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Show CLIFFORD WEATHER E. YOUNG WILL BE ck VISITING Clear Fri-,nEldtr County: Saturday, slowly rising 10 to ratures. Low Friday 35 to afternoon, iijh Friday d Wj box elder elites For I. $ i lewd- -' fournci Volume 53, Number 21 v l re-t- ,icent survey of erosion practices put into opera )1 cooperating farmers in-,- , and j Ply-1- , established a system of cropping on a field fuas subject to extremely Winter wheat erosion. alternate were after with a large duck-foo- l ator. The neighboring ;e field above, which ordi-- j contributed a large vol-surplus water, was chis-nthe contour in the late As a result of these treat- the surface soil did not solid enough to prevent netration of rainwater that n February 22, and the ad-a- l water from melting The highway borrow-pi- t this field will not require st n mg out e amount of silt chiseling of stubble on tadcliffe Henrie ranch in "reek prevented runoff. The marks were not frozen and the melting snow 1 Peaches Fans Precinct 1 Republican Mass Meeting Tuesday ps-sa- Oppose Games voting district mass meetPrecinct 1 in Brigham for ing been called for Tueshas City Fourth Ward To On Sat. Night l. d o club-room- diver-ditche- secretary-treasur-tecinc- n an-S- a M- d s ancient i. S times, prospective required to go to and X abstain from certain oa fod at 'the time of formal, the committee Ives' nounred. ; confinements. SSy" In day evening, March 16, at 8 oclock, in the city hall, L. D. Wilde, precinct chairman, announced today. All qualified electors of the Republican party residing in the voting district are eligible to parftfipfite, Wilde said. Purpose of the meeting will be to elect 11 delegates to the conRepublican organization vention March 24, and to elect a voting district chairman, vice chairman, secretary and three The district committeemen. , meeting also will make recom-mendations as to delegates to at the iepresent ,he district state convention, and will choose two members for the county Republican central committee, Wilde added. n e gold-bearin- " Death Takes Holiday" March 24 Through 27 Death Takes a Holiday will be the next drama at Utah State Agricultural college. It will be presented in the main auditorium March 24 to 27, under the direction of Clayton Cheney, All-Star- s y graduate assistant in speech. This is the fifth play to be presented at Utah State this son under the auspices of the Utah State theater, according toDr chaster j. Myers, speech deof partment head. Final drama the season will be Shakespeares Junius Caesar, with Dr. Myers and Prof. Harold Hansen as sea-fig- e Bureau Ladies TaMeet The U. S. Bureau of Mines announces that Utahs total 1947 produedon of copper, lead, zinc, gold and silver amounts to $156,321,000. Arizona passed Utahs production by several million dollars. However, most of Arizona's mineral production was cPI,er' Today, Utah ranks first in the production of gold, second in copper, lead and silver, and fifth in the production of zinc. In the west, Utah ranks first in iron production, with 2,741,-00- Provi-denc- 0 2S ' U"' tons produced, well over the total western, output, and also of all the produces coal mined in the west In adexcludition, Utah has three a sive mineral products with growing economic importance gil sonite. one-fourt- h on - f' 'i A1 Second To Arizona Cor-rad- a'So'hev' coun7rr" s - Utah Ranks First In Gold Productioon; Copper Is Ral-liso- StatPS- Extra! Season's First (Confirmed) Fish Story The meeting of the South Box Elder Farm Bureau ladies will be held at the Corinne city hall Thursday, March 18. There will be a work meeting conducted by Mrs. Rhea Hearst of the Utah extension service at 9 oclock in the morning for the ladies with refinishing. Following will be a lecture and explanation concerniing wood finishing. Tryouts for the Shakespeare 4 p. m play will be held at said. Dr. 12, 11, Myers 10, March reBecause of the large cast quired. there is a splendid opfor all portunity in this play students who wish to take part, h(, emphasized. Rewritten for the American Death stage bv Walter Ferris, .Takes a Holiday has been callIt ed a play for everybody. is a brilliant and fascinating comedy which has established I itself as one of the most popu-lar and successful plays of the amateur stage. Performing in the U. S. A C. production are: Carma Johnson, Logan, Cora; Vasco Call. Brigham City. Duke Lambert; Jean Bagley, Salt Lake BriCity, Alda; Renae Reeder, Stephanie; gham Citv. Duchess ,H,h. Dorothy Gillis, Blackfo Charles Princess of San Luca, Cesa- Amusson, Logan, Baron