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Show OFFICIAL newspaper op emery county uaiMw pg 32 NUMBER CASTLE Listed On er Of Centennial c Festival Chorus Voices IS toat at year Die wea-- S her. factors seem attpm?bute t0 some non- at school this presented of the Student of this district non Se added attraction of local and Centen guest soloists, the Festival nroLate in the t be an unparalleled Festival to be held 19. at cultural offering ening, Apnl The musical will be given with and Sunday night, stle Dale, reports out charges for admission as of a sponsored event by the Emunter, supervisor ery County Centennial the of section Those who will sin in the y represented inWilchorus, according to a list ut- with Annont Lake City, as the tered during the week by Mrs tor, and with the Hunter, are: fffSon XSS mes ont dtt Spntl AAt sc Ruth Nelson Iva Killpack Ruth Litster Virginia Eden Jean Swasey Joan Moffitt Maud Snow Cecelia Jewkes 09 irtOB on tty sling 1 on Christensen len mson Nelson raford Jerry Tuttle Gloria Jean Whetzel Young .til an BOX CASH CLEAN SKIVER was Station mdard ait Norman Behling Lee A'dridge Level yn Killpack I Height Killpack Kirk Snow N. Wakefield Scott Grange I'an Kinder Clyde Johnson Perry Wakefield Fred Reid Frank Moffitt O. Harvey Allred Ernest Larson I.S0S Legion Auxiliary Organized At Huntington night s yet unapprehended be three men came closing time, hung a few minutes and Huntington im Thursday produced automa-demand- American Legion Auxiliary was organized and officers installed Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. Ethel Anderson. A hot dinner was served at 7:30 to 23 members and visitors. Mrs. Ethel Tasker Greenriver; Mrs. Bliss Huboard and Mary Leipha, of Price, the district officers present, installed Rene auxGrange, president of the Ethel Anderson, list vice iliary; jiJ 2nd president; Helen Howard,Couch, ed the con- tout $45 in the reg-- r cutting the tele-e- s and tying Harold back room, the des-cf- t. By the time Mr. got loose and walk-- o a phone, they were ie that they couldnt anything further of ENN1AL events -- Dehr Ruth n. at - Blossom Time Pleasant But Not Goodbye ta. -- Sacred Cantata at St. George !Men and Attendants "15 "The Spirit of ! Grounds, Pageant, -- Temple George. St. . Minneapolis Sym-Ogde- Kali. 18 Katherine Cor-l- V Shirley Margaret secretary-treasure- r; Car arms; of sergeant Young, Flora historian; rie Whimpey, inJensen, chaplain. Others were itiated or taking other parts Nielson, Ruth Anderson, Verna Klecker Dora Truman, Mae Flora Manchester, Dora AnderGuilson, Marie Grange, DaisyFrancis a ders cm, Famie Baxter, Katie and Killpack Eve Baxter, Barrets of Street, at Kings Jhe Sait Lake City, ApfU 18, Dear Eld Angei at Time", at street at Ruth 'rtSn,und Romberg Coliseum, Grounds, "Blossom Utah Salt Time at j'Dear J"Angel Street at from 3:10 to 3.30 of th teacher Clay Petersen, the programdirect class, will aMblt ebiPrli'Art Exhibit County Schools S ss P- - soils, Mi - cw (Continued broooe ls ana z freezers, oh3tbe farm 1116 Ut?r company s? The large tent electrical farm ns. W$" the officers of the gU(n were reeiected as JjGimes foi- Smith, president; vice-preside- nt; poultry ebPand tes of fairs (Ooat. p. 6, eol. 3.) tlie Hunter Drug at Castle Dale. She has been very active in music and drama in her ward and school. She likes all kinds of sports and takes an active part in them. Accompanying the queen at the coronation ceremony will be her two attendants. One attendant is Miss Elaine Jensen of Castle Dale, daughter of Neva and the late Ernest Jensen, also selected because of her ancestry. Her grandfather, John Y. Jeruen, pioneer of Emery county was 8 years old when he left Denmark, crossing the North Sea. Chris Johnson of Orangeville, sailed In the same ooat. The night