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Show 4 BOX ELDER NEWS, Brigham City, Utah Sunday, January 6, 1974 cene Phone If a great change is to be made in human affairs, the minds of men will be fitted to 723-385- 3 it.Burke. It may take a little while, but youll get used to getting up before youre ready and eating whether youre hungry or not. Ill take a few days Credit women Area couple to wed will hear bureau officer Announcement is made of the engagement and forthcoming marriage of Miss Carolyn Child to Henry J. Yates by the parents Rocket chapter of Credit Norman J. Child of Bear River Women International will meet on Thursday, Jan. 10, at 7:30 a.m. in the downstairs room at City. Ray and Cathys cafe, Brigham of the bride-to-b- Mr. and Mrs. e, the future bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Willard M. Yates of Malta, Idaho. The couple has chosen Jan. 18 as their wedding date, with the ceremony to be performed at the Logan LDS temple, and followed by an open house that evening in Malta, Idaho. There will be a reception and dance the following evening, Jan. 19, at the Bear River LDS ward cultural hall. Miss Child is a 1972 graduate of Box Elder school and a four-yeLDS Seminary graduate. Parents of City. Guest speaker for the morning will be Boyd E. Newman,' manager of the Brigham City office of Mountain Bell telephone company. He will talk on the subject Credit 1973: Some Considerations. Newman is president of the Greater Brigham City Area Chamber bridegroom Prospective Yates is a 1969 graduate of Box Elder High school and a four-yeLDS Seminary graduate. mission in He served a two-yeSouthern California for the LDS church. Yates is a member of the National Guard in Burley, Idaho. He is presently farming in partnership with his father and brother Kirtland in Malta, Idaho, where the couple plan to make their home. Womens council sets meeting TO BE WED Miss Carolyn Child and Henry J. Yates will be wed Jan. 18 in the Logan LDS temple. Society Editor's Chapter enjoys holiday events Beta Sigma Phi Preceptor Theta chapter members met at the home of Mrs. Colleen Burr for their first meeting in December. President Ruby Godfrey conducted the business meeting. Chairman Cleo Dixon introduced President Ruby Godfreys guest, Mrs. Phyllis Johnson, who presented interesting sketches on Mrs. Zachary Taylor, Mrs. Millard Fillmore, Mrs. Franklin Pierce, and Mrs. Andrew Johnson. These first ladies each made important contributions to the lives of their husbands as well as to the nation. Members exchanged tacky items. Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haynie was the scene of the chapters Christmas party with their husbands as invited guests. A delicious chicken dinner was served on a beautifully decorated table. Santa dropped in to take Christmas requests and pass out presents to the chapter sisters and their husbands. The remainder of the evening was spent playing Bingo and visiting. Those present enjoyed this holiday party. Fill er up DETROIT (UPI) a - Keeping cars fuel tank filled improves rear wheel traction on wet and slippery' roads, auto experts say. Each gallon of gas weighs about seven pounds so a filled tank puts about 140 pounds over the rear wheels. n SCRATCHPAD The Editor children have begun the new year with new bedrooms in color schemes that look like something from a home decorator magazines, although the furniture doesnt quite fit the image. For weeks theyd been plotting their color schemes and planning the painting for the holiday season. Mrs. Society Editor was in hopes that the boys wouldnt change their colors since she had ordered new twin bedspreads of blue and yellow and green plaid with a double one ordered with which to make matching curtains. It took a long time to select the paint, however, since they naturally had chosen ultra colors that cost $18 a gallon and has to be talked into colors that cost less. As it is, the room is plenty bright. Bit Worried In fact, the paint salesman seemed a bit worried about the gobs of yellow and green that had to be added to the paint to produce the colors desired. Then when the blue enamel was selected for the beds and the purple paint for Little Miss one wall, he was probably sure that the family lived in a madhouse! Actually, the room is bright and pretty although the draperies will subdue its brightness somewhat when they are finished. The boys decided that they wanted the beds stacked into bunks again to give them more playing room, and we had to chuckle at the chart of room arrangement