JuncCache Barnes, rca; Josep tion, Rhoda Fenton; Marvin NaLogan, Eric Fenton; than Smith, Wendell, Nev., Mary Hockman, Grazia; Douglas Mann, Earl Brigram City, Prince Sirki; Major City, Brigham Faulkner, Whit read. : Benefit Tilt all-sta- U.S.A.C. To Present n Hance, Play Ag Stars A The areas be-- s marks were i solid. Below the chiseled an a flatter slope where the Firm opposition to Saturday will be lodged tad not been chiseled, all night games rater had to runoff due to bv the Brigham City Peaches rozen condition of the sur-roidelegation at this (Friday) evenings Industrial league meeting ,zn Sail Lake City. ither outstanding1 example Otherwise the proposed schedound on the Homer Kotter ule for the coming season, which in Howell valley. A stub-lelinvolves scheduling a game located below a fall somewhere in the league for evd field was cultivated with day of the week, and radio cultivator in ery' ge duck-foo- t broadcasts of all the games, will ate fall. The runoff from be approved. reeded area was absorbed e stubble field. That was canen le are only a few exam-o- f sentiment voiced at ofgood conservation work meeting of Peaches baseball ef-tby farmers in their ficers, representatives of civic improve the soil condi- - clubs and the city council, and Peaches fans Wednesday eveobservations point to the ning in the Commercial ss of contour strip crop-ibroadconjunction with stub-nulcAll agreed that full fall tillage, sweet casts of Industrial league games r s green manure and the season would be when properly Jo- throughout a good thing for the league and lt is apparent when its teams. They were so stronguning these farms that a in favor of accepting the of(nation of all these erosion ly fer of a Sait Lake station to ol practices will be neces-fo- r conduct the broadcasts, in fact, the complete control of that they even favored accepting Saturday night home games in order to secure the broadcast ond Precinct Demos arrangement. repreHowever, sentatives who will attend the ne County Delegates meeting tonight were urged to against the Saturday night ver Loveland, Mrs. Jane nossible lfd and .Mrs. Maria Fawson schedule if I ihcre elected delegates to the the proposal, Under peratic county convention at would be no regular "baseball ; " cond precinct meeting held night for each town in the learotate nesday evening at the Seegue, but games might night to ded meeting house. season any the through wgp Tiller was appointed of the week. A schedule for the l0rary chairman and con- entire season, to be published 'd the Love-wa- s and well in advance of season openmeeting, elected precinct chair-Mrs- . ing, would list the dates for all Linford chairlady and games. Fawson t The only grounds for objection committeemen elect was ere Fay to Til-aSaturday night games Sholty, George They draw, wouldn't Mrs. Lewis Jones. that they financially. . and Mrs. Lloyd Davis, Mr. arent sound Mrs. George Tiller, Arthur 3rd- Mr. and Mrs. Leo Cot Ward Gold And Mrs, Lewis Jones, Alfred First 30 wn and Fay Sholty were Green Ball March d as additional delegates Gold Democratic county con-10The First ward Mutual's herd be will ball with John Larsen as and Green March 30. in nate. Tuesday evening. home. b( in the War Memorial it was 9 oclock, m,)n Eastern Star b) yesic-rrtnCollins. Lester Mrs. ding Dinner-Danc- e Payne and Mutual presidents. L'prinne Eastern Star, attendants, The queen and her s holding a din-,,nbail, wtlt dance at the Corlnne to be selected at the coronation the in Jiail Saturday evening. be featured an ng of dinner will begin ceremonies. Dan Ross th mu oo o clock and continue un-i- orchestra will furn.sh fe(L according to sic for dancing. d ii , Fyan, chairman of the cJmmittee. Admission eTtldl will be by ticket Dance lickt-t- s s ers of have been sold by Final Moderine the lodge, and a Be Next Saturday erow1 of 250 persons Will 'Jwured will hold The Moderine club season a dancing dinnfr there its J3Si ui , John Reeve And Le-ro- n the chisel rs Were Au- Fort ing authorities and principal speakers at the quarter); conference of North Box Elder stake Saturday evening and Sunday, President John P. Lillywhtte announced today. The opening session will be for all stake and ward welfare workers, Saturday evening in the Third ward chapel at 6:30 oclock. A general stake priesthood leadership meeting will be held in the Third ward chapel at 8 oclock Saturday night. Sunday there will be two general sessions at 10 oclock and 2 oclock, in the stake tabernacle, and an evening meeting at 7 o'clock at the tabernacle, under the direction of the stake Mutual