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Show ? Vij Rooms Will SEARCH PLANNED IN WESTERN S Remodeled, BOX ELDER FOR PROSPECTOR Actors Decide of directors of the Commerce, in. a passed on the Imendation given them by headed toy house committee, to make E. J. Ryan lSirman the present ral changes in board ber of OOtnS. aB change first L )unked In Jump 8 PAGES BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 17. 1950 will be to the secretarys office I present reading room. will be moved 2 room Hivers Are Favorites Over Jordan Beetdiggers County DUP Meet to The into Nov. 18, At room, which Junior been used by the e To Camber of Commerce. the reading facilities, into the airs will be moved office. It ent secretarys The county convention of the aecomodate six to eight Daughters of 'Utah Pioneers will be held Saturday, November 18, Tsons. ThfSe changes will take at 2 oclock in the afternoon at They were the new Fourth ward chapel. ace next week. stated by Brigham City Mrs. Kate B. Carter, president made headquarters of the of the Central camp, and other sodated Civie Clubs of North-officers from Salt Lake' City, Utah. will be in attendance as special which were guests. Future changes, are moving A good attendance from jo recommended, all ecard room into the east side county camps is deurgently To sired, the present pool room. to the county tables will officersaccording alee room, the pool in charge. changed to run east and west side of the ,st on the This move was deemed by the committee as a the tier means of utilizing ace In the club rooms. e Iso, the projected plans the construction of a door-i- y The Christmas bazaar, to be from the present card room is the general meeting room. staged by the ladies aid society the present of the Community Presbyterian ieii this is done rd room will be made into a church, has been postponed unit intonation lounge and meet-- I til Thursday, November '30, mom and will relieve the was announced this week by sgestion of people entering Mrs. Lucille Howes, president. d leaving Originally scheduled for Satthe cloak room as urday of this week, the project as people entering and was postponed because of conthe general meeting iving m when banquets are being flicts with the Box Elder-Jordafootball game on that day and rved. the second portion of the pheasant season. snail board re-jc- 4th Ward Chapel ,H n Ladies Postpone Christmas Bazaar in-id- Plans eweyville Dinner C. BUT of is planning a barbe-- t supper in the Deweyville ird meeting house, Thursday raing, November 30. mraerce committees talk with eyville people the banquet false funds for their church. There will facilities to handle a crowd 600 and Brigham Ciij , gh the public relations this :n pro-ne- irtittee headed by Dennis wn, will have 200 tickets the affair for sale in the future. ai is one of the beweyville communities in this yet visited by the Box amber of Commerce in t acquainted program two I good City years ago. attendance from is desired. last area Elder their ini-e- d Brig- - igubr Legion Meeting M At War Home Thur. slip meeting of American City, s held Thursday, November st the War Memorial home Commander George Hodges gular oven Post 10, Brigham Mn, with roid todmg. tef a short business session membership was entertained Dt. Moskowltz, who showed tores of his travels while in service through d Egypt, In-Jn- China. LEVY WAS LOWERED E. In The Ute Stadium Are row) Glendon Hendricks, Richard White, Phil Oyler, Reese Whitaker, Ronnie Rock, LeRon Johnson, Gary Mortenson, Coaches Dale Rasmussen, Earl Ferguson and Vernal row) Neil Hunsaker, John Holmgren, Harold Don Anderson, Ray Secrist, Tom Welch, Bob Jones and LaFramboise. Lyle . .. Har-(Ba- n, Active Church Member ITS WORKING BEET FARMERS the-peo- of Northern Utah and the people of the state at large are the Utah Conference of Social Work sessions, scheduled to be held at the Intermountain Indian School at Brigham' City, on Friday, November 17, according to Jay Oldroyd, committee chairman . The theme of the conference, DevelopHealthy Personality fitment," seems particularly ting in this unique setting. Not only will some of the most outstanding authorities in the state participate in the program, but those present will have an opportunity to observe a dynamic new program of personality development in action when they tour the school in groups, Mr. Oldroyd stated. He said the boarding school principle upon which the school is based, defies one of the most basic principles of work with children, that such work should begin with the assumption that the home is the basic of