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Show Universal Microfilming Corp. 227 Sixth Ave. P.0. Box K7 Salt Lake City, Utah Nominations for Snow Queen Eight Inch Snow Contestants Begin to Arrive Fall Makes 14 Sherry Lund, MaRue are: Sherry Hon-eyvlll- 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Maughan, Brigham City. The lovely iMisses will compete in the annual winter festival slated for January 29, beginning at 8:30 p. m. at the Box Elder High school gymnasium. As in the past the lucky Miss will reign over the carnival and dance. She will also receive a woolen (blanket lovely white enscribed Snow Queen ,1955 presented by last years queen, Miss Bonnie Nay, of Willard. Nominations are being received at Post Office Box 11, Brigham City. The nominations are reviewed by a selections committee then turned over to .the Hadfields and Johnsons of the queens committee. Requirements are that the contestant be unmarried, 17 yeats of age or older and worthy to be called Snow Queen. The selection will be made by lucky number. Those In charge urged that nominations be made soon in order to precess the names and notify the contestants. Mr. and Mrs. Aubry Moody are serving as general chairman of the annual event. , First To' Vie Along with the crowning of the queen and dancing there . . . are Sherry Lund, top; will be regular carnival festiv Fay Maughan, center; and ities with the sale of homemade MaRue Hunsaker, bottom. foods. The serving will be conducted under the direction of Mrs. Jennings Conner, Mrs. Sam Morten-seand Mrs. Morris K. Lee. n Frosh Produce BEHS Assembly . The Freshman class of Box Elder High school presented an assembly to the - student body last Friday. Acting as master of ceremonies was Rex Osmond, class president. Jeanette Jensen and Harold played an accordion duet, record pantomime by Therra Farnsworth and Annette Knudsen; violin duet, Genieve Burt and Carol Glenn, roller skate number by Ruth Weir, accordion solo by Dean Burt, dance (by Becky Judy Larsen and Pearse; piano solo, Judy JohnCoombs son. Highlighting the assembly was the performance of Liber-ac- e and George, played by Brent Sanford and Ron Lum burke. Jay Swenson Has New Postion Air Force Trains 21,000 Westerners t By the end of July 1955 more than 21,000 air force 'personnel from eight Western States will have received specialized training in a technical field, accordW. G. Angel, who ing to heads the USAF Recruiting station here. "Due to the huge expansion program which, calls for nearly one million people in Air Force Blue by 1957, there is plenty of for specialized opportunity training in the USAF, Sgt Angel said. Local persons who join the USAF are sent to Parks Air Force Base, California for 11 weeks of basic training. The technical schools take anywhere from four to 22 additional weeks to complete. Any interested persons may obtain further information about air force technical schools and other opportunities in the air force by contacting Sgt. Angel at Room 284, Post Office Building, Ogden, Utah, or at tho Selective Service office, in Brigham City, Utah. t. BEHS Art Dept. Jay Swenson, president of the Brigham City Junior Chamber of Commerce, has been appointed sales representative for Butler Manufacturing Company, it was learned this week. Swenson will cover eastern Oregon, Southern Idaho and all of Utah for the steel products manufacturing company. Now in Kansas City, Mo., tak ing a training and orientation course, he will return here Jan uary 22 to begin his duties. One of his first assignments will be a Farm Dealers show at Salt Lake City shortly after return- Uses New Method The Art department of Box Elder High sohool has been experimenting with a new technique of art work. As a variation to regular class work, Lura Redd, the art Instructor, has the students draw modern art to the music of Stan Kenton, the Four Freshmen, Tommy Dorsey, and other musical artists of the students. After the playing of the first record, students papers showed designs of various types of ing. moods that the music Indicated, according to Redd. Many were colored and very expressive, Civil Service Reports she said. Trainee Positions Open The students generally seem to enjoy experimenting with our The Civil Service Commission moods created by certain mu today announced positions open sic, said Miss Redd. which pay from $2750 to $3175. They are student trainee jobs in soil conservation, range con DSA Banquet Is Set servation, soil scientist and en Tonight gineer, civil and agricultural. Information and application Ranch House Maddox forms may be secured from Glenn S. Nelson at the Brigham The annual Distinguished