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Show V "TTTTTT V Universal Microfilming Corp 227 Sixth Are P0. Box U7 Salt Lake City, Utah VOLUME 57, NUMBER 9 BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 3, 1954 Court Rules Garland Wins, Minutes Must Brigham Loses In Tournament Be Released t . . o- - Forward Together ' Salute to Brigham Show Tickets Are Available This Week f Tickets lor the Bruce I Garland Van-derho- television show Saturday afternoon, March 6, during which a salute will be given to IBrigham City, are available this week at the News & Journal office. The program will be telecast over KDYL-Tat 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon. Tal ent for the show is being recruited here this week by Perc Petersen who will assist in directing the program. X Anyone wishing to attend the presentation which will be held in the Empire room of the Hotel Utah, may obtain tickets good lor two, without cost. Second ward, cham- . . had to borrow Elwood Troop 128 a cub scout from Brigham Citys Den 2, Pete Moskowitz, to present closing ceremony, at the recognition rally Saturday night. Taking part is Explorer Reed Petersen, Scoutmaster James G. Abel, Cub Pete . FAIR1 EMCEE Tickets To Go On bers to serve as mistress of ceremonies in the annual fash ion show sponsored by the Kin dergraten club in cooperation with Brigham City merchants. Mrs. R. M. Kaiser has graFashion Fair will be held ciously accepted the invitation on Thursday evening, March extended Fashion Fair" by 8:15 m. at chairmen and committee mem- - 25, beginning at schoolp. Box Elder (High gymnasium. Charming Lady Tickets for the affair will be distributed at regular monthly meeting of the Kindergarten club tomorrow afternoon, March Sale Thursday for Annual Fashion Event 4. Moskowitz and Scout Ray Ileslop. gram on Saturday evenng, March 6, in he Fourth ward amusement SIXTY-EIGH- T SCOUTS HONORED Recognition Event Is Held Saturday; 900 Attend Ceremonies I i AT RALLY ' and Nine hundred scouts scouters attended the special recognition rally at the Interauditorium school mountain last Saturday night and participated in the activities. N. A. Rytting, Tremonton, Golden Spike district chairman, presided at the meeting which opened with an organ prelude by Mrs. Perc Petersen,, and a flag ceremony by WiUkrd Explorer Post 609. Darrel Gam, Fielding Post 631, gave the invocation and Chairman Rytting extended a welcome greeting. Ted Elkin and Lorin Hunsaker of the council staff, led the group in community singing and sunts. Frank Coppin, district commissioner, acted as master of ceremonies and called for a standing roll call. Recognition of new star, life, ee(gle and GIP awards was made toy Rytting and two boys, Eagle Scout Teryl Hunsaker and Star Scout Orland Hunsaker of Post 608 responded with a poem of recognition to scouters. awards District recognition were made by Glen Knudsen, district vice chairman. These included the attendance award to the Riverside troop which had a 100 percent of registered scouts and scouters present at the .meeting. The advancement award was made to the Perry troop under Bill direction of Scoutmaster which reported 35 Wagstaff advancements for the 31 scouts enrolled. Speakers on the program included Dr, Geo. A. Boyce, national Scout committee member; iRulon Petersen, Ogden, Lake Bonneville council president; and Ed Baggs, Ogden, Preston council commissioner. iW. Pond, Ogden, council scout executive, also spoke and led the group in a rededication ceremony. For the finale, two boys from Tremonton Troop 140 read a poem as the curtains opened on a tableau by the Elwood Troop (Continued on Page Six) Hon-eyvill- e t hall. Serving of pancakes, scrambled eggs, sausages and. drink will begin at 6 p. m. and continue until 8 p. m. As each lady enters she will receive a gift Miss Lura Redd has generouslandly donated a watercolor SCOUTERS AND Benjamin Hewett Tolman, 73, of Honeyville, died Sunday in the Cooley Memorial hospital, Brigham City, after a stroke. Tolman had