the social fabric and the right and natural setting for any child. Yet, in spite of this, Dr. Boyce and his staff are making their program work. How do they do it? Is this type of a program Ml ck RECEIVE jt' f ple basically sound? What will be the effect ofthis type of schooling upon the lives of these Indian children In five, 10 or 15 ll years. These questions, as others wtti 5 br discussed ' in considerable 'detail by people who are authorities in their respective fields. The keynote of the conference is expected to be sounded by Dr. George A. Boyce, Superintendent of the schooL He will speak on the subject, The Role of the Intermountain Indian School in the Personality (Development of Navajo Children. Dr. Boyce, is unquestionably one of the best Tonnage, Smaller Than of the toppihg and loading was '49, Will Bring vesters. Growers $1,195,000 handled by, the mechanical har labor Though was drained from the Box Elder county area of Og Box Elder county sugar beet by the Increased activity the den installation, military be richer by farmers will beet sohool cqu vacation, fiigh next Mondaywhen the AwIflWthi! work of 250 Naka Utah Idaho sugar co mpany Win-mak-e in high its first payment, for the joe, kept the harvest gear. i 1950 crop. At the height of the harvest Checks for one of Box Elders about 48,000 tons of beets were will he crops major agriculture in one mailed this Saturday, according dug, topped . and piled week." , district to Orson Christensen, manager. The payment will be for beets harvested up to and including November 5. An additional payment of Elias (Lee) Andersen by the . . who died Thursday at 8 $70,000 willa be made and the little later company Ci!ht $2.40 per ton payment by the authorities in th. tlai.ad Stare, months limess government will be made duron the education of Navajo chll- ing the first of 1951. dren. He has received the deThe payment will be for a gree of D. ED. (Doctor of Eduover 100,000 tons of beets, Unilittle Columbia Elias (Lee) Andersen, 77, 135 from the cation) south, Brigham . considerably tonnage less than west Seventh versity. In 1941 he was apin 1949. The smaller tonnage, City, died Thursday morning, pointed director of Navajo exist the in vacancies acres was which November 16, at 8 oclock, at his grown on 9,550 Eight schools and was in charge of all Navajo schools with head- Brigham City Field artillery re- of land, is the result of cold home, after an eight months quarters at Window Rock, Ari- serve unit for enlisted person- weather this spring that retardIs illness. zona. He was also chairman of nel, it was announced today by ed growth . Sugar content He was born January 19, 1873 planning. In Capt Keith Boyer, commanding higher, however, ' Christensen at Bear River City, the son of Navajo long-rang- e added. Anders Peter and Kirsten RasJune, 1949 he was appointed officer. The Garland sugar plant Is mussen Andersen: He was rearAny young men, Boyer said, superintendent of the Interwho has not received his call now cutting an average of ed And educated in Bear River mountain Indian school.' for 2,000 tons of beets a day. The City and attended the Box ElDr. Boyces discussion of the for physical will continue for der county schools an college program being carried on at the the draft, whether or not he is processing about another 30 days. is eligible to join. Indian school will be discussed at Logan. For all practical purposes the 'He married Abbie Hansen, As a reservist the men would and analyzed by three individuals whq are well recognized not be subject to draft and beet harvest Is now complete. June 20, 1912, in the Salt Lake in their respective fields. Pro- would be called for military There are only a few acres In L. D. S. temple. They made Don Carter, of the educa- duty only upon a general mo- all of Box Elder county not yet their home at Elwood where he In fessor harvested. tion division of the Social Work bilization, Boyer said. was an active farmer and fruit Excellent weather conditions grower. He lived at Elwood The reserve unit trains two at the U.S.A.C., will discuss the program being carried on ' at evenings a month for which this fall expedited the harvest for 30 years, moving to Logan It is estimated that 65 percent in the Tenth ward in 1941. They the Indian school fftyt the view they receive two days pay. Dr. a of lived there until 1949 when he point ysociafrker. W. P. Miller, assistant superinmoved here. tendent of Ogden City schools, While In Elwood, he was an will discuss the Indian school F. officer of the Elwood drainage By district and in the Elwood program from