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Show WWW MMI i 1 Death Claims Former Teacher Young Mother Mantua Woman Dies Following Dies Friday in After Illness Long Illness Massachusetts Husband of Former Briglianiilcs Dies Funeral services were conducted Monday in the Aultorest Mortuary, Ogden, for Ellis M. Sanders, 57. Mr. Sanders died Thursday in an Ogden hospital following a stroke. Burial was in the Aultorest Memorial park. He was bom April 15, 1901, and in St. George to Ellis M Mary Snow Sanders. He moved to East Garland with his parents as a child and then to Ogden 40 years ago. He married Florence C Hansen, daughter of the late Mr and Mrs. Edward Hansen, Brigham 1,W City, May 17, 1922 in Ogden. He was employed by the Og- den City for the past 28 years and was foreman of the waterworks department Mr Sanders was a member of the Lorm Farr ward, Church of Mrs Leona Johnson Hailing, Saints Jesus Christ of Latter-da72, of Mantua, died Saturday Surviving are his widow, a at the home of a daughson, Gene, Ogden, a daughter, morning Wells-villMrs William Stamey, Sunset; ter, Mrs Earl Riggs, in following an illness. and four four grandchildren Mrs Hailing was born Sept. 24, brothers and four sisters 1885, in Mantua, a daughter of Peter C. and Bene Christensen NEWS Johnson. 8 She resided in Mantua most of her life except for six Wednesday, June 4, 1958 years spent at Union, Ore Brigham City, Utah She was married to Cannon Hailing on Dec 23, 1905, in Mantua They later received their endowments in the Logan I.DS temple Mr Hailing died May Ervin Clark, 38, San Bernardino, Calif., former Brigham City resident, died Sunday, June 1, m a Salt Lake City hospital after a long illness. He was born Oct. 4, 1919, in Treasureton, Idaho, to Lucius and Adelia Carling Clark. He married Dorothy Jeanne Carrol .on Nov. 20, 1947, in the Salt Lake LDS temple. Mr. Clark is a graduate of Brigham Young University and has served an LDS mission and Miss is also a U. S. Army veteran. ACCEPTS CALL taught school in Snowville Margretta Stander of Bear andHe Mantua before moving to River City has accepted a Bernardino in 1953. call to serve an LDS mission San Survivors include his widow, in Western Canada. sons and daughter, Stephen Wayne, David Lynn and Carol Jeanne, San Bernardino; parents of Ririe, Ida., and six brothers and sisters. Funeral services will be held today, Wednesday, June 4, at noon in the Holladay Third ward chapel, 2600 East 4800 South. Burial will be in the Holladay Memorial park. y Box Elder 24, 1938 She was an active member LDS church and had bteui a teacher in the Mantua of - AJ- &MMA Ms, X. Say Thanks to Dad With a Group Portrait The one gift only you can give on Fathers Day, June 15. Hell want a large one for the office desk, one for home and another for his wallet. DAY FATHER'S With 1 or 18x10 2 SPECALS people in photo: size 5x7 size 1 Wallet size Regular $8.00 value 1 $6.25 $8.00 SPECIAL OFFER GOOD UNTIL JUNE 11TH COMPTON STUDIO Phone 5-- J ward Relief society. Surviving are the following sons and daughters: Kenneth J. Mrs Leslie (Dolly) Hailing, liumpage, Lais Jay Hailing, all of Brigham City; Oleen Hailing tfnd Lynn Hailing of Mantua; Mrs Vern (Lucille) Brough of Deweyville, Mrs Earl (Vesta) Riggs of Wellsville; and Mrs. Gerald (Afton) Holliday of Mag13 greatna; 27 grandchildren, the following grandchildren, Arnold brothers and sisters: Johnson, Rose Johnson, Mrs. Romina Rasmussen of Brigham City; Mrs. Florence Osborne of Ernest and Salt Lake City; Johnson ol Mantua Funeral services were conducted Tuesday at 1 p m in the Mantua LDS ward chapel with Bishop Chester Rasmussen officiating Burial was in the Mantua cemetery under the direction of the Harold B. Felt Funeral Home Bear River Girl Accepts Mission Call to Canada Miss Margretta Stander, daughMr. and Mrs. Chester of Bear River City, has accepted a call to serve a mission in Western Canada for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Miss Stander will be honored at a iarewelt testimonial Sunday evening, June 8, at 7 30 p. m. in the Bear River LDS ward chapel. She has been teaching school during the past year at Roosevelt school in Ogden. She is a graduate of the Box Elder High school and LDS seminary. She is also a graduate of the Utah State University and of the LDS Wrong Coin Institute of Religion at Logan. SALT LAKE CITY (UP) City Her brother, Elder Ray StanTieasurei Oliver G. Ellis der, is currently serving as an a one half English sov- LDS nnssiunaiy in the Southern ereign to a coin collector here States when she told him it