before they landed they all rushed to deck to see land and one young man Jumped In the ocean and was never found. Mr. Jensens first suit In U.ah consisted of a homemade straw hat, troupers made frun a white duck wagon cover and a calico shirt with a clover leaf de;lgn In It, much like curtain material. Miss Jensen was born June 29, 1927 and at present time, she is completing her second" ear at the B. Y. U. at Provo. leadership and nunwngton Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kinder announce the marriage of their daughter, Ramona, to Mr. Wil- liam Pierce of Price, Satur day, March 29, at Los Vegas Ramona Is attending North Em ery and will continue her studies here for graduation this year. Mr. Pierce is a marine war veteran. Death Claims James I?. Foote cil. y: Sunday, Everyone invited, Sunday, 12:15 P. m. at Em ery: Special meeting for Stake Missionaries. Sunday, 4:15 p. m. at Emery: Meeting for presidents of Seventies. -- Mrs. Flora Jensen, Reporter HUNTINGTON James Frank land! Foote, 88, died at his home here Sunday at 8 p.m. of causes incident to age. He was born June 22, 1859 in Mt. Pleasant, son of Marla Ivle and Warren Foote. He had resided here for the past month. The past 23 years he had lived In Gunnison, as a farmer and pros Mrs EMERY WOMAN DIES AT PRICE HOSPITAL Mrs Edna Keele, Reporter Eliza Christiansen passed to the beyond at the Price hospital Monday at 11 oclock p.m. After an illness of about four weeks. She had three small children. Funeral arrangements will be made under the direction of the Witbeck Funeral Home of Castle Dale. STAGE SET FOR LIVESTOCK SHOW AT FERRON Final plans for the 9th Annual Southeastern Utah Junior Livestock Show to be held on April 25 and 26 at Ferron, have been made, according to officials of the Show. Under the guidance cf Seely Petersen, Ferron, President, and Robert Dahle, Ferron, Manager classes for the following livepec tor. Survivors include his widow, stock have been scheduled; Mrs. Lena Sanders Foote; four Dairy cattle, swine, sheep, daughters, Mrs. Francis Jones, horses, fat beef, and breeding Huntington; Mrs. Alma Case, beef. FFA and Young Only Murray; Mrs. Oliver Bowden, Roosevelt; Mrs. Peter Jensen, Farmer members will be eligible Manti; four sons, Charles F. to show in the fat classes. Ammon Foote, Young fanners will not be alFoote, Price; Warren Foote, Salt Lake City; lowed to compete for Grand Oscar Foote, Castle Gate; a Champion Fat Calf. The breeding beef will insister, Throda De Haven, Duchesne; a brother, Charles IL. clude clashes in the Junior Foote, Salt Lake City; a half Division and also open class. brother, George Foote, Ferron; The swine classes are open to and 18 grandchildren. only the Junior Division, while Funeral and burial services the cattle and sheep are open will be under the direction of to everyone. A new feature this year will the Wallace Mortuary in Price. They will be held Thursday be classes for grade heifers, at 2:00 p. m. in the Hunting- - both singles and pens of three, I ton ward chapel. (Cont. p. 8, Col 4.) 4-- H, Mother Administers First Aid; Conover Saves Life Of Her Drowning Child Aids New Auxiliary atucrayers7 portable Dale gave nSng water tt.a. which Priesthood welfare meetings are scheduled isr Orangeville Saturday nite, April 12. The following schedule of meetings was released by the Stake Presidency conjointly with the announcement of the conference dates: Saturday, 6:30 p. m. at Orangeville: Welfare meeting for Stake and ward welfare ..committees and Melchlzedek priest hood presidencies. Saturday, 8:00 p. m. at Orleader Priesthood angeville: ship meeting for all presidencies' of Melchlzedek priesthood quorums, all group leaders all bishoprics, all Aaronlc priesthood leaders, ah male members of Stake auxiliaries, the Patriarch, and