill m 1883. Rule 11 a as still stands, at Orderville our In and deportapparel monument of these Utopian ment we will not pattern after dishopes, with their attendant nor encourage foolish and exappointments. fashions, and will travagant The following is a copy of an cease to import or buy from the of rules the of official list abroad any article which can old an from print bo with or which can United Order used by be dispensed yellow with age, once produced bv combination of Order. members of the hone labor. We will foster and and Rules that should be observed encourage the producing United manufactuting of all articles by members of the needed for consumption as fast as our circumstances will perRule 1 We will not take the name of mit. or speak Rule 12 the Deity in vain, or of in our We will be simple lightly of His character, dress and manner of living, ussacred things. Rule 2 ing proper economy and pruWe will pray with our famil- dence in the management of all , and entrusted to our care. jes ni0rning and evening Rule 13 aim to attend to secret prayer. We will combine our labor Rule 3 We will observe and keep the for mutual benefit, sustain with our faitn and prayers and works, those whom we have elected to They edition. Journal Christmas take the management of the difto read Brigham will also be ferent departments of the Order 21 Citv shoppers December in their will be displayed and be subject to then The pictures from official rfraining capacity, They in local store windows. a spirit of ill also be printed in the Box Rule 14 l. Elder y We will honestly and Mrs. Winston P. Ne.son heads ourdevote labor and Mrs. with the contest committee selves and all we have to the Lorrin Tingey, Mrs. J. Oleenn Order and the building up of Palmer and Mrs. K. Bsiton th Kingdom of God. as committee members. of pro-rat- PetafCi & Or-db- r. fault-findin- News-Journa- g. dilli-gentl- 01-se- Committees son, music instructor at Box Elder high school, will furnish two numbers at the 9 oclock session Preparations for the two-fol- d campaign for the Boy Scouts, which is to be conducted in Brigham City and the surrounding communities, are rapidly being conpletod, according to Alf N. Olson. Mr. Olson is the campaign chairman and has been lining up some of the community leaders to assist in the effort. The two parts of the campaign are educational to better inform the citizens as to the value and operation of the Boy Scout movement and to secure resources to extend and enrich the program for boys. About 150 leading men of the communities involved will be organized into teams and committees to do the work. Team captains for Brigham City are, Ernest Freeman, Andy Carruth-erEzra Sackett, Glen Anderson, Walter Mann. Harold Felt, Scott Horsley, DeLos Thompson, Bill Long, Danzell Butler and These men H. A. Malmrose. are recruiting teams of ten men each and there men will in turn contact 10 citizens to tell them about the Scout program and to invite their suppor. A kick- off meeting has been setup for these fhen for Monday, December 16. in the couit house Another group of men who are to be members of the execuare tive campaign committee C. B. Stratford, Leo Nelson, Lloyd Rees, H. Call, Earl Anderson, Chester Hamilton, Percy Knudson, Clair Merrell, Eugene Wixo.ti, Roy Thompson, and The campaign Jack Musulas. committee are to meet on Wednesday, December 11, at the court house. We are delighted with the response we are having in this said Mr. Olson.. ca l'paign. With leaders such as we have to head our effort, we are sure : f success. The benefits of the smut program for our boys make the campaign worthy of the support of eveiyor.e. s, of the priesthood. The. Eighth ward choir will provide music far the 10:30 session and the centennial mixed chorus, under direction of C. C. Watkins will provide music for the 2 oclock session. Evening Meeting An evening meeting, under direction of stake boards of the M. I. A. will convene in the tabernacle Sunday at 7:30 oclock. An outstanding program has been arranged for this meeting, officials said. Bishop J jreph L. Wirthlin of the presiding bishopric and Lorenzo Hatch of the welfare will attend. At the Sunday evening meeting invocation will be offered by Superintendent Erne.