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Show 'lleiui-our- BOX ELDER Friday. June Brigham Cily, Utah A aI n Semi Weekly One death 1948 BOX ELD E R United Nations Librarian Tells About thing in favor of death over taxes doesnt get worse every time congress Her New Hobby-Speak- ing meets. Hope Reeder, daughter of Fewer people would he in debt if they Reeder of didnt spend what their friends think they and Mrs. A. M. librarian of Newspaper Successor to T II 25, a NEWS To Mr. e and the United Nations library in GeSwitzerland, has written Youll find the big potatoes are on top ol neva, THE BOX ELDER JOURNAL another interesting letter to her little of lot a are 1909) there because (Established the heap parents, telling of things she ones holding them up there. has seen and done in Europe, M Editor William Long, a and particularly describing Charles Clayhaugh, Business Manager Its all right to drink like a fish, so long new "hobby. Mrs. Gladys 1L Johnson, Advertising Manager Part of her letter follows: as vou drink what the fish does. Member I'mtecT Press, Audit Bureau of CirculaUnited Nations Library tions, Utah State Press Association Switzerland A fellow went to a lawyer for some adGeneva, Published every Wednesday and Friday and enof it later, 30, 1948 his May and hearing friend, vice, tered as Second Class Matter at the post office scoffed: Why spend money on a lawyer? Dear Folks: In Brigham City, Utah, under the act of March It is some time since 1 wrote notice that he read everything Box Didnt Rates: Elder 1879. you County 8, Subscription and so many interesting a Box book? a you, $5.00 Elder of a out outside told he County, $4.00 year; you I year. Single copies 5 cents. Yes, was the reply, but he knows what things have been doing that to begin. where know hardly on. is page it That is the wonderful part of a move every once in Dan Frodsham said everythings under making awhile there are so many nevv control" last night but his voice quavered. and interesting things to see The Jaycee canyon outing, of which he is especially in Europe, where the chairman, was scheduled lor last Monday roots of the American civilizaevening in the county park. Then it was tion are planted. It is all so inscheduled, tentatively or positively, for teresting! To jump back to May 9th. I every night of this week except Saturday up on and Sunday. Maybe they considered Sat- went to the mountains of Lake Geneva end the other was There sure. not always to see urday, too Im the narcissus in bloom a conflict, though. Something else going I have been told that every year or of lot on to involve a Jayceettes. they make a real festival out Jaycees Or else it would rain. Finally they skipped of the narcissus time, and it and scheduled it absolutely sounded 'like something to see. the week-en- d time for Monday night. Two girls from the library went this positively, Enjoyed meeting Orvill E. Morrell, Jr. And after everything is arranged it develops with me the girl from Norway, and a girl from the Netherlands. (guess its Dr. Merrell now, but he was that the Jayceettes are holding one of their We went by train to Vevey, then wearing vacation levis, talking about fishbig meetings of the year Monday night. we took a tiny little train, which ing, and the formality didnt quite fit at the So now its postponed for the seventh or a funicula, to the call they June east. the next Tuesday night, moment) who just got back from eighth time to of the mountains. one of top Finding lodging for a night is. getting 29, 1918 A. D. Everythings under con- The place is called Les Pleides. to had tough, he said, and as a result he trol, says Dan! All the way up to the top we jump from Pittsburg to Clinton, la. saw the beautiful fields of white There narcissus. Literally, the whole Chet Hamilton is busy, he says. were He explains hes letting Cal sides of the mountains all alone. Lost One gentlemanly Bennion, d covered with them. And the per his Brittany spaniel dog named Timmy, because right-han- d man, get rested up. So Chet fume was something out of this hes kinda timid. Actually, hes sort of a can world. I can't remember of the go again! narcissus in the United States sissy, and very fussy about what he eats, so fragrant as there. There even out of the neighbors garbage cans. I One of the Main streeters who hasnt being were thousands (no exaggeradont think hed hurt a flea a louse, that been defintoo the rainy days busy during is. The vet tells me dogs dont have fleas tion) of people all over the out in this country. The Long children and itely didnt join in on the chorus of that mountain sides picking tltz flow parade favorite, Rain, Rain Go Away. ers. The strange part was, that their parents and Art Steffens pointer, hit Hes name of Mike, are very fond of Timmy, and bucks been making thirty, forty or fifty that night when we all went hot down off the mountain with Life. His day playing wed pay $1 reward for information leading streak awas arms full of flowers, you coulrains still after the holding, to his return, alive and healthy, lies not dnt even see that any had been abated. Beats sick And about it. hes I worth stealing, because doubt if hell make ! picked. They just grow wild, workin much of a hunter and hes certainly no and are more like a dream than watch-doa reality Timmy looks like all llrittanys, By newspaper, radio