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Show Universal Microfilm Corp. I " 2 T( V'-- - .v - lla flcrpont Plans Shaping . For New Bridge Over Bear River u Plans regarding the proposed new bridge over the Bear River east of Bear River City were discussed by the county com-missioners at their regular 44 meeting Monday of this week.- - VOL, E. Paul GUgen, secondary road engineer for the state road commission advised the county:, board that they had already made preliminary field work and if the county desired, they would go ahead with the preliminary engineering. It would be necessary for the- county to ., make application and submit i matching funds. Replying to a" : :"i question from the commission ,: ers, Mr. Gilgen stated the state road commission has just apw--- ) proved the 1967 budget, but ' that plans should be completed, in case other project funds' were not used, the allotment could be transferred to this Ave. uu ; "' if j p. . if - i 1 - county. The design should also be set up, ready for calling of bids on the project. The commissioners stated the money was available, and they 'Xj J Thiokol Gains New Project Funding Exceeds 800,000 j j w I . ) Air Force approval to manufacture GENIE solid propellant motors for flight testing has been given to the Wasatch Division of Thiokol Chemical Corporation, according to Charles E. Hunter, Vice President and General Manager. Authorization to produce the motors came after Thiokol successfully completed the first phase of their contract to develop improved GENIE rocket motors. Total funding , to date exceeds $800,000. Douglas Aircraft Company, associate contractor for GENIE, will conduct flight tests on some of these improved motors. Hill AFB will handle surveillance and storage tests on the balance of the propulsion units. Qualification testing of the motor will be acwith the flight test complished program. The majority of the qualification motors will be static tested at Thiokol's plant in northern Utah, and several will be ground launched by the Douglas Aircraft Company. j The motors tested under these two programs will be subjected to environment tests including extreme hot and cold conditioning, vibration testing, rough road tests, and altitude cycling. ' The Air Force contract requires that Thiokol develop an improved GENIE propellant and propellant liner systems and still retain the ballistic characteristics of the rocket. Thiokol was successful in expanding the operating temperature range of the propellant. and extending . the storage life of the motor. The motors have , met Kit Force ballistic requirements in tests conducted to date. , GENIE rockets, carried under the wings of Air Defense Command aircraft, are designed to intercept and destroy attacking aircraft. The weapon must be flexible enough to withstand the extreme high temperatures of a desert airfield and the subzero weather encountered at high altitudes in air-to-a- ir (ill I NO. 1 THURDAY, OCT. 1, 1964 TREMONTON, UTAH, CARLOS CHRISTENSEN signed the agreement with the 1 state road commission. The commissioners aiso requesieu the county road crew be used during the winter months to put in the fill for the bridge. The commissioners are to set up a meeting with the town board of Bear River City, in - An "announcement from the State Department of Public Inthat they can be advised of the struction has declared Carlos plans and progress of the pro. Christensen, one of three FFA ject. members in Utah to receive the Bonding Deputies degree of American Farmer on 14 at the national October Sheriff Warren Hyde met with the commissioners to discuss , F.F.A. convention in Kansas ' plans of changing the bonding City, Mo. Carlos is the son of Mr. and of guards at Thiokol Chemical Wallace Christensen of v Mrs. , Corporation plants. Previously eight guards had ' Tremonton and the husband of -- ft. Jut t been i deputized, and since the former Mariana Handres .. ... , ... some of them had left the ; and operates a cattle ranch in Both these cars DEMOLISHED plant, Sheriff Hyde desired to ' the, Howell Valley. completely around and came to rest to Elvin Downs, According off the highway after it was struck change the bonding to W. G. were estimated at total loss by inof Agricultural securand head State Hayden, safety Supervisor broadOne by the sedan in the background. vestigating officer following a one Future Bob Keller. The and only Education, officer, ity woman was The station side collision Wednesday. hospitalized following." ac- , Farmer per 1000 members is commission the' approved the accident." wagon ; in the foreground was spun tion. eligible to receive the coveted farm award which is based on Scout Fund Drive farming scope and