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Show NOK -- P " ATING j - READY FOH THE FOURTH FoWth of JJuly Celebration secretary, Larry iMcKniglhtand Chairman Craig Westover, go over the final plans for the' celebration in Lewiston. A rodeo queen was named last week, Sue Bodily (second photo) with Susan Hatch, first attendant, and Kathy Allen, second attendant. During the celebration the VOL. VI NO. 12 LEWISTON, UTAH SPOT UTAH 84320 THURSDAY, JULY 4, Food Sales Said Up In County 1968 Following the queen contest last week, the actual celebration will start at 6:30 p.m. with the traditional flag ceremony under direction of the Benson Stake Primary, with Mrs. Grant Flygare in charge. The Lewiston Lions club will follow with the Fourth of July breakfast with Gayle is a 1968 graduate of Sky View High School and seminary and is currently employed at the Cache Valley Dairy Associa tion in Amalga. While at Sky View, she was active in the Pep Club and FHA. She has been a member of the 1 program for six years and was selected one of the dairy princesses for LewSpackman as chairman. More than 60 entries are iston in 1968. scheduled for the Fourth of Active in the Lewiston 2nd July parade, one of the largest ward, she is Camp Director parades held in the valley. and assistant chorister. She Three marching bands will has earned six individual participate along with commercial, political, civic, and church floats. The kid's movie will be held in the Lewiston Community theater at 10:30 p.m. and the ball game between girls from Lewiston and a team made up of city council members and others will be held at 11 and during 19G7 and 1963 has attended 100 percent at all of her LDS meetings. She was an attendant to the queen last year. This fall she will enroll at the Continental Beauty School in Salt Lake City where she received a scholarship. Attendant to Miss Bodily is a.m. Susan Hatch, daughter of Mr. The rodeo will be sponsored and Mrs. Alma A. Hatch of by the North Cache Riding club and will be held at 1:30 p,m. Entry fee and prize money will be given to the top - NEW YORK . In Cache County, consumer spending for food, clothing, furniture and other goods was at a high level in the past year, accord ing to a new report on retail store activity in the local ar ea and elsewhere. With most families enjoying better incomes than before, they were in a position to spend more freely and they did so but without going all out and with inflation and higher tax With the war going on cowboys. A little league game will be played, made up of teams from the four Lewiston LDS wards, with Lloyd El wood and Paul Dent as coaches of the team and Max Gregory West This cactus plaint, belongne to Mr. and Mrs. Roland md Blaine Stevenson as the It was the third time hi lb years and It Woonwd t"4 coaches of the East team. The Citizen Photo The celebration will end with a special Fireworks dis play. The schedule of events includes: es facing them, they chose to put a considerable amount into savings. The manner in which local residents and those in other NIGHT BLOOMING CACTI areas SDeht their retail dol Mortemsen, bloomed recently. lar in the year is brought out night. in a nationwide market study, just released by the Standard Interesting Cacti Rate ana Data service. It shows that, in Cache county, a large part of the consumer dollar was spent in Flag Ceremony ... 6:30 a.m. stores selling food and auto 6:45 a.m. Breakfast Between motive equipment. 9:30 a.m. Parade them, they accounted for 38 Mr. and Mrs. Roland have among their collection zations. He has also had Kid's Movie 10:30 a.m. buslocal of retail all percent curators of lovely several interesting cacti, one many church assignments and Ball Game 11:00 a.m. iness. flower and vegetable gardens, of which is the cereus, a night an LDS mission to New Zeal1:30 p.m. s Food expenditures alone, in blooming variety. Thursday and. Meble has been active Little League 6:30 p.m. bakeries, meat markets, delinight at precisely 10:30 p.m., in the ward and stake, having Girls Ball Game . . 