boards. Special music for the conference will be furnished by the Orpheus chorus, under the direction of Norman V. Watkins, at the 10 oclock session Sunday morning, and by the Wellsvilie choir at the afternoon general session. A fine program has been arranged for the evening session. President Llllywhite said. A cordial invitation has been extended to all South Box Elder stake members to attend any or all sessions of the conference, President Llllywhite said, and all North stake members are expected to attend." e jted. isa ('alls e this year because reduced at Essay Winners P hone 1862 De-Lo- n lur strip the ti, Bud Grover Are s the stubble strips immediately Banquet e con-- i pro-wa- gust the-yea- e that soil erosion it runoff water was where a complete followed. In ; of 194", Jesse Lamb, For Down In School o weath-ndition- in home. and FFA married Henry Lee Steed, June IS, 1884 in the Logan temple. The annual F. F. A. banquet She had two children, a son, will be held at the Box Elder Let'lyde, and a daughter, Lysle, r death. both preceding her in high school cafeteria again 19. This Her husband died 36 years ago. on March Friday, School finals in the national maible tournament will be held banquet is given by the hoys She is survived by ten grandnext week in most Box Elder in the F. F. A. department of children and 19 great D the classes, and counts schools, eoncunent with B, C, and simi'ar school tournevs thiough-oq- t parents of the boys are invited the United States, under the guests. sponsorship of the Veterans of John Reeves will act as masmar- ter of ceremonies with the folFoteign Wars nation-widble tournament piogram. lowing ofticers and committees RobIn the Brigham City area, making all arrangements: ert Wendel, Boyd president; Honevville schools tournament will be sponsored by Honeyville Gaidner, vice president; ne Anderson, treasurer; Johnsons store. Grocery and and The junior high tourney in Brig- George Welch, secretary; sergeant-at-arms- . as Hunsaker Shorland ham City wHI be sponsored by John Reeve of Box Elder high The committee in Hodges Barber shop. Central school and Bud Grover of Bear are of invitations George school's tournament is being charge Welch and Boyd Gardner. Pro- River high have been judged Main Wess South sponsored by is composed of winners of the essay contest Market, and Scamorcs and gram committee Marvin By- sponsored by the Noithern Utah Shorland Hunsaker, Valheigs groceiys are sponsor water and Dale Lott house. Fer- Soil Conservation district and ing the Lincoln school tournaanPetlingill and Dick Grover Hie Flying Famieis, it was will ment, according to Dan Frod rer) nounced this week. Each in of are and charge publicity, sham of the sponsoring commit and a ticket to receive a tee from the local V. F. W, post. menu plans are being made by the aerial trophy conservation tour next Jack Spackman, Glenn RichardMantua, Perry and Willard son, Harvey Forsgren and Don- Tuesday, including an airplane Albert Thorson, trip from the Tremonton airschools have not yet been offi ald Anderson. Anderson Dale and John Reeves port to their families farms or but cially adopted by sponsors, some other farm they may wish in of are tour it is expected that before arrangements. charge to see from the air, lunch at nament time arrangements for affair this year promises noon, Ihe implement show and their tournaments will be made. to The be bigger and better than other features. Second-placMembers of the commitee winners from each school years with some good previous from the local post arranging afforded during will receive tickets for the aerial the tournaments in the Brigham entertainment dinner time, officials report. conservation tour, and third-placCity area, along with the indiwinners will receive suitand vidual Journey sponsors able prizes. faculties of the schools, are Lyle First Ward To Hold Hansen, Herb Adamson, Ace Second place winner in Box Robinette, Wally Christensen Sacrament Meeting Elder was Ezra Harper, and and Dan Frodsham. Johnson was third place Sunday At Tabernacle winner in the conservation essay Prisoner "Loses" Officer Bishop Peterson announced contest. Bear Rivers second today that the First ward sac- place winner was Blaine Hill, Then Vanishes Fast rament meeting will be held and Roger Taylor was third. Sunday evening at 5 oclock in Police- the tabernacle. The program is A benefit basketball game beThe trophies to the first place VIENNA, Ga. (UP) exr tween a U. S. A. C. quin- man Herbert Allen wasnt under the direction of the Re- winners are ixing provided by tet and the world champion- actly sure, when he got back lief society. All ward members Seagull Aviation and Trenton-towho wiii will here, the best way to explain are requested to be present. Flying service, ship Fourth ward make the presentations, lost the be played Wednesday evening, how his prisoner lost himself. Dnly favorable weather is Maryh. 