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Show Semi-Weekl- THE BOX ELDER NEWS, Publishing Company Published Every Tuesday and Friday A as Adrienne TALCUM Managing Editor B. C. WIXOM Subscription Rates: One Year. Six Months Three Months Tf'y' it: Au; irTfc. ly Kember National Editorial , Record Breaking Hop Russian Flyers Feted After The Box Elder News Semi-Week- y $2.00 1.00 50 Large Size Delightful odor. Fine talcum. Excellent for men or women. Entered at the Postofflce at Brighan City, as Second Class Matter liSSilliillt! -.- .ur.'Hlu.. tail Sixty Years of Age IODIZED SALVE St'r'T Sixty years ago yesterday, Full Size for August 19, 1877, the Box Elder Apply this salve to keep stake was organized by the late iodine on cut or wound. President Brigham Young. The in held were a bowery meetings Chrome Blade on the Smith Square on West Forest street and it was here Electrex the Great Colonizer made his FAN last public address. With The organization of the stake Cord $145 to a cow pasture near San was commemorized yesterday flight of 6,262 miles from Moscow their Keep cool with this quiet, feat Photograph shows, remarkable trouble-fre-e fan Slif three Soviet fliers were feted and congratulated on their lUioll frodaet by the dedication of a splendid Lanhn The fliers, and Sergei Yumachev Navtgator Andrei leftTVigh Pilot Michael Gromov, monument in honor of Brigham expedition of three She wer?ta the a r 62 hours and 17 minutes, exceeded the record of the Sov.et trans-pola- r Young, an account of which is weeks previous by nearly 1,000 miles. EDDY DRUG given in another column. The Box Elder stake has ever in swallow tail coats; music was Russell Bros. Store men with furnished by several bands of various gone forward, good MISSIONARY at the helm, and its growth civic and military organizations. Circus Is Coming ft- cars vf &SAVEwUTSArETYKI At the end of the parade, the has been vigorous and substanDRUGSTORE1 to went schools of the To Tremonton grade pupils tial. From one small village LETTER FROM was the lower church for a program and the stake has grown and has stader, schools advance the of Edwards, those Justus upper speeches; press (V been divided and today has thirwent up to the church by the castle agent for the Russell Bios. Circus, ;n days on course teen wards, with that many EUROPE was in Brigham City for their program. During the Tuesday intro27 units numbers colorful a News heard production The here the of and while the gave latter, congregation splendid ward chapels, some of to e -- prevli new talent of a galaxy discourses from the pastor and the pleasant call. them costing upwards of $80,-00- ducing st ten the screen in scintillating songs, Max Wheelwright school superintendent, and was fav- Since playing Bricham City last The membership of the danee3 and novelty acts. total Visitor: Toor from a girls ored by this circus has spent two and of drink stake has likewise grown and The story reveals the questionable Discusses Swiss bring yoj chorus of 200 voices. Beautiful in- spring, fIce weeks in Idaho, one week Convict: Lord, r d6lIven flourished as has the growth operations of a producer of stage deed was the Ave Maria with sohi two weeks in Nevada, California, get nothin in here '.In the School System and prosperity of the entire plays. Romantic complications upset prano solo by Miss Caselmann and two weeks in models Oregon, and are now TispiV'- record-breakin- g non-sto- p A Co-Pil- ot J! ri:. 0. part-son- one-ha- lf - i community. ' the plans of the producer, who flees just in time to save a show backed with the last $15,000 of a pretty show actress. The stellar headliners of the show find strong support from a wealth of new talent including Lorraine Krueger, petite dancer and singer; Ann Miller, clever tap dancer; the Four Playboys, rhythm group; Lowe, Hite and Stanley, novelty dancers; Eddie Rio & Bros., eccentric dancers; Loria Bros., Mexican entertainers, and many others. Editor, News: I thought you might like to know something about the Swiss school algreat commonwealth that was system, because it is ours. laid by Brigham Young and his like not quite though followers the Utah Pioneers. I have been especially interested the past month in visiting the schools The late President Lorenzo of Neuchatel, giving my first attenwras who sent in here Snow, tion to the teaching of music. early days by Brigham Young The first glance at public education to colonize this community, was here points out the lack of cothe first president of the. stake. education among the children until Others who succeeded him were they have finished their schooling as his son, Oliver G. Snow, Rudger required by law (boys 14 years, Costs girls 16 years ) $2,200,000 Clawson, Charles Kelly, Oleen Grading The school year starts and ends N. Stohl, S. Norman Lee and NEW YORK. Such was the condiin April with six weeks for summer tion of the site of the New York Hervin Bunderson. Worlds Fair of 1939 when its engi- vacation and two weeks for Christneers took It in hand, that the task mas holidays. All examinations come of leveling the ground entailed the the last month of the school year. moving of 6,800,000 cubic yards of (What a relief for the other eleven ashes and earth at a cost of over months.) A board of education supervises $2,200,000. the activity of all the city schools New Faces of 1937 But this great amount of work two superintendents, Mr. A novel back stage plot, charged was accomplished in 190 days by through of the grade Perret, superintendent with action and highly humorous shifts of workmen employed twenty-fou- r and Mr. Grosjean,- superinschools, hours a day. situations, forms the background for tendent of the upper schools (junior RKO Radios musical and senior high schools, professional New Faces of 1937, the A freight train 200 miles long comedy, etc.) first of a series of yearly extrava- would be required to transport the schools, Until about a year and a half ago, ganzas, coining to the Capitol Theatre material required in building of the Mr. Louis Haemmerli was supervisor next Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. 