the standpoint of an educator . LaVerna Peterson, threshing company. He was an active member of the L. D. S. nursing supervisor, District No. 5 Utah State Dpftftment of 1, church and served as a member John F. Monson, 75, former wmiscuis from the of the Elwood ward bishopric Corlnne merchant, died at his Health, Besides their regular lessons, of the health and for 15 years. M, P. standpoint 8:00 at home In Corinne well-beinchilof the students at thej Intermountain amounts and sign their signaHe served on an L. D. S. misfollowgeneral 23, November , Thursday dren who are in attendance at Indian school now have a prac- ture, and also how to carry the sion to Norway and Denmark illness. ing two years tical class in finance. Recently balance onto the stub in order from 1906 to 1907. He served in 1875 the school. school In groups a school bank was opened up to keep a check on their finan- the M. I. A. and was He was born August 17, A the of tour religion at 'Hyrum, a son of Jens and by those attendingthe confer- at the administration building ces. class: teacher and ward teacher Monson. Annie Sophia Hansen Most of the accounts range for many years. ence is scheduled !s begin at for the exclusive use of the mpbell He married Eunice E. The after- - young Navajo Indian students. from two to five dollars. Some He was a high priest in the approximately November 5, 1914, In the Logan noon session wilj.be Under the of the students work on the Fifth ward at the time of his According to Thomas L.D.S. Temple. administrative assistant kitchen detail and do other jobs death . direction of Mrs. Margaret Kelaround the school to earn their Survivors include his wife, Survivors include his wife and ler, executive secretary of the to Dr. George A. Boyce, superinB., the following children: Steven ot Childrens Aid Society of Ogden. tendent, the project Is under- spending money and some of Brigham City; two sons and Sharlet and Judy Ann, all of The first speaker in this sec-tof way to teach the children thrift them receive a little money three daughters: Dr. E. Milton and to acquaint them with mod- from home. 'Most of their ac- Andersen, U.S.A.C.; tion will be Dr. John Carlisle Professor Corinne and Gale B. Monson tual needs are supplied by the Stanley P. Andersen, U.S.A.C., the Department of Education at em banking practices. Ogden. former superin' now on leave studying at the Special rules of the student school. .Funeral announcements wui the U.S.A.C. and The bank is open from four University of Minnesota; Mrs. B. ten tendent of Logan City schools. bank stipulate that not more Harold be made later by He will discuss the subject, 'The than one dollar may be taken to five oclock each afternoon Wayne (Norma) Gunnell of funeral home. Role of the Schools In Personal- out without the approval of the and only enough money Is kept Ogden; Mrs. Benton (Ara) Rich-ardwill He an be advisors on In who will act still hand for each days busiMrs. Alfred Clearfield; to ity Development. corded after that date goes th followed by Dr. William Brown, advisory capacity. Previously ness, the rest being banked in (Betty Lee) Glauser, Logan; unless owner Dethe former all dhe, students money was the local bank by the Student and eight grandchildren. is nou senior clinical psychologist Univer- handled by the advisors, who Activity council. of County Treasurers office Psychiatry, Funeral services will be held partment fied previous to the time th sity of Utah medical schooL Dr. will not be relieved of the reAdvanced students will ..later Monday at 2 oclock In the( mailed by are in sponsibility of the large amount do actual work In the school afternoon In the Fifth L. D. S. tax notices Brown did graduate work t bank to gain the experience of ward chapel. Bishop Oleen Palclinical psychology at the Min of cash Involved. purchaser of the prop? so eithe the people who have Foundation School of The bank offers every bank- banking procedure. About 250 mer will officiate. ninger . property He com- - ing service to students with of the 10OO students are bank- - Friends may call at the famor purchased J Clinical Psychology. not reoei for the exception of - loans state- ing their money. his January 1 and have requirements ily home after 10 oclock in the j r ments are issued once each the tax notice will either Assisting Mr., Tommaney are morning Monday until time of h D at Kansas University, at the County Trf1asuioti0n i The public is invited to at-o- r month, and check books are, Harold Knudson, business man services. write giving the de.tJ tax' tend all sessions of the confer-o- f used in which the children are j ager and Mrs. Norma Jensen of Interment will be in the Bear River City cemetery. the property, a dup to tnem. taught how to fill In the the administrative staff. notice will be mailed -- as-we- -- j Elias Andersen Dies After 8 Months Illness Vacancies Exist In Reserve uml 1-- Ss Money Than 49, Says Treasurer fhile i .91 95 the number of tax no--th- have been paid to this year at ' the county brers office is about the e as last year, the amount ooey collected is a little according. t0 Boyd Shef-6 treasurer. 