formerly served as deputy assessor of Box Elder county. A member of the LDS church, he was superintendent of the Thatcher ward Sunday school for 17 years, ward chairman of the genealogical committee and served as ward teacher for 50 years. IHe was born May 27, 1880, in Honeyville, a son of Benjamin Hewett and Eliza Bell Grant Tolman. He was reared and educated in Honeyville. In October, 1909, he married Ellen Wheatley in the LDS Salt Lake temple. . In 1912 the couple moved to Thatcher. Mrs. Tolman died March 22, 1914. He married Emily Knowles on June 6, 1917, in the Logan LDS temple. They moved to Logan in 1944, to Salmon, Idaho, in 1947 and to Honeyville in 1952. widow, Surviving are his Honeyville; the following sons and daughters: Ralph W. Tol man and Miss Louise Tolman, Honeyville; Benjamin A. Tolman and Gerald H. Tolman, Thatcher; Edward Tolman, Provo; Don C. Tolman, Corinne; Mrs. Twila Forsgren, Both well; Mrs. Vonda Hess and Jack Tolman, Fielding; Rex Tolman, Salmon, Idaho; 28 grandchildren, the following brothers and sisters: Abinidi Tolman and Claudius Tolman, Honeyville; Nathan Tolman, Berkeley, Calif.; Austin Tolman, Ogden; Mrs. Emma Buckmiller, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Theda' TurneT, Bluff-dale- , Utah; Mrs. Polly Booth, Honeyville. Funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 1 p. m. in the Honeyville ward chapel. Friends may call at the home of a son, Ralph W. Tolman, in. Honeyville, Wednesday from 7 ! Goes to Brazil scape painting which will be given as a door prize during the evening, During the serving movies are planned to entertain those who complete their meal early until the program begins at 8 p. m. for Donated the . supper, through Earls Food Fare will be Superior Dairy butter and cream, Sego milk,' Pillsbury pancake flour and Vermont syrup. The favors for the ladies will be furnished by Earls Food Fare. Ken Jensens Market will donate 75 pounds of sausage and Don Sheffield of Sheffields Grocery, will furnish a case of eggs. Ice cream will be served with compliments of Bill Harris of the Peach City Ice Oeam. Pictures are to be taken during the entire evening and table games will be played while the supper is being served. A good program has been arranged by a Those in charge urge that clubs and groups planning to attend together secure their tickets now. Each community will be con taeted through its civic groups and all groups and are cordially inindividuals vited to attend and view the fashions for spring. Mens fashions as well as ladies and childrens will be shown and a special invitation is extended to the men In the community .to attend the show. Ticket sales are under the direction of Mrs. Jean Barnard with the following committee members: Mrs. Mildred Egbert, Mrs. Mrs. Barbara Rasmussen, Harriet Balls, Mrs. (Bessie Nelson, Mrs. Beth Walker, Mrs. Geraldine Grover, Mrs. Jennie Reese, Mrs. Mauneen Pimper, Mrs. Joyce Richmond and Mrs. Jackie Huchel. Admission price will be $1 per person. The full length ramp will insure good viewing for all who attend and the new sound system will make it possible for all to hear the mistress of ceremonies without strain. Mrs. Clyde Glover and Mrs. Herm Hadfield, general chairmen, reported today that new fashions are arriving daily at the local stores for the show. They also announced that fashions In the pattern department are beginning to take shape and the pattern section of the review should prove most interesting. n Utah State Agricultural college group to start at 8:00 oclock. Mrs. Lillian Felt has arranged serving; Mrs. May Balls, program and publicity; Miss Lura Redd, posters; Mrs. Jennie Jones, Mrs. Alta Ferry and Mrs. Elsie Jensen, table decorations; Basil Hendricks along with the Elders in charge of tables and clean-up- ; Mrs. Carlyle Jensen, tickets; Carlyle Jensen, movies; and the following committee members assisting: Mrs. Leona Rees, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Weaver, Mrs. Martha Jensen, Evelyn Foster, Mary Ward and Dean