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Show THIS LflE ADS IN BUILD HELP TO ! local READ happenings IN A PAPER DEVOTED TO BRIGHAM CITYS WELFARE COMMODITY j0C Brigham City, Boa Elder County. Utah, Tuesday, February 22, 19387 South Farm Bureau Chinese To Hold Social PE INE-O'-TV- By LESLIE humpage Oddities i8 UrfiSOO Bibles p Bizze'l. president of Oklahoma, I over 300 of them. Doesnt Pay b Hoose of Ohio was U to 10 years in prison time Lay robbery, although cents from ned only 45 that n ire White Boy Comes Home The annual social of the South Box Elder Farm Bureau will be held Friday, March 4th, at Corinne. Officers and committees of the organization are busy with the details of the function and the social this year promises to be very successful, according to President H. E. Larsen. The dinner will be served from six to nine p. m., followed by a program from nine to ten p. m., after which dancing will be enjoyed. As usual those attending will be asked to bring silverware. 'k' t' " upstairs three-year-ol- d Arthur Kessel, of down-h- e .Y., hustled couldnt sleep oed was on fire. Didnt Change at ag a man dozing of an automobile, a oliceman ordered him in. The man blinked he had been waiting ht ANNOUNCED ,4 "Hi ini AGRICULTURAL Alexander Schreiner PLANNING TAYLOR NAMED MEET HELD traffic Fung Kuok oung, aged Chinese restaurateur, of New fork greets bis white foster son, Fung Kuok Young, Jr., (left) on the latters arrival from China, where he has spent the past 17 years. The boy was born Joseph Rinehart, son of an American soldier. He was signed over to the Chinese when a baby and sent to China, where he was educated and broaght up a Chinese. He speaks no English yet. MRS. WILLIAM MRS. SINE C. PULSIPHER DIED POULSON DIED SATURDAY ON SUNDAY Funeral Wednesday In Fourth Ward Chapel At offi-fcr- is Hy-ru- Camp-jdre- e; Le-R- p oy great-grandchil- d, Hun-sake- Last Rites for J. Anderson Are B Held On Sunday K Off Fielding Couple Celebrate Golden Wedding I LSs g, y W ca;rraf u years Fine Arts Exhibit At Capitol Mar. 5th Also Planned Wvrwl The Box Elder agricultural planning program presented Saturday at a convention held at the commercial club rooms in this city should prove very beneficial to farmers and stock-me- n light to of the county as well as to the The light was a red general public. Morning and afternoon sessions were held, both of rer an excavation. which were largely attended. The meetings were held under the direction of general chairman J. L. idly Dictator Weidmann. and jha Kemal, president Distinguished speakers were DirecJctator of Turkey, has ruled tor William Petersen of the Utah lather stern hand since he d State Agricultural College extension 2 p. m. lower in 1922, and his would hardly Indicate service. Dr. 0. J. Wheatley, exteniitiment in his nature, al- -i sion agricultural economist, and Rena Mrs. Wight Pulsipher, 63, regime has been marked B. Maycock, assistant director of wife Caroline William of Pulsipher, died on salutary reforms. home economics of the extension a. m. at the eleven at Saturday service.. M haa a kindly heart be-222 North, Second East home, family rough exterior is Reports of the various committees street, after an illness of several by his solicitude were given by the various chairmen, weeks duration. Welfare of children, six of e, fe has adopted five She was born October 20, 1S74, at girls dealing with activities, in gricul-turlivestock, poultry, the financial Logan, daughter of Joseph M. and loy status, the home and other topics. Mary Hurren Wight Her childhood was tending sheep in The keynote of the convention was days were spent in Logan and i when the dictator ran Planning for the Security of AgriSm and was struck by his and she came to Brigham City culture and the Home. Intelligent face, and also by when a young girl, where she has I that the lad appeared The reports given were replete spent her life. She married William irished. with vital Information gathered from Pulsipher on November 11, 1892, in the Logan temple. She was a memI took him in charge, sent extensive surveys and with recomI hospital to be cared