that they drew that even included the wastebasket. Their chests of drawers and desks, which are constructed of orange genuine mm ms for your Childrens room crates, are all banked down one side of the room and they must have calculated well for there is only about a two-inc- h leeway involved. As is always the case, the furniture that didn't get painted looks drab and the braided rug looks shabby and too small alongside the new bedspreads and gaily painted walls and beds. Purple Wall Since the boys had a purple wall that we painted over in green, Mrs. Society Editor was just wishing that it would revolve since it is with the hot pink wall that was changed to purple in Little Miss back-to-bac- room. Her paint job wasnt as traumatic, however, since she masked her adjoining walls and did the whole job herself. The boys wanted to help with their room and in the process of doing just the baseboards, windowsills and casings had managed to spill one cottage cheese carton of yellow paint, get their hair into the paint, and thoroughly spot the floor. Luckily, they tired of the sport and Little Miss and Mrs. Society Editor finished up the job and had just managed to get the mess cleaned up and take baths when hubby arrived home on Saturday to a house that had been completely ignored all day while the painting progressed. Museum-Galler- y Little Miss room was similar to a its in museum-galler- y content, and she actually took down many of the items on the walls and more miraculously gh even threw a few items most were carted to the basement just in case she needs them in the future. But the wall looks pretty clear with just a psychedelic poster, some yellow plaques, an orange butterfly and the shelves containing her doll collection. She grabbed Young Sons retired bedspread that was a purple, magenta and blue plaid and put it on her bed and has plans to make pillows of the remains of Littlest Brothers spread that hadnt survived having some loose threads cut from it a few years ago and was just about to fall in half despite major surgical repairs. Altogether, the rooms look enough to pretty good-go- od make the hallway and bathroom and living room all look like they need similar treatment! away-althou- AUSTIN, Tex. leads the (UPI)-Te- nation xas in annual production of beef, 2 Ladder Guard & Rail Innerspring Mattresses 2 Box Springs EVERTON MATTRESS 24 Eott lit COMPANY Phone South 723-643- 1 cattle, sheep, goats, grain, sorghum, cotton, rice, onions and wool and ranks third among the 50 states in total farm and ranch output, according officials. Gov. to state Dolph Briscoe announced the production records in a recent proclamation declaring Food and Fiber Appreciation Month" in the state. for Wednesday Members of the Brigham City Womens Educational Advisory council for the Division of Continuing Education of the University of Utah will be held on Wednesday, Jan. 9, at 11:45 a.m. at the Red Baron cafe. Included on the agenda for the meeting, according to Pat Freston, director of womens programs, will be the selection of a chairperson for a fall conference. The committee is under the temporary chairmanship of Beth Gurrister, and has a number of local women serving to determine the type of con- tinuing education programs that should be offered to women in the Brigham City area. Interested women are invited to contact Mrs. Gurrister if they wish to attend the meeting, with council members having been notified by mail of the meeting. k Texas Produces 1 Commerce, president of the board of the Brigham City Credit Bureau, and second vice president of the Community Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Northern Utah, Inc. All members of the chapter are urged to be present for this regular monthly meeting of the organization. She also graduated from College of Beauty, and is currently managing the Riviera Beauty Salon in Tremonton. Program of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Tracy will observe their 50th wedding anniversary at an open house on Saturday, Jan. 12, at the Brigham City community center. ANNIVERSARY p.m. in the Brigham City community center in observance of their 50th wedding anniversary, with the open house to be hosted by the couples son and daughters. The couple traded marriage vows on Jan. 13, 1924, in the Logan LDS temple and spent the earlier years of their marriage in farming at Yost. A native of Yost, Mr. Tracy was born March 18, 1896, to Charles Benjamin Tracy and Celestia Cadwick Tracy. He has served two LDS stake missions, one at the