Freer. A full evening of fun has been planned by genealogical committee members of the First ward for their pancake supper and pro- Robert H. Stewart will prob- ably be Congressman Douglas R. Strlngfellow and William A. MRS. R. M. KAISER NAMED FOR MARCH 6 BV RRST WARD - OF PERFECTION FOR OPENING re FASHION Miss Bertita Harding will be in Brigham City-oThursday, March 11, as . . . guest speaker at the Knife and Fork dub. Knifeand Fork Club to Meet On March 11 6 PAGES ANNUAL OPERETTA NEAR POINT ie FULL EVENING OF FUN SET Pancake Supper, Movies Prizes, .;.. Games and Program Brigham Mon Calls Utah Congressmen From Flouse Floor pions of division 15, won their Dawson's favorite lobbyist In opening round of play in the the .future. The Brigham City pair from the tournament Tuesday man called afternoon by defeating Reno, House of Representatives Just Nevada, by a 62 to 46 score, minutes before Monday's while Brigham Seventh iward shooting incident dropped their initial encounter Stewart was in Washington with Haven ward of Salt Lake to appear with the Utah lawCity last night 51 to 48. makers before the House agri-cutuappropriations subcomGarland will continue in the championship bracket to meet mittee to urge that it vote Provo Thirteenth ward in the SI 0.000 for the purchase of adfield house at Brigham Young ditional watershed lands in Cache National Forest university at 8 p. m., Wednesday night. Brigham Seventh, him, the By accompanying in the consolation bracket, has two Utahns relinquished seats been paired with Montpelier for in the area which was a 10:30 game this morning in right by bullets. sprayed the field house. The Stale Supreme court ruled Saturday that boards of education meetings generally should be open to the public and the press and minutes of such meetings should be made available for inspection before actions taken could be put Into effect. The high court, in an opinion written by Justice F. Henri Hen-rioreversed a Fourth District court which had upheld the action of the board clerk of the Nebo school district in refusing access to minutes after a meeting. The case was appealed and four Utah newspaper publishers Joined in the action as amici curiae, friends of the court. They were J. F. Fitzpatrick, Salt Lake Tribune; Charles W. Claybaugh, iBox Elder & News Journal; Harrison Conover, Springville Herald; and Norman J. Fullen-bach- , Richfield Reaper. IWhile the decision does not affect Box Elder District in any way because since last July minutes otf all meetings have been released immediately following, it does counter an order issued by Dr E. Allen Bateof man, state superintendent public instructions, who main tained that minutes were not official until they toad been ap which proved by the iboard, could determine its own policy as to the release of the information. Many districts throughout the state however have followed this practice and have not per mitted the release of minutes until they were approved at some future meeting. Participating In Scout Recognition Rally were left to right, Ed Baggs, Ogden, Lake Bonneville council comSaturday night missioner; Glen Knudsen, Golden Spike district vice chairman; Preston W. Pond, Ogden, council scout executive; Rulon Petersen, Ogden, council president; Frank Coppin, district commissioner; and Andy Rytting, Tremonton, district chairman. . Jan- - u Mum Council, District Officers Talk ft Over High School Will Produce "Naughty Services Thursday : 4 J'A T Marietta" Soon The operetta, Naughty Marietta, will be presented at Box Elder (High school auditorium on March 47 and 48 at 8:00 p. m., It was announced this week. Heading the production staff of the Victor Hetibert favorite, will be J. Earl Johnston assisted by Margaret Johnsen, accompanist; (Wayne Johnson, orchestra; Marie Thorne Jeppson, painting; Janet Hyde, dances; Carol Warr, dramatics; and Bertha Harris, i committee costumes. Other members are Lloyd Hust, lights; and Roland Gourley, publicity.' y The cast of characters include Evalu Mills playing the