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Show Wildemess Picture to Be Shown at Davis High in Salt Lake swim station KDYL-TGreat Salt City on Friday, May 8th at 0:45 Lake. A Utah vacation is different. Nowhere else in the nation can you p.m. An additional lift for Utah's find a greater variety of things to tourist business will be given by see and things to do in Utah, said the Fram Filter Corporation, spon- Mr. Campbell. sors of Vacationland America The choice' of John Cameron who have prepared a travel book to star in the nationwide Swayze y outlining a complete travel program about Utah .adds tour through this area. to the entertainment value of the More than l.ooo.ono of these free r, program. As NBCs top TV travel books will distributed 'by Mr. Swayze is seen on tele12o,wo Fram dealers in the U.S. vision each week by more people and Canada, giving further im- than any other person in the world. petus to Utahs recreation and Vacationland America also vacation business which brings millions of dollars into the state each murks the TV debut of the Swayze family Tuffie, his wife; John Jr.j year. 111 and Suzanne, Hi. Television A formal presenatjon of a spec ial plaque to Governor J. Bracken Lee will be made by Fram, saluting Utah as Vacationland America State of the Week, prior to the TV broadcast. In a special statement issued in Salt Lake" City before receiving the engraved plaque, Governor Lee said that' "Vacationland America travel series was a commendable effort to acquaint the American traveling public jyith.the counties!., magnificent vacation opportunities spokesmen note that the show is it's the unique in one respect first family TV show devoted entirely to travel. the travel Helping show are hundreds of service- - staand automobile tions, garages dealers in Utah. Designated as "Vacationland America are Headquarters, the supplied with the travel booklets which will be given away free to motorists. V al day-to-da- news-Miste- in our, ItfurfiV I .III A (Treat caribou killed in the vastneas of the arctic. When Jim Bond comes to Kaysville, at the Davis County High School. Auditorium, Friday, May 15, 8 p.m., he will show his famous caribou pictures that won several high national awards including that of the Boone & Crockett Club of New York. Many fishing and other animals pictures will be shown on the same program. Ir. Stock Show To be Held Youth. The premium list has been completed and is available from William D. Backman, secretary-treasure- r, Chamber of Commerce, Box 120, Salt Lake City 10, Utah. Mr. Backman indicated that all entry blanks must be in his office not later than Monday, May 25, 1053. livestock Although present prices are lower than the general average of last year, our youthful livestock growers can expect well above the current market price, said James A. Hooper, president of the Fat Stock Show. The show always arouses interest among livestock buyers, commer-cia- l business houses and civic organizations who are anxious to purchase quality livestock. The famed Junior Fat Stock Show formally opens Tuesday, June 2, 5:30 p.m. at the Stock Show Arena. Livestock will foe received until 5:00 p. m. Tuesday evening, at 8:00 p.m., Newspaper Agency Corporation will sponsor a star studded vaudeville show, featuring top comedy, singing, musical and dancing acts. Wednesday, June 3, will be devoted to a uniform, showmanship and fitting contest and grading of cattle, hogs and lambs. An exhibitors banquet at the Newhouse Hotel, with entertainment furnished by the Salt Lake Kiwanis Club, will climax Wednesdays activities. Thursady, June 4, will bring financial rewards to the youthful livestock growers. Auctions begin at 0:.