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Show ! . J ,-... "' ' ; p - . :. i "'.' , r.-t. , $ UyS : '?j i ' ' - s ' ' ; s-i '.'v j - . J : -A , . ' , j J i . " - , A1 5 ' 4 - v . 'j ' ? - V" L . ' ' v ' AND FREE CHEESE, TOO Utah's Dairy Princess and her attendants visited Beaver Tuesday, on a tour advertising the Utah Dairy Industry. Left to right, Attendant Merris Hendricks, Beaver Press Publisher Steve Williams, Dairy Princess Shirley Chugg, Beaver Dairy Committeeman M. J. Warr, and Attendant Connie Bergon. Utah cheese was also presented to Mayor S. Taylor Farnsworth, who met the charming visitors visit-ors later. (Photo by Grant Esplin) DAIRY PRINCESS AND ATTENDANTS VISIT BEAVER ON STATE-WIDE TOUR utan s uairy Frmcess, accom- panied by her attendants and state dairy association officials, visited Beaver County Tuesday, presented Beaver's Mayor S. Taylor Farnsworth, Publisher Steve Williams, and Dairy Committeeman Com-mitteeman M. J. Warr ' with packages of Utah cheese, then spent an hour or two visiting local stores which distribute i dairy products and attending a meeting of the Beaver County , Dairy Association. I V : . local stop was when Miss Chugg snagged a new pair of nylons while descending a ladder after posing for a picture with a Beaver merchant. , . Miss Chugg and her attendants, attend-ants, Miss Merris Hendricks and Miss Connie Bergon, are accompanied accom-panied on their tour by Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Parrish of the ' Cache Valley Dairy Associa-j Associa-j tion; Prof. A. J. Morris of the USAC; Cal Nelson of Nelson-ilicks, Nelson-ilicks, and Welby Young, the American Dairy Association president of Utah. They are on a tour of the state to advertise the Utah cheese industry, and to date have passed out 250 1-pound packages of choice cheeses as they visited the municipalities on their route. Before returning return-ing to Salt Lake they will have visited 37 towns in 24 counties and given away more than 1000 pounds of Utari Swiss, Monterrey Monter-rey jack and eheddar cheese. In between visiting stores, posing for pictures with city officials and merchants, and distributing dis-tributing literature to merchants, merch-ants, publishers, mayors and the general public, they found time in Beaver to stop for a chat with little children on Main Street, to pet a cute stray puppy, and drink a few gallons of Beaver Canyon water at the Main Street drinking fountain. And being feminine, they naturally natur-ally took time out for window shopping and Browsing around a few of the stores; also for "loading up" with a few pounds of toa ted pine nuts. Their visit aren't all pleasure, though; upon arrival in Beaver from Fillmore about 10 o'clock Tuesday morning they were tired, thirsty, and sleepy. "Riding so much makes us so sleepy we can hardly wake up when we approach the cities." said Miss Shirley Chugg, Utah . Dairy Princess. But they were wide awake and smiling prettily, pret-tily, with fresh lipstick properly in place, when they alighted from their caravan car to pose 'for pictures with M. J. Warr, Beaver County representative !o the state dairy association, I and the only semblance of a I frown they exhibited during the |