title role of Marietta, Marvin Grazer as Captain Dick, John Jensen as aif k Jean Parker as Adah, E . Etienne, , tm ,t Mrs. Jessie Guymon Nelson Mack Watkins as Rudolpho, Maureen Carroll as Llzette, . . . former resident, dies in Dick Watkins as Silas, Glade California Sunday. Funeral Hunsaker as the governor, Garth services will be held in the Welch as Harry Blake, and SanFourth ward Thursday after- dy Sheffield as the governors secretary. noon. The boys and girls choruses will feature about 70 voices and the production will Include many dances including comedy numbers. Advance ticket sales will start In the very near future. This is the third operetta to be presented by the high school since it revived this cultural and entertaining art two years Funeral services will be held ago. The first production feain the Fourth ward, Thursday, tured Rea Nielsen and Val for Mrs. Jessie Vilate Guymon-Nelson- Woodland as the talented leads, 72, former resident who with that popular comedy team died Sunday at a Martinez, composed of Gary Shirts and J. Dell Sackett, In The Red Mill." Calif., hospital after a lingering The 1954 of production illness. Mrs. Nelson was born .Sep- Marietta will please and thrill tember 15, 1881, a daughter of you just as much as the other two, was the promise made by Hetoer and Sarah Ellen Guymon at Minersville, Gourley. Beaver county, Utah. She came to Brigham City as a young girl and married Torval Nelson here in 1906, Jater being married in the Logan LDS ' temple. He died .J a:. fj Rites Will be Held Thursday, StopTraffic in 1936. She has made her home In Martenez, Calif., for the past five years. She was a member of the LIDS church and very active in the Relief society and the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Surviving are her Mrs. Maria Wight Guymon; sons and daughters, Mrs. Melvin (LaDene) Jeppson, Mrs. DeVon (Leona) Owen, Mrs. (Nelda) Poison and Don Nelson, 'all of Martinez, Calif.; Doyle M, Nelson and Nolan G. Mrs. Win. Nelson, Clearfield; (Rhoda) Frearson, Ogden; 18 three sisters, grandchildren; Mrs. Orson (Essie) Tingey, Brigham City; Mrs. Jordan (Bertha) Jones, Sacramento, Calif.; and Mrs. Wm. (Evelyn) Brad bury, Concord, Calif.; a brother, Albert W. Guymon, Stockton, Calif.; three step sisters, Mrs, Clissie Tingey, Oxnard, Calif.; Mrs. Chris (Mildred) Rasmus sen, Brigham City; and Mrs. George (Amber) Doyle, Phoenix, step-mothe- a ; When Car Hits Utility Role All traffic was stopped on the at highways through Willard 6:30 oclock Saturday night, when a car, traveling at - high speed, went out of control and clipped off a utility pole allowing the wires to fall across the , street. the accident Investigating were Town Marshal James Braegger and State Trooper Wm. C. Sackett who issued a citation against the driver of the car, Sam Waddell, Jr., Idaho Falls for driving too fast for .existNeither Wading conditions. dell nor his passenger were injured. According to Officer Braegger, the car traveled a block and a half after striking the pole before it could be brought to a stop. First to reach the scene, Braegger stopped traffic while Orville C. Gray, Utah Power and Light company employee could be summoned to cut off the electric power and remove the wires from across the street. Company workmen were busy until midnight restoring electric service which had been Interrupted. The utility pole also carried a Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph cable and lines. Little known or facts are splashed with romantic softness by Bertita Harding, the famous historical biographer and platform speaker, who will toe guest Of honor at the next meeting of the Knife and Fork club, to toe held Thursday evening, March 11. Ariz. According to Ross Bowen, local secretary, the affair will be Short funeral services were held at the Box Elder High held at Martinez on Tuesday school cafeteria. So. Stake MIA Leaders and the body' was shipped to Miss Harding, who is one of Brigham City where it will arrive Wednesday evening. the