-- t Freeman. Narrators will be Patsy Jensen and Max M'uiphy. Responses will be given by the following readers: Jed Richardson, Lon Veil Petersen, Stallings. Lou Arleen Deem, Irene Freeman, Marie Nelson, Elaine Freeman Lila Mae Johnson. A Honeyvillc ward trio will com-mitte- . sing. Choral readings will be given by Box Elder high school pupils. Soloists will be Geraldine Thompson, Maigaret Johnson and Joan Hunsaker will present a duet. Visiting officials will speak and benediction will by Presi dent John P. Lillywhite. Directors will be John Owens, Naomi Ward, Howard Call and Margaret Johnson, Usheis will be Eeehive girls of the Seventh ward. ei sites. Dr. Munger, superintendent of St. Lukes hospital, New Yoik Gayle Holmgren overseas en-rou- te Gayle Holmgren Tokyo Bound Gayle Holmgren, daughter of HolmMr. and Mrs. Reuben gren, Bear River City, is on her back to Tokyo, Japan, wav again in the service of the Ancr-ica- n Red Cross. She said, The Ited Cross just wouldnt take no for an answer. They kept writing me, uiging me to come back, so 1 accepted. Miss Holmgren returned home two last July after spending years overseas, having first enlisted in the Red Cross in July, 1944. One year of the time she spent abroad she was stationed in Italy a part of the second year she was in Germany. She was also in France, Belgium, Holland and Switzerland for a In of this October hort time. year she was on her way to It was from Washington, D. C. Washington that she took the southern route to San Francisco, City, prai:cd the site surroundings and administration of the tiaining school at America i) Folk, but said there should be improvements there in facilities andrep increase in the operating . she ..aind-Thui'sc- lay, staff. Nov. 21, on the Admiral Sim The state hospital at Provo, for Honolulu and will go from he said, is acutely in need of there to Tokyo. more personnel. He also said there was much obsolescence in the plant. There were 1154 patients in the institution it. The on the day ne expert made it plain he felt the 71 size of the staff to treat this number of mentally ill was "woefully inadequate. Termed Intolerable He ;aid that conditions at the are industrial s ho T, Ogden, Intoleiahle. Nothing will do but Aiiena May Criddle Taylor, a complete overall. Fire hazards 71, wife of Daniel Taylor, are high, the place is unkempt died Tuesday night in and not clean." Valley hospital, Tremonton, folSpeaking of Bushnell he said lowing an extended illness. it is a typical government army Mrs. Taylor was born Jan. hospital, planned well, but con- 30, 1875, in Morgan, a daughuse. structed for temporary ter of Charles and Emma Jane Asked about treatment of al- Crofts Criddle. She was rearDr. coholics at an institution, ed and educated in Morgan and Munger said he felt that the later moved with her parents to hostime had come for general .Meadow and Basalt, Ida. pitals to take over responsibilOn May 22, 1892, she was ity, since treatment of alcoholics married to Mr. Taylor in Black-foo- t, is a medical problem. Ida., and moved to D. S- Skeen, chairman of the Ida., and later to Payette, governor's committee, presided. Boise and Burley. Ida. Twenty-eighis committee He announced years ago the family came would meet on Dec. 11, again. to Tremonton, where Mrs. Taylor had resided since. In 1908 the couple received L. D. S. endowments in the Salt Lake temple. She was active in the Relief society in the Tremor, ton Fiist waid and was a member of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Surviving besides her husband are the following sons and daughters: Harry Taylor and Acting Postmaster Ernest Free- Mrs. .May Kent. Tremonton; Mrs. Emma Nelson, Ida.; man made the following Burley, following the post- Frank Taylor, Ogdon; Mrs. Alice master geneials older c intern- Persson, Portland, Ore.; also 11 limitati.ns of grandchildren, one great giand-chi.- d ing temporary and the following brothweight of first clas.-- ur.d weight and size of fourth class matter, ers and si teis: Henry and John due to the present coal situa- Cuddle, Idaho Falls, Ida.; Mrs. Nellie Russell, Lethbridge. Altion: "Lack of fuel for normal oper- berta. Canada: Mrs. Daisy Skination of trains using coal ha. ner. Sugar Citv, Ida.; Mrs. Elsie of Tufts, Fish Haven, Ida.; also a made neccsaiy cuitailment train sei vice. The office of de- half brother and a half Miller, Basalt. Ida.; n has placed Mis. fence transpo-trit- i an embargo on ceriam express and Alvin Cuddle, Ogden, and a Mrs. Hairiett and freight .dupmentj and lias made writhn lequest to the Criddle. Basalt, Ida. The body t? at Shaw & Rogers for an pojtcffice department embargo of comparable extent on funeral home in Trcronton. Funeral services will be conmail matn r in older that coal ducted at one p. in. in the L. D. conservation may be effected, mid S Tremonton Firet ward cha"Therefore', effective night, Dev. 6, and until further pel by Bishop Wayne Sandall. notice no aiti.le f first cla.