Service Award banquet anCitypost office. nually sponsored by the Brigham City Junior Chamber of CpI. Earl Kunzler In Commerce, will be held toJanuary 19. beginning School night Cla$s Ranger at 8 p. m. It will be held at Maddox Corporal Earl R. Kunzler, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Kunzler, Ranch House. Annually one of the high- recently graduated from the , of the year's Ft. at school lights Armys Ranger Disof the winner Campbell, Kentucky. Corporal Kunzler Is currently tinguishedtoService Award will a young Brigham assigned to the reconaisance be made section of the 76th Tank Battal- City man. He will be selected on the ion which is a supporting unit basis of community service, of the 11th Airborne Division. personal accomplishment abiPrior to entering the service more. Corporal Kunzler attended Box lity and Cost will be $2.00 per plate. Elder High school. , at Joyces-activities- r I City council backed a j rj 4- - .e f . five-ye- V s delivered to Brigham City. THE WEATHER Bank Promotion Received by Boyd H. Students Drill For Posture Event Intermountain ing on some of School is tak- the appearances of a military school, with hundreds of students drilling dutifully in preparation for posture parades. The junior division girls de partment will Wednes7:30 p. m, parade day, January 19, in the boys gym. at . attendants who training the girls have extended an invitation to all to attend. Dormitory been have The senior division of the girls department will parade Saturday at 7:30 p. m., January 22, in the Boys gym. Winners in the competition will .receive trophies. Judges include Miss Cheney and Miss Shirley Jensen, physical education instructors at Box Elder - - - High school. Works For Snow Plows In Brigham A host of cars parked on Brigham City streets havs gummed up the works" for the city street ' department snow plows. Tracy Larsen, superintendent said the city wants to push snow farther back off the roads, but the cars force the plow trucks out around them. Chief of Police Harry Smith Said parking of cars on Main streets at night must be discontinued during the winter and pointed out they are subject to removal by the city and to a ticket for overnight parking. Jeppson Boyd Jeppson, son of Mrs. Anna F. Jeppson, Brigham city, was promoted to assistant and manager of the Consumers Credit department of the Commercial Security bank In Ogden last week. Mr. Jeppson has served with the bank for the past five years. He was a former employee at the First National Bank. He is past president of the Ogden chapter of the American Institute of Banking and now serves as a member of the su perintendency of the South Og den stake MIA. Jeppson was born and reared in Brigham City. He is a grad uate of Box Elder High school and attended college at Bakers Have A Heart For The Heart Fund fiHd, California. Following three years duty Prepare February Heart Fund Drive with the U. S. Navy during . . . Mrs.- - Herman Hadfield, standing. Heart Fund Drive chairman, Brigham City and Mrs. World War II, he returned to R. M. Kaiser, county director. The annual drive will raise funds for aiding patients and Willard and assumed duties as research during February. A special Heart Sunday on February 30, will be devoted to counselor to the bishop in the Willard LDS ward. a house to house campaign by volunteers. He and his wtife, the former Ilene Chlarson of Willard, and four children, Judy 12, Will their Will Douglas 9, Linda 5 and Janice 3, reside at 3501 Quincy Ave., Ogden. Dental Society CarsFoul Up The Sponsor Poster Contest Here, Observing Health Da The First. District. Dental .so - ?ciety will sponsor a poster conAll schodls have been invited test in local schools in obser- to participate, With entries due vance of Childrens Health Day, not later than January 28. Dr. Mary Petersen Reeder, Brigof dental health, On any phase ham City dentist, said today. they should toe 9 by 12 inches In size. A prize will be awarded Sale of Savings Bonds in each school room. Five dollar prizes will be Reported by F. Coppin awarded students who produces Mr. T. Frank Coppin, savings the best poster in the junior (bonds chairman for Box Elder ahd senior divisions at Box Elcounty, announced that Decem- der High school. ber sales of E and H savings ,Dr. Reeder requested all high bonds in this county were $23,-10- school students to turn their en bringing the total to $226,-89- 9 tidies in at the Box Elder News for 1954. ahd Journal. gas exploration program ar at a special meeting Monday night that might require an Investment of $1,400,000 by a private New York City company in Brigham City during the next five years. In