countrys leading authors To Meet on Thursday South Box Elder stake MIA and lecturers of note, will talk It may be viewed at the Haron Latin America in Transi Leadership meeting is set for old B. Felt Funeral home from tion. Thursday evening, March 4, at noon Thursday until time of 7:30 p. m. at the First ward services at 2:00 p. m. Services will be held in the Fourth LDS chapel. All bishops advisors, MIA of- ward, with Bishop George Niel James R. Palmer ficers and teachers of ward or- son officiating. Burial will be . . . son of Mr, and Mrs. Rud-gganizations, along with stake made in the Brigham City cem leaders are urged to attend. etery. E. Palmer of Park Valley, Waddells car was , beaded will be honored Sunday aftersouth and the pole hit was the Farmer Outstanding Young first one south of the Willard noon at farewell testimonial. Grocery on the west side of the highway. Waddell was fined before $15 when he appeared Frank Neil Jensen was named Justice of the Peace Monte Zun-de- l. Outstanding Box Elder Young Farmer of 1953 in special ceremonies Monday evening at the regular meeting of the Young Farmer group at the high Mr., and Mrs. Ellis Wood, 657 school. South Main, were hospitalized J. Leo Nelson, vice president late Saturday night when their of the First Security Bank of car failed to make a corner and James R. Palmer, son of Mr. Utah, presented a trophy on becrashed against a utility pole at and Mrs. Rudger E. Palmer of half of the bank to Jensen in First West and Second South. Valley, has accepted a call recognition of his fine record Still in the Cooley Memorial Park to an LDS mission in Brazil. the past year. hospital Tuesday evening, Mrs. James is a graduate of Box forThe award was made on the Fifty-eigh- t enrolled for the Wood. 70, was described as in High school with the class basis of leadership in communfirst aid instructor course that "fair condition, suffering from Elder 1952. He of one acyear ity and church, cooperative completed severe bruises and shock and opened here Monday night, J. D. of college at USAC and this tivities, improvements made on Gunderson, county civil defense possible broken nose. She was director, announced Tuesday. thrown against the car wind- year has been attending Brig- the farm and home, and attenham Young university. dance at Young Farmers meetCourses will continue shield by the crash. every A farewell testimonial will ings. night this week and next from Wood, 72, was released Sun- be held on 7 ofat March Farmer officers and 7:30 until 10:30 oclock at CenSunday, Young for day following treatment 1:00 oclock at the Park Valley ficials of the First Security Bank tral school. Morning classes shock and bruises at the ward chapel to which all made the final selection after were considered but the demand , was not great enough to justify Police Officers J. f, Lannell friends and relatives are invited ratings have been established to attend. for qualified members of the orInthem, he said. Foote and Jack Jorgensen A social will be given on Sat- ganization. The course Is being presented the accident. vestigated urday evening, March 6 at 8:00 Frank Neil Jensen by the American (Red Cross to 9 p. m. and Thursday from oclock. Return from Phoenix through the Box Elder chapter, . 10 a. m. until services. InterJames will enter the mission Mr. and Mrs. John Adams, who . . was presented with First Security Bank trophy as Box headed by Mrs. Mary IPearse of 1953 at a meeting ment will be in the Honeyville home on March 17 and will have spent he winter In Phoenix, Elders outstanding young farmer Owen, chairman. Instructor is Monday night. J. Leo Nelson, vice president of the bank Elmo Patterson of Salt Lake cemetery, directed by the- (Ro- leave about a week, later for Ariz., returned home last gers Mortuary, Tremonton. made the presentation. South America. City. n Frank Jensen er Is Outstanding Pair Injured Young Farmer In Saturday James Palmer NightCrash Leaves Soon For Mission 58 Enroll for Red Cross First Aid Training hos-pita- - l. |