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Show .i r A Trio Of "Miss BoxEldcr" Candidates ; "t Apache Trick Dancer Balloting Shows Summer School To Return To City Dies On Bus En ..wxvw: x; Vi Janice Hansen liss Miss Dorene Meacham Route Home 'Miss Mona Rae Eskelsen Beta Sigma Phi Box Elder High School 4 P. W. Club (ili vie for the Miss Box Elder title in the special talent show sponsored by the nauseated earlier and asked the Dclnb to be held at Box Elder high school on the evening of July 4. Fourteen girls driver to stop and let him out. photo by glenn compton Box Elder county arp entered in the competition, the Upon reentering the bus B. From Brigham City Business Men artists have beenC- - heck day in Brigham field a month, according to W. Hyde, with indivi-- a st three different total of $459.25 of rubber checks, first of the trio was in Salt Lake City and held there: to see which x counties seeking him .This is ave jurisdiction. Winkler,, described as an Warren ap-ide- d Oklahoma from vict Who Brigham City on May 30 ft two worthless $10 auto- - one voucher for $35 an-- a L. ; Davidson and like around as the second artist passed through the ling . Tim-Warre- June 5. n first two were pikers the old master who main .drag on June the to ired the leaving eight souvenirs ranging from $8 to $57.50 for a total of $339.25 for the days effort. Logan also has been hit with check , artists, Sheriff IHyde rein ports, tout were 'successful picking up a pair of them last week. To stop this loss, the sheriffs department has printed forms for identification of anyone unknown who wants to pass a check, Hyde reports, and the office will toe glad to furnish them free to merchants. "A person passing a good check will not toe embarrased by the identification questions the sheriff explained. asked, "Its only the crooks that will become . indignant and start squirming. 'For your protection, insist on complete identification before accepting checks from strangers. VFW Drum And Bugle Corp Hold glare Take before, the July, dtj parade appearanee at arrant,' will be "held Thursday evening for VFW Drum and . Bugle corps. ' The special practice session will start at 6:30 o'clock at the War Memorial, home, U was announced this week by Clyde Larsen, Delores Laurit-ze- n and Keith PettingilL committee in charge lor the VFW T , organization. Final practice : Cleaners, n into the breaking jlars last Thursday early ' Friday morning, with an estimated worth of clothing, it was ered at 6 oclock , when Christensen the opened or off . establishment.' and the sheriff were called in to finding a broken win-s- s June Grass Fire Puts as one or the back m through which the Department To Work , apparently '.crawled, - then The .'Brigham City .fire deked the rear 'door from the another partment answered to load into their car. call last Friday , June grass fire ss and ladies suits, afternoon at 3:30 oclock. . shirts, skirts, draper-ni- l The blaze was at Second west other items of apparel and First south. No damage was taken in the robbery. A ng . de-r- police in-;at- e , iofab mmI dress-acks- lete m - 20-3- 0 i Wilford-Roger- s two-da- two-stat- Dance, Creek Stomp (Dance, InSnake Dance, dian two-steCorn Grinding song, 'Apache Trink Dance, PaWnee (War Dance and Communal Dance. , e from governor Utah and Jim Watts, Pocatello, the governor from Idaho. iPpcatello was selected as the site for the January district Additional numbers Included the summer school band; presentation of the 1950 Mother of the Year, Elizabeth sub-distri- School Board Mrs. Mable Nielsen meeting, At the Sunday business meeting, a resolution of thanks was club extended to the local and for entertainment fine the Only two members of the Box convenElder Board of Education were meals provided to the.announcwas able to attend the Monday ses- tion delegates, it convention Verl ed Petersen, by sion this week and because of ; chairman. lack of quorum, no business was transacted, it was announc . ed yesterday. Ceylon Doctor Asks A special meeting of the , For Information board will be held 'Friday of this week1, yrtien bids advertised Control fcr construction at Bear River SQn Mosquito be school will opened. v high The fame of the Bax Elder