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Show k . - TV - i Tremonton, Utah Volume 53 Number 42 tl': July 5, 1974 Deveyville's Eve I Knievel Li If T .. 1 " - - rn ? u CKASH SITF Airport Manager Wayne La r sen and his ere begin disassembly of the single --engine craft in which two men escaped serious injury Tuesday in Pocatello Valley. ..is ASCS Plane Crash Tour Planned On Hillside Monday Two men escaped seriaus Injury Tuesday morning when their single engine plane smashed up on a hillside east of Pocatello Valley. Jon Z. Thompson, 37, of Deweyville pilot of the craftand a passenger Dale Allen 39, of Tremonton were both listed in satisfactory condition Tuesday evening in the Valley hospital with lacerations and bruises. Sheriffs Deputy Robert Limb said the pair left the Tremonton airport about 9:15 Tuesday to look for stray sheep in the hills east of Pocatello Valley. Don Allen, a brother, told sheriffs deputies he alerted Airport Manager Wayne about 10:30 a.m. Larsen when the two failed to return. Larsen and Allen flew to a pot about three miles east of the Pocatello Valley road and about five miles north of the freeway where they spotted one of the men outside the downed aircraft. The flyers had apparently flown up a valley and then left too little room to make their turn. The aircraft came to rest about 100 yards from the crest of the hilltop on its belly. Don Allen and Wayne Larel sen Jr. used a four-whe- drive vehicle to reach Thomson who had walked down the mountain side into a wheat field about a half mile from the plane. The second man was located farther up the hillside. Sheriffs deputies escourted the two injured men to the Valley hospital. Deputy officials crash The llox Elder County AS- CS Conservation tour will be held July 8 according to Tremopton-base- d officials. will tour The visit projects of interest in the northern portion ofthe county beginning at 9 a.m. at the ASCS office, 55 South First East, Tremonton. Lunch will be furnished for a nominal fee at Earley Park in Beaver Dam. Ladies are invited to attend. will be Transportation furnished. j National Farm Organization (NFO) members Elder County will hold a grain meeting Friday, July 5, In the Tremonton Civic Center starting at 8:30 p.m. On hand to speak will be Mark Thompson, grain representative from the Provo Marketing area along with the assistant grain representative from the Great Falls area office. All NFO grain producers are urged to attend. For RocQeo A new Golden Spike Rodeo queen will be crowned Saturday, July 6, at the County Fairgrounds. The annual competition is lated to begin at 2 p.m. a bevy of young women xhibtt their horse sense and their horses in hopes of re Igning over the three -- day Golden Spike rodeo held ln conjunction with the annual u Box Elder ir.yi l , County ,.,,,1 HI Fair, Au- - iTBtffle Each contestant will provide her own mount and will be judged on horse manship (70 percenti appearance (20 percent), and personality(10 percentX Last year's queen. Miss Karln All red, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob A 11 red of Bountiful will be on hand to crown the new queen. Judges will also name two attendants. The nubile is Invited to i i !. ' it Persons Number Responding Answer 117 Inside Ciod Inside l air Inside Vi 41 lir i (,d )c i ei:t percent (jercent Outside ivrccii! 43 irrcent Outside Outside lVvir 21 ienc .! 'M f,- -7 I , ; Miss Rudd YA ix-- p Preliminary pageant are Jo-le- ne Rudd, Susan Rindlisbacher, Lynda Poulsen, and Teresa Scott The pageant is being sponsored by the Civic and Home Arts Club of Garland and is the opening attraction of the annual celebration of Wheat and Beet Days August 1, 1974, at 7:30 p.m. ln the Bear River high school auditorium. The reigning Miss Wheat and Beet Days, Dar-rale-ne Lewis will crown the winner. Jolene is the daughter of w.i'w Mr. 14 Mm N'"v Garland. She has been active In school affairs while attending Bear River high school where she Is a senior. She was junior class secretary, member of Searchlight staff, an officer in Future secretary of choir and is in the top 20 percent of her class. She is active in church affairs also. She will present a piano solo for her talent number. Susan is a graduate of Bear River high school where she was secretary of the student body, she has been a member of the A Cappella -- 1v r Choir fisr Home-make- rs, 23 9 30 35 40 15 20 25 ence of customers. Asked to rate merchandise select!.. 31 percent said it was good, 42 err o:t said fair and 24 percent said poor. Of those responding. 239 were heads of households and 79 w.-rsingle. siu-foand 11 204 were or females percent were males with 89 percent Caucasian. Fifty percent of the respondents listed their occupation as agriculture while pi Industry and government each employed about 13 percent. Eleven percent had local employment. Findings of the survey were presented to local merchants at a merchant's committee meeting Tuesday. e 30 35 40 50 ur 65 7C 90 5 72 ront on Ci ty 276 I r i . 