Raft River stake and one at the South Box Elder stake and served in many other church positions and is still active in the LDS church. The couple moved to Brigham City in 1942, and he worked at Press women sets session on interviews Ethel Bradford, Utah Press Women president, announces the next meeting will be held at the Deseret News conference room, 34 East First South, Salt Lake City, on Saturday, Jan. 19, beginning at 1 p.m. Margaret Masters (Mrs. J. Franklin Smith), one of Utahs outstanding interviewers, will speak on the art of interviewing. Ms. Masters is to discuss this subject since for several years she was hostess on KSL television program where Margarets Kitchen she interviewed interesting and their personalities specialties were demonstrated. The public is invited to attend the meeting. Press Women are to bring their contest entries ready to be judged for the state contest, with winning entries to be forwarded to the national contest. d Lots of little tax deductions in late December at Cooley Memorial Hospital in Brigham City, with parents arrived delighted over their safe arrivals as special holiday gifts to the family: Dec. 19, girl to Glen and Mary Ann Jensen, Brigham City. Dec. 21, boy to Earl and Alana Kimber Rasmussen, Burley. Dec. 23, boy to Bruce and Sharon Houton Dover, Brigham City. Dec. 23, Ellen 23, It all began way back Bushnell VA hospital and retired from Ogden Defense Depot in 1957. Her Activities Mrs. Tracy was born Nov. 31, 1905, at Lake Point to Thomas Henry and Eliza Crich Moss Smith. She has been active in the LDS church since her youth and has served in the Relief Society presidency, Primary, other organizations, and is still active. She also worked at Bushnell Hospital and is retired from the school lunch program. Both are active in the local Senior Citizen organization, and in the World War I Veterans and Auxiliary activities. They are the parents of one son, Merlin A. Tracy of Centerville and daughters Mrs. Dee (Melva) Kunzler of Park Valley; Mrs. Don R. (Verla) Jensen of Roy; Mrs. Dean L. (Anita) Kelson of Layton; and Mrs. (Darlene) Larry Pickering of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Tracy have 24 grandchildren and three Currently citizens of Texas but the history wasTexian. call themselves Texans, term in the areas early Hope for Some - NEW YORK (UPI) There are at least 340,000 blind persons in the United States today. Yet about 75 per cent of them do have some vision and many can be helped to see more, says the American Optometric Association (AOA). In a new pamphlet Beautiful! Vision About Partial Sight, the AOA says modern visual science is making it possible for many legally blind persons to learn to use their remaining vision more effectively. For a free copy, send a stamped business-siz- e envelope to the Public Information Division, American Optometric Association, 7000 Chippewa St., St. Louis, Mo. 03119. in December when the Grovers and Petersens flew to Hawaii for a winter holiday, Dec. They rented a car and did the usual things like visiting the Polynesian Cultural center, LDS temple and other tourist attractions. Then the Petersens toured the other islands and the Grovers relaxed at Waikiki. Coming home they boarded the ship S.S. Monterey on Dec. 13 for the trip. crew were The Hawaii Five-filming one of their series aboard ship. Thats how the Brighamites became involved. They also had a talent program on board ship and Perc Petersen entertained. Their ship docked in San Francisco Dec. 18., and the Perc Petersens flew home to Twin Falls. The Grovers visited with Mrs. J. Gordon Felts mother, Mrs. LaVerne Mansfield and sister, Mrs. Bob Franklin. They also visited Mrs. Grovers brother and sister-in-laMr. and Mrs. Bennie Degn. Entertain Family Mr. and Mrs. Ben Day entertained at a dinner for her family. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jensen and children of Ogden; Mr. and Mrs. Vance Thompson and family and Mr. and Mrs. Dreg Thompson and children of . Providence. On Dec. 26 they entertained Mr. his daughter and and Mrs. Boyd Burke and children Salt Lake City. Her sister Mrs. Eleanor Hobbs of Preston spent one day here with the Days. son-in-la- Baby Arrives Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Dover have their first child, a baby boy. He was born on Dec. 23. He weighed eight pounds six and a half ounces and will be named Christopher Bruce. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Dover and Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Houghton. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Otto Dover and Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Jensen, Harrisville. 0 Take Vacation Mr. and Mrs. Winston P. Nelson and son Riley have returned from a delightful 10 days in California. They went first to spend Christmas with at their son and daughter-in-laAnaheim and see their new home. On Christmas Eve they were guests of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bailey at Laguna Beach. On Christmas Day the Randall Nelsons entertained at dinner for her family and the Brighamites. They enjoyed visiting the beaches in the area and traveled to visit her brother Gordon Larsen in Fresno. While they were there they were his guests at a Farrells, old fashioned ice cream parlor. While they were in Fresno they also visited old friends Mr. and Mrs. Michael Voghand enjoyed an enchilada supper at their home. The Vogts lived in Brigham City and were at Bushnell during World War II. The Nelsons spent Saturday and Sunday in San Francisco and arrived home New Years eve. The only snowstorm they encountered was at Elko on the way home. Visitors Here Lou with the Visiting Breitenbekers for two weeks Peanut problems Use AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) of improper or poorly adjusted equipment cost Texas peanut growers $1.5 million in damaged peanuts last year. James S. Denton, area economist for the Texas Agricultural Extension service, said the faulty equipment causes split kernels, loose shelled kernels and foreign material in the peanuts, lowering their grade. - any- more LET OUR CLASSIFIED SECTION BE YOUR SALESMAN BOX ELDER yjewi Call ourna 723-347- 1 DUP News girl to Robert and Tolman Wallace, Honeyville. Dec. 23, girl to Toyce and Joyce Davis Walker, Brigham City. Dec. Hobnob Celebraties When Killer At Sea, a segment of Hawaii Five-- 0 airs in February be on the lookout for the Norman Grovers of this City the Perc Petersens, former Brighamites who were extras on the set. Couple to be feted on 50th anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Tracy will be honored at an open house on Saturday, Jan. 12, from 3 to 6 to get in the groove when we move our clocks ahead. One good thing about it is that its here to stay for three years. At least by Monday we should have our days straightened out again. These holidays in the week really throw me. Makes too many Mondays (or so it seems). I dont know about you but I'm glad to be back in the old routine. Now if youll pull up that easy chair we can visit awhile on Party Line and then you can steal a few winks before you have to get dinner. during the holidays was their Mrs. Eileen Hall of Santa Monica. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Newman were busy with visitors during the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Ken Hall and children Lisa, and Jason of Anaheim Calif, were here for Christmas. They spent a week here. On Jan. 1 her Mr. brother and sister-in-laand Mrs. Bob Keller, Tiffany and Michole of Carmichael, Calif, came for six days. daughter girl to Brent and Kathleen Nichols Pettingill, Ogden. Dec. 24, boy to Scott and Karen Iverson Goodliffe, Bear River City. Dec. 24, boy to Don and Carol Giffen Berchtold, Brigham Seagull camp of the camp Daughters of Utah Pioneers will meet at the home of Mrs. Emma Gleed, 113 West Second North, at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 8. All members are urged to be present. Seagull City. Dec. 25, girl to Randy and Launlae Wheelwright Morris, Ogden. Dec. 26, girl to Verio and LeAnn Barker Hunsaker, Willard. Dec. 26, boy to Benjamin and Mary Louise Young Tingey, Route 1, Brigham City. Dec. 26, boy to Wayne and Jeanette Peterson Sims, Syracuse. Dec. 26, boy to Larry and Hope Apodaca Neaman, Corinne. Dec. 27, girl to Thomas and Pearl Ann Brown Davis, Corinne. Dec. 27, girl Roger and Karin Nelson Burke, Brigham City. Dec. 28, boy to Shelby Ray and Debbie Hendersen Whitaker, Brigham City. Dec. 30, girl to Duane and Elsie Charley Prall, Brigham Instant Friendship Dec. 31, The warm greeting of your Welcome Wagon hostess with The Most Famous Basket in the World" will introduce you to our community and start you on the way toward new and lasting friendships. If you are new in town, call girl to Steven and Harrison Brigham City. Grover, Jan. and Clara Garbe Jeppesen, Brigham City. Jan. 2, girl to Rodney and Thais Waddoups Young, Brigham City. OF BONDS AND A BETTER BRIGHAM CITY City. Elaine THE ISSUANCE 1, boy to Leon Phone 723-894- 3 IN TUESDAY'S RECREATION BOND ELECTION! |