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Show s BOX ELDER JOURNAL, 69 give blood of Tremonfon Seventy-fou- r persons regis- tered and 69 were accepted as donors at the Red Cross blood drawing in Tremonton Friday. About 25 who were scheduled were needed as donors for open heart surgery and therefore could not participate at this drawing. Forty who registered were Bear River High school students. It is unfortunate that the quota of 125 pints could not be met. However, the Red Cross thanks all the donors and volunteers who helped; a Red Cross spokesman said. It takes many persons to man a blood drawing. The Red Cross would like to acknowledge all those who participated, the including the following, spokesman said: Doctors Dr. Dennis Hars-toDr. Williams and Dr. D. Kerr. Nurses Helen C. Harper, Anne Hickox, Betty Mae Thompson, Sandra Roberts, Rachel M. Anderson, Yvonne Frost, and Marcia Payne, Selman, Dennis Anita Barluss. Hars-to- Anetta Christensen, Patty DelRay Bourne, Virgil C. son, Joni Nessen, Jodi Chownos, Michelle Pulver, Tonie Irwin, Lorie Giles, Sherry McNeely, Elida Vee Stokes, and Sue Gentry. Donors Edwin Tazoi, An- - V7GHT Waldron, Sherry McNeely, Diane Allen, David L. Thompson, Steve Johnson, Steve Fullmer, Barbara Davis, Theda Smith, Dorothy Nelson, Sharon N. John-seJay Westergard, Elida Vee Stokes, Kent D. Petersen, Scott Dansie, Steven Bates, Kathy Mson and Sandra Smith. ley, Margarette Romer, berta Fronk, Anna M. Ander- tt k Purdue, they are pictured here with fireman Art Petersen who took the group on a tour of the station an4 kindergarten students were among many persons visiting the Brigham City fire station during Fire Prevention week. Students of Mrs. Hazel FOOTHILL SCHOOL talked with them about fire prevention. Price support reported is decandent and what is vital on the current dance scene. New Arrivals in the childrens Genetics & the law, edited by "Aubrey Milunsky and George J. A distinguished faAnnas culty of scientists, physicians, department. Perraults exten- pre-scho- Acupuncture theraphy: n otolifas David Bjorkman, Suisse, Rachel M. Anderson, C. Duane Kerr. Don Fish, Ellenor Garrett, Jack R. Garrett, Charles HurRo- sively explores the major issues in modern genetics which now confront the law, such as: the legal rights of the fetus, the prenatal diagnosis of heredity disorders, legal aspects of artificial insemination, sterilization of the mentally handicapped, gene manipulation, cloning and in vitro fertilization The plug-i- n drug, jjy"liiarie' Winn This book is d powerful challenge for parents and educators to their attitudes toward television and become aware of its dangers, especially for the most vulnerable members of our population children. It is a call to action that could have and beneficial effects on our childrens future and the future of the family. The death and life of Bishop Pike by William Stringfellow An and Anthony Towne documented portrait of the most controversial Ameri- - . can clergyman of our modern times. Based on prodigious research into private letters and unpublished documents, as well as exhaustive interviews, it is a biography so candid the book itself is bound to be considered controversial. Nevertheless, it is not an expose but an honest and compelling testament to an extraordinary and vital personality who had an astonishing impact on the contemporary church. Solitudes, by R. G. Vliet Texas, in the 1880s. A man, provoked, kills another man. In the dead mans pocket, the picture of a beautiful woman. In the mind of the man who killed him, an obsessive determination to find the woman, and to know her. It is this search, and the eventual confrontation of passion and will, that galvanize this remarkable and remarkably involving, novel about life in another time, another place . pers can take advantage. O'Brien said the new store has 22,000 square feet of merchandising area, all new snack bar, camera bar and prescription area. In comparison, he said, the old store had 6,000 square feet. When the old store was being razed, Skaggs owner L.S. Skaggs donated a large walk-ifreezer to Camp Kiesel of the Boy Scouts of America and many items from the old snack bar to the Brigham City Fire department. Value of the items donated was $8,000. i, Linda Holmgren, lawyers and et'hicists in the oldest prescription bottle. There will be free samples and other items of which shop- Hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday. OBrien said there will be several special promotions as well as bargains during the grand opening. For example, $100 in prescriptions will be given to the person who brings Janet Veals, Alice Weidman, Robert C. Veals, Sr., Robert Z. Evans, Curtis Starr, LeVina Schlickeiser, RoLayne Jensen, Jerry Harris, Don F. Carlile, Ronald E. Ogborn, Jay R. Her-schVenice Maughn, Cleve B. Arthur, Willis C. Petersen, store BC Brigham Citys new Skaggs store will holds its grand opening Thursday (today) through Sunday. Store manager Rick OBrien said shoppers will find a store four times larger than the old store with 60 major departments to choose items from. Thats three times more than the old store, he added. Hansen, Dana Hill, Shauna Dalton, Judy Staheli, Sandy Selman, Tenna Biddle, Tom Mums, Loina H. Adams, Ned H. Silvester, George R. Thornley, Roberta Fronk, Wayne Fronk, Myrle Bingham, Barbara Woodruff, Delma Peterson, Ruth Ann Anderson, Tonya Gardner. Darley. Angie Francom, Dorothy opens' Blanchhard, Wayne Volunteers Julie Stokes, Cindy Hess, Dina Tucker, Sue Taylor, Lois Rucker, Clara Misrasi, Skaggs 'grand dera Petersen, Steth Samson, Scott Kinney, Darwin Wamsley, Craig Veibell, Jamie Green, Reatha Combs, Gay Smith, Wendy Christensen, Robin Ravsten, Brian Kerr, Bobby Paul Brigham City, Utah .Thursday, October 20, 1977 Tales Complete Fairy The Fairy tales of the master