the High Coun- with Andy Moore and Delbert Tidwell on the advisory board. lunch, the visitors were home. exhlblt After some of the most intershown Operation ,iebeSn th? latter part of esting livestock in the valley: Prothe steers that Wilson is fattening, the and Company duce scheduled in an two steers that are being fed as summer deaiers Ished 'by local coolers, Emery Stake quarterly con-- i ference will be held in anery on Sunday, April 13, it was an- nounced during the current week toy the Stake Presidency. S. Dilworth Young, of the First Quorum of Seventies, and Ezra C. Knowlton of the General Welfare Committee will be present to preside over and ad- uress the sessions. J. tfrogj; the first Mormons to enter the Great Salt Lake Valley. Miss Snow attended a year at the Brigham Young University and at present is employed at Quarterly Conference Set For Emery, April 13 L. D. S. 9:00 a. m. at Em-frPriesthood meeting for all held their business meeting in members of the Melchizedek and the city hall. Besides the re- Aaronic priesthoods. Sunday, 9:00 a. m. at Emgular badness they had the fol daughters lowing speakers: Eton E. Ken ery: Mothers and and ney manager of the North Salt meeting, for all women Lake stock yards, who spoke for girls 12 and over, on the desirability of marketSunday, 10:30 a. m. and 2:00of instead m.: at Emery: General seslivestock direct, p. ing srs.f&'i sstMr 1' I Hr8, PSurnsP feed PER YEAR many sports. The second Queen attendant, lis LoLs Wilson ofMr.Huntand ington, daughter of Mrs. Pierce Wilson, traces her ancestry to William S. Bir-ges- s, who cros'ed the plains with the Brigham Young company and came to Winter Quarower r.ght, Emery County ters In the fall of 1847. William Cen.ennlal Attandanta. Burgess served as errand boy Quean and for two years, living In Joseph Smiths family. His father was principal carpenter In erecting the Kirtland temple. William owned the square used by his father in laying out the roof- -. Ing timbers of the temple. Miss Wilson, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Saints, also a gradmarriage OF HUNTINGTON uate ofDayNorth Emery High GIRL IS ANNOUNCED school, takes delight In music, swimming, dancing, horseback Flora Jensen, reaerter. riding and hiking. In making announcement of the conference, the Stake presthat the program of Hereford idency expressed gratitude for improvement will be continued the large attendance at past as it conferences and expressed the by Sears Roebuck & Co. ad- hope that Stake membership has been the most effective vertising they have ever done. would fill to capacity the halls The program will be chang- at the forthcoming gatherings. ed slightly, instead of putting out herd bulls as in the past, M the comoany will buy and main Mrs. of registered cattle omiinment for tain a herd bulls. Darrell Stok- for raising and many otPfrbedmi stock laPddition there county fairs, PreTp,ahta kss milk w ir Utah Power & Exhibit Of Electric Appha meSLe7reDar Mill Juanita Snow, top, Mist Lola Wilton, lower left, and Miaa Elaine I(Tre?ia.&i.e 15, an interesting ns; Cattle any DOLLARS Miss Jensen Is very actle 'n music and takes part in' Ber-iSi0through truckers; V. A. of j commissioner state the del A anu, their geson, on brand who pressed spoke livestock, and they therein, stressing support of investigation. jt? inspection, the laws by the individual own ers; Marden Broadbent, who is suffer- - connected with the U.S.A.C. tvifl car of high and1 spoke on improvement of ?y Assure You could even modern range cattle. He stated HUNTINGTON 6th GRADE TO APPEAR ON RADIO exhibit Goodbye ,ou srs-- Robbins. til othy Kimball Keddington of Salt Lake and Gae Petersen oi Brigham City. Tickets wail be aHocated to each town in the county. They will be offered for sale by the .entennlal