proficiency To publicise the fund drive practices and leadership in the ' in the Birdhaven District, perschool, state and community. mission was granted Cliff Gra- T 'Mr. Christensen is presently ham, chairman of the finance serving as president of the A two car collision one mile minor injuries. Her two chilinjuries to ; two other women committee to set up a scout Bear River Young Farmers North of the Crossroads on dren riding in the car were not Wednesday morning. camp on the front lawn of the group and while in school 191 U. S. Mrs. Alice Hess was' listed injured. hospitalized a Fieldcourt house all Saturday, served as a chapter officer and v According to Highway Patrol with the assurancedaythere at Valley in good condition ing woman and caused minor would in the, national poulcompeted - William Mrs. Sackett, St. hospital with head and arm be no damage to the grounds. try judging contest as a team had stopped at the stop juries. She was the passenger John ;,before r.ianber of the state -- winning ir. a car driven by her daughsign entering the high-- " r jUPy policy' poultry juaging team. He has not did Darrell Godfrey, way and apparently The board of county commister, Mrs. attended Utah State Univers sec .the Godfrey car as she sioners adopted a policy toward Fielding. She was treated for ity and in June 1963 graduated drove on to the road. The staknee and lip injuries and reemployees who are called to from the Graham School for leased from the hospital , Mrs. tion wagon driven by Mrs. John serve as jurors. If employees Cattlemen at Garrnett, Kansas. are called to jury duty, they Godfrey's four year old daughi was demolished as it was Carlos and his wife will Godter riding in the car was not struck broadside by the can accept the jury fee only, lnavA fii If arteoe fifv Kv aitfn frey car which was unable to injured. Oct 12 to attend the week-lon- g impdrt ;avoid collisioA suck pa wllia .rtoaational convention? of "the" Fu Vlmn Jj,,,P:pritage;;was;:also f,,spuc the station wagon'wi 9'ajntial vacaJjQO-Hpj- U areT mu i a tuuivig v miJiivai, tedu.and i, released , w w ti pieceiy arouna anaacross . ine $8.00- - per day, to . stop. 7 highway where it came ., , , r flOWell KanClier Earns National air-to-a- ir fighter-intercept- flight vr-.- -- v .:.-- ., F.F,A. Honors Father, Son Duo Brigham Asks Reduction in Pool Honored by Fees; Bear River School Accepted Insurance Co. relations and the quality of A letter was received from : Mayor Willis L. Hansen of . Brigham City, requesting the' the in time first the For rental fee of $4.00 per hour for history of the Farmers Insuruse of the Box Elder Junior ance Group Presidents Council, High swimming pool be reconn father-sobeen team has a elected to the Council, it is sidered. In making an appraisal ofN announced by E. G. Zwaschka. vice president in charge of costs of operation of the pool, the board had previously set sales. The men are Dale Garthe rental at $4.00 per hour, Brig-haof ner, district manager however Brigham City, wanted City, and his son, Dick to $2.00 per Garner, agent for the company the rate reduced hour, as was charged in prein Tremonton. Their wives also vious years. ' y will be guests at the At present there is an agreeconference in California. ment with the city that all Dale Garner joined the insurance organization in 1956 as school facilities may be used rent free during the summer an agent in Nampa, Idaho, and months, provided employees of in district the Brigham bought the school district are employCity in 1963. Dick Garner was ed by the city as supervisors, appointed to the agency force which has cost Brigham City and in 1961 in Nampa, Idaho, approximately $1500.00. transferred to his father's dis It was further agreed that trict in 1963. during. the.limt. JchooU was .in. selected .61 of Our fore- session that a ' rental of $2.00 m0st agents and district man hour for the pool, and $2.00 in per 7900 some from among agers 25 Western states to meet with ' for supervisors would be charged. However only $2.00 per hour to discuss officials company was all that was charged for ways of improving our policythe supervisor and ho charge holder service and planning the was made for use of the swim- 1965 sales program," said E. G. Zwaschka,,,, vice president, (in "As j, $arge of sales,, ?.GW board 'adopted the ' policy !hat 'rentalsi;on pools in the , district. Box. Elder and Bear River ? should beT$1.00 per hour, and the supervisor fee' would remain at $2.00 per hour. Accept Bear River Elementary School Miles O. Thompson, contractor of the Bear River City Fitting and showmanship results showed Richard Jensen Elementary School met with first in the sheep division and the board and presented his