Charles Perrault, are presented here in a complete collection that instory-telle- r, Sugar beef processing begins at Garland factory of U and I campaign at the factory. U and I district manager n two-wee- . click-beetle- dhcd sing names, said Carroll C. Nichols. Nichols said that those who have information may contact Dr. J.C. Haws, Rotary club president, local Veterans of Foreign Ward Commander Darrell Loveland or himself at Box Elder High. The organization plans to reset the monolith under the marBut theres a snag. They dont quis at the high school with know where to find the names of appropriate landscaping, he said. those who died. Nichols said the names will be We are appealing to people in the Brigham City area to cast in a bronze plaque and contact us and supply the mis attached to the monument. The Brigham City Rotary club is in the process of repairing vandalism to a stone marker erected in memory of Box Elder High school students who died in World War II. The organization would like to update the marker and include the names of those who died in Korean and Vietnam conflicts. Vote for ExporioRce with Respese-i&St- jf ,4 Rising plumes of steam from the U and I sugar processing plant in Garland evidence the start of another beet slicing n cludes not only the Lawrence Smith announced classics, but the three stories that the plant began processing originally in verse form-Th- e sugar beets at 8 a.m. Saturday Rediculous Wishes, Donkey-Skimorning following settlement and Patient Griselda. and ratification of the k The delightful pioraLsomuch a long labor strike thab- delayed part of the real Perrault, are the scheduled opening. also included. Utah sugar beet growers were Bugs by Mary Ann Hogerman particularly relieved by the Do you like bugs? Or do you start of the factory. Harvesting hate them? Mary Ann Hoger-man- s had also been postponed and witty, informative verse with fall weather and colder transforms ladybugs, mayflies, temperatures, growers were crickets, ants, and mosquitoes very anxious to get their beets into surprisingly sympathetic out of the ground and delivered to the receiving stations, Smith creatures. Her centipedes, jumping beans, do- said. odlebugs, locusts, and carpenRegular harvesting began ter ants fly, creep, crawl, and Oct. 11 and by Saturday about 25 gnaw their way across the percent of the total Utah beet pages with remarkable spirit crop had been delivered, Smith and energy. Really dont care reported. about bugs? This delightful collection, illustrated with humorCommunity Relieved ously scarry drawings by VicEveryone in the community toria Chess, may persuade you was greatly relieved when the to like them-- a little. strike was settled, Smith said. Its good to be back in business and see sugar beets going through the mill. Things The Difference are running quite smoothly and Edison didnt invent the first we expect to be operating up to talking machine only the first capacity very soon, he added. The Garland factory will pro one that could be turned off. well-know- scoCi cess approximately 221,000 tons of beets during the campaign, he said, which is somewhat less than last years run. Due to the drought and low sugar prices, sugar beet acreage this year was reduced about 30 percent. Although the crop is smaller, Smith reported, the beets are in excellent condition. Both yields and sugar content appear to be for our area. above average 1 OS !"-'! t'U i into sugar. It means a lot to our local and state economy. Growers are encouraged by the recent announcement from the Secretary of Agriculture Bergland that an interim relief measure for American sugar producers became effective Sept. 15. The program, Bob ,i !( Are Grateful Were grateful to the grow- ers for their patience and cooperation during the recent unsetAnd tled period, he added. also, were grateful to the many workers who are back on their jobs helping to make the beets ,f which applies to the 1977 crop, provides for guaranteed payments to producers based on support level of 13.5 cents a pound, raw sugar basis. (DEI) Picker - (layer WAYNE JOHNSON - Cczal WILLIAM J. L WAYNE E. CALL Ccrtcil In Utah this calculates to an average price of around $28.50 per ton for sugar beets of good average quality. ilio I j' ': ,i3dO WE NEED ALL THREE FOR BRIGHAM CITY s, Interagency T& Council S& meets today ;sw Box Elder Interagency Council will hold its regular meeting today (Thursday) from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Ray and . WW Cathys cafe. Representatives from social agencies and volunteer agencies are urged to be present for the meeting, according to Chairman Walter G. Jaggi. m Hi Tf-- w 2 ConmirortaMe caoualo r fffc a in oofft, natural leather. Slip into our casuals. Youll see their classic good looks, Youll feel g their fashionable, crepe soles, and foot cradling, cushioned arch. easy-walkin- I cur- rent Chinese practice by T. Tan Leong This new edition of the widely acclaimed text that pioneered acupuncture instruction in English has been extensively enlarged and revised to include the latest refinements in theraphy as reported from the Peoples Republic of China. Watching the dance go by, by A clearMarcia B. Siegel sighted examination of more than 80 performances by both American and foreign companies, an enlightening introduction to contemporary dance for the novice, a penetrating appraisal for the initiate. Ms. Siegels work draws the necessary distinctions between what & W Scholl Casuals o Introducing new fall fashion Scholl Shoes to Brigham City B101 KSOP IF YOU WtllT TO KNOW! & KUPUMDSAC IfliAG Peter C. Knudson Beth Gurrister FOR Tom'' Purdue FOR If you want to know what that SIREN is all about, where dc you turn? U KSL C3:jna 0 j) U SO Smith mmtrn, Brigham Cliy, Utah a 723 - S277 MS. MAYOR CITY COUNCIL If CITY COUNCIL VOTE November 8 |