committee In each town. Price will be $1.20. Sale of tickets will begin on Saturday, April 12, at 2:CO p. m.j Cowboy Day n. Minneapolis Sym- -; Salt Lake City, at tory of Mitzi, will be played by Dor- Greenriver Rollicks On Yearly vice-preside- nt; statewide grandmother, bom wdiile cro's-- I Ing the plains. Iter Grandfather Fairbanks built the first store in Payson In 1847 and also the first home there, which still stands on Main Street. Her paternal lineage goe' back to Erast us Snow, one of all-ti- Mor-tense- Boyd O' son Alonzo Olson ielson lie Ison Snow e; at the following stations: CasPrevaricator tle Dale and Orangeville tickSheriff Bryant Nelson ets at Hunter Drug. Co.; Fer-- j near the Monday night last, ron tickets at Ferron Drug Co.; hour of 7:50, received an urtickets at Eldred Emery gent telephone call from one Huntington-Clevelan- d Mr. X of Huntington, who retickets at Mortensen Drug Co. in that in Huntington. ported that parties uown had shot at him, and who No phone calls or reservations requested immediate interven- will be acknowledged in the tion of the peace officers and sale of the tickets. First come, the arrest of his assailants. first served, will be the policy. Forthwith Sheriff Nelson departed northward, stopping at DRIVERS EXAMINATION the County Seat to get Deputy for drivers liExamination Sneriif Russell Snow to accom- censes will be conducted in pany him, and then racing on. Ferron on April 29 and in Cas Ceming to the canal at the tie Dale April 30, reports Fred south of Huntington townsite, W. Reid, County Clerk. The the officers were hailed by a State officials will be present man standing in the road, and in each town between the hours stopping, they discovered it was of 10:00 a. m. and 4:00 p. m. Mr X. Nearby stood his car, a Model A Ford, with a man in CARD of TIIANKS it who was apparently asleep. wish to express our sinWe ofX was a little frantic, the cere and thanks appreciation ficers report. He said that he to all the friends and neigh-cor- s man and his companion (the who assisted in so many in the Model A) had been shot ways during the illness and at several times and that he, death of our wife and mother the in legs. hit offX, had been fash- and for the many floral He asked the officers to and expressions of symerings bandages ion something into pathy. and wrap his wounds, which Jonn E. Soderquist and rath-e- r be said had been bleeding Family. profusely. the man, the to help Moving wet officers found his trousers aromatic-a- h! and sticky-a- nd Yes, auite pleasantly aromatic. over indeed' They bent cloe sucked the wounded man and and wetness the of samples and their lungs into stickiness Greenriver before long, they knew. rootin tootin CowBlood? If it were blood, then at the boyAnother went into history last Mr X was also bleeding Day of It was bemouth, for the smellBlood? did Friday, April 4. Festivities too. when 10 in the morning at there, gan strong it were blood, then the members of the Greenriver brother1 can buy blood Association Growers Thomas Wakefield Ison reim- Centennial Emery Countys celebration will get under way April 19, when the County Centennial Queen will be crowned In elaborate ceremonies during the course of a dance in the Huntington school auditorium. The Queen, MBs Juanita Sncw of Cartle Dale, daughter of Mr and Mrs Russel Snow, represented Emery County In he contest for selection of a State Centennial queen. Miss Snow was born In Castle Dale. January 31. 1927, and Is descended from a long line of Utah pioneers. Amongst these is Harriet Douglas, a t Blossom Time", a light opera wiuch has Been a perennial favorite since 1921, will be presented at Ferron, April 25, at 8.00 p. m. by the Arts Division cf the Utah Centennial Commission, with Dr. Lor-i- n F. Wneelwright as proauction manager. Tire popular musical is being sponsored by the Emery County Centennial Com mlttee. 