1939 Golden Gate Exposition. of music in the grade schools, but Joe Penner, Milton Berle, Parkyakar-ku- s, as an economy measure (they still Harriet Hilliard, William Brady, Excited Young Father: Quick! feel the depression over here), he Jerome Cowan and Thelma Leeds Tell me! Is it a boy? was pensioned and his post obliterare featured. Nurse: "Well, the one in the ated. However, he still gives freely Embellishing the story are five middle is. of his time and teaches four or five school classes a week free of charge. He also undertook the task of educating the regular class teachers as to the rudiments of music and how to teach them. His ideal is to simplify music by games and mechanical devices and make it so interesting that the pupils will develop themselves; that they will want to create and give expression to new musical ideas. At tne age of 12 or 13 years the boys and girls enter the secondary schools (similar to our junior high), but there they are still farther apart; they are in entirely different schools. In the line of music the girls make much better progress than the boys. So Mr. Jean Marc Bonhote (supervisor of music in secondary schools) very cordially invited me to visit one of his girls classes. Music is a language, a universal language. And although Mr. Bonhote did not make this comparison, I am taking the liberty to do so. In learning a foreign language, we learn to read, to write, and to speak. One of the best ways to learn to write Is by dictation, it had never occurred to me that such principles might aptly be applied to learning or teaching music, but they can. Mr Bonhote did it. first he took up grammar and LOW FARES LIKE SHORTEST ROUTE TO CHICAGO read in THESE MAKE THE (they call it solfege in AND EAST TRIP COST LESS music), and I wondered if you or I THAN GAS AND OIL could read a fait trips daily. All -- paved scenic melody we didnt know, FOR YOUR CAR and sing it without highway. accompaniment as those girls did. Then Stop over wherever you wiifi, at no he gave them a Los Angeles....? 9.15 dictation, played a extra fare. simple melody on the piano Denver. (slowly, 8.45 Extra savings and long return limits of course) and the pupils wrote it Omaha. 15.45 on round-tri- p down in their notebooks. Then tickets. they Kansas City ... 17.40 sang some of their favorite Sr?artv My-ridin- g buses with reclinsongs and 21.95 practiced the ones for the Youth Chicago ing chairs. which was held last Xevr York 31.50 travel information, r rjday. folder., itineraries National Amateur at The Youth Festival marked the Golf Tournament, close of school for summer vacation. BUS Portland, August iit the school children from the 23rd -- 29th $22.90 , Howard Hotel 15 South third grade up participated. At nine Main ip, j o clock inthe tou n d PHONE 175 morning there was a parade. And oh! It was a pretty Bight! Those hundreds of children all dressed up, the girls carrying bouquets of flowers, were led by members of the board of education This all bears testimony of the splendid foundation of a The Bees, accompanimenta three-pasong, and a "Choral by the boys chorus were also inspiring. During the afternoon and evening the school children were guests of the board of education out at the and did they public playgrounds, have fun! Races, contests, free rides organ - rt in Washington. The circus will leave Washington, August 26th, and return Teacher: eastward through Oregon, making Teacher: Wh flrBt three stops in Idaho, and then show rup dl(i; deliver! in Tremonton, Utah, on Wednesday, wasn t ; ,'iouin t darB, rev September 1st. They will move on d In on through Brigham City September hgu 2nd for American Fork, and conti Classified Ad nue on to the cotton country the CASH PAID For ;de,lTeri on the d and other gouth-pla14, the various towns cows and horsei . concessions made them a happy as 18194 Reverse chattel they go. 49-crowd. Thus the summer semester or I AM AGAIN LICTi execu came to a gay climax, and the Four thousand trees, 70,000 shrubs real estate bustaeslays of holidays were well begun. be will and consideration' sales 700,000 your flowering plants MAX WHEELWRIGHT. to sell or buy d this planted on Treasure Island in San Norman Lee. NEWS ADS BRING RESULTS Francisco Bay for the 1939 Fair. f dellv toj merry-go-roun- ying 3 ftnounci fall. : Capitol Theatre Sunday-Monday-Tuesd- ay - hilarious 4tui When youve got this fleet-heele- And so d, Buick man-siz- e t to put a lift into the rest of the summer, why try to squeeze out the last long mile on a car that's already ripe for retirement? Its trade-i- n value, you know, isnt getting any greater. And new car prices, as you can well understand, certainly cant be expected to go down! Meantime heres this d straight-eigh- valvc-in-hea- Buick. Selling at the low-eprices in all its history. Actually delivering, in some models, for less straight-eigh- t st than certain sixes. Jam-pack- ed with stirring and solid worth that others to match it for value-- no they do next! Go see for yourself! Turn y!; loose in a Buick of today-l- et it its wares in its own entrancing C and ask yourself if you can ever if., expect to get so very much I! mighty little money! You bet its a buy! It has be! months. Its a good buy for rightnc, if only as a hedge against the h)u,y Gall us any time for a ' well prove our words with some test-ri&- L V festival, jComplt. DEPOT tr N. V. WATKINS MOTOR COMP North Main Street -- - Brigham, Utah - Telephone p : j. - , |