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Show Corp Univeesal-Microfilmin- 141 Peirpont Ave.' Utah Lake TS). City. o VOLUME 59, NUMBER 26 T- q- o BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 27, 1956 Increase Age Young Bobby Breitenbeker, center, son of Mr. and Mrs. and Julie Victor, right, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Victor, say as they receive their Miss Liberty and Uncle Sam contest numbers from Mrs. Shirley Simper, left, member of the baby contest committee for the Jayceettes annual Kids Day event at Rees Pioneer park! Numbers will be pinned on entire day devoted to kids the tots for the judging by Mrs. is the aim of the Jayceettes as Marva Frost and her committee they sponsor the annual Kids members. Mrs. DOn Nelson is Day at Rees Pioneer park on chairman of the baby contest . July 4. with Mrs. LaRaine Petersen arActivities begin bright and ranging for judges and Mrs. early with the baby contest. Thelma Larsen Miss Liberty and Parents may enter their chil- Uncle Sam charman. dren until the 9 a.m. deadline. The parade,' under the direcChildren, up to and including tion of Mrs. Maurine Fryer, will four year olds, are asked to don begin at 10:30 a.m. and all partisunsuits or sun dresses for con- cipants in costurhes or with a test competition, or floats, decorated bicycles ' Miss Liberty and 'Uncle Sam wiil receive a number and be will be chosen by a group of presented a popsicle and bottle judges and will receive loving of soda pop following the pacups with their names engraved rade. and $1 ribbons as prizes. Money Registration will be handled prizes of $1 go to the child with by Mrs Mary Call and comthe reddest hair, darkest hair, mittee. blondest hair, least hair' biggest Mrs. Irene Jensen Is pony smile and fattest baby. cart chairman; Mrs. Grace Jepp- An & Valuable Prizes Offered at Two-Da- y Appliance School Held Here This Week valuable prjzes will be awarded to ladies attending the cooking-freezin- g and laundry appliance school being held in Brigham City on Thursday and Friday of this week. . The school will be hel4 In the Eighth ward recreation hall and will begin at ? p. m, both. days. Being sponsored by' the Box Elder News and Journal, electrical appliance dealers in Brigham City, and the Utah Power and Light .company, the school will feature Miss Hazel Bishop and Miss Merle Chipman. Miss Bishop and Miss Chip-ma- n are home economists for the Ogden division of the Utah Power and Light company and will conduct the demonstrations. cook They will prepare and foods by methods that give maximum values in vitamins and good minerals necessary to Many health.- - Local appliance dealers will furnish the appliances used in the school, , The school is designed to bring homemakers helpful hints on the use of electrical servants In their homes. ' Each days program will be different, and the school is for - everyone. Included in the prizes will be the food which is cooked at the demonstrations and along with the individual prizfes, the group having the largest percentage for the two days will receive an appliance award. IDS Fifth Ward Use Blazing Arrow Plans Chicken To Start Campfire Polio serum for innoculation as well as booster shots for all of age residents up to arid expectant mothers was released Monday by the Utah committee on polio serum distribution of the State Board of ' ' Health. .The action was .taken. at a special meeting held in Salt Lake City, attended by Ross C. Bowen, a member of the committee. to pervoted The group also mit the distribution of the serMASSED COLORS Heading the American Legion parade um through commercial cham evening was this massed display of colors. Also nels and will be available at ' Thursday included in the parade were the Box Elder . High school cost. stores minimum at drug band and the Veterans of Foreign Wars drum and bugle The Saik serum will be availcorps. able through all medical doctors for free distribution, the doctors charging only for their services, Bowen explained, Our group is very anxious to have immunizations completed before the fall polio season starts, Bowen said following the meeting, and we encourage local residents to start the program immediately. Previously, booster shots were not available to all of the group now included. By liberalizing the requirements, it is felt that a larger number can participate in the program, Bowen - i said. , Entire Day Devoted to Kids Is Jayceettes Aim on July 4 sen in charge of the pony and horse rides; and boat rides will he available under the direction of Mrs. Carol Victor. Children and their , parents ii invited, by Mrs. Roxie Geis-ler- , general chairman, to spend he morning in fun and enjoy their lunch at the food conces-ioto be operated by Mrs. Alma Allred-- ' Mrs. Doris Cazier is chairman of the concessions stand It is announced by the parade that Mrs., Frvej, chairman, money prizes will be swarded ' , ! Thiokol Plant Expected to Be Ready For Production by First of the Year The proposed two million dollar plant of the Thiokol Chemical corporation to be built in (Box Elder county, will be in full operation within a year, it was announ- -' ced by Chemical Week in its June. 23 issue. The authoritative national . publication announced that the Utah plant was slated for start-u- p by Jan. 1, scheduled for July of 1957, with operation ' ' next year," Survey work on the rolling 10,000 acre tract of land has been completed and