OCR Text |
Show h rt r ?ie Library More Brigham Beauties Who Will Vie 'ForehPeach Queen Honors ?!$ 1! f,;..: r f Vvc ,v sr : ? n fyT?- Vv i Joan Peters Andersen Auto . Anson 1A Conference School and The The Home, 1 d Marches On is the theme Parent Teachers annual to be held nation conferenceRiver high Bear at year tonight, 'hool in Tremonion, to the com-;!ietgusi 26, according e charge. . 0. C. C. B. Dauna Jensen Williams Ins. Realty Blaine Carter lwe Accounting Service i e Mr. And Mrs. Ezra e planning: Mrs. B. L. Flanagan, goals; Mrs. Norman Jor risen, magazine and publicaHeath, ns; Mrs. Lawrence , embership;. Mrs. S. R. Ander-mfinance and reports; Mrs. R. Tonks. room represents-ves- . ram Owen Honored As USAC Alumni Ezra and Phyllis Kirkham committee chairmen are Owen of Brigham City, alumni of offi Utah State L'tah congress of PTA Agricultural college, ers. The health committee will are the recipients of the 500th f directed Miss Phyllis life membership certificate in the by .erson, registered nurse. reUSAC Alumni Association, The committee arranging the ported Leonard W. McDonald, The 11 the conference are Jensen of Hyrum, re ronal director, and Mrs- Don heffield of Brigham City and IrsClyde Coombs of Tremonton etails of .adys E. - Elder county ox TA presidents They are being chapters. ssisted with oembers of both arrangements Elder re: Mrs. by councils. the various units in county as presidents, Vance Lind, Tremon-n- ; Heading ox of Mrs. Ruby Bowen, Collin-lon- ; Gladys N'orr, Dewey-le- ; Mrs. Elva Stokes, Elwood thool; Mrs. Ezra Mason, Field-:g- ; Mrs. John Middleton, Gar-tod- ; Mrs. Velda G. Harris, 'rtage; Mrs. Jack Leak, (Thatcher school); Mrs. taine Quinney, Trfhonton; Ire. Roberta Tracy, Yost; Mrs. fster Anderson, River Bear y; Mrs. Glon Humphreys, igham City; Mrs. Ephraim ohnson, Brigham City; Mrs. y Craner, Corinne; Mrs. Wini-rpThorsted. Honeyville; Mrs. Mrs. n oota Keller, Mantua; Mrs- - Elva Jrry, Perry, and Mrs. Jennie arlson, Willard. All e A principals of the schools first vice presidents of the units. fat Son Of j., ) Merrells Dies William Son in-J- Brigham City, died at 2 oclock morning in the Cooley hospital. Was born August 23, 1949. the parents, h Ju'ors 'nc'ude and sister, David, age m0 Judy, age two; grand ns Yr. C. W. ... Merrell and ' ay Merrell and Mr. and cuWay, August 25, the . 'f J- Nielson. services will be held J at oclock in the after-jf- " lhe Harold B. Felt FulwHh the bishopric l Vs! Third ward officiating, nds may call at the funer-irp v Frida-between 1:30 time of services. merment win be in the Brig-dUneral u,y cemetery. Case Lis,ed isted Er J36 dePartment of health Paj,t "ly new of tularemia . . Brigham Glass . Garfield Smith Studio . U. S. POSTAGE 1c cio disease in Box f"r lhe VVPPk PndinR . . . Fellow Citizens Contribute; J.Cs Plan PAID Brigham, Utah Permit No. 14 box elder VOLUME 51, NUMBER GS Benefit Ball Game For Dickie Harmer u tewd- -' fourna BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY MORNING, 500th Life Members AUGUST 26, l'.ll!) Jesse H. Nielsen r Fruit Growers To Tour August 0 29-3- county fruit growers are invited to attend a tour of experimental and actual fruit farms in Weber and Davis counties under the direction of Clarence D. Ashton and S. W. Edgecomb, horticulture experts, Anson Call, Box August Elder county agricultural agent said today. The tour will be for the purpose of examining the work done in the experimentation and the various methods of fruit farming. Mr. Call requests that anybody interested in making him at the the tour contact county court house. During the first day of the tour the group will assemble at the North Ogden experiment station at 9:30 in the morning from which they will visit fruit orchards. At 1:30 oclock in the afternoon of the first day they will meet at Davis county fruit tree disease experiment station diwhere they will discuss virus sease symptoms. On Tuesday, August 30, group will meet at the Orem town hall, from where they will visit various fruit farms and discuss cover crop, pruning, thinof ning. spray program, results following late pruning proper severe winter injury, and man-v;votliprs. Friends and fellow citizens this week showed their y and moved toward lightening the burden of a tragedy that befell it local young business couple, Mr. and Mrs, Vern llarmer, when their son, Dickie, fell into an industrial machine and suffered the loss of his left arm last Friday. A substantial amount was given and subscribed at PAGES the merchants outing yesterday afternoon, and plans were being made for a benefit baseball game between Bingham and the Brigham City Peaches, Industrial league teams, Wednesday evening. Ira Diderickson Peaches players and the Bingsym-path- five-year-o- ld 10 Dies Following Registration