was placed Miss Stander will enter the inadvertently in a downtown LDS mission home in Salt Lake paiking meter by her husband. City on Monday. June 23, for a week of special training prior to Life Tenure leaving for her mission head Char- quarters at Edmonton, Alberta, SHARON, Mass. (UP) les E Collins wont have to run Canada. for election any more. Townfolk Friends and relatives of the granted him life tenure as town Stander family are invited to atclerk and accountant. Collins, tend the testimonial Sunday eve who has a wife and 11 year-olning, according to Bishop Roy son, is a cripple but handles L. Braegger, who will preside. both his jobs effectively from his wheel chair. ter of Stander d With 3 or more people: Same assortment of sizes. Regular $9.75 value the d for Appointment 102 SOUTH MAIN Mrs. Joyce Fryer Olroyd, 23, former Deweyville resident, died at Westover Air Force Base hospital in Massachusetts, Friday, following a lengthy illness. She was the wife of Lieutenant David Oldroyd, a former resident of Provo. Mrs. Oldroyd was born Jan. 31, 1935, at Deweyville, a daughter of Clarence and Jennie Fryer. She was reared at Deweyville and graduated from Bear River High school. She later attended Henager Business college in Salt Lake City. She was married to David A. Oldroyd on May 18, 1955, in the Logan LDS temple. She is survived by her husElder John RETURNS a daughter, Carrie Oldband, Allen Peters, son of Mr. and her parents of Deweyville; Mrs. E. H. Peters, former royd; a brother and two sisters, Arnold Brigham City residents, re- Fryer of Deweyville; Mrs. Evan turned last week after com- Sorenson of Logan; and Mrs. LDS mis- Ross Bowen of Kearns. pleting a Funeral services will be consion in South America. ducted Friday at 10 a. m., in the Deweyville LDS ward chapel with Bishop Horace A. Lish, Jr., officiating. Burial will be in the Provo city cemetery. Tips Offered For Better th Former Resident Cattle Lice Completes Mission Control Urged Cattle freed of lice by dipping or spraying will remain clean much longer if running only with treated cattle, cautions Dr, George F. Knowlton, extension entomologists at Utah State University, Logan. In some areas all cattle are dipped or sprayed for cattle lice. Such herds receive maximum benefit from lice control treat ments, he says. Many herds now are being treated or soon will be treated against costly lice infestations. The better the control job and the freer of lice are the cattle they run with the longer will cattlemen benefit, Dr. Knowlton points out. Many sheep will doubtless be sprayed or dusted after shearing to control sheep keds or ticks. Here again, benefit is greatest when all sheep running on a range or in a pasture have been adequately treated to avoid earDr. Knowlton ly reinfestation, adds. Michigan has four times as much water as any other state covering more than 40,000 square miles. Gathering Moss Moss MADISON, Wis. (UP) growing, an industry over 100 years old, has become an annual $480,000 business for central Wisconsin farmers who raised 300,000 bales last year. The growers raise sphagnum moss, used principally in holding water to roots of plants, trees and shrubs in shipment. Tol-ma- n, Honeyville Native ! Named to LDS Post LeRoy Tolman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Abinadi Tolman of Honey- ville, has been sustained as a member of the high council of the newly organized Orlando stake of the Church of Jesus Saints in Christ of Latter-daOrlando, Fla. He is a graduate of the Box Elder High school and LDS Seminary and has attend the University of Florida. Tolman fulfilled a missiori for the LDS church in the Southern States. He then entered the U.S. Army, serving 15 months of his two-yetour of duty in Korea. He married Sabina Godwin of Melbourne in the Logan LDS Temple on Jan. 16, 1953. Tolmaq is an employee of the Pan American World Airways. , y Elder John Allen Peters, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. (Pete) Peters, returned home last week from South America where he has labored as an LDS missionary In Argentina 'and Chile for the past two and a half years. He was called from the Payson Second ward, however since that time, the Peters family moved An 'earthquake in Assam, Into Blackfoot, Idaho. They former- dia, disturbed 1,750,000 square where lived in Brigham City ly miles. Tri-Staof his father was manager Lumber Co. Elder Peters has a brother, UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Gordon, who is a student at BYU, and a sister, Linda, who is a ninth grade student at