-- s Interment will be in the River-vie- w marl includ.ng air mail weighcemetery. Fi lends may call at the funering iq exce-- s of five pounds and no paicels of fourth clars mat- al home this evening and Satter exceeding five pounds in urday until time of servide. weight or 18 inches in lengrii or 60 inches in length and girth, and hospital supplies. 5. combined, shall be accepted tor Shipments rf money in the mailing, provided treat there registered mail. limitations shall not apply to 6. Local parcels and all lothe following items or in the cal matter for delivery on lofollowing circum dances: cal rural and star routes. L Live day-ol- d chicks and 7. Parcels addressed to memether poultry poults. bers of the armed forces and 2. Cut flowers, seeds, plants other pcrs'ns served through the and other nursery stock. s. areny postoffice and fleet 3. and other Eggs, butter 8. perishable food products norSecond clais matter and mally accepted for mailing. mats for newspaper and maga4. Serum?, medicines, drugs, zine publications. 9. Films.' surgical instruments, dressings Arrema Taylor vi.-ite- Dies At In Valley Hospital n, Rex-bur- g, ht Mailing Rules Changed As Embargo Placed Be-'si- e 0 kids letters from have started pouring into the po?t office here. in 1855, Tne village, named didn't know what it was getting into when it picked Santa Claus as a name. The town fathers had applied for tne name cf Santa Fe, but they were infonrr.ed that there as a pori office by already that name. On Christmas Eve on 1855, they finally decided And the letters Santa Claus. stalled the next year. This year, the town is ready for visitors to Santa Claus. It has built a ' new Santa Claus Land childrens park and toy 40 acres. renter that cjver Youthful visitors tour the wonderland on a miniature train, the Atlantic Ocean, seeing Mother Goose Swiss Land, Alps and the Egyptian gift-hung- army-abandon- ; SANTA CLAUS, (IND.) GETS FAN MAIL FLOOD SANTA CLAUS, Ind. (UP) The first of an expected 1,000,-00- blighter than ever before. ot opinThat wa, the conoen.-u- s ion at a session of the governors committee in Salt Lake City Aednosday, when the group hcaid a report fr. m Dr. Claude .M linger, a national authonty on institution administration. Dr. Munger said that liie state liiduxtiial school would greatlv bone! it by removal ta Bushnell. He al.o saw future lire for the indigent aged at the local institution. However, Munger said that the state hospital at Provo and the Paining school at Ameucan Folk should be retained and improved on their present sites. He also said that if Utali is de-tmined to provide a refuge lor its aged citizens who are chronically ill. the state can atLrd to. ive further study to establis.i-ig such an institution at Bushnell Sen. Ward Hoibi ooks legisla live committee, whnh under from the legislature, whether the stale is studying should acquire all or pu:t Uushncll from the government ii for Utah institutional purposes, met with the governors Bushnell committee. From Three Aspects From statements by members of that committee .and questions asked, there were indications is that tiie legislative group considering Hie situation from three aspects: Whether the state should acquire the entire facility or a part of it, whether the stale should seek to obtain only the furniture, equipment and other parts of the large installation, which may be put to use in Utah on tueir present institutions is u Alinas She's Mercy Worker s, Plans Completed For Conference FOR NIGHT OF DEC. 19 SAYS PROSPECTS APPEAR BRIGHTER Begirir.ing Saturday, Brigham City merchants will extend their shopping hours from 9:30 in the morning until 8 o'clock in the evening. These new hours, however, will be on Saturdays only, until Christmas. During the rest of the week days stores will operate on their usual hours. OliWlCi 512 COMMITTEE as a member of the h.me nurs- - ing committee,' ard additional members will be added to strengthen the unit. It was re-- 1 poited. Monthly meetings of the committee are also planned. Mr?. Watkins is in receipt of a letter fr.m Ruth I. Ellis, director nursing service, Pacific area, acknowledging her appointment as local home nursing chairman, and stating that by accepting the position Mrs. Watkins is assuming direction of an educational service which can contribute greatly to the immunity health program. Mrs. Gifford Watland is home nursing chairman of the Tremon-to- n branch. She has held that position for a number of years. More than $3 250.000 worth of Australian wool changed hands during the sales. September auction post-offire- |