1 1 i i Miss Scott Miss Poulsen Club, Future Homemakers, on the Bearfax staff and she attended Girl's State. She was chosen Outstanding Citizen by the DAR. She will present a piano solo and she is sponsored by Westergard Garage. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rindlisbacher of Deweyville. Teresa is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Scott of Fielding. She is being sponsored by Continental Telephone Company of Utah. Teresa has been a popular student while attending Bear River high school where she graduated. She was senior uate, officer of the Future Homemakers, and is an attendant to the Dairy lrin-ces- s. She will present a reading as her talent numVcr. Lynda is being sponsored by Northern Furniture. She rUl play trumpet solo for her talent number. She is a sophomore at Utah State I where she has participated ln USU Symphonic Band, orchestra, Jazz and Chorale, she the received outstanding freshman musician award and Is also recipient of a four year superior student i 22 10 46 23 26 8 9 9 5 7 5 14 23 16 5 10 16 5 6 5 3 15 8 20 25 30 35 40 50 60 12 18 20 17 21 72 26 30 16 65 75 90 12 46 10 46 8 6 6 9 16 10 15 20 25 30 35 10 Pageant Draws pour More Contestants The latest beauties to enthe local Miss America 20 25 15 Local ter 20 9 5 i J, Miss Rindlisbacher 15 10 i But IT Mce:U s sonnel are slow to acknowledge lit c, I 12 50 18' courteous. . -- t 5 10 45 Store personnel general h ratings overall for res'.siei i 'eni s,tid courteousness. Only were sonnel vii unresponsive l lh ttd-- v i"1 s' Meet Set ram r Wednesday. h in the What percent of your shopping do you do in these areas? ty-o- Ti in Box cois . '. Limb said FFA investigated the Golden Spike Queen U-- -- ; ' pers head out of umn. n.hur of those responding listed roct rii v ne percent listed sports euii'me-.- : second item most sought mt .f i while 37 percent listed clothiii.!'. items listed Included medical . .iv percent): cars (22 percent! an.! percent ). Asked to evaluate the inside and outsit appearance of local businesses tue produced the follow i:v iv -- I NFO Grain hnU answer to Evil veins as though she uecided to u. .':U-v- , Kim Knudsen's cycle, head of steam and if it hadn't been ,i :s; iin g chicken coop si just might have I'u: iump. siffi-iviwas a few scratches and 1. ii: st.-i Competitive pricing and improved merchandise selection are by far the two most sought after improvements wanted In the Tremonton business district and conversely the reason many Rear River Valley shoppers opt to travel to Ogden, Logan or Brigham City to do their shopping. Eighty-tw- o percent of 318 people questioned in a recent survey said they felt competitive pricing was one of two needed improvements to better the shopping in the Tremonton area. Seventy-thr- ee percent listed improved merchandise selection. The survey was conducted by the Distributive Education class at Bear River high school in May 1974 at the request of the Bear River Valley Chamber of Commerce. StiRlents under the direction of teacher Keith Fillmore distributed 425 questionnaires throughout Bear River Valley, one to every third home. Completed forms were returned by 318 of those surveyed. Third on the list of improvements named by local shoppers was improved store personnel. Thirty-nin- e (39) percent of those responding made that response. Other improvemtns cited m necessarv rcent); included: Improved parking (21 a J.C. Etenney Store (is percent); msn's store (18 percent); swimming pool (15 percent): and boys and girl's store (14 percent). Response to the question: "What percent of your shopping do you do in these areas?" indicated that 87 percent of those surveyed do "some" shopping in Tremonton; 37 percent do some shopping in Ogden, 58 percent do some shopping in Logan and 22 percent do some shopping in Brigham. The adjacent chart shows a breakdown of the question: "What percent of your shopping do you do in these areas?" Groceries were listed as the "main items of interest" for which local shop on its '..iri QCQColtMifeciG1 Pair Survive Artene Fryer By ) "READ CHART Read left to right For example on first line, 12 persons among the 117 persons who said they shop in Ogden do 5 of their shopping there. Twenty of the 117 persons do 10 of their shopping there and to forth. Only One Week Left Days contest ln He another week left to submit your Kids, only poster depicting Tremonton's upcoming Krazy Days sale 0. IYizes for the six best posters include .July three passes to the NuVu Theatre and three airplane rides. Posters should be submitted to any Tremonton businessman by July 6. Hems to be featured on the poster should include: scramble, 3 p.m., July 2D. Kids will scramble inches. A two for 50 trout ranging in length from pound trout will carry the top prize. l ree show at the NuVu on Saturday, 'July 20, at 1 p.m. Barbequed beef dinner Saturday evening featuring 800 pounds of beef. Place: South Tremont street Begins at 6 p.m. Square dancing Saturday evening at Phil and Lowell's 19-2- six-mon- th one-ho- ur 9-- 11 service. parking lot Saturday Western band in Safeway's . ' v. '$ ci 'VV |