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Show Business and Professional Women Elect Installation of officers was on the agenda for Business and Professional Women of Brigham City as they met Friday evening, April 26, at the Idle Isle. Miss Lenora Romer, past state president, installed Mrs. Lewis Olsen as president; Miss Miriam Jarvis, vice president; Mrs. W. B. Howes, treasurer; Mrs. Paul Johnson, recording secretary, and Mrs. Elva Miller, corresponding secretary. Dihner was served from one long table with President Olsen presiding. Collect was given by Miss Jean Shonka.. Plans for members to attend the state convention at St. George were made with Miss Anna Erickson, state recording secretary; President Olsen. Mrs. Carl Hansen and Miss- - Jean Shonka planning to attend May 3, 4 and 5. Plans were also completed for the tea for senior graduates to be held Sunday afternoon, May ser12 following baccalaureate vice. The evening will be held at the Central school with Mrs. exhibit to Dolly Rockwood paintings. The general public is invited to attend. During the Friday evening meeting it was announced that President Olsen had been named as outstanding BPW Woman of the Year in Brigham City. The award is rated on attendance, service and willingness to serve Business and Professional Women. A plaque will be presented. INSTALLATION CEREMONIES Miss Lenora Romer, right, past state president, was installing officer at the Brigham City Business and Professional Womens club meeting Friday, April 26, at the Idle Isle. Newly elected officers include, left to right, Mrs. W. B. Howes, treasurer; Mrs. Paul Johnson, recording secretary; Miss Miriam Jarvris, and Mrs. Lewis Olsen, president. Mrs. Elva Miller, corresponding secretary, was unavailable for photo. i vice-preside- nt Local PTA Officers Driver Hurt, Convention Bound ; Cars Damaged A large group of South Box Eldei1 PTA officers and workers . 9:30 a. m. Bo-nor- o Dr. J. Moffitt, school superin- . Box Elder NEWS Brigham City, Utah Wednesday, May 1, 1957 Trooper Evan Green of the State Highway Patrol had a busy weekend with an accidcnt-a-day- , Convention Is inflicting $2,500 in Scheduled Here to damage four vehicles involved and sent one driver to the hospital. It all started 'last Thursday morning at 5 a.m. when Walter R. Batton was driving to his home at Little Valley, swerved to avoid hitting a deer, skidded BPW WOMAN OF THE Governor George D. Clyde YEAR Mrs. Lewis Olsen will be guest speaker and was announced as Woman of and Harry Overstreet also Year at meeting Friday eve- will speak. Both are authors, specialists in the field of human ning, April 26. relations, and lecturers., 3 Postmasters In Accidents are planning to attend the state Parent-Teache- r Association convention Thursday, Friday and Saturday in Provo High school and on the Brigham Young University campus. Official delegates, visitors and school patrons, as well as interested citizens, are Invited to attend Friday and Saturday sessions. The Thursday meetings are for state officers only. Friday,at 8:30 a. m., delegates will register at Provo High school. Meetings will begin at tendent in Provo, will moderate a panel discussion. Bridges of Understanding. Friday evening, a banquet will feature Gov. Clydes address and talk by Mrs. James C. Parker, vice 'president National s association. The convention will move to the Joseph Smith auditorium on BYU campus, Saturday at 9 a. m and feature an address by Mrs. H. Cecil Baker, president. Rex Campbell will moderate a panel on This We Can Do, and installation of officers will conclude the meet at noon. Parent-Teacher- Hopscotchers in the gravel, hit an embankment and rolled over on the tpp, damaging his late model car an estimated $1,300. Batton was un injured. Friday at 5:10 p.m. on Utah 102, two miles east of Trenion t6n, Charles E. Petersen, Dewey-villstarted to make a left turn to leave the highway just as Larry Dean Benson, 305 South Fourth West, Logan, started to pass. Benson skidded sideways into Petersens truck, demolishing his car valued at $5Q0 and inflicting ' $100 damage to the other drivBenson was cited for ing too fast for existing conditions, Petersen for making an improper turn and no registration No one was injured. A Saturday morning call at 1:30 a.m. took Trooper Green to just south of Plymouth where Oleen Vanderhoof of Plymouth was injured when he dozed at the wheeL . He went off the road, hitting and a driveway embankment flipped the car landing back on the wheels. Vanderhoof received a crushed jaw and split chin in the mishap, was taken to the Tremohton hospital and later transferred to Ogden. Citations are pending further investigation, Trooper Green e, ve-icl- ' Compete May 4 'Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary will sponsor the eighth annual hopscotch tournament for elementary school girls