(o a.m., featuring two veteran auctioneers for the event. The well known acutioneers, Col. Charles E. Adams, Los Angeles and Col. W. H. Adams, Jr., Salt Lake City, will be on hand to add touches of humor and to keep prices moving upward. Merrill Parkin, show manager, North Salt Lake, indicated that there has been evidences of great interest in this years Junior Fat Stock Show. "The general public has learned to recognize and demand quality meat, said Mr. Parkin. A good crowd will be present at the show to purchase high quality meat livestock at premium prices. June 3 and 4 SALT LAKE CITY Dates for the seventeenth annual Intermountain Junior Fat Stock Show have been set for June 5 and 4 at the North Salt Lake Stock Yards. Boys and girls from the intermountain region will be competing for thousands of dollars in premiums, although most emphasis will be Grand Champion placed upon Nowt Choose pro-miu- from the the one perma-nen- t (hat's hat foe your type of hair. RtgsUr 1 Told for normal hair Sopor Toni for hair e T0ff fiOOtlO Toni for tktimtfTmi hair rtfilh, fmtt 150 flm LOTION lo SHAMPOO tomorrow your hair will be ranahine bright tonight Us jn,' uut 6C,' ,03 TV Show Salutes Utah as Ideal Vacation Area PROVIDENCE, R. I. A salute to Utah as one of Americas outstanding vacation areas will be seen by millions of television viewers NBC-Tnetover a coast-tocoawork during the week of May 3rd to May Kth. Utah will be one of the features in the Southwest Tour when John Cameron Swayze and his family travel these areas in the new television series, Vacationland America. A total of 4!l TV stations across the nation and in Canada, one of televisions largest hookups, will televise the vacation tour of the Swayzes promoting vacation travel to this state. Televising the show in Utah, is st Layton, Utah 6 De Luxe Sedan O Spotlight O Heater O Radio O Overdrive Motor Needs Work MAKE OFFER OR WILL TRADE FOR ANYTHING OF EQUAL Phone taluei lU-Kays- ville tarvel; and maps outlining the tour and indicating some of the attractions that have become vacation favorites in this area of America. The Fram Corporation, worlds largest manufacturer of automotive filters, has designed the show to promote travel throughout America in the family automobile. I When visitors cross boundary lines into Utah, . they enter the heart of Scenic America with a matchless variety of things to see, said the Governor in his statement. t When Brigham Young looked across the parched Salt Lake Val-- , ley in 1S47, his vision must have carried in its sweep all the valleys and mountains that his people later were to colonize and possess. ' "Nature sets the scene in Utah and men have built the trails to a thousand, matchless playgrounds. A warm welcome will always be your greeting in Utah, concluded the Governors statement. The presentation of the engraved plaque to Governor Lee and the citizens of Utah was made in the Governor's Office in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, April 2X. The variety of Utahs tourist travel was emphasized by John C. Campbell, Director of Road and Tourist Information Division of the State Road Commission. Recreation in Utah is not confined to any one season. In winter, skiers gather from all parts of the country to enjoy the powder snow of the states various ski centers. A unique summer experience is a j A year or so ago Jim Bond, Yukon . WE'LL STAND ON OUR HEAD TO PLEASE YOU WITH LOW PRICED A-- l USED CARS 1947 Plymouth Tudor 1947 Olds. 6 Fordor t 15 books contain photos and , The In 1!52, 2!5,13 pedestrians were descriptions of scenic and well known places of interest in Utah, injured in U. S. traffic accidents. Saturday is the most' dangerous including Salt Lake, Bryce Canyon and Zion National Park; tips on day of the week in traffic. ad- venturer and big game hunter, flew into the rugged McKenzie Mountain country of the Upper Yukon. He was accompanied by ... 1041 PACKARD tt Thurs., May 7, 1953 Page THIS YUKON GRIZZY HAD THE WRONG IDEA A drunk stepped into an open elevator shaft and fell three ato-rie-s. He picked himself op, brushed off his clothes and indigI said up! nantly shouted: ROWLEY DRUG V state. ; Kaysville, Davis Connty, Utah . Radio, Heater, Hydro. 1948 Stude Champion Radio, Heater, Ovrdr 1949 Ford V8 Cus. Tudor Radio, Heater Ford V8 Sta. Wagon Rad., Heater, Overdr. 1950 Willys Station Wagon Overhead Valve Eng. 1950 Stude Champion Rad., Heater, Overdr. 1949 1950 Mercury Tudor Radio, Heater, Overdr. Mercury Fordor Rad., Heater., Overdr 1951 Ford V8 Cus. Tudor Radio, Heater, Overdr. 1951 Lincoln Fordor Radio, Heater, Hydra. 