Time Announced For Lingering Illness Box Elder High Dies Thursday Ira west Dideru-kson- , Second 68, south, of 108 Brigham Jes.se 11. Nielsen, G4, died at According to Alf L. Freeman, City, died in the Cooley MemoCalifor- principal of the Box Elder high rial hospital, Thursday, August his home in Berkeley, nia early Thursday morning school, the individual class 23, following a short illness. He was horn August 22, 1881, schedules and locker assignfollowing a lingering illness. ments will be given to students in Brigham City, a son of Nels He was born in Mantua, May of the school this coming and Jennie Bromberg Dideriek-son- . and week, high 10, 1885, the son of L. P. to the following pursuant Sarah Nielsen. Mr. Nielsen was schedule; Mr. Diderickson was reared atin he Mantua where reared and educated in Brigham City tended grammar school. Seniors, Tuesday, August 30, following which he moved to He attended the Brigham 0:30 p. m. Thatcher and worked as a farYoung college in Logan for sevmer and stock handler. Juniors 30, Tuesday, to August He Idaho moved eral years. He returned to Brigham City 8 m. p. Falls in 1902 after living in about a year ago .and has been Mantua for 17 years. Sophbmores Wednesday, Au- living with his rteiee,' Mrs. Lola In 1907 he was married to gust 31, 6:30 p. m. Anderson since. in Mrs. Florence Kingston the Survivors include three brothD. S. Freshmen Salt Lake temple of the L. AuWednesday, ers and one sister, Eli Diderickchurch. They made their home gust 31, 8 p. m. Dideson of Randolph, Victor in Idaho until a few fears ago 8th graders Thursday, rickson of California and Nephi . to moved when they Berkeley-1, 6:30 p. m. Diderickson and Mrs. Adaline Mr. Nielsen was active in the 7th graders, Thursday, 4 Sep- Anderson, boih of Ogden. L. D. S. church having served tember 1, 8 p. m. Funeral services will be held a mission to Norway and The registration fee for memoclock in the. aG from 1912 to - 7914 add bers of the 10th, 11th, and 12th Saturday ternoon with George Nielson of the Idaho grades is $5.00 and for members serving as bishop officiating. Falls Second ward for 11 years. of the 7th, 8th and 9th Friends may call at the Harold grades At the time of his death he the fee is $3.00. This foe must B. Felt mortuary Friday evewas a high priest in, the Berke- be paid before class schedules from 7 to 9 oclock and ning S. L. D. ward. ley and locker assignments can bo Saturday between 11 o'clock in For many years Mr. Nielsen made. the morning and 1 o'clock in was in the sheep business and Students will be able to pur- the afternoon. became well known in Idaho for chase their books the Interment will be in the Brigevenings his herds of .sheep. they register in the Bee staff ham City cemetery under the He was active as an educator, room. direction of the Harold B. Felt having taught school in Idaho will Funeral home. Any new students who Falls shortly after being mar- enter Box Elder high this fall, Ezra And Phyllis Owen in from Idaho ried. and Ammon, irrespective of grade, should about years spent at Utah State Agri. . .are reminiscing He was superin- come to 1937 to 1910. the high school Friday, were The recently tendent of public schools in cultural college. Brigham City couple September 2, between the hours in the certificate life for 500th the Idaho of Bonneville membership county, recipients of 9 a. m. and 3 p, m. Miss Shon-ka- , Is several years. USAC Alumni Association. the school registrar, will be Survivors include his wife and at the school those hours The time for the Box Elder nine children. Dr. M. L. Nielsen to assist new during students in selectof Logan, Utah; Mrs. J. M. Mccounty fair parade has been their classes. ing Call of Mountain View, Califorchanged tfom 5 o'clock in the afternoon, September 1, to 4 nia; Captain V. L. Nielsen of Notice Of Old Folks Meeting it the U. S. air force, Lt. Col. M. J. To The old folks will have a o'clock the same afternoon, Nielsen of the U. S. air force; meeting Saturday at 3 oclock in was announced today by the CoA. W Nielsen of the U. S the afternoon in board. the Box Elder Fair A Boy Scout board of reviews, The Kiwanis club held their All organizations and churchMrs. George Punk of force; Aair court house, it was ancounty noon luncheon district Box Elder north the lor regular weekly Beach, individuals, schools and busVrginia, and nounced They will dis- es, at the Idle Isle cafe Thursday will be held Saturday evening Virginia e Nielsen, Darrel K. cuss their today. iness firms from the south end Mr ae for future. the plans and had as their guests, Royal from 7 to 9 oclock it was an- - Nielsen and Mrs. Lola Nielsen, of the county have been particNorman, vice president of the nounced this week by Lawrence au 0f Berkeley, Calif.; one broth- - Glen Knudson of the Second ularly invited to enter in the advancement1-.