and television the a little thinner and a little smaller than On 14th, I left for Paris are treating the public to the for a May Republicans brief holiday. They obI some, and dont believe he was wearing a summers greatest show . . . they hope. In serve Pentacost as a holiday collar when last seen. Harold figures hes when the curtains ring down here, and whenever I get a long event, any out either trying his hand at a little free- theyll be in. a pretty sound position to turn week-end- , it is an opportunity lance spring hunting (which Id rather he to the Democrats and say, Now, try to top for a trip somewhere. I went wouldnt do, just now) or else a little freewith a tour of an agency here lance spring romance, which doesnt seem that! in Geneva. There were 24 in like quite Timmy. But dogs, you know, will The Republicans are supremely confident the group, and as usual, one or be dogs. Let us know if youve seen him, of success in this falls election, and in two who spoke English. We left wont you? Geneva Friday night on the deepest secrecy fearfully hope that their and, although I rode to confidence is shared by at least 51 percent train, Paris without a ticket, because Isnt the sunshine nice, after the rain, of the registered voters. the man from the agency who had my ticket went on another though? Weve always heard that as a Its time we were reminded that, after all, i train, yet my honest face consort of adage or proverb, but every time it quits raining and the sun comes out we feet there are two classes of screwball candi- vinced the conductor that I was as if wed just discovered it for the first dates. There is the screwball who turns all right, and he let me ride candidate, while on the other hand there is without a ticket. I was sorta time. worried about meeting the man the candidate who turns screwball. with my ticket in Paris, but it worked out ail right. What a A lot of women would look more spic if Maybe we should have saved that one thrill it was to be in that great for the punch-lin- e they had less span. of an editorial! city that everyone has read home of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac A. of: in Dickens Tale of Two Phoebe Ward at Riverside. of t The Arnita club held a Young were Mr. and Mrs. Moy-le- Cities (I especially thought I saw the sights), eveYoung of Rexburg, Idaho, that book as party last Thursday ning at the Alverna Inn coffee Mr. and Mrs. Dean Young and in history, in the movies, etc. shop. The members were seat- children of Willard, and Mr. and On Saturday, we had a long tour of the city, by special sight-seeined around one large table cen- Mrs. Newell Wight and with a guide who bus, tered with a vase of heautiful spoke both English and French. roses, where a delicious hot chicPerry News Mr. and Mrs. Lewis J. Ham-soTo go into the famous Notre ken dinner was served By Mrs. Lyman Wight after and son David and Bobby Dame Cathedral, to the Arc de a which the ladies attended Hope returned last Monday eve- Triomphe, the Louvre, Eiffel PERRY, June 24 Mr. and Mrs. show. ning from a three day fishing tower, gardens of the Tuilleries, Melvin Peters of Los Angeles, Mr. and Mrs. Harper Billings trip at Ponds lodge. Island Park, etc. was a thrill! We saw so Calif., visited with relatives and went to Logan last Friday eve- Idaho. They were guests of Mr. many places, I can't begin to friends here last Monday a and-Mr- s. Albert Krause who are tell you. Of course, we rode ning where they attended to their home after a trip birthday party given in honor of spending the summer months down the famous Champs to Yellowstane park. They, also DeLoy Bate. there. Princess Elizabeth was in visited at the home of .Mrs. Father's Day visitors at the Pfc. Robert Clair Allen, son of Paris that week end, and we saw the wreath she had laid on the tomb of Frances Unknown Soldier. Everywhere we saw crowds waiting to see her, but we had a lot of things to see and couldnt be bothered stopping to see a mere princess. On Saturday night. I went to the marvelous opera house and heard the opera "Faust." I was so thrilled to be seeing it in Paris, and I have never seen or L' (Established and mild-mannere- 18) make. d, good-lookin- good-nature- g, mv lifetime I liked Versat. . Fantan-bleaules much better than 1 suppose those wonderful gardens had a lot to do with Peit. I especially liked the AntoMarie tite Trianon and "Le inettes little, rustic farm, I dream. a was It Hameau. ,or those lovely gar because I wanted to convincea mjself that it wasn'tI wasjustrealdream )t was true the ly there. We also visited home of the Empress Josephine Malmai-son- . (wife of Napoleon It In the morning is merely IF ITS AMERICAN ENGLISH ting ii)) early mattress. over mind of (jucstion in Get Strangers heard it better done. I was the only member of the tour who went to the opera, because I had requested the agency three weeks in advance to get me a ticket, and the rest of the group apparently didnt think of it until they got to Paris, and then it was too late. Taxis are in Paris, so I asked the host in the hotel how to get to the opera by subway (they call it the Metro), and so I took myself around by Metro thereafter. We had one free day, supposedly for the fair in Paris, but 1 I have seen many fairs, so hunted up a tourist agency, and took myself out to Fontanbleau to see the great palace