return for the companys efforts and to protect its arge investment, the council agreed not to purchase gas from any other source for five years and to charge no less than the prevailing retail gas price in Ogden if and when gas 4 rtf ear New York Interests Will Invest High As Field $1,400,000 To Develope 200-We- ll A 'CP. 6 PAGKh Plan City Council Backs For Gas Exploration Near Town 5-Y- ' Lund, 17, daughter of Mrs. Vernal Lund, Brigham City; MaRue Hunsaker, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken V. Hunsaker, and Fay Maughan, 'BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 19, 1955 VOLUME 58, NUMBER 3 Eight and one half Inches of snow which fell on the evening ot January 16, brought Brigham Citys total snow depth to 14 iches, Charles Clifford, U. S. Weather Observer, noted. The wintry weather this week set another five year record. The temperature dropped to a minus eight degrees Tuesday morning, the coldest since the hay-lif- t year of 1949 when it was a minus 16 degrees here on January 20. January has been a kind month to the watersheds in northern Utah. In Brigham City there has been a total of 313 inches of precipitation during the month. 5 In!w! mm r Nominations are beginning to arrive for Snow Queen contestants, it was learned today from Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hadfield and Mr. and Mrs. Darel O. Johnson. First nominees Inch Total Here Carnival Contestants Hunsaker and Fay Maughcn Are Entries Jan. Willard Ward Host South Stake Willard Ward will host all of South Box Elder stake Saturday evening January 22, at the stake dance, In the Willard ward re creation hall. Supplying the music will be the Grace Hadley orchestra from Ogden. A floor show will be presented during the evening. Refreshments will be sold MIA activity conselors Iva Ar chibald and Don Christensen are in charge, assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Clive Walker, dance directors. Smorgasbord Set In First Ward; For Fun, Funds A fund raising dinner party, sponsored by the Primary organization of the First LDS ward, will be held in the unfinished new halL Saturday, January 22, beginning at 6:30 p. m. The affair is named Cottons and Jeans' with a smorgasbord dinner to be served, Mrs. Phyllis Owens, Mrs, Grace Burt. Mrs. Afton Hess and Mrs. Maureen Williams, of the Primary presidency, said today. The Primary officers and are also selling teachers birthday cards and homemade candy to help swell the building funds. During the evening following the dinner, prizes will be awarded for those in the brightest shirt oldest jeans, gayest dress, fullest skirt eldest couple attending in costume and largest family attending in costumes. All attending are asked to bring their own silver and dishes. A charge of $5 for adults and $2.50 for children will be made with all proceeds going to the building fund. Representing a group of New York investors, E. Stanley Glin- es, former president of the American Continental Corp, told the council the people he repre- sents require only those two provisions of the agreement to initiate drilling not later than May 1, following an electronic and other surveys this winter and spring. Field Near Brigham City The company hopes to develop the gas field immediately west of Brigham City. Attorney Leon Halgren, counsel for the New York Interests, said that Dr. Paul S. Stacy Is . the motivating power behind the plan. Stacy was reported to have had experience in shallow gas development in both the United States and Europe. He feels prospects hereare good enough for the large investment, Halgren said. The development would not be for marsh gas, E. Stanley Glines emphasized. The wells would probably be drilled about 1,000 feet deep. Marsh gas found west of Brigham City down to depths of a few hundred feet. Would Drill 200 Wells Gl'ines said that an estimated feet of gas 300,000,000 cubic would be required for Brigham Citys needs annually. The New York group would bring the gas to Brigham Citys city limits where it would be sold Wholesale. Under the councils' agree-- ' ment, the city could give the distribution franchise to a private company, or distribute it themselves. The city would not be required to purchase the gas until they are ready during the five years and after the five years have elapsed would not be required to purchase it at all. his Glines indicated that company was sufficiently confident that the people of Brigham City would want the gas if and when it is developed, that It does not have to have the guarantee of an absolute customer but only a potential customer. Glir.es, who has served on the Clarence F. Westley committee