sent to the Trenton, N. J. head- quarters of the chemical firm,. it was announced this week by Walter G, Mann, local attorney and papers have . been filetTWItfr the secretary of state to permit the firm to conduct business in Utah. According to the article in Chemical Week, Thiokol is currently making a public offering to raise more than two million dollars. All but a half million of this amount appears to be earmarked for the Box Elder coun' ty plant. , Thiokol has been one of the chief contributors to solid propellents for rockets since World War II; the Utah facility will plunge 'it even further into the field ' . with, perhaps, fewer government controls over researchers," th6 national publication announced in the recent article. ; ; The company now operates government-owne- d rocket facilities in Longhorn Ordnance Works (Marshall, Tex.) and Redstone Arsenal (Huntsville, Ala.) Thiokol pays no rent, is reimbursed for maintenance ' '' 'N costs. , I t The Utah unit, on the other hand, will be financed entirely by private capital and will be wholly owned by the company. Full company ownership stems partly from the different interests among the three armed . service branches. Observers say that Thiokol now will be able to concentrate on any phase of rocket research and development it thinks feasible, without having to meet the needs of a single service more than another an alleged problem in the Longhorn and Redstone operaJ tion. ' Another reason for building the Utah center is the military need for larged solid propellent motors, produc- tion of which requires greater plant area. The companys own rocket center at Elkton, Md., will be small compared to the Utah unit, the journal adds. The swing in the missile and rocket field has been toward solid rather than liquid propellents. Its certain Tiow. that the garth Satelite (Thiokol has bid for this project but; lost out to a competitor) to be launched sometime next year will use a solid propellent, and operating j; "requirements are easier since fuel pumps and complica- ted mixing equipment is unnecessary. full-sca- le 4 - , . - i - Dinner at Park .Members of the LDS Fifth ward are planning a welfare dinner, featuring charcoal broiled chicken with all the trimmings to be held this- - evening, Wednesday, at the Rees Pioneer park, beginning at 7 p. m. . Special chef for the evening will be Dr. Carroll L. Draper of the USAC .Extension service. The dinner is being planned under the direction of the Welwith Bishop fare committee Walter Jaggi as chairman, for the purpose of raising funds for the wards welfare assignment. Anyone interested is invited to attend the dinner and tickets will be sold at the dinner. A charge of $5 per plate for adults and $2 for children under 12 years of age will be made. Those attending are reminded to bring their own eating utensils. Cars Collide on Sunday Afternoon cars collided Sunday at p.m. at the intersection of Sixth South and Fifth West, causing a total of $600 damage, according to City Police records. A car driven by Joy Hammer-lanof , Corinne 'collided with one driven by Barbara Ann Ridd of 504 South Sixth West, as they met at the intersection. The local ambulance was summoned, however, no one was injured seriously enough to be taken to the hospital, according to police reports. Miss Hammer-lanwas treated by her personal physician and released. Police estimated $350 damages to the Ridd vehicle and $250 to the car driven by Miss Hammer-land- . Two 12.59 d Former Resident Receives Transfer ; ,, t Perry D. Goodiiffe of Spring-villea former resident of Brig- ham City and a son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Goodlilfe, 346 South First West, has recently taken over the management of the American Fork J. C. Penney Store. Goodiiffe started his career with Penneys in Brigham City and has since' that time been manager at the Springville store. He plans to move his wife and children to American Fork as soon as the home he purchased there has be.m completed. Willard Boy Assists With U. Production Gayle Edward Baddley of Willard plays an important part in the production of The King and 1. which opens Monday, July 2, as the first offering on the University of Utah 1956 Summer Festival. . . , , Baddley, a son of Mr. and Mrs L. H. Baddley of Willard is art , assistant for the production. He Miss Hammerland was cited is a senior art student at the for failure to yield University of Utah where he is and for driving with no drivers active in publications, fraternal license. groups and other activities. d . right-of-wa- ----- 1 noted Wintergreen, from Cache Valley, story-telle- r will entertain Cubs, Explorers and Boy Scouts at the campfire session to be held Friday evening, in connection with the Bird Haven district skill-o-reAlthough the overnight camp to toe setup on the Box Elder High School south campus will be for Boy Scouts and Explorers only, Cub Scouts are invited to attend the campfire program. The campfire will be lighted by a flaming arrow, shot from the roof of the school building, promptly at 8:45 p.m. Friday night. Claud y - : City Names Committee to Procure Land for Watershed to Benefit Local Water Supply Polio Serum DeVon Breitenbeker, 8 PAGES Brigham City Appropriates Funds For Fourth of July Celebration Limit pn Salk ARENT CONTESTS FUN 57 Voting to appropriate $100 to help defray expenses of the 1956 Fourth of July celebration sponsored by the for the children of