Black-foot- . te A ar homecoming testimonial was held Sunday evening in the Pay-so- n Second ward. The Peters family visited with friends in Brigham City Monday enroute to their home in Black-foo- t COOL! COOL! A New Lock BOSTON (UP) After stealing $190 worth of groceries from a Dorchester store, a burglar replaced with a new lock of his own the lock he had smashed to gain entrance. Pasture Land STARTS TODAY "The pasture season is here what kind of grazing are you going to have on your farm? Lyman H. Rich, extension dairyman at Utah State University, Logan, is asking Utah dairymen these CHURCH MAN LeRoy Honeyville native, haa been named a member of the high council in the new LDS Orlando stake in Florida. DOUBLE 1 days. Today, most dairymen know varthat pasture ieties of palatable grasses a nd legumes are among the highest paying crops on their farms. Hundreds of farmers visit the Utah State University experimental dairy farm in North Logan every spring and summer. Professor George Q. There, Bateman and his associates have developed the pasture mixtures which give the highest returns on irrigated land in Utah Professor Rich said that Utah dairymen are welcome again this year to visit the experimental dairy farm and obtain the latest information on pasture PROGRAM GEORGE MONTGOMERY high-yieldin- b? GET MORE OUT OF LIFE GO OUT TO A MOVIE! the Marshall; V . whose guns were ONE : whose name was BIG WEEK! MATINEES WEEKDAYS SPECIAL Wednesday thru Tuesday Open art 3:30 P. M. li high-yieldin- varieties MATINEE PRICE 75c to 6 P.M. first-han- Extension Dairyman Rich offered these reminders to Utah dairymen on a few facts: 1. Get the barnyard manure on the land, with pasture getting its share of covering early. 2. Spread phosphate (treble ) at the rate of 150 to 200 pounds per acre, or its equivalent, in order to bring about a good growth. to 3. Harrow or brush-draspread last years droppings. 4. Rotate the herd on pasture sections. Use a large area the first few grazing days then later in the season. Electric wire fence divisions of small areas are becoming more popular. Fence off just enough to feed the herd for a day or two, then move to fresh grass. A. Fullmer Allred, Box Elder county agent, invites Box Elder county dairymen to obtain a free copy of the extension ser-- I Pasture vice circular No. 183, Mixtures for Irrigated Land in This publication gives Utah detailed information on pasture mixtures to plant in this mUNTIO Y WARNER t IBROS. ..t DIANE BREWSTER A EVENING PRICE $1.25 after 6 P. M. well-know- -- .white lightning and STARTS TODAY FOR , SEBASTIAN CABOT Production MONTGOMERY BIG CO - MIT CHILDREN 35c ANYTIME Features Start 3:50 P.M. 9:30 P.M. 6:40 P.M super-phosphate- Pieces Cost of a Sofa Bed Alone e opportunity of During this unusual sale you have a becoming the proud owner of a complete, perfectly matched whole le chosen by a decorator for harmony and beauty1 The room fine construction fcuures, as well as the beautiful modern styling will thnll you Just look whit you get A full size sofa bed, luxurious club chair, comfornblc I V chair, 2 smart lamps, 2 modern tables, lovely wall bed have tufted seats and pictures and modern cocktail Ch urs and sofa hack, and art upholstered in the smirtest decorator fabrics. Don t nuss at the Usual $199.75 Pay $20 Down $10 Month on North Mains Easv' Payment Plan iXJA. ' area. Art Inflation SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 1:10 P.M. 9:30 P. M. 6:40 PJM. WINNER OF SEVEN ACADEMY AWARDS! No J - - . . could resist his touchl WILIAM HOLDEN I Winner o( ACADEMY AWARD bast actor ALEC GUINNESS-JAC- HAWKINS K ..THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER tUVAl CINEMASCOPE I SESSUE s: RAY MIUAHID. The SAFECnCUEn BARRY JONES Also starring MELISSA CLARK Scrwan ndSAUCC HAYAKAWA JAMES AIM SEARS DONALD STRlBLING VtCTOB Hh JEANNETTE MAODEftM 8TCRKC CYRIL ERNEST RAYMOND PAUL MON ASH Baaod on Story by LT COL IMvt OAVCS THOMAS Dtroctd by RAY MILLANDAOAViOf son WtQOuCTOS tNV'l v w Pity TECHNICOLOR by :oming J Two Centuries The NEWPORT, R. I. (UP) Newport Mercury, established by James Franklid in 1758, is the oldest continuously published newspaper in America. It observes its 200th anniversary this year. safe, no secret, no sweetheart . Les ITHACA, N. Y. (UP Usines a Clinchy, a painting artist Vincent Van Gogh sold for 100 francs in 1887, was sold recently for $90,000 to provide the bulk of a $100,000 donation by Cornell University from the estate of Wilhelm Weinberg, the late New York art collector. 3:50 P.M. Z Q 3S ZLZ rau 1- - wemm) zr - s . |