1)0' decrease, Sheffield point-at- , is due to the lowering levy this year from 1949. 2.08 "fas a decrease of with 2.00 j e mills decrease made by the Box school district . Elder November 30, 1950, and naxes received at the treas- office after delinquent. that date will Although the collections have considerably Over any previous week juat It appears there will rd "S ,V t" .he '5 e last minute rush usually have the last cach collection per treasurer commented. year there are several Pf land that the taxes are on because the proper does not receive the tax Tf jj f in. u this the uc t aiii ilitf tors! ived! Monson Dies Last Night Indian School Students Now Served lohn Own Bank; Accounts Run To ?nasmuch as the assess-WU- s from which the tax th Are made, are prepared v , Person's name the prop-- , eoorded In January 1 'hat year k Property which was re- - Dollars g Tom-mane- delinquent date for the taxes is 12 oclock nt of about- - 100 miles Brigham City. On October 26, Read told Sheriff Hyde he was digging out a spring and that the older man had left to do some prospecting. After two days Murphy had not returned and Read reported to the Sheriffs department The easiest way to get In to the remote desert area Is by traveling on the train from Ogden across the Lucln cutoff. This would take them within three miles of the prospectors camp. Sheriff Hyde now plans to load a picked mounted posse on a freight in Ogden and make headquarters at the location In a railroad car. The mountain is approimately so rough 50 miles long, and that even a horse cannot traverse all of It, the sheriff said. Although officers believe Murphy Is dead, it was explained that he could have walked across miles of mud flats and caught a train for Ogden or NeThe Box Elder Chamber of vada. Commerce is planning a mem Any Information from friends bership meeting in the Chamber and relatives of Mr. Murphy of Commerce club rooms at would be appreciated by the oclock in the evening, Friday, Box Elder Sheriffs office. They Decmeber 8, D. M. Mason, sec should call Brigham City, 67. , retary said today. This meeting will climax the, last membership drive of the year. An outstanding program is being planned plus the Introduction of the new members, which will be followed by a dutch lunch Membership committee, headed by Harold B. Felt, Is planning a meeting to prepare for the affair, Tuesday evening at i . 8 p. m. Eight Box Elder county men Following the meeting ' the werd sworn into the .United committee with the 'assistance tateHfmy last Tuesday, Noof the board of directors will vember 14, through the seleccanvass the town. Present mem- tive service, it was announced bers of the Chamber of Com- today by Mrs, Marllla Spencer, merce are urged to cooperate by secretary of the local i draft either getting new members board. themselves or bringing the atThe men, who left Brigham tention of the committee to City November 13 ant! were prospective new members. Ma- sworn Into the 10th infantry dison said. vision at Ft. Douglas the next day, will train at Ft. Riley, Kansas. Kiwanis The "men are Ifamu Endow, son of Mr. and Mrs. K. Endow of Brigham City;' Richard Noble Holds Petersen, son of ' Mr. and Mrs. Noble Petersen of Fielding; Mr. and Mrs. The regular meeting of the Pandi Pali, son of Nisi Tremonton. Pall, Brigham City Kiwanis club was DeVere Hess, son of Mr. and held Thursday noon at the Idle Mrs. Stanley Hess, Fielding; Isle cafe. Robert Wayne Cutler, son of Mr. t Dr. George A. Boyce was the and Mrs. Joseph Cutler, Corinne; guest speaker. His talk was Norwood Von Fridal, son of Walalong the lines of forgetting the Tremonton; Glenn financial benefits received from ter E. Fridal, son of Charles Barfuss, Ray the Intermountain Indian school, Tremonton; and Raymond which would be lost in the files at the end of the year, and con- Clifford Butler, son of Mr. and Mis. Clifford Butler, Brigham centrating on a more lasting City. . benefit . According to Mrs. Spencer, He pointed out that the big four Box Elder men will be inof school the is accomplishment