of Mosquito Abatement ' district The next regular session the board of education will be is spreading, apparently, to Monday, July 9. the far corners of the earth. For Meeting Mabel Nielsen i Installed As 20-3- 0 - Nielsen - was - in. stalled as president of the Brig a'rfi- Soroptimists 'oh City Thursday evening June 21, . in installation ceremonies . conducted in the Idle Isle, dining room by Myrta (Hales of Ogden, ipast secretary for the Rocky Mountain Region Soroptimists. Other officers Installed dur ing the meeting were: - Bessie Grace Hansen, vice president) Petersen, corresponding" secre tary; Dorothy Rdbbins, recorder; Norma Jensen, treasurer, .and Luella MacFarlane, director.; Dinner was served at one long dinner table centered with beautiful-- bouquet ot roses. Mrs. Elnora Bowcutt, retiring presi the business dent, conducted . ;! f meeting. .;?. The candle of service was lit by Sophia Reed of Ogden, past director for the Rooky Mountain Mrs.; Mabel . , selections by sub-distri- Lacks Quorum head of Soroptimists ! , - This week, supervisor 4 ' r ' Roe . Cloud, Qjfbway, . of Vlfest Esther , Horne, Linn, Oregon; 'I L' descendant of 5acajawea, IIP ,41 ' m M. Pahe, (Navajo, a ' , . , x 1 " 2 fV v . - fa? Carl Vicentl . . . Apache Indian from Dulce, N. M., garbed in authentic colorful plains costume, performed the difficult Apache trick darice at the tribal pageant t Rees Pioneer park last night. iVicenti, who lives on the Jicarilla Indian tion in northern New Mexico, is attending the summer sesphoto by fred piersen sion at Intermountain Indian School, - : Karl . Robbery o ; A New Mexico law, according to The American Magazine, permits a wife to go through her husbands pockets at her 1950 Mother Of The Year, Mrs. Henry Roe Cloud, Conducts Workshop At Summer School Session By Helen Hill Headliners On Rotary Club Program Henry Roe Cloud of West Linn, Oregon, who was 1950 mother of the year, has been at school Intermountain Indian during the summer school sesof sion, serving as chairman the National Congress of American Indians workshi-- on community, organization. Mrs. Roe Cloud, a Chippewa Indian, was eager to speak of her four daughters and she explained, That is how I got to (Mrs. garments. "ABERliACLE : 1 MILES ol'" t Wuled For set ; are again this year a "Kids Parade Fourth of July. Parade will begin at 2 k at the Rees Pioneer park ifeettes coring . e ;he to - 4th; child (Each plan-- : nutrition and preventative : ; section , - children-participati- . Bf soda - men and water - C O'V the public Jarned that having in pos-or offering for sale any Packers, roman candles, or any . other fireworks Eolation of city ordinances te laws.: Violators will Merely , chief 3-- prosecuted! OF .POLICE CHIEF QF FIRE DEPT. .. . . county mosquito abatement 'district and the county commissioners, a large -- majority.: of whom were In attendance. The question tackled by the group is the pest control problem that will be created by: the bringing of Additional irrigation waters Into Box Elder county from the Weber basin project and the new proposed Willard 1 . . . . . came Up for discussion. Insecticide costs have increased by 50 percent and ,the; present tax revenue would be sufficient only for the cost of materials, leaving none for labor. ' . medi- Tommy Tommaney, Mrs. Roe Cloud, Wayne Woodland, H. A. Mathiesen , superbomber appeared on the Rotary dub program last Friday. Tommy acted as master of cere- - Tires on amonies for John Howard, program chairman and President Woodland. Mrs. Elizabeth are nine feet two inches tail and Roe Cloud, 1950 mother of the year, was the principal speaker and Mathiesen told about each contains enough nylon to make 15,000 pairs of stockings. the summer school program' at Intermountain. NOTICE TO FBOPEkW energetic lady has traveled 40, orphans in Europe as a result of the fndian people in the com- back into the minds of 000 miles this past year, as a last war), student and refugee munity and state In which I children the feeling that r member of the goodwill co centers, met with officials, ob- live, but tangible world services are wanted and loved. All old automoiles, trucks, your news to 1,000. WARNING m -- I - Mrs. Roe Cloud is serving as national chairman of ffndian affairs of the General Federation of Womens clubs. In connection with this organization the will ng :e a bottle Popsiele. one cine--. (Finding a solution for a prob-lebefore xlt is created, --' was the theme of a conference held Friday by the trustees of the , ? herself, .. Mrs. Roe . Cloud took advanced graduate work at Wichita and Kansas . universities. She majored in diet and floats, tricycles, ,, bi-s- ; buggies, .costumes and Wlaneous, with prizes in -- .. e participate Is urged to ('the park "it 1:45. There six- sections,--' including gTcupk-.