of the Inexecutive t In Korea Serving ternational Chamber of ComPlan To Attend First Ward Dinner merce, told the council that two Airman Second Class Clarence geological surveys have been F. Westley, 51 North First West made of the area. Conflicting street, Brigham City, is currentreports, one of which is optily assigned as a food service mistic about the gas potential Air technician at Kimpo Base, beneath the earth west of the an installation of the Fifth Air city and the other is pessimisForce in Korea. tic. Westley enlisted In the Air He pointed out that his group Force after graduating from Box is taking a calculated risk Elder High school, and was staand that its Investment in the tioned at Payne Air Force Base, exploration for gas might be a Wash., before coming to the Far total failure, or successful: East. He has been awarded the Horsley Mayor C. LeGrande National Defense, Korean and the councilmen reported inand United Nations Service medals. vestigating .the . possibility of The airmans wife. Beryl, and securing gas from other sources their daughter, Deanne, live at for Brigham City and that they 10415 Price street, Tacoma, had found the possibility highly Wash. remote. Before taking their final vote, Will all councilmen agreed, as well $244 Million as Chamber of Commerce President Herb Adamson and member Dr. C. A. Munns, who were 1956 Billion $62.4 present, that in making the agreement the city would be Utahs calculated share of the risking virtually nothing, while 1956 not be will posed budget bud$62 4 billion 1956 Federal the possibility of gaining a suphowcollected the year, during get just submitted to Congress ply of inexpensive fuel was since bud the Presidents by President Eisenhower is $244 ever, a deficit of good. million, according to Utah Foun- get4 contemplates Glines suggested that develOf billion. $2 the expected to dation, the private, bil- opment of the distribution sysof revenues federal $60 tal tax research organization. it is estima tem in Brigham City should be lion for fiscal . This amount is equivalent to ted that Utahs1956, will be gradual Instead of all atof one share the with first one part $325 for every man, woman and or $235 $313 per capita time, child in the state. For the aver- ($1,251million, receiving gas as it 13 decity for a family of four.) veloped and then another part. age family of four persons, these Based upon Utah Foundation expenditures will equal $1,300, calculations, Utahns will con according to the Foundation. Utah's share of the expected tribute $61 million ($81 per cap Pfc. Farrell R. Freeze 7 for the present ita) for the Air Force, $38 mil expenditures for the (1955) fiscal year is $248 mil- lion ($51 per capita) in Airborne Operation lion, or $331 per capita ($1,324 Navy, $35 million ($46) per capfor a family of four). The states ita) for the Army, and $8 milPfc. Farrel R. Freeze, 19, son of share of the 67.8 billion federal lion ($10 per capita) for atomic Mrs. Mimal Freeze, 663 North budget for the fiscal year end- energy development under the Main street, Brigham City, reed June 30, 1954, was $265 mil- Presidents budget. cently participated in the 187th Utahs share of proposed for- Airborne Regimental lion, or $353 per capita ($1,412 Combat for a family of four). will Teams Operation Climax on eign aid expenditures Thus, Utahs share of the pro- amount to $18 million ($24 per the Japanese island of KyashU. The last exercise of 1954 for posed Presidents budget for 1956 capita), and veterans benefits is $4 million below that of the also will cost Utahns $18 mil- the paratroopers, Operation Climax was held under low present year (fiscal 1955), and lion ($24 per capita.) of on $21 million less than that Interest payments the temperatures, combat condilast year. For the average fam- growing national debt will re- tions. of Private First Class Freeze, a ily of four in Utah, this repre- sult in Utah contributions All Ready To Go sents a reduction of $23 from $25 million ($33 per capita), and gunner In Company K, entered to the fund raising smorgasbord planned by First Ward Primary Association are: the 1955 budget, and a cut of the states share of the Pres- the Army In August 1953 and (left to right) Rowena Williams 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Williams ; Mrs. O. $112 from the federal expendi- idents proposed budget for agri- joined the team last June. He is tures of 1954. culture will be $9 million ($12 a 1953 graduate of Box Elder Dee Lund, primary teacher, and Ricky Pixton 8, son of Mrs. Dorothy Y. Pixton. The lull amount ,ol the pro per capital. High school, Utah Contribute For Ikes Budget non-prof- ... |