Mark Anderson second in the final billing on the project. He indicated that the full contract beef division. price would be $235,026, which Exhibits in crops, beef, sheep, swine and farm mechanics is $538.00 less than the original earned blue ribbons for the fol- bid. After reviewing the matter, exhibitors: youthful lowing board accepted the changes the Tolman, Erickson, Floyd Terry Fred Sayoma, Nolan Bourne, which had been made in the Billy Rhodes, Richard Jensen, project and authorized the acceptance of the school and inKenneth Eggli, Jed Lamb, Lesstructed the clerk to make ter Peterson, Mark Anderson, final settlement - with Mr. Gail Godfrey, Rex Godfrey, Steven Stokes, Quinten Hess, Thompson. The board also expressed apRoss Stokes, Ken Timothy, preciation for the fine working David Sato and Ron Henrie. . .... . Date Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Max. 76 80 84 68 71 77. 79 Min. tne caf. completely shatter- ji the glass. Trooper Sackett estimated the Godfrey car at nearly a complete loss. A citation for failure to yield right of way was issued to Mrs. John, according to Trooper Sackett. 44 40 41 34 40 45 38 A former Tremonton girl was killed instantly in a bus-ca- r collision Monday in Denver, Colorado, Shanna Hill, 30, died instantly when the car she was driving Utah Power & Light Plans Largest Development Program Formation of the largest regional electric power development program ever planned was announced recently by E. M. Naughton, president of Utah Power and Light Company. Members of the organization known as WEST, a contraction of Western Energy Supply and Associates, will 'Transmission spend $10 billion in the next 20 years, Mr. Naughton said, adding that the money will come from the investing public with no federal tax funds involved. The program, he explained, covers all or part of nine states, an area roughly equal to one--4 fifth of the continental United States. WEST is presently comowned posed of 10 investor Power Utah utilities, including and light, operating in California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Texas, New Mexico, Wyoming and Idaho. Mr. Naughton said the WEST program is an extension to a regional basis of the interconnecting and power pooling which UP&L has been carrying on with neighboring utilities for oveV SO years. It calls for long- ' ranee toint planning of some j M kilowatts d new gen-M- r I and an extra- capacity erating transmission system interconnecting member power suppliers. , high-volta- -- Co. actually is the Eastern hub of the integration of power facilities in all the Western States. UP&L's new high voltage' facility to the Arizona line will tie the Northwest and Southwest power pools together later this year into a single " . was reportedly struck broadside by a bus in Denver. Miss Hill made her home in Arvada, Colorado and was employed in the delivery business and was attending the University of Denver. She had lived in Colorado for the past 6Vfe years. Shanna Hill was born March 5, 1934 in Tremonton, the daughter of Seymour and Lydia Romer Hill. She was raised and educated in the Bear River Valley and was a graduate of Bear River High School and Seminary. She was an active member of the Tremonton 2nd Ward and served on the South Bear River Stake MIA Board of the LD,S. Church. She is survived by her parents, Tremonton and the following brothers and sisters; Mrs. John A. (Roma Jean) Bourne, Fielding, Mrs. Keith (Lola Dean) Coombs, Fielding; fktonn (Rpvprlv) F.stpn Plymouth; Blaine Hill and Barnard Hill, Trempntoh. Also is Mrs. Margret surviving Romer, Brigham City, grandmother of the victim. The Joint approach,, he said, Funeral services will be con- 'will make possible use of latest ducted in the Tremonton 2nd technological advances and lowO. Miles Ward by Bishop est cost fuel sources be they coal, oil, natural gas or the Thompson Saturday at .l p.m. Friends may call at Rogers atom and will save several Mortuary, Tremonton, Friday billion dollars in' construction from 7 till 9 p.m. and Saturday and operating costs over the next 20 years. from 11 a.m. till services. Mr. Naughton pointe i ' out Interment will be in the Rlverview Cemetery by. Rogers that because of Iti geographical location Utah Power and Light' .Mortuary. ''' &e kilowatt pool Mr. The WEST program, Naughton declared, will be equivalent to 18 Grand Coulee dams and will be eight times the size of Russia's largest development, the Bratsk project in Siberia. The impact of WEST on the , economic development of the region, he asserted, will be tremendous. For example, by 1971 the program of utilities belonging to WEST expects to be usfng the energy equivalent of over 10 million additional tons of coal a year; will create over 6.000 new jobs resulting in an annual increased payroll of. $40 million; and will generate additional local tax payments of $8 million. 