1952 Ford V8 Cus. Tudor Rad. Heater, Many Other Accessories, 1951 Low Mileage THESE GUARANTEED CARS MUST GO! TRADE NOW! BISHOPS USED CAR LOT! 360 NORTH MAIN LAYTON, UTAH an old Indian whose name was Billy Smith. Billy could neither read nor write but he could speak about 100 words in English, enough to tell Jim, "Now we go to bed and have long sleep. But that night there was no sleep, for just as soon as old Billy Smith and Jim Bond went to bed their pack dogs began to bark. Both Bond and the Indian would gel up and look out of the tent into the darkness. They could see nothing. But still the dogs barked. Each time they got up and stirred around the dogs would quit bark- ing and there wasn't a sound, Then the two men would crawl bark into their warm down sleeping bags and try to go to sleep. About the time they were ready to doze off again the dogs would bark. The dogs barked no less than a clozen times that night and each time the tired men searched the darkness with a small flashlight but saw nothing. Just at daylight the following morning the dogs let out another round of barking and this time more excitedly than ever. This time Jim Bond got up and saw, not ten feet from the .corner of the tent, a brown grizzly bear. The bear was nearing the dogs, watching the largest, and didnt see Bond. Bond shot the bear, which didnt go far after he was hit. Said Jim Bond: "When I look at th above picture I cannot help but get excited, for it reminds me of one of the bes hunting trips ever taken by man. On that trip Billy Smith and 1 flew from Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, with two good bush pilots to a destination in the vast McKenzie Mountain Range. We had provisions along for 80 or 90 days. The pilots landed on a small lake and we unloaded-thtwo planes. Our instructions were to pick us up when they thought freeie-u- p was imminent, some 80 or 90 days later. After that the old Indian and I were on our own. We realized we were 200 or more miles from the closest help and if anything happened to either of us Jwe would just have to stick it out. We traveled many miles in the McKenzie Mountains with our pack dogs and saw much game:. Big, old ... hite moun- bull moose, stately caribou, tain sheep and grizzly bears that had never before seen man. It was one of the finest game countries I have ever seen. On that trip Jim Bond took his most famous colored wildlife motion picture, YUKON WILDERNESS WONDER-LAND- . , On May 15, at 8 p.m.. Bond will show the Wonderland, in the Davis County High In addition, he will School auditorium. show a picture he took last summer on Kodiak Island titled "THOSE KODIAK BEAR, and a superp fishing picture, RAINBOWS. "ALASKAS LEAPING This two-hoprogram is for the Entire family and one(you wont want to miss. Jim Bond spends four months iu the north country each summer. He is one of the best rifle shots in the country. His "dead-ey- e aim hs brought him many fine trophies at 300, 400 and 500 yards, lie is one of the few men on the continent to bag four species of mountain sheep Stone, Fannin, Dali and Bighorn. The noted big game hunter has also obtained Woodland, Mountain and Barren Ground Caribou, six moose with antler spreads of more than 65 inches and one with a spread of 72 inches; he has killed many grizzly bears, Alaskan brown bears, wolves, goats, deer, elk, as well as other game. Some of Bonds colored wildlife motion pictures won highest awards from the Boone & Crockett Club of New York, and last year Bond was chosen a judge in the famous Boone & Crockett Club's annual big game trophy competition, the first man from west of the Mississippi ever to have been chosen. ur Bond is the author of mapy magazine ' articles and three books. His first book, From Out Of The Yukon, was the bestselling outdoor book in America for two years and received highest praise from the New York Times. His second book, Americas Number One Trophy, has sold more than 19,000 copies. Bonds third book, The Rifleman in Alaska, is just off the press. motion Tickets for this feature picture program are available at stores. Jim Bond will appear in person and narrate his films. The program is for TWO NIGHTS ONLY. Better get your tickets early. ADMISSION IS ONLY 90c for ADULTS and 65c for CHILDREN, taxes included. all-col- or |