17j. in the Box Elder high Would Extract Gold school gym. The game will nepded to insure the success Allen arrested a man identi- From Great Salt Lake start at 8 oclock. Tuesday of the first aerial conservation tour to be conducted All proceeds will go to a fund fied as B. C. Stevens on a charge to buy uniforms for the firing of passing bad checks. Since it Camanls, 17, New York, in the West, A. W. Bishop, board George was a friendly arrest, Allen a teen-agscientist who has al- chairman of the Northern Utah squad which assists with miliconsiderable Soil Conservation district, said for repatriated agreed to drive Stevens out into ready achieved tary funerals service men. The military hon- the country so the prisoner could would extract gold this week. A large crowd of inpublicity, bewaters terested farmers, members and ors are conducted jointly by the hreak a date with his girl from the mineral-ladeof the soil conof Great Salt Lake, he reports three veterans organizations in fore going to jail. servation has placed to district, Camanis United Press. the afBrigham City, the Amvets, the One thing led to another Veterans of Foreign Wars and ter visits to a few has already worked out a process reservations for the event. Each including that, for extracting gold from ocean farmer will be flown by the the Legion. The Legion pro- of Stevens relatives. Then, folvides the firing squad, and it is water. Of Utah and Great Salt Flying Farmers from the Trelowing the prisoners directions, Lake he the purpose of the benefit game Allen says, It is interesting monton airport to his farm or drove all over that part that the six men of the firing of the country until he got to note that the Great Salt Lake land, and pilots will point out or in Utah was formed by rivers soil conservation practices, squad be uniformed for such oc- thoroughly lost. for them, from the the need casions. A good turn-ou- t for the through flowing his When the officer parked own over game, even at popular prices, car and out to ask directions, regions and should contain a air, both on the farmers land between the will raise the funds for this he said got percentage of gold than land and that his prisoner just larger sea water. Only an extensive airport and his farm. project. walked off into the woods. Prices for the game will be Flights will begin at 8 oclock analysis of the lake could verifiState highway patrolmen fin50 cents for adults and 25 cents as soon As he has this. Tuesday morning from the Trefy nally located Allen at Pelham, ished for students. college, Camamis plans to monton airport, with some 30 Ga., some 80 miles from come to Salt Lake City to make planes and 60 pilots taking part. Playing with the Aggie a study of the Great Salt Lake All farm implement dealers in will be such outstanding and and determine its gold extrac- Box Elder county have been infreshman student varsity, vited to show the latest farm tion possibilities. cagers as Nate Done, Jay Van-No- Livestock Worth 106 Million and Ken Lindsey, and the implements at the airport durThe U. S. Department of Agriing the day. Lions clubs of Gartop talent of the freshmen and The modern hotel is an Amer land, Tremonton and Brigham culture says Utahs livestock is intramural teams. the City will furnish lunch for the ican invention, although The Fourth ward quintet is worth $106,137,000 twenty-onand coached by Henry Johnsen, with million dollars higher than it first inn was opened in Lydia farmers, Flying Farmers The during the seventh century B. other invited guests taking part was on January 1, 1947. Lloyd Robinette as manager. number of sheep and lambs were C. The word hotel was first in the conservation tour. at 1,616,000 as com- used by Joseph Corre, a New estimated South Box Elder Farm York innkeeper, in 1790. pared to 1,584.000 a year ago. Sound-Proo- f Room a negligable point on s v arm areas under that existed this reports E. C. Thompson, 'onservation service repre-1Vassisting the Northern Soil Conservation district. seeded The ated Clifford E. Young, assistant to the quorum of twelve apostles, auFuneral set vices for Sarah will lepresent the general Jane Loveland Sleed will lie thorities, and Feno Casto, the general church held tins afternoon at 2 oclock wil be visitm