'Bloisom Time Is tire unfor- -, gettabie story of the love and life of Franz tl Schubert, great Austrian composer. It juts had a practically continuous run in the United States smee it was first produced 25 years ago. It is considered one of the maste.piccJs i.i this form of art and is being produced specially for Utahs hundredth birthday anniversary celebration. The entire cast of 25 plus a large chorus is made up of Utah residents. There are two complete casts. The leadin role of iSchubert will be played alternately by Walter Richardson of Benjamin, Utah, and vV. Sterling Bush of. Salt Lake Reported by Jim Peacock Stewart Snow Roger Curtis Coy Jewkes Arris Young Lean Young Isos unde-sireabl- BlossomTinie U. R. A. Hairy Mortenson G.en Huntington Jack Bell offltt nelson t TWO 1947 11, Coronation Ceremony At Huntington To Open County Centennial Season Music Lovers Await Opera Investigate Shootiii"O Clay Peterson Duane Trowbridge Donald Cox Reed Moffitt Lynn Collard Lund Leonard Archie B'ackham Wayne Johnson Eldred Mortenson theirs-persistan- Sberifl, Aide Betty Joan Allred Jr. be attendance oncuces to other types of APRIL The feminine lead, the role Gordon Ihjlis wkes that should UTAH, FRIDAY, City. Norma Sitterud Ora Larson Addle Richards Faun MeCandless Emma Green r do Neilson .orthy Brown Lucy Jones Vai consequently tbe benefits from 3- Rose Olson Maudie Moffitt Este la Geary Janice lloElprang Ramona Staker Glyda Rowley Faye Powell R none Littlefield Gaynel! Kll pack Elizabeth Cox Shiela Jewkes Aneta Humphrey Shirley Davi3 asmussen ellahan d,erive bursement to the local dis-tnIs curtailed because these funds are distributed on an average daily attendance basis. Every day that high school student Is out of school our district loses one dollar, and every day a student of the elementary school is out means a loss of seventy cents. As a taxpayer of this district can afford to keep your children out of school? Jensen Leonard Murell Nelson Clane Hunter Verda Olson Geraldine llortensen Florine Peacock Loye Thompson Phyllis Stanton Pauline Snow Anna Larson ;en of in their the States 2nd SOPRANOS sen stay out delinquency, which is Lois Wilson Marie Grange Jean who non- - Christy Humphrey Vyone Reid I.ud .e 'ons ntdesi,reable from sev view; namely, SK,5s ,and -- Ellen Russell Reva Funk Verna Vee Maxfield rg rd S. lase. interest 1st SOPRANOS m P'l Attendance DALE, In a state convention held February 14 and 15 in the New House hotel, the wives of the members of the Utah Cattle and Horse Growers Association met and formed an auxiliary organization called the Utah Cow Belles. They elected the (By Special Correspndent) Huntington The life of Denny Meeks, son of Mr and Mrs Bill Meeks of Huntington, was saved last week by his mothers timely administering of three-year-o- ld into the river, Caron, the oldest of the trio, ran to her house for help. The parents reached the river shortly and plunged into:the water. In the meantime Dude Sherman, a boy who was plowing nearby, had heard the shouting and he rushed to the scene and1 rescued the child from the artificial respiration. The child had fallen in the river while playing on Its bank water. with two other children, Caron following officers; Eight years ago Dennys faPresident, Mrs. L. C. Mont- and Louie Muming. The childthe was rescued from ther Smith Mrs. ren been in Heber had the City; gomery, playing of yard of the Muming residence same river at the time of a Greenriver, and Mrs. Jesse Conover of Fer- only a few minutes before the flood, said to be the largest In thirty-fiv- e ron as secretary and treasur-(Oon- t. accident occurred. years. Pete Muming When the Meeks child fell was his rescuer. p. 8, Col. 5) vice-presid- ri 1 |