36,000,000 , Court Case In a jury case held in the First District Court at Brigham City last week, John D. Newton, Tremonton won an appeal over the action of the justice court decision in Tremonton on June 22. Judge Lewis Jones was on the bench. Newton was found guilty on charges of disturbing the peace before Justice M. P. Christensen in June and immediately petioned the district court for appeal, which was heard Wednesday. SECOND WARD R. S. BAZAAR OCT. 9TH Plans for the Second Ward Relief Society Bazaar are near-in- g completion, with the date set for Oct. 9. Supper will be served at 6:00 p.m. with the bazaar starting at 7:30. - ii mil 9lHjmMa'. LEON JENSEN TT:. Y"lffit vFllICCr 11CVV aIpromiseJEdibhMhe', '"ij' , ! "-- . ir f "J" rvir theAtWbTininrOllve ": JJCPt. of Pree SHANNA HILL Shajina Hill Killed in Denver Wreck vSy fry : ; , J (j -- - six-da- Collision Wrecks Two Cars TeJ build- m v . workmanship on the new ing by the contractor. Sweep State Fair Awards most outstanding sheep exhibit by a chapter and a sweepstakes plaque for the highest scoring chapter based on the amount of prize money won by exhibitors were two of the awards won by Bear River High school F.F.A. members at the Utah State Fair. , At the conclusion of the week long fair, a tabulation of individual awards showed: Quin-te- n Hess with a grand champion rosette in the Hampshire sheep class, Richard Jensen won a similar award for the champion Hampshire grand ewe and Nolan Bourne showed the champion fat Iamb.' ' A trophy for the Tremonton! Cit this week an nounced the "selection oV1ob Jensen, 22, as patrolman for the Tremonton Police Department. Mf. Jensen replaces Howard Cornell who resigned to n accept a position with the Police Department. A native of Brigham City, Mr. Jensen is a graduate of Box Elder High School. He was ; selected by the city from 14' applicants for the position. Beginning his duties last . week, the addition of Mr. Jensen to the police force restores Tre- - ; monton's police to three full time officers providing 24 hour security protection for the , ' city. Mr. Jensen and his wife, the former Margie Selman of are making their home at 50 North 2nd East, Tremon-ton- . Dew-cyvill- e. . ; "Miss Congeniality9 at State Fair Airport Plan Suggests New Tremonton Strip Facilities SALT LAKE CITY, - A new national airport plan,' recommending improvements for the Tremonton airport, has been sent by the Federal Aviation Agency to Congress, Senator Frank E. Mou has been advised. Under the plan, Federal funds would be available to Tremonton to construct an apron at the airport, lighting, and other mis-- . cellaneous improvements. . Senator Moss explained that the FAA report was a blueprint only for recommended improvements, and that the Congress would have to appropriate the funds. "I have always supported funds for airport improvements and will continue to do so", be stated. "With heavier, faster planes we must continue to improve our airports to' assure the safety of M passengers. I have twice been the sponsor of bills to extend the H . airport act; and provide more funds for airport grants." ' . is based on overall personality. Miss Summers is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.; . Marion Summers, Tremonton and is a at freshman student State University. Utah Welcome Home Set For f. Returning Pair ! Thatcher-Penrose Ward will honor a returning missionary couple Sunday at 7:30 in the Ward Hall. Elder and Mrs. Joseph J. Nelson will be welcomed home cfter having recently returnel from their missionary activities in the Eastern Atlantic States Mission. ' a IAh 0 1 ! ; MamODIST WOMIN MIIT TUISDAY The Womens Society of Christian Service will hold a meeting at the Methodist Church at I p.m. on Oct 6th. Hostesses will be Mrs. Sam Woerner and Mrs. BiU McLeod. Mrs. Gerald Makepeace Is chairman for the program. TO , L;.: :; ;-- 5 - ! ill Li U (ithe,:rUtah State Fair are award of.,, many .:)lMe.vlribtbons.r nAt plqxs,;wWnner',Xey Erickson, Billy wpn by,Bcai;RiveroFJF.Aivexhibitors:l,B and Floyd Tolman. F.F..A, VV.)yAKp5h9v.ing,off sjl;J;eyt(.f.i,,at . Og-de- Kathy Summers Wins Title of Kathy Summers, the first girl named Miss Box Elder County Fair was named "Miss Congeniality" in competition for the Miss Utah State Fair title in Salt Lake City last week. Kathy entered the contest as Box Elder County's representative to compete with beauties from all the counties of the state for the state fair title. She was named the most popular girl in the contest by judges and other contestants. The title ; e , |