Brigham City and appointing a committee to procure land and assist with the project of establishing a watershed in Cache National Forest for the benefit of the local water supply headed the list of business completed at the regular meeting of the Brigham City Council held Thursday evening, June 21. Jay-ceet- ces City officials attending the meeting included Mayor C. Councilmen Horsley, John Larsen, Richard Hansen, John Hadfield, Leon Packer and Don Chase; Office Manager Willis Hansen, Supt. Orion Eskel-sen-, Supt. Dallas Jeppson, Engineer Keith Hansen, and Gertrude Bosworth, clerk. The Jayceettes were represenA special program is planned ted at the meeting by Roxie for Brigham City tourists, LDS Geisler and LaRaine Petersen, church investigators and the itemized general public by LDS stake who presented an statement of expenses for the missionaries at the Box Elder 1955 Fourth of July celebration stake tabernacle, tonight, Wedand requested the same consid- nesday, June 27, beginning at 8 eration be given them for spon- p. m. According to Henry R. Bolt, soring the 1956 event for the children of Brigham City. The president of the stake mission, council members voted to ap- the one hour program will be propriate $100 to help defray ex- preceeded by an hour of organ their music. penses and expressed thanks and appreciation to the Promptly at 8 p. m Therald Jayceettes for services rendered Quayle and David Morrell, reand commended them for their cently returned LDS mission aries will speak, with music by endeavors. The council members heard a Mrs.- Tommy (Evelyn) Andersen. Invitations have been posted letter and report from Congressman H. A. Dixon concerning a in all hotel and motel rooms in $200,000 grant toward a water the city and Kenneth. Hailing shed in Cache National Forest at and Wayne Loveland, North and NATIONAL COMMANDER Appearing on the state LeWellsville, which will be of great South Box Elder stake missiongion convention program was J. Addington Wagner, 'nabenefit to the water supply of ary presidents, have been intional commander, center, who confers with William Sut-tee- r, Brigham City. A committee com- vited to ask their investigators Duchesne, national executive committeemen, left, and prised of John Hadfield, chair- to attend. Keith Steve Williams, Milford, district commander, right. man; Orion Eskelsen, Hansen, Don Chase and John Larsen, was appointed to assist with the project and procure thi land. Harold B. Felt met with the council with reference to costs of opening graves and the use Two fire calls in ' quick sucof burial vaults or receptacles cession had the entire Brigham in the Brigham City cemetery. City Fire department in action ' Final Business Sessions Saturday Bring The council members voted that Monday mofning.' . . t $40 is a reasonable fee for openTwo trucks answered the first End to T956 State Meeting Held in City : ing and closing graves and it call at 10:30 a. m. at 520 East was also explained that Brigham Fifth South-wherFollowing a heated election session last Saturday they put out noon, the Utah department of the American Legion closed City does hot sell vaults, only a small grass fire which appar-,- . ently had started from V burntheir 38th annual convention held in Brigham City and the cement encasements. : A letter was received from ing trash, barrel. 900 or more delegates and visitors returned to their homes for were to Jensen Vera leave They offering gravel just ready after a successful three-da- y session. sale to the city. The letter was when a second call at 10:40 a. m. sent the standby fire truck to filed for consideration. Picked to head the organizawas Parley The council appointed the City the north pond on Forest street tion during 1956-5another grass fire. E. .Jensen, Ogden. Lyle Engineer to locate markers near and the new Hervin Bunderson Ele . Without returning to the' staSandy, was named department first vice commander; mentary school which were dis- tion, the first two trucks joined Jim Yarciley, Panguitch, second located during sewer construe to put out the blaze which destroyed a number of fruit trees. vice commander; and William J. tion in that area. A third June grass fire MonA new furniture upholstering Atmend Previous Minutes Highbee, Salt Lake City, deThe council members voted day at 12:30 .pm. partially partment executive committee- service Is being offered in Brigburned a shed and scorched a man. Commander Jensen suc- ham City by the Lauritzen Up- that the minutes of the June ceeds H. C. Tasker, Green Riv- holstering company, located in a meeting be amended to read garage and another building at the Lorenzo Babbitt residence, er. new building at 523 South Main That we conform with the State 247 ; North Third West Franklin Ritter, Salt Lake Owner and manager of the not allow any signs to extend City, was reappointed depart- firm is Gilbert Lauritzen who over the lip of the curb. ment judge advocate by the Le- has been employed by the Ever-to- n Office Manager Willis Hansen He gion executive committee. Mattress company as an up presented the council with the . is a brigadier general in the holsterer for the past 10 years t liability policy statement from i Army Reserve. He recently purchased this por- Arnold HalL Hansen was auAuxiliary Names Officers tion of the business from Walt thorized ti check over the policy the Evertun and has built a new 28 Meeting simultaneously, and pay the amount due. American