to promote excellent relation- ducted December 11. On November 29, 27 Box Elder county ship between the Indians and men will have their . the whites. physicals. Mr. R. S. (Rich) Poulsen, manager of Fram warehouse here, was welcomed Into the club at mountain southwest side-tracke- of d Eight Box Elder Men Inducted Number Of Tax Notices Brings me J. R. Murphy, 78, prospector, when favorable weather develops, according to Sheriff Warren W. Hyde. The search for the prospector, who was reported missing October 26, has been going on the past few days both by air and on the ground. Murphy and Grant Read, 38, both of Ogden, had been living In their cabin during the summer on .New, Foundland Membership Meet CHECKS FOR 50 CROP MONDAY Boarding Schools To Highlight Meet Of considerable interest to A posse will be organized and the search continued in western and Box Elder county for an aged Leo J. Lee, son of Mr. Mrs. John R. Lee of Brigham City, Is a new member of the Caterpillar club, and to obtain membership in the elite group of high divers he parachuted into the Pacific ocean five miles out of San 'Francisco last Friday. A thunderjet pilot, Lee is stationed with the 84th fighter squadron at Hamilton field. When his jet propelled plane developed engine trouble over the ocean, he radioed his home base that he was going to bail out. Even while he was floating down in his parachute at 9:06 a. m., a coast guard rescue plane from San Francisco was on Its way out to pick him up. The cutter Willow and a helicopter and another smaller patrol craft also began racing to the crash scene. At 9:11 a. m., only five min utes after he had bailed out, the pilot of the navy rescue plane radioed he was bringing the dunked pilot aboard. Lee suffered only minor bruis es and was not hospitalized. His plane crashed into the sea. First Lieutenant Lee and his wife, the former Helen Ipson and one child live at Hamilton. 2 Oclock Bees Who Will Play Final Contest At (Front row) Val Woodland, Ray Stain, Stanley Shelby, LeMar Mavis, Gordon Jarman, Delbert Breitenstein, Darrell Poulson, Garth Nelson and Keith Orchard. (Second row) Paul Josephson, Tom Barnes, Maurice Hunsaker, David Hotter, Russ Nelson, Collin Hunsaker, Lewis Knud-soLee Boothe, and manager Paul Anderson. (Third - Comparison Of Family Life And Indian public relations commit-- i the Box Elder Chamber of Hie Missing Since Oct. 24 Chamber Plans n Of Air And Land Hunt Fails To Locate J. R. Murphy, Jrigham Jet Pilot i y, s, 1 Into U.S. Army V Club Meeting Bar-fus- s, 2 Auto Accidents the meeting; Special guest at the meeting was Dennis Johnson of Brigham Truck and Implement company. After the regular meeting a meeting of thp board of direcThe first wave of winter took tors and the committee heads for the installation dinner to be its first toll in traffic accidents held December 4, at 7:30 at Mad. in Box Elder county Wednesdox Ranchhouse, was held. day morning and was followed by another collision on dry roads No one Thursday afternoon. was injured. Yesterday at 1:45 p. m., a car driven by Joe W. Allen of Burley, Idaho collided with a car driven by Alfred J. Bywater, 72, The trial calendar for the at the Packer Hatch-highwa- y November term of the court of Ogden, 91 intersection in Cothe first judicial district, in and rinne. for Box Elder county, was toAccording to Leonard Jepp-soday released by K. B. Olsen, state highway patrolman county clerk. It follows: who inspected the accident, the November 16: George N. AnBywater car turned Into the derson, et al. vs. Marie T. John- road, evidently without the son, et al. driver the oncoming .car. November 24: Joseph Penrose The carseeing d diiven by Allen vs. John C. Reid. the car driven by ByNovember 25: Toshie Tawa- - water and turned over complete-l- y tari vs. Sweet Grass Gun club, once, coming to rest on the an unincorporated assaciation, wheels. ' and Alfred R. Egan, president at 8:30 Wednesday morning thereof, personally. oclock a car driven by , Mrs. December 19: Dee Selman vs. Erma Crompton, Brigham City, S. J. Hess. who was accompanied bv David December 21; J. D. Crapo vs, C. Ward, Willard and Mrs. GolWilliam Kremen. die Owen, Brigham City, skidJanuary 2: F. Barlow vs, El- ded on icy roads just east of mer E. Gorin- Corinne Into a deep barrow pit All trials except that of TosThe car turned over on' one hie Tawatari vs. the Sweet lde- , , , Grass Gun club, will start at 10 All three Involved are teachoclock in the morning, it will ers at the Corinne elementary start at 11 a. m. school. 4 Occur Wed., Thur. November Trial Calendar Released side-swipe- |