-Thema- . . Of July was prepared f The program under the general management of ttie preel4nt oi .the. Indian ,4UTo(pinaneyk euttlMSnt Creek, 'administrative at Intermountain. help with the solution. Dr. Don iM. Reese,- Salt (Lake City, .president of the American mosquito association and (Fred Harmston, Salt Lake City, U. S. Public Health service, met With : ' the group, .r, Dr. Reese explained the reasons for the survey now: being made by the U. S. (Public Health service in (Box Elder county through which a plan will; be devised to" properly drain : the area where extra water . might accumulate. Results of the survey will be announced in August when government recommendations wUl be made Also considered at the meeting was the fly spraying , program which started last week in Box Elder. Five crews now are working, Karl Josephson, county supervisor reports. - The problem of financing the 1952 fly spraying program also mother of the year." iMy daughters are all married, she continued, "and they all college graduates. (Her oldest daughter, Mrs. Edward L. Hughes, is a Wellsley Mrs. graduate; her second, North Woesha, is a graduate of Ohio university; her third, (Mrs. Lillian Freed was graduated with a masters degree from Kansas university and her fourth, Mrs. Ramona (Butterfield, is a Vassar graduate, receiving her masters degrey from New York university and Mills. A graduate of Hamilton insti-tur- Parade . To ibe JV Inter-mountai- reservoir. . entry ,. teacher-interpreter- Phoenix, Arizona,' and Miriam- C, Ayze, Navajo, dormin tory attendant at the (Indian school;' vocal solos by Clarence S. Taptuka, Pueblo, boys adviser ,. at Wingate, - Arizona; Mexican, Dance by Margaret fcaga, night of June 8 when the back door to the grocery operated by Ed Pratt was entered. Between $150 and $200 worth of cured hams, fresh meats and vegetables were taken by the hungry ' burglar. s Advertise Tourist Attractions Da- kota; a piano duet by Ethelyne V Sxfx Sho- shone of IWahpeton, North - percent of all josephson received a letter Snowville farm trucks are in the light ve from Dr. W. L. F. Dassanay-ake- , tons hide classification of 1 Colpetty, Colombo, Ceyor less. ' lon, reading as follows: Still Unsolved "I have read with interest a in work done of the Region Soroptimists who also summary Sheriff Warren W. (Hyde regave the keynote addess of the your mosquito abatement district in the 'Mosquito News. ported this week that his office evening. ; if During the evening 'vocal se- I shall be greatly obliged if is still investigating the burlections were sung by Mildied you can see your way to send glary at Eds Grocery In Snowus a copy of your annual re- ville but so far has no leads. Andersen1 accompanied by Ra mona Madsen. ' The theft occurred on the port for 1949 or 1950." (Ninety-tw- y, - semi-annu- with owners Ivtlue of the last week was the ?J at Modern burglary ws but the first time any l!ng had been taken. had been in h of money only, none of was left in the plant af- first successful raid. , f - OjHb-wa- 20-3- 0 burglary. insurance ' was id by the firm. Employes eg S Deb Hadfield sub-distri- missing clothing, : sy checking stermine- - the EM reported. has been turned over to sheriffs department who search taking he are ! .the items inventory .SI Soropt. Pres. Final Practice a State Office 16 .his il. h' jBT Indian enrollees at the Inter- - ' mountain summer school presented Indian ceremonies and dances last night at Rees Pioneer park in 'Brigham City. Talent for the show came from among the 300 or more enrollees of Indian descent attending the summer school and numbers on the program represented almost every section of the