for, mendations of ways and means that ber of the L. D. S. church and was iim, gave him his name and might be adopted for the betterment active in the Relief Society, serving for his education. of agricultural and home conditions. as a teacher. She is the mother of fourteen children. were as The follows: Reports A poor shepherd boy given may Mrs. V. vrise to high of Reeder home, Ella Brigin Surviving are her husband and the his position M, because a mighty dic-J- d ham City; water problems, irrigachildren: Mrs. May a Turk at that had tion, by J. L. Weidmann of Honey-vill- bell, Mrs. Stella Hawks, Mrs. Hazel culinary, Amos P. Hansen, North, Mrs. Elverta Goss, Mrs. Edith Brigham; livestock, dairying, J. A. Pathakis, Clifford, Joseph, Wayne and Marcus Pulsipher, all of Brigham Ward, North Willard; feeding, Brings Bunnell, Garland; poultry, Les- City; Alice Pulsipher and Mrs. Melba l&tion on how to begin lie Nelson, Brigham; hogs, Ed Ward, Carlson, both of Ogden; 43 grandand Brigham; crops, grain, H. E. Larsen, children, one often is a ruse by Corinne; sugar beets. Noble r, the following brothers and sisters: e avoid getting started. Corinne; canning crops, 0. A. Mrs. Ella W. Jeppson, Logan; Mrs. Iverson, Tremonton; range, John Lydia Bateman, West Jordan; Lewis of :uch our trying to Hadfield of Grouse Creek; crop rota- M. Wight and Mrs. Elmira Baird, hthin the law concerns tion, R. o. Richards of Garland, R. Salt Lake City, and James H. Wight, Py with keeping out F. D.; beautification of home and of Draper. public grounds, J. M. Caddie of Funeral services will be held on finance and credit, J. Leo Wednesday at two p. tn. in the Garland; iroiizing for the purpose Nelson, Brigham City; fruits, M. J. Fourth ward chapel, with Bishop A. independent is one of Thorne of Perry; noxious weeds, R. M. Hansen conducting. Interment pndest indications o f L. Rigby of Brigham; rodent and will be in the city cemetery under F cbaracter . Samuel grasshopper control, Israel Hunsak-e- r the direction of the Larkin and Felt of Tremonton; home gardens, funeral home. Mrs. Pearl Hunsaker of Honeyviile; has only two dis-Fyouth planning. Mrs. Nettie B. Lund, Brigham City. of woWcs, says a A general discussion of the topics J? ttle large gray tira-- I presented at the meeting was given L. and the coyote or at the afternoon sesston and InterestlVhat about the ing talks were made by the visiting n the speakers. Funeral services for L. J. Anderson A summary of the various reports of this city,' who died in Rochester, given at the meeting will be pubwere held on lished in subsequent Issues of The Minn., last Wednesday, two p .m. in the Third at Sunday Box Elder News. wtard chapel, with Bishop J. Frank Bowring presiding. L Beebe The attendance was large and the floral tributes beautiful. a farmer of To An organ prelude was given by ' a a 8 succeeded Mrs. Verna Johnson. Invocation was experiment-colore- d offered by President Hervin Bunder-so- n cotton. and a vocal duet was rendered Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Coombs, Bear Alice Nelson and Ruth Mrs. Ben by River valley pioneers, will celebrate Johnson f Valentine. tbelr golden wedding anniversary on The speakers were Bishop David February 23rd at their home la Field-laO. Anderson, John B. Mathias, S. where they started fifty years 8earch- itterg fothat-bago by filing on a homestead shortly Norman Lee, and Hyrum Wr. ValenNans he0cnoMTj after their marriage. tine of Salt Lake City. Resolutions of respect from the Box Elder fish They will hold a reception in the U. D. S. and game association were read by Fielding ward hall the day of their C. O. Christensen. r V. to meet their anniversary Snodgrass ntany friends. A vocal solo was rendered by W. Mr. and Mrs. R. I V ?V0Ur Coombs have seen Dredge and a vocal duet was the coming of by Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. given which retired changed the Bear irrigation, River valley from Felt. The benediction was pronounHutchin-rvisea dry Lins., d farming settlement to the ced by Alf L. Freeman. Li aintaincd a greatest Irrigated section In Utah. Interment was in the city