A. car driven Auxiliary by 50 brick and concrete block Legion by H. J. Dial of Hansen reported that City chose Mrs. Edsel H- - Swanner, to house the new es- Attorney Walter G. Mann sug- Willard was damaged to the exbuilding Salt Lake City, as department tablishment. J tent of $70 Monday at 12:58 gested that Brigham City hire a m. when it was struck by p.a president. She succeeds Mrs. a com Everton the to Meanwhile, prepare competent person William G. Larson, Magna. truck belonging to Brigham Also named to Auxiliary of- pany will use the space formerly history of water for Brigham City Corporation and being drivto fice posts were Mrs. William R. occupied by tiie upholstery de City. Hansen was authorized en by Algernon Anderson of Conley, Sugar House, first vice partment for their expanding investigate the costs and etc, 402 North First West an emsendee, for the for such a history. president; Mrs. George Hodges, rnattrf ss building ployee of Brigham City. The council members considBrigham City, second vice pres- manufacture of car seat covers Dial was turning into ' the Mrs. James ident; Yardley, and to display a new line of ered a recommendation from parking lot on First West and Panguitch, third vice president; bedroom furniture which they Chief of Police Dell Fife that Forest street at the time AnMrs. Earl Jones, Salt Lake City, have purchased. the stop signs on First South derson was backing the truck Mrs. Harry Tasker, historian; GilLauritzn is immediate be removed from Main Street out of the City Water departGreen River, chaplain and Mrs. past commander of George Gid to Sixth East streets. The coun- ment located unheadquarters was Larson, outgoing president, ney post of the Veterans of cil recommended that Chief Fife der the fire station, according to named national executive World investigate further and consider police reports. Foreign Wars. During War II, he war a test pilot for the stop signs being replaced Anderson was cited for failure the Air Force with Yield Right of Way signs. to yield Relinquishes Presidency right of way by Officer Dr. Russell W. Fishburn was The council approved that a Jack The new firm is now open for Jorgensen of the city po- lice force. business, Lauritzen announced. (Continued on Page Two) (Continued on Page Two) Missionaries Slate Special Program Tonite - Grass Fires Cause Legion, Auxiliary Conventions Damage to Trees; Close With Election of Officers , e 7 Gun-derse- Lauritzen Opens Upholstery Shop - . - Willard Motorist Struck by Truck , Partners Pus tM Soon to Qualify for Soil Bank Payment s ' Set Payment Formula Is raising a crop of wheat which tive payment would be made on a total payment of $21.31 per counties of the state. up Payments for plowing All farmers must make appliplanted wheat land and putting Farmers generally will get a is expected to produce at the the basis of wheat at $1.05, a acre. These figures vary In other cation for participation by it into the Soil Bank program payment equal to 60 percent of normal county yield, his incen normal yield of 20.3 bushels, for July 20. acreage reserve will vary ' by the support price times the normal or expected wheat yield Minimum Is $4 Acre county and by locality. Besides those who plow up of the land put into the reserve, Satur- whichever is lower. However, This was emphasized planted acreage of spring or day by J. Taylor Allen, Provo, in any case they will not get winter, certain others may qualchairman of the state Agricul- less than $6 per acre. County ify for acreage reserve payments tural Stabilization .and Conser. ASC committees actually will this year. They include farmers vation committee. who underplanted spring wheat appraise fields to determine Farmers in Box Elder county yield prospects. with the intention of participamust plow up or mow planted Because and support ting In the program also those yields wheat acreage intended for the prices vary who reduced their plantings of counties the inby 1956 acreage reserve program centive payments for participaspring wheat because of adverse by June 30, while wheat fanners tion in the acreage reserve porweather. in other counties have a little tion of the Soil Bank program Winter wheat growers who longer to act, it was explained. will vary widely, Allen said. underplanted their wheat' acreage allotment because of ad- Land put into the Wheat growers are urged to acreage reverse weather will get a flat $4 serve may not be grazed, har- contact their local county ASC per acre this year. vested, or cropped. . However, office for specific information. the state ASC committee was However, the Utah State AgriFarmers may put 50 percent or 50 acres Into the acreage renotified last Thursday that cultural college Extension Serserve this year, whichever is wheat land which was grazed vice has been asked to distri- DISCUSS SOIL BANK Mulling details of the new Soil Bank program in bute general information of the Those with wheat alduring the past six months left to right, Don S. Gibson, program specialist; Glade Allred, Agricultural Stabilization larger. from January 1, to June 22, of program. . lotments of 50 acres or less may S. Leland and Conservation E. state Ray Lyman, Paroway; Capener, Riverside; put their entire allotment into director; this year, is eligible for the Payments Will Vary ' If a Box Elder county farmer and J. Taylor Allen, Provo, members of the state ASC committee. the program. acreage reserve.-- ' - - ! - |