- . district high school F.F.A. club and Sam Turley, Idaho ward officiating. Dr, L. P. Nielsen of parade, the Fair hoard said. Gordon, faculty advisor for the chairman. Carl Mrs. Friends may call at the Hartwo sisters, Falls; Anyone wishing to enter a F.F.A. club of Box Elder high Wold of Brgham City; and Mrs. old B. Felt Funeral home Sunday float or exhibit in the parade in The meeting wll be held school. Sarah Simmons of Los Angeles; evening and Monday morning should contact Mrs. Merrell stuthe south stake offices in the and 10 Robert Rupp, exchange Laub or Mrs. Dwain Romer, at grandchildren. prior to services. Modover Glens if dent from England, was the Eddy building Interment will be in the Brig- Tremonton, by Wednesday, Funeral services will be held in the All scouts ern two oclock in the ham City cemetery under the possible, but later entry in the at speaker. He gave the English northDrug. Monday district who are coming afternoon in the slant on America as he saw it Brigham City direction of the Harold B. Felt parade is permissible, the board or higher questions up for merit badges and also answered First ward chapel with Bishop Funeral home. reports. beto are appear expected asked by the Kiwanis club mem- rank of review. fore the board bers about England. Serving The L. D. S. Church . Sep-temb- Dcn-niaVk- '' U Time For County Fair Changed Student Speaks Kiwanis - HTeNGOODFKIEND3 GET TOGETHER Box Elder Six Brigham City Missionaries Meet In Dunedin, New Zealand Dist. Conference 29-3- . Ray Merrell, the f John D. and Marian Merrell, of 112 west .,flSon :tst north. ; executive secretary of the association. The first such membership was granted in 1925 to Professor Dan A. Swenson of the college faculty. Memberships have since been taken out by over five per cent of the graduate members of the association, Mr. McDonald said. Mr. Owen is executive secretary of the Brigham City Chamber of Commerce. He is a member of the Aggie class of 1938, while Mrs. Owen graduated with the class of 1933. She was an honor graduate and president both of the Associated Women Students and her sophomore class. She was awarded a scholarship to the Merrill-Palmeschool at Detroit, Michigan. She has since served a three-yea- r term on the USAC Alumni All Patricia Hansen . & R 4-- n s Kill ENDS INDEED See. 31.66 P.L. A. Jacobsen, dean of the Utah hoo1 of education at the college and are Agricultural of the member of the board will deliver an Jess. Mr. Charles L. Walker, esident of the state congress ,1! be a guest speaker and chair-an Myrtle D. Petersen, of Home and Family life, j;i give a talk on her expenregional ds at the national on orkshop at San Francisco daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy dur-me and family life held Passey, Provo, and the couple this month. now has five children, four girls con-nthe general session will and a boy. aftcr-Wn- , at two o'clock in the The new Box Elder agent is with registration of PTA an active L. D. S. church work1:30 from orkers scheduled er, having served on the stake in the afternoon util 2 oclock Sunday school board, the Y. M. he public is invited to attend M. I. A., Boy Scouts of America, ie general session. and as senior president of the will 29th meetings Departmental quorum of seventy, while at 3:13 oclock in the in Washington county. e held . hemoon for all PTA workers-Isthe Walker will conduct L. residents meeting. Dr. will be in charge of pro . Meacham Tanners . Doreen B. Call Is Replacing Robert Stewart as Box Elder county's agricultural agent is Anson B. Call. Jr., it was announced today by Dr. Carl Frishknecht, U. S. A. C. extension service director. Mr. Stewart recently retired after 30 years duty in Box Elder county. Call began his activities with the extension service on July in 19, 1928, as assistant, agent Utah county, where he served for eight years in charge of fruit, insect control, poultry and club work. In October 1935, he became the county agent in Washington county where he has worked since, with headquarters in St. George. He was born and reared on a farm in Mexco, and received his bachelor and masters degree from Brigham Young university. He married Verna Passey, remonton Today in . Darlene Meservy Brigham Laundry New County Agent Held In Be 0 . - Six missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints from Box Elder county misserving in the New Zealand a at came together sion field district conference in Dunedin, in the south island of New Zealand recently. ArAccording to a letter from a such was it B. Gilbert, nold rare occasion that we thought it might be of interest to the folks back home to have a picture 'taken for the News-Journal.