cemetery They saw the establishment of Gar- - with the Larkin and Kelt funeral nPfaJ?round for uren land, Tremonton, Fielding and other borne iu town. charge. President Win. C. Itowus in the county. the grave. dedicated Horsley , SALT LAKE . Proceeds from the social will be turned over to the Corinne ward to assist in the erection of their new meeting house. Farm and Home Is Subject of Parley Here Saturday CONCERT AT V 'f he robbed. Disturbs Sleep for his after-h- e Noted Organist n: Funeral Services At Sixth Ward Chapel Wednesday Mrs. Sine Christensen Poulson, 80, a resident of Brigham City for about sixty-thryears, died Sunday at two a. m. at a local hospital. She susee tained a broken hip about five weeks ago in a fall on the steps of the Fifth ward chapel as she was entering to attend a funeral. Mrs. Poulson was born August 7, 1857, in Denmark, and came to Brigham City when she was 17 years of age with her parents, converts to the L. D. S. church. She married Hans Poulson of this city in 1874 in the old endowment house in Salt Lake City. He died a number of years ago. She was a member of the L. D. S. church and active in the Relief Society. Surviving are the following E. H. and Gene Poulson of Twin Falls. Idaho; Mart A. and Albert Poulson of Brigham City; Fon Poulson of Burley, Idaho; Lee Poul- SECRETARY Alexander Schreiner, University of California and Salt Lake tabernacle organist, and an augmented Utah State Sinfonietta of forty musicians will give a concert of organ and symphonic music at the Salt Lake tabernacle, Saturday, at eight fifteen p. m., March 5th. This will be the closing event in a days celebration on behalf of an appreciation of the arts, sponsored by the Utah State Institute of Fine Arts for the opening of its thirty-sixt- h annual exhibit at the State Capitol building. For the first time in history, Mr. Schreiner and the orchestra directed by Reginald Beales will play the massive Guilmant Concerto in D LAND BOARD Minor. Formal opening of the thirty-sixt- h annual exhibit will be made by Governor Henry H. Blood at two p. m. in the House of Representatives, State Capitol. At this time, the first annual art conference will be held to discuss government sponsorship of Box arts, a Utah State Art Center, and the building of a larger audience for H. Warren Taylor, former super- Utah art. Gail Martin, chairman of visor in the Box Elder school dis- the state institute, will preside. A trict, but more recently assistant number of distinguished speakers will state superintendent of public in- take part in the program. struction and a member of the state At five p. m., the third annual land board, has received the appoint- dinner will be held at the Capitol. ment of executive secretary of the After inspecting the pictures, memland board, by the unanimous choice bers will go in a body to attend the of the other four members of tabernacle organ and orchestral prothe board. gram. Utah art, civic and culture The selection of Mr. Taylor was groups are invited to send delegates made after nearly a score of appli- to the conference. cations had been submitted to the As added features, five of the board members, who in the state- best will be selected to be ment said the appointee had not sent paintings in June to the National Exhibit solicited the post, but that he had of American Art in New York, and accepted only after the board mem- a collection of federal art traveling bers had urged him. project paintings from Washington, For many years Mr. Taylor oper- D. C. will be hung in the Capitol ated a ranch in Rich county, later with the thirty-sixt- h annual exhibit . moving to Box Elder county where of Utah art he still owns a farm. While here he was associated with Charles H. Skidmore, superintendent of the Box Local Elder school district, as a supervisor On in the district. was Shortly after Mr. Skidmore J. W. Valentine, local agent of the elected state superintendent of public American Express company, and C. instruction five years ago, Mr. Tay- W. Merrell of the Merrill Lumber & lor was appointed assistant state Hardware company of Brigham City, superintendent, and