country and at least a dozen tribes, including the Eskimo. The various songs and dances were interwoven with a narration, "Utah Sojourn," written especially for the occasion. by Clarissa Benjamin Lowry, and recited by Phillip Gov er, Pa uwtee, , an. .elementary teacher at Inteimountain. Mia. Lowiy has staged many of the famous Anadarko Indian- pageants. An Invocation was given by (Lee Payton, Cherokee, area principal at: Chlnle, Arizona. Songs and dances presented were: . Navajo riding song, Eskimo hymn, (Peace Pipe Dance, Oneida Indian Lullaby; Inikpata and Rabbit Dance, Sun Named To Artists Collect Toil Of Check positive passenger declared he felt much better but about ten miles fur 20-30 ther along again asked the drive er to stop. He collapsed just as the bus came to' a halt and was found to be dead by the time he could be carried outside. . Coroner Garland Pussey, Tre Delbert Hadfield of the Brigmonton; County Attorney O. ham City club was named Dee Lund, . Highway Patrolman for the governor Evan Green, Sheriff (Warren W, state of Utah at. the Ed and Hyde Sylvester Deputy clubs convention of formed the official investigating held here and SunSaturday i group. .. The body was taken to the day. climaxed the The election Funeral home in filled with enmeeting Tremonton. tertainment for the more than According to Sheriff Hyde, 120 visiting delegates represenCrabtree apparently was en 14 clubs over (Utah and route home from a vacation trip ting Idaho. to Missouri. Local officers were Arlos Anderson, Provo, was trying to reach relatives of the named district governor over dead man. area, Hadfield the the, Soroptimists Prexy AUTOGRAPHS? ACTING Presented At assurance Indian that Intermountain school would be host to the summer school session again in 1952 was expressed this Almost Walter Crabtree, 70, Portland, week. Ore., died yesterday afternoon Enrollees at the school were after stopping the Greyhound vote on the matbus he was riding in Blue Creek permitted to and while the of location ter Sheriff valley when he felt ill, not been tabhad ballot total Warren W. Hyde reported late small a gave ulated, sampling Tuesday afternoon. to the Brigham support heavy to bus the the story According City location. driver, Carl Smith, told investigating officers, Crabtree became S' 10 PAGES BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 27, 1951 VOLUME 56, NUMBER 26 ' B C Call Henry Bird, Arthur Smith, Elmer Hopkins Bng-hacroudlv survey the new sign put up just south of The taternade. at the City inviting tourists to stopwas the high by up Funk, put by McLaren Drlests of North and South Box Elder stake who are conbureau at the tabernacle, ducting the tourist informationCall. A similar s gn wilLbe of direction Judge under the to the north city.: approach at the plEuied on the highway . m operative tour sanctioned by the state department On tour the group studied the Marshall aid set up in the ; 11 European countries that are re primar ceiving aid.. ily concerned with the people and how they were progressing. , The group of women . visited orphanages (there are 14,000,000 They-wer- e . . . served building projects, the repairing of buildings and industries and the restoration of cattle and livestock herds. Commenting on the trip, Mrs. Roe Cloud said, "It broadened my horizon so that now Im not only an American citizen but a citizen of the : world. Services not only need to be rendered lor - and help primarily for the chilImpressed with the Indian dren with neither parentage, service summer school at Interfood or clothing,' need to be mountain Indian school, F Mrs. given In these great devastated Roe Cloud said: , areas. This summer school has been We must render material and Inspiring. The National Conphysical aid but we must also gress of American Indians is restore into the hearts of the grateful to the leaders of the youth that there is a spiritual summer school for their cooperforce in the universe to bring ation. . B-3- 8 wagons, bob sleU) machinery and th pieces . of like now parked on cfty trets must be removed not proved, the city will taka steps to have them moved and costs involved will be charged to the 'owners. HARRY SMITH. ' Chief of Police: , . -- J27 29-ch - I XX |