- Besides the six elders from pictured, is mission president, Gordon their Elder Young has been C. Young. caserving the church in thatHe is the year. for past pacity of Brigham a Box Elder county great-grandso- i Young. He himself is a loving father to nearly 100 missionaries Gilbert here in New Zealand, comes said. President Young from Sait Lake City, where he known both for his cnts in the church 1 and in the business world. Elder Marvin S. Wright, seated on President Young's left, who at the present is second counsehas Young, lor to President spent most of his life ir Brigham his City but is now making California. home in Oakland, in He arrived in New Zealand July of 1917. and left last July Dur5, to return to his home. ing his twro years in New Zealand he served as mission secretary for a year and upon his release from that position, was called to be counselor in the mission presidency. Although Elder Wright is at Oakland, he is planning an extended visit in Brigham City in the near future. Elder Lowell Young is from Perry where he was active in the Perry ward. He is a graduate of Box Elder high school, where he was active in athletics. He has been in New Zealand since May of 1917, and is due (Continued on Page Two) ham baseball club volunteered their services, entirely with remuneration, for the benefit game. The Box Elder high school of band, under the direction Wayne Johnson, has indicated it will play at the ball game. All advertising, promotion and management of the game is being contributed, and the entire proceeds, except for federal tax, will go to the farmers to apply against the large hospital and medical bills they are Incurring as a result of their sons accident. . 1 , It was announced that employees of the J. C. Penney store in Brigham City where Harmer is employed, each are contrlbu- ting a days wages toward the fund, and most of those attending the merchants outing yesterday made contributions of $5, $10 and more. . The boys arm got caught In machine at a Brigham City fruit packing boose, just across the street from his home, Friday afternoon. His father, who was at the plant on business at the time, picked him up. The childs arm was torn from the body, with the bone broken close to the shoulder. Following first aid at Cooley hospital, the child was taken to Ogden for special treatment.. a Yesterday the boy underwent surgery, doctors attempting to go into the shoulder, find the torn artery, and tie it off to diminish the danger of hemorrhage. The skin around the wound has been under traction, in an effore to stretch it out to cover the stump of the arm bone, and it was considered likely that other repeated operations and skin grafts would be pieces-sarto prepare the member for a prosthetic limb at a 1 ater date. y Friends of the Harmers and Junior Chamber of Commerce members, sponsors of the benefit ball game, pointed out that there is no welfare agency or insociety whose jurisdiction cludes such personal and financial tragedies. Its up to the Harmers friends to come to their assistance in relieving the financial worries Which constitute a real although secondary part of their musfortune, O. D. Lund, one of the workers on the informal benefit committee, assorted. Its the sort of a thing that could happen to any young couple, with a family of small children, just getting started in business or in a job in Brigham Lowell Packer, another City, committee member, pointed out Some misfortunes of this sort would be taken care of by the crippled childrens society, or the Infantile Paralysis or Cancer funds. But no help from such sources as these is available in this case, although the need is be much greater than it in many other cases that would be covered by such organizations. Everyone in this community should be glad that he is able to help, to extend a concrete expression of his sympathy. Tickets for the benefit ball game will be on sale in a score of business places in Brigham Cty, including the office, as well as at the .gate at Rees Pioneer park Wednesday evening. Admission prices, including tax, will be $1 for adults and 50 cents for high school students. It is planned that the Jayceettes, Junior Chamber auxiliary organization, will make a canvass selling tickets and accepting contribuand early tions, this week-ennext week. News-Journ- Missionaries Saints from Brigham City all of whom of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y were brought together at a district conare fulfilling missions in New Zealand. They ference in Dunedin, South Island of New Zealand. They are lrom left to right (front row) Elders Henry Dee Johnson, Gordon C. Young, mission president; Marvin Wright. (Back row) Lowell Young, Henry W. Diewes, Ralph G. Willie B. Gilbert. ... of the Church . house-to-hous- e |