moved with his left Saturday morning by motor car family to Salt Lake City, w'here he for a two weeks outing in California. has since resided. They expected to go by way of Southern Utah, and Phoenix,. Arizona. Was Former School Supervisor In Elder District Men Visiting the Coast Central School Students Broadcast son, Mrs. Myrtle Bellwood of Kimber, Idaho; Mrs. George Greenwell of Ogden, and Ira Poulson of Cincinnati, Ohio. Also two sisters, Mrs. Seventeen students of the Central Eliza Wright of Ogden, and Mrs. under the direction of Prinschool, Emma Thompson of Brigham City, Clifford Frye and their teacher and thirty grandchildren and forty cipal Salt Lake City visited Glen Marble, ren . on a sightseeing trip and Saturday Funeral services will he heid on to give a broadcast over KSL. Wednesday at one p. m. in the Sixth Upon reaching the city the group ward chapel under the direction of went to the state capitol building, Bishop Henry Holst. Interment will where they were shown through the be in the city cemetery, with the building, museum, and office rooms Larkin and Felt funeral home in by a guide. They then visited the charge. temple grounds and the museum there and were entertained by those who were in charge. At three thirty p. m-- , the students, who compose the Central School Harmonica Band, gave the following anThomas B. Mathias of this city broadcast over KSL, which was medA Kenneth nounced Frye: his Principal son, word by that received Mathias, who is employed by the ley, Drink To Me Only With Thine and America the Beautiful Western States Utility company, at Eyes; Bird. to sustained the Mocking had Listen Nevada, Winnemucca, The broadcast was given by remote an injury to his knee. of after which the group visited control, Mathias is superintendent Mr. the Winnemucca water works system KSL and were shown through the received and according to the report was studio. They were warmly on at KSL and each student was given knees on his time a for working the system and when he arose from a box of candy. the stooping position was unable to straighten his leg. He went to Reno to consult specialists there and was Over great-grandchi- KSL ld B. R. H. S. Will Give Opera The music department of the Bear River high school will present the annual opera, "In the Garden of the Shah," on Wednesday and Thursday evenings. The main cast, supervised by Geot 0. Nye, includes Cleo Nye, Melvin. Manning, Stanley Castleton, Amy Chris-tophers- June Frazer, Grant Parry, Hal Neilson and Grant Hawkins. Former Brigham Man Injured instructed to return to his home and have the local doctors put the leg in a cast. It is hoped that he will soou recover from the Injury. NATIONAL SAFETY COyNCI Plans Complete For Military Ball Tuesday Invitations have been issued and all details completed for the Military Will Be Ball to be given Tuesday night at the Armory by the officers and men of Battery A, 222nd F. A. The armory has been decorated in and a patriotic colors for the ball, A is anticipated. attendance Prince The large play, A three-afuncsocial There Was" will be presented Tues- feature of this prominent march. The o clock tion will be the grand day evening at seven thirty function comes as a fitting climax hall. amusement in the Fifth ward Americanism WeekTho play will be presented by the to and wards of Second. Fifth and Sixth Mr. and Mrs. Scott Horsley cordial invitation is extended to on Sunday this city were in Logan T. thm general public to attend, attendance at the funeral of in be will cents 10 A small fee of G. Lowe, Mrs. Horsleys grandfather. charged. Play Presented Tuesday Evening ct - i BY A Glorious View Just a couple of pals who started out to enjoy the beauties and ended up old girls lap. Some right in the see the forest cant simply gents others cant while for the trees see the road for the sceneiy. This motorist had eyes for everyahead. He thing but the highway In fact slghts-saw many pretty were simhe and his companion the sceneiy. ply carried away by car And they Jnst escaped being too. undertaker, rled away by the to yonr driving. Pay attention of Mother Nature |