of Fon- tanblegii. home of many kings. One the way, we stopped at Barbizon, and visited the studio and home of the artist Millet, the man who did the famous paintings of the Angeius, the Gleaners, etc. It was wonderful to visit his studio and realize that there he had labored to create these great masterpieces which the world admires so much. To describe the palace of Fontanbleau is impossible. It is so huge (2070 rooms in it), and so luxurious you could understand why the impoverished people of France had a revolution when they were so poor and their kings lived in such luxury. but that Don't tell anybody, night after I returned to Paris, I went to the Folies, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. It w'as so colorful with its beautiful lighting effects, dresses, dancing, and of a very high standard for that sort of thing. We had one full day at the palace and parks of Versailles. That place really thrilled me. for Evelyn Sorensen had showed us pictures of the gardens when I was in her French classes, and never did 1 think I would live to see those beautiful gardens very-scarc- of each urn ns over the f:ont one long "he is it store, only whole of each porch for the As I wandered around, block old cobble-intrigued by those the hall found stone streets, meet m wheie the Mormons locked up unBerne, but it was I til the evening service ' the name I recognized by thin. Would in German. church of the 1 I started have habit a of I hear speaking to every person It English. American speaking is v erv easy to tell who are the Americans and on the BnlJslli just by It is proving very intertrain, and arrived in Genevaa. the m. sptak and I am meeting some 8 at morning following to esting.fine people in this way. very just in time for me to go from I to used go work just like Last week, imagine my surprise wowhen I heard two American Washington to Providence Oh, 1 forgot men speaking, and I spoke to the week-end- . tell you that one morning them and found out that the Paris, my watch played a on me and I got up three hours too early for the tour we were to have that day. When I found out what the right time was, I of decided to take advantage the time, and take myself on a I used walking tour of Paris. my map, and walked and walked until I located the Paris office of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. That was is Miss Scanlon a thrill, too. coming to Paris in August to be We left Pans at night one was Anne in law from New Wk' .V ' she seemed very , I told her I wa; she sdid that husband was City neaily swa!Wj tongue! She was jUst to see me as I was m pea 1 remember when were so chummy. ,hat Cvr ; Helen seemed such people to be living ln NewP Cyril came to Europe ness (he is a UwJer ,0n Oil company) a d f came with him. 1 guess p' tinue my new ' ' 1 hoob pays off as weil as V "her.l that. After you ve read it ,h ly, lend your copy of the Journal to a tru-nd- , relative. it, too. They'll I n 1 neighWi hi. RIGHT COMBINATION Fog the FASTER FARM DIG there all during the General Assembly of the United Nations. I plan to go to Paris while she is there, and she wrote me that she will come to see me in Geneva after the General Assembly finishes its session. Isn't that exciting? I took a little Last week-end- . trip to Berne, the capital city of Switzerland. It is in the German- ME Talk SA1 transmission means more acres per day. Iearborn Implements, specially Faster designed for the Ford Tractor, save time through Triple-QuicAttaching and Hydraulic Touch Control from the tractor seat k Automotive Duo-serv- o type steering brakes mean aulic shorter turning, quicker stopping, Trtr tor and implements are designs for easier servicing. It all add up to faster farming and moit J "g profit for you. SAL FORD FARMING work more income par Meant latt snditi' . sot II part of Switzerland, but I have forgotten all of my German, and so I had to get along with French. However, ev-speaking eryone understood French, and so it was all right. That city is a most unusual place. It has blocks of arches in fact the city has distinguished itself by its famous arches all through its business and urban streets. 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They make a habit of doing good work ot fair prices. $SK us about monthly payments on our 10W COST- FISHER -- - SANDALl MOTOR 17 E 2 So. 0 ((). Rhone 74 Mr. and Mrs. David Allen, arrived last week from San Antonio. Texas. After a ten-daleave he will go to Tacoma, Washington where he will take further training in the air corps. Last Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy D. White were Mr. and Mrs. Clark White and family of ITovo, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Mecham and family of Ogden, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dredge and children. Paying tribute to their father. Ezra Weaver, last Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Ned Hansen and dayghter. Joiene, of Pocatello, Idaho, and Mr. and Mrs. Junior Hall and son, C. A., of Portage. H. W. Stokes and daughter, Sharon, of Los Angeles, Calif., arrived last Friday. Mr. Stokes came to attend the M. I. A. conference, leaving for his home Sunday and Sharon remained for an extended visit at the home of her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac A. Young. 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