8:00 p.m. their only plant reached the served in the Relief Society Fireworks catessens, supermarkets and 9:30 p.m. the like totaled $10,814,000, an height of its bloom and beau- stake board for many years. as Rodeo Queen of increase over the previous ty. According to Mrs. They are the parents of one theSelected Lewiston July 4th Cele by 5:00 a.m., the year's 810,512,000. flower was wilted and closed daughter, Mrs. Ellis (Mari- bration was Miss Sue Bodily, This sum, which representwith the duration of its beau- lyn) Griffin of Ogden, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. of all retail ed 21 percent Bardo Bodily of Lewiston. Sue ty lasting for only a few have five grandchildren. for was solely locally, hours. food purchased for home conFuneral rites are scheduled This particular plant was sumption. It is exclusive of for Joseph Verlin given to them as a gift by a Wednesday restaurants in money spent Kefford M. and in other eating and drink- Steers, Preston, who died brother-in-laof injuries suffered Peek of Ogden, a former resSunday ing places. a fall from a load ident of Trenton, about 10 e following Just how much the of hay Friday morning. years ago and has bloomed food purchases averagMr. Steers was born July only three times in that perwas on a basis, ed, per family 23, 1902, in Preston and iod of time. The plant is kept determined by apportioning lived In Preston all of had his the total outlay equally among life. He was the son of Wil- in the front window of the Post Office where it the local population. It came liam E. and Julia Hall Steers Trenton receives plenty of light and to 1951 per family. and was married to Alice warmth from the sun and reAs for stores selling auto- Wetzel on April 18, 1925, in quires very little attention. motive equipment, including Logan. The residence of the cars, motorcycles and boats, Mr. Steers was a salesman is a haven for those for 88,644,000, they accounted and painter by trade. interested in beautiful needleas compared with the prior Services are to be in the work, ravishing gardens and Preston Second ward under flowers, delectable vegetables year's $8,491,000. Most other retail lines also the direction of Bishop Loyal and beautiful rock collections. hit high figures for the year, Hansen. Interment was in the Mr. and Mrs. Mortensen Fairview cemetery. the report shows. have lived in the Trenton ar Survivors include the wid- ea for many years where they ' Those selling general merof ow, two sons, Gene W. and have been active church and: chandise chalked up a total Budd W. of San Francisco; civic organization workers, the prev$8,434,000, against two daughters, Mrs. Wayne Roland is a member of the! ious year's $8,001,000. (JoAnn) Wimmer of Logan, Lions club, has received his Shops selling coats, suits, and Mrs. George (Peggy) Silver Beaver award from the hnps and other aonarel had a of Meadows, Ida.: BSA, and has been an officer Lambirth as against 15 gross of $1,870,000, grandchildren and three in the Sons of the Utah Piotheir former i,s,uuu. grandchildren; one sis- neers, and local rock organi great furniture Stores carrying Mrs. Earl (Alta) Head, ter, and other home furnishings of Ogden, and five brothers, reported a volume of 82,721,-00- Harold R. of Ogden; Earl H., Fire Destroys previously $2,523,000. Jesse J., Dan M., and Don W., all of San Francisco. Rural Home Mr. Steers was a member of the LDS Church, had served The home of Harold Oliver-soas city judge, and was active near was burned to the ground in civic affairs. many of the house-daThe accident occurred on but with the help of the Byron Hall farm. Accordold Preston boy A ing to a report by Mr. Hall, hold effects were saved. According to the Prostnn was arrested last week on a he and Mr. Steers had just of Fire forgery. of department, the fire load into the a charge hay brought He appeared in Juvenile yard. Mr. Hall told relatives must have started from Court Thursday but sentencing that he turned to drink a glass sparks from the chimney. was delayed for further Infor- of water and Air. Steers climb Firemen said that Mr. Oliver-so- n Richard Tureen rtlnrmi nu nf the ROTI.FR TMflF attempted to nut out th mation. He was charged with ed up on the load of hay. He in the boiler at the canning center. The checks the roof over which bad fire, started on joices next heard a thud and found the writing Preston area and is suspected root, out was unsuccessful in center has become a community project. (Continued on page 5) of writing bad checks in Utah. doing so. The Citizen Photo Bloomed Three Times Mor-tense- n, Rodeo-Race- PreslonMan Mor-tense- n, Dies, Falls bus-Mie- ss American Legion; Mrs. Steven Bodily, PTA; Mrs. Seth Gregoiy, races; Craig Westover, chairman; Dale Hansen, The Citizen Photo rodeo, and Rodney Dahle, rodeo. Lewiston Readies Big 4th Of July Celebration th1)CACHE VALLEY BEAUTY pony, ridden by Brad Blair, will be given away. Members of the committee