the Harold B. Felt Funeral welfare committee, he deceased was born and water loss can be . Plans Being Made Kids Knuckle 'Effective 3y Services Today 8 Pages , ad Makes Refrigerators Tell SPRINGFIELD. Mass. (UP) The Wostinghou.se Electric corp. has a completely sound-proo- f room called a quietorium in Ihe middle of its refrigerator factory. The room "floats on 50 steel springs set in a bed of cinders and as constructed to test electric refrigerators. A sound technician, undisturbed by outside noises, can listen to each refrigerator and tell by its music whether it is operating properly. Any unit that doesnt sound right because of excessive or unusual noise is sent back to the production floor for repair. Oak Ridge Put On Top In Fire Prevention BOSTON (UP) The home of the atom bomb, Oak Ridge, Mr. And Mrs. Laron G. Anderson, And Fish Mr. and Mrs. Laron G. Anderson and daughter Gay returned to Box Elder Monday from Overton, Nev., where they spent the winter. They stayed at Flcyd Wells trailer court at Overton. Mr. and Mrs. Wells, whose home is at Promontory, are spending the winter in Nevada. The Andersons fished with the Wells in their boat. The bass Anderson is holding in his right hand in the above picture weighs seven pounds, and is one of the largest caught this season. The Andersons brought back their limit of ten The bass are taking fish each for the party of three. live minnows, they report. SPEAKER Sessions Saturday Evening And Sunday For North Stake Sarah J. Steed Brigham City, Utah, Friday, March 12, 1948 kion Control CONFERENCE Fire Department Holds Down Loss In Two Fires About half of the home of Manuel Jensen, owned by William Goulding, in Mantua, was saved in a fire Tuesday evening by the Brigham City fire department, in spite of the distance of the run to the' fire. The alarm was turned in at 6:50 oclock Tuesday evening. The frame house was in flames. It was believed a defective flue or overheated stove started the fire. Loss was estimated at about $1,500. Thursday evening at about 6 oclock the firemen made a run to the home owned by Lorenzo Smith, first 3odf fidfth of Smith and Son grocery, on south Main street. The roof was on fire, presumably from sparks from a chimney, but the fire was extinguished with loss of only about $50, and no water Dr. Felt's Offices To Close For Remodeling The offices of Dr. J. Gordon Felt, on the second floor of the Brigham Hotel building, will be closed Saturday, Sunday and Monday for remodeling and redecorating, he said this week. Dr. Felt will be in town, and may be reached at his home. An additional room is to be included in the suite in the hotel, permitting the addition of an room, and moving and enlarging the reception and waiting room, he said. The offices will be open again "Perlite" Promises To Be New Utah Industry Perlite, an acid volcanic glass which expands or "pops like popcorn when subjected to heat, for promises a new industry Utah. Changed by heat from a relatively dense rock to a fluffy-light cullular substance, Perlite has wide industrial uses, been many of which have brought to light since World War II. As a result, an inten-tiv- e Perlite prospecting prohas been conducted gram throughout Utah and the Western States for the new important product. The Raw Materials Division of the Utah State Department of Publicity and Industrial Development is assisting in this new field of endeavor and conducted an extensive study of Utah Perlite fields during the latter part of February under the direction of A. M. Buranek, department geologist. Buranek examined substantia Perlite deposits on the Thomas range, Juab county, and an enormous perlitic flow in Beaver county. Excessive snow hindered examination of large Perlite deposits near Enterprise, Washington county. The mineral is already being processed by the Combined Metals Reduction company of Salt Lake City. Perlite is used for insulation, the manufacture of accoustic plaster and primarily for the manufacture of new light weight building blocks. Tenn., has been named the winner among the nations cities in the 25th annual fire prevention wrek competition sponsored by the National Fire Protective association. Runner-uwas Chicago, the association said, with New York third. Others in the first 10 finished in this order: Jersey City, N. J.; Memphis, Tenn.; Louisville. Ky.; Fort ColResidents and visitors of Kenlins, Colo.; Cincinnati, O.; Atlanta, Ga., and Anderson, Ind. osha, Wis contribute between eight and nine tons of pennies Cricket fights are a favorite and nickels each year to parking meters. sport in China. p |