in third, fourth, fifth and sixth grades, Saturday morning, May 4, at Lincoln school. . BREWED According to Mrs. Eva Years-letournament chairman, girls WITH PURE from Central, Lincoln, Mantua, Perry and Honeyville will parROCKY MOUNTAIN ticipate. SPRING WATER All who enter the final competition will receive a prize with grand prizes, plu$ the chance to compete in the state contest at Murray Park in . Murray, May 11, to go to the grade winners. Parents will be invited to attend the state event. Mrs. Year-sle- y will transport and chaperU. , one winners whose parents will OOCPH COOK COMPANY, GOLOKN, COCO. be unable to attend. The contests will begin at 10 Jackson Distributing Co. school with a. m. at Lincoln 118 24th Street games to be played inside or Ph. 24554 outside according to weather Ogden, Utah conditions. ' y, The Utah Branch of the Naof Postmasters will gather in Brigham City on May 10 and II for their annual convention, according to Postmaster C. Henry Nielsen. tional League Headquarters for the two-da- y event will be the War Memorial home with registration beginning Friday morning. May 10, from 9 to 10 a. m. The Friday morning session will begin at 10 a. m., followed by luncheon at 12 noon. A general assembly will begin at 1:30 p. m. and those attending will be divided into classes for instruction according to the class of office. Conducting the classes of instruction and speaking - at thg meetings will be district and regional officers and representatives as well as Postal Inspectors. Friday evening at 8 p. m., the Tropical Retausrant will be the scene of a banquet and program for postmasters and their partners. Saturdays schedule will include a meeting from 9 a. m. to 12 noon. At 1:30 p. m. the delegates and their partners will meet at the Box Elder stake tabernacle for a short organ recital and a conducted tour starting from there, which will include Intermountain school, several fruit orchards and a trip around the Migratory Bird Refuge. It is expected that approximately 50 postmasters and their partners will be in Brigham City for the two-daconvention, the local postmaster said. Four Hurt in Sunday Crash At Promontory Four High school teenagers were injured Sunday at 3:30 p.m, when their car went out of control and rolled over on a county road, 28 miles west of Corinne, near Promontory. Injured were Paul Hunsaker, 17, who received Honeyville, head lacerations and suffered shock; Letty Hunsaker, 14, Honeyville, leg laceration; Karolynn Cox, 14, 835 No. Main, bruises and shock; and Larry II. Davis, 17, DISTRICT COMMANDER fractured ribs, bruises Dr. C. R. Jones was elected Corinnq, and shock. All were treated at American Legion District Cooley Memorial Hospital and One Commander Friday eve- released except Paul Hunsaker ning at convention hall in who was still being held, TuesBox Elder ' Hyrum. . Corinne School Nominations Slates Round-U- p For National The Corinne school will hold their annual round-uof preschool children today, Wednesday, according to Mrs. Frank Taylor, PTA president. All children living in the Corinne area who will be six years of age prior to Nov. 1 should register at the school today in order to be eligible to attend summer kindergarten and school in the fall, Mrs. Taylor explainp ed. Any parents who have not been contacted previously, are requested to bring their child to the school today at 2 p. m. along with his birth certificate and immunization records, Mrs. Taylor said. day. Awards Open Governor George D. Clyde has appointed the Salt Lake City Junior Chamber of Commerce to assist him in nominating candidates for the national awards of Young American Medals for Bravery and for Service, to be presented by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, through the office of Attorney General. To be eligible for the Bravery award for 1956, the applicant must be 18 years old or less, and must have exhibited exceptional courage, attended by extraordinary decision, presence of mind, and unusual swiftness of action, regardless of his or her own personal safety, in an effort to save or in saving the life of any person or persons in immediate danger. The Yoifng American Medal for Service is awarded to a citizen 18'years old or less who has achieved outstanding or unusual recognition for - character and service during the year 1958. Such character and service must have been public in nature, and must have been publicly acknowledged and prominently mentioned by local press, radio or television facilities. Anyone knowing of worthy candidates Is urged to . contact the Salt Lake City junior Chamber of Commerce, 207 South Main, at once, to receive full details on the requirements, since completed applications must be received by May 25. j The quartet of teenagers were taken to the hospital by Wallace E. Allen, Ogden, who happened Local upon the accident scene. Patrolman Ralph Kotter, investigating for the State Highway Patrol, cited the driver, LarDavis for reckless driving. Dr. C. R. Jones, Brighma City, ry The car, valued at $200, was dewas elected commander of the molished, he reported. A 1952 model sedan received American Legion District No. 1, damages estimated at $500 FriFriday evening, April 26, in Hyday when it skidded on the wet Local Girl rum, at district convention. street as it was traveling north Norman Gray, Randolph, will on Main street between First serve , as vice commander. and Second North, according to Role Auxiliary officers elected incity police reports. clude: i Mrs. Lucille Bcrgason, Driver of the car was Mrs. Mrs. Ora Lewiston, president; Shirley Dove Harrison of Brig- Lillian II. Felt of 165 South Hutton. Hyrum, first vice presi- ham City, has ben chosen for a Fourth East. The mishap ocdent; Mrs. Myrtle Gleason, Gar- role in Brigadoon, final spring curred at 11:25 a. m., when the land, second vice president; Mrs. quarter musical production of car went into a skid, traveling Nancy Forrester, Brigham City, the Brigham Young University, to the opposite side of the road, historian, and Mrs. J. Leo Nel- scheduled for May 8 to 11. A man stopped to speak to it hitting the curb and making a son, Gold Star Mothers Tea The right side of the little girl playing in the sand at Miss Harrison is a daughter of half-turchairman. Dr. and Mrs. E. B. Harrison of car was damaged, police reports the beach. My word, youre Outgoing officers for the dis- 302 North Second East. She Is stated. pretty dirty, he remarked. trict include Dr. C. R. Jones as a freshman student at BYU maOfficer P. R. Parker was in"Yep," she smilingly respondvice commander, and Mrs. Jenin English and is a mem- vestigating officer. No citation ed, but Im a darn sight pretr nie L. Jones, auxiliary presi- joring ber of the Opera Workshop. was issued. tier clean. dent, and Mrs. Elsie Jensen, auxiliary secretary. During the evening essay contest, winners presented their esWinners included Kay says. Bernhisel, Lewiston, and Suzanne Johnson, Laketown, in the senior division, and Burke Bod ily, Lewiston, and Margaret AlDINNERWARE COUPON ly, Laketown, in the junior dii art THIS COUPON Toward the purchase . vision. H 0 UU Checks went to Wellsville and IS WORTH of Homer Laughlin Brigham City for reaching memDinnerware A FULL bership quota earliest. APPLY FULL $10 VALUE TO ANY SERVICE FOR 8 SET the convention Attending Sets Priced from $29 to $49. Save $ 1 0 with coupon from Brigham City were: Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Jones, Mrs. Ken Jensen, Mrs. Harry Smith, Mrs. J. Leo Nelson, Mrs. Nancy Forrester, Mathew Compton, Hyrum Malmrose, Mrs. George Hodges, Mr. and , Mrs. Boyd Sheffield, Mrs. Pere Knudson and Victor J. Bott Car Damages Total $500 in Legionnaire Named Commander Friday Mishap Chosen - i For Musical jjudt m Tjime fy&i Jhay ' vl3 Mi e Ive killed a child r Never had an accident before. Never been in trouble with the law. Always tried to do right by my family and friends. Now Ive killed a child . . . just by taking a foolish chance. Every day it happens, often just like that, to drivers who .thought accidents happen only to the other fellow never to themselves. t Remember this. No one expects to meet death on the road. Certainly no one expects to be tS y guilty of causing it. Yet last year, 40,000 men, women and children died in traffic accidents. many who never had or expected to have an accident found themselves guilty of killing someone on the highway. Most of these deathd can be prevented with Thousands of drivers your cooperation. IT v ' MADE-TO-ORD- ER UPHOLSTERING Repairing - Restyling - Refinishing get our ready on time service NOW! tool heavy-dut- y tillage Be LET US GIVE YOUR TIRED A FURNITURE BRAND-NE- Put our LOOK them in When we deliver your reupholstered furniture from our workrooms, you'll be thrilled with its new beauty! Why not give us a call today? Decorator Fabrics Frames Repaired "like-ne- Pickup & Delivery Fine Workmanship Phone 1516 MnaiHVii mwiim working w Here' 8 how you can help stop traffic tragedies : service tillage Q Drive lately and courteously yourself. Observe speed limits PHONE 300 Q Insist condition. Make a datd for your heavy-duttools today. y TRUCK AND IMPLEMENT CO. ond warning-signWhere traffic laws are obeyed, deaths go DOWN! 27 North Main Brigham City, Utah , Support your local Safety Council on strict enforcement of alt traffic laws. Traffic regulations work for you, not against you. Where traffic laws are strictly enforced, deaths go DOWN! Published in an effort to save lives by BRIGHAM Lauritzen Upholstering 523 South Main 5-S- tar Service manpower on your tillage team. Let us check your heavy-dut- y tillage tools carefully and recommend oniy the service needed to put ; The Box-Elde- r NEWS and JOURNAL |