include (last picture) Mrs. Wayne Noble, parade; Larry McKnght, secretary; Joe Myler, From Hay Load w, take-hom- Mor-tense- Smithfield. Susan is a graduate of North Cache Junior high school and Sky View high school. She enjoys horseback riding and swimming and is employed at the Coburn Travel Service in Logan. She is also second attendant to the Northern Utah Riding Club association. Second attendant is Miss Kathy Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reed Allen of Cove. Kathy graduated from the Lewiston Junior high school and will be a senior at Sky View this fall. During her junior year, she served as secretary of the junior class and will be president of the Girls League at Sky View dur ing 196849. While at Lewis-to- n Junior High, she was secretary of the studenlbody. At the present time she is a teacher and in the Cove ward she is serving as chorister of the Junior Sunday School and Primary teacher, An accom-Kath- y has plished pianist, participated in many ward socials. Damage By Frost Spotty Franklin ' county farmers have been surveying this week the frost damage - to their crops following the drop in temperature Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. For some, there was extensive frost damage, for others near misses. The extent to which crops were damaged depended on loca-- " tion and air clearance. Frank lin County Agent, Daniel Rob erts, reported Tuesday. High and low temperatures recorded at the official wea ther station at KPST radio station were: Friday, High, 90 degrees; low 47 degrees. Saturday, High, 80 degrees, Low, 46 degrees; Sunday, High, 68 degrees, Low, 32 degrees; Tuesday, High, 79 degrees, Additional cookers will be Low 37 degrees. added to the cannery if they In Stock Valley, north of can be- obtained. The cannery Treasureton, George Johnson committee is attempting to reported a low of 24 degrees get some cookers from the on Sunday morning. Cache Welfare Region of the Most corn patches in FrankLDS church. The regional lin County received from welfare cannery which was lo- touches to severe frost damcated in Logan will not be age but all should recover but will be delayed in maturity. opened this year. Some bean patches were The nearest other "home" cannery is located in Burley. slightly to moderately damAt one time there were 10 aged. A few were damaged such canneries set up under beyond recovery, again de the government in Idaho, but pending on location. and Potato fields suffered vary Preston, . Burley-RupeWeiser are the only ones left. ing degrees of frost damage With the closing of the Logan but all should recover, delay cannery there will be none in ing the crop. Grain damage from frost is northern Utah. much harder to evaluate and come from People Brigham more time to show requires City, Logan, Tremonton, Blackfoot.and other symptoms. It 'is anticipated distances to can goods in that there will be some damPreston. Mr. Orme said that age in the usual low places last year there was a group that always frost first, the from Florida. However, he County Agent said. It is very apparent the damadded, that the people were in Preston visiting relatives age from this frost was not and came over to can some (Continued on page 5) back. before goods going 1 Area Canning Center Gets New Location The Franklin County Can- - ning Center, after more than 20 years of operation in the basement of the old rock' building at the high school, will open with new quarters this month. According to Lincoln Orme, who has managed the cannery for about 20 years, the open ing is scheduled for July 15, The cannery purchased the metal building from Keith Larson between the highway and State Street on Fourth South. Crews have been add ing a boiler room and redoing the inside of the cannery. Mr. Orme said that the new facilities will be a third bigger than the old location and plans are to aaa a can storage area to the building which will make the area more than twice as big as the old location. A parking lot is located along side of the building. The boiler from the high school has already been installed and the cookers will be moved soon. - rt o, ns i 0, Juvenile Held For Bad Checks n, Preston, Satur-neighbo- rs y, 17-ye-ar NEW INTERIOR Workmen complete the new interior of the Franklin County which be located on Fourth South. Installing the paneling